THE GOSPEL OF NICODEMUS: PART I.--ACTS OF PILATE (LATIN FORM) / PART
II.--CHRIST'S DESCENT INTO HELL (LATIN.--FIRST AND SECOND VERSIONS)
THE GOSPEL OF NICODEMUS
PART I.--ACTS OF PILATE
LATIN FORM.
I AENEAS was at first a protector of the Hebrews, and follower of the law;
then the grace of the Saviour and His great gift took possession of me. I
recognised Christ Jesus in holy Scripture; I came to Him, and embraced His faith,
so that I might become worthy of His holy baptism. First of all I searched for
the memoirs written in those times about our Lord Jesus Christ, which the Jews
published in the age of Pontius Pilate, and we found them in Hebrew writings,
drawn up in the age of the Lord Jesus Christ; and I translated them into the
language of the Gentiles, in the reign of the eminent Theodosius, who was
fulfilling his seventeenth consulship, and of Valentinian, consul for the fifth time in
the ninth indiction. Whosoever of you read this book, and transfer it to other
copies, remember me, and pray for me, AEneas, least of the servants of God,
that He be merciful to me, and pardon my sins which I have committed against Him.
Peace be to all who shall read these, and to all their house, for ever! Amen.
Now it came to pass, in the nineteenth year of the reign of Tiberius
Caesar, emperor of the Romans, and of Herod, son of Herod king of Galilee, in the
nineteenth year of his rule, on the eighth day before the kalends of April, which
is the twenty-fifth day of the month of March, in the consulship of Rufinus
and Rubellio, in the fourth year of the 202d Olympiad, under the rule of Joseph
and Caiaphas, priests of the Jews: the things done by the chief priests and the
rest of the Jews, which Nicodemus recorded after the cross and passion of the
Lord, Nicodemus himself committed to Hebrew letters.
CHAP. 1.--Annas and Caiaphas, Summas and Datam, Gamaliel, Judas, Levi, Neptalim,
Alexander and Jairus, and the rest of the Jews, came to Pilate, accusing the Lord
Jesus Christ of many things, and saying: We know him to be the son of Joseph the
carpenter, born of Mary; and he says that he is the Son of God, and a king. Not
only so, but he also breaks the Sabbath, and wishes to do away with the law of
our fathers. Pilate says: What is it that he does, and wishes to destroy the
law? The Jews say: we have a law, not to heal any one on the Sabbath; but he, by
evil arts, heals on the Sabbath the lame and the hunchbacked, the blind, the
palsied, the lepers, and the demoniacs. Pilate says to them: By what evil arts?
They say to him: He is a sorcerer; and by Beelzebub, prince of the demons, he
casts out demons, and they are all subject to him. Pilate says to them: It is
not in an unclean spirit to cast out demons, but in the god of Scolapius.
The Jews say: We pray thy majesty to set him before thy tribunal to be
heard. Pilate, calling the Jews to him, says to them: How can I, seeing that I am
a governor,(1) hear a king? They say to him: We do not say that he is a king,
but he himself says he is. And Pilate, calling a runner, says to him: Let Jesus
be brought in with kindness. And the runner, going out and recognising Him,
adored Him, and spread on the ground the cloak which he carried in his hand,
saying: My lord, walk upon this, and come in, because the governor calls thee. But
the Jews, seeing what the runner did, cried out against Pilate, saying: Why
didst not thou make him come in by the voice of a crier, but by a runner? for the
runner, too, seeing him, has adored him, and has spread out before him on the
ground the cloak which he held in his hand, and has said to him: My lord, the
governor calls thee.
And Pilate, calling the runner, says to him: Wherefore hast thou done
this, and honoured Jesus, who is called Christ? The runner says to him: When thou
didst send me into Jerusalem to Alexander, I saw him sitting upon an ass, and
the children of the Hebrews breaking branches from the trees, strewing them in
the way; and others held branches in their hands; and others spread their
garments in the way, shouting and saying, Save, therefore, Thou who art in the
highest; blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord!
The Jews cried out, saying against the runner: The children of the Hebrews
indeed cried out in Hebrew. How canst thou, a Gentile, know this? The runner
says to them: I asked one of the Jews, and said, What is it that they cry out in
Hebrew? and he explained to me. Pilate says to them: And how did they cry out
in Hebrew? The Jews said: Osanna in the highest! Pilate says to them: What is
the meaning of Osanna in the highest? They say to him: Save us, Thou who art in
the highest. Pilate says to them: If you yourselves bear witness to the terms
and words in which the children cried out, in what has the runner sinned? And
they were silent. The governor says to the runner: Go out, and lead him in, in
whatever way thou wilt. And the runner, going forth, did after the same form as
before, and says to Jesus: My lord, go in, because the governor calls thee.
As Jesus, then, was going in, and the standard-bearers bearing the
standards, the heads of the standards were bowed of themselves, and adored Jesus. And
the Jews, seeing the standards, how they bowed themselves and adored Jesus,
cried out the more against the standard-bearers. And Pilate says to the Jews: Do
you not wonder at the way in which the standards have bowed themselves and
adored Jesus? The Jews say to Pilate: we saw bow the men carrying the standards
bowed themselves and adored Jesus. And the governor, calling the standard-bearers,
says to them: Why have you so done? They say to Pilate: We are Gentile men,
and slaves of the temples: how had we(1) to adore him? for when we were holding
the figures,(2) they themselves bowed and adored him.
Pilate says to the chiefs of the synagogue and the elders of the people:
Choose ye men powerful and strong, and let them hold the standards, and let us
see whether they will bow of themselves. And the elders of the Jews, taking
twelve men very strong and powerful, made them hold the standards, six and six; and
they stood before the governor's tribunal. Pilate says to the runner: Take out
Jesus outside of the praetorium, and bring him in again, In whatever way thou
wilt. And Jesus and the runner went outside of the praetorium. And Pilate,
calling those who had formerly held the standards, said to them: By the health of
Caesar, if the standards do not bow themselves when Jesus comes in, I will cut
off your heads. And the governor ordered Jesus to come in a second time. And the
runner did after the same form as before, and besought Jesus much that He
would go up and walk upon his cloak. And He walked upon it, and went in. And as
Jesus was going in, immediately the standards bowed themselves, and adored Jesus.
CHAP. 2.--And Pilate seeing, fear seized him, and immediately he wished to rise from
the tribunal. And while he was thinking of this, viz., to rise and go away, his
wife sent to him, saying: Have nothing to do with that just man,(3) for I have
suffered much on account of him this night. And Pilate, calling the Jews, said
to them: Ye know that my wife is a worshipper of God, and in Judaism thinks
rather with you. The Jews say to him: So it is, and we know. Pilate says to them:
Lo, my wife has sent to me, saying: Have nothing to do with that just man,(3)
for I have suffered much on account of him this night. And the Jews answering,
said to Pilate: Did we not say to thee that he is a magician? Lo, he has sent a
vision of dreams to thy wife.
Pilate called Jesus, and said to him: What is it that these witness
against thee, and sayest thou nothing to them? And Jesus answered: If they had not
the power, they would not speak. Every one has power over his own mouth to say
good and evil; let them see(4) to it.
And the elders of the Jews answering, say to Jesus: What shall we see?
First, that thou wast born of fornication; second, that at thy birth in Bethlehem
there took place a massacre of infants; third, that thy father Joseph and thy
mother Mary fled into Egypt, because they had no confidence in the people.
Some of the bystanders, kind men of the Jews, say: We say that he was not
born of fornication; but we know that Mary, was espoused to Joseph, and that he
was not born of fornication. Pilate says to the Jews who said that he was of
fornication: This speech of yours is not true, seeing that the betrothal took
place, as these of your nation say. Annas and Caiaphas say to Pilate: We with all
the multitude say that he was born of fornication, and that he is a magician;
but these are proselytes, and his disciples. And Pilate, calling Annas and
Caiaphas, says to them: What are proselytes? They say to him: They have been born
sons of the Gentiles, and then have become Jews. Then answered those who
testified that Jesus was not born of fornication, Lazarus and Asterius, Antonius and
James, Annes and Azaras, Samuel and Isaac, Finees and Crispus, Agrippa and
Judas: We were not born proselytes, but are sons of the Jews, and we speak the
truth; for we were present at the betrothal of Mary.
And Pilate, calling to him those twelve men who proved that Jesus had not
been born of fornication, said to them: I adjure you by the health of Caesar,
tell me if it be true that Jesus was not born of fornication. They say to Pilate
We have a law not to swear, because it is a sin; but let them swear by the
health of Caesar that it is not as we say, and we are worthy of death. Then said
Pilate to Annas and Caiaphas: Answer you nothing to those things which these
testify? Annas and Caiaphas say to Pilate: Those twelve are believed that he is
not born of fornication; we--all the people--cry out that he was born of
fornication, and is a magician, and says that he himself is the Son of God and a king,
and we are not believed.
And Pilate ordered all the multitude to go outside, except the twelve men
who said that He was not born of fornication, and ordered to separate Jesus
from them. And Pilate says to them: For what reason do the Jews wish to put Jesus
to death? And they say to him: They are angry because he heals on the Sabbath.
Pilate said: For a good work do they wish to put him to death? They say to him:
Yes, my lord.
CHAP. 3.--Pilate, filled with fury, went forth outside of the praetorium, and says to
them: I take the sun to witness that I find in this man not even one fault. The
Jews answered and said to the governor: If he were not an evil-doer, we should
never have delivered him to thee. Pilate says to them: Take him, and judge him
according to your law. The Jews answered: It is not permitted to us to put any
one to death. Pilate says to them: Has God said to you not to put any one to
death? has He therefore said to me that I am to kill?
Pilate, having again gone into the praetorium, called Jesus to him
privately, and said to Him: Art thou the king of the Jews? Jesus answered Pilate:
Speakest thou this of thyself, or have others said it to thee of me? Pilate
answered: Am I a Jew? Thy nation and the chief priests have delivered thee to me. What
hast thou done? Jesus answering, said: My kingdom is not of this world. If my
kingdom were of this world, my servants would assuredly strive that I should
not be delivered to the Jews; but now my kingdom is not from hence. Pilate said
to Him: Art thou then a king? Jesus said to him: Thou sayest that I am a king.
For I for this was born, and for this have I come, that I should bear witness
to the truth; and every one who is of the truth hears my voice. Pilate says to
him: What is truth? Jesus says: Truth is from heaven. Pilate says: Is not there
truth upon earth? Jesus says to Pilate: Notice now the truth-speaking are
judged by those who have power upon earth.
CHAP. 4.--Pilate therefore, leaving Jesus within the praetorium, went out to the Jews,
and says to them: I find not even one fault in him. The Jews say to him: He
said, I can destroy that temple, and in three days raise it again. Pilate said to
them: What temple? The Jews say to him: The temple which Solomon built in
forty and six years; and he says that he can destroy and build it in three days.
Pilate says to them: I am innocent of the blood of this man; see ye to it. The
Jews say to him: His blood be upon us, and upon our children.
And Pilate, calling the elders and priests and Levites, says to them
privately: Do not do so; for in nothing, though you accuse him, do I find him
deserving of death, not even about the healing and the breaking of the Sabbath. The
priests and Levites and elders say: Tell us, if any one blaspheme Caesar, is he
deserving of death or not? Pilate says to them: He deserves to die. The Jews
answered him: How much more is he who has blasphemed God deserving to die!
And the governor ordered the Jews to go outside of the praetorium; and
calling Jesus, said to Him: What am I to do to thee? Jesus says to Pilate: As it
has been given thee. Pilate says: How has it been given? Jesus says: Moses and
the prophets made proclamation of my death and resurrection. And the Jews,
hearing this, say to Pilate: Why do you desire any more to hear blasphemy? And
Pilate said: If this speech is blasphemous, do you take him, and lead him to your
synagogue, and judge him according to your law. The Jews say to Pilate: Our law
holds, If a man have sinned against a man, he is worthy to receive forty less
one; but he who has blasphemed against God, to be stoned.
Pilate says to them: Then judge him according to your law. The Jews say to
Pilate: we wish that he be crucified. Pilate says to them: He does not deserve
to be crucified.
And the governor, looking upon the people of the Jews standing round, saw
very many of the Jews weeping, and said: All the multitude does not wish him to
die. The elders say to Pilate: And for this reason have we come--the whole
multitude--that he should die. Pilate said to the Jews: What has he done that he
should die? They say: Because he said that he was the Son of God, and a king.
CHAP. 5.--But one Nicodemus, a Jew, stood before the governor, and said: I entreat,
mercifully allow me to say a few words. Pilate says to him: Say on. Nicodemus
says: I said to the elders and the priests and the Levites, and to all the
multitude of the Jews, in the synagogue, What have you to do with this man? This man
does many wonders and signs, which no one of men has done or can do, Let him go,
and do not devise any evil against him: if the signs which he does are of God,
they will stand; but if of men, they will come to nothing. For Moses also,
being sent by God into Egypt, did many signs, which God told him to do before
Pharaoh king of Egypt. And the sorcerers Jamnes and Mambres were there healing, and
they did, they also, the signs which Moses did, but not all; and the Egyptians
deemed them as gods, Jamnes and Mambres. And since the signs which they did
were not of God, they perished, both they and those who believed in them. And now
let this man go, for he is not deserving of death.
The Jews say to Nicodemus: Thou hast become his disciple, and takest his
part.(1) Nicodemus says to them: Has the governor also become his disciple, and
does he take his part? Has not Caesar set him over that dignity? And the Jews
were raging and gnashing with their teeth against Nicodemus. Pilate says to
them: Why do you gnash with your teeth against him, when you are hearing the truth?
The Jews say to Nicodemus: Mayst thou receive his truth, and a portion with
him! Nicodemus says: Amen, amen, amen; may I receive it, as you have said!
CHAP. 6.--And of the Jews a certain other one, starting up, asks the governor that he
might say a word. The governor says: What thou wishest to say, say. And he
said: For thirty-eight years I lay in infirmity in my bed in very grievous pain.
And at the coming of Jesus, many demoniacs, and persons held down by divers
infirmities, were healed by him. And some young men had pity on me; and carrying me
in my bed, laid me before him. And Jesus, seeing, had pity on me, and said the
word to me, Take up thy bed, and walk. And immediately I was made whole; I took
up my bed, and walked. The Jews say to Pilate: Ask him what was the day on
which he was healed. He said: The Sabbath. The Jews say: Have we not so informed
thee, that on the Sabbath he heals, and drives out demons?
And a certain other Jew starting up, said: I was born blind; I heard a
voice, and saw no man. And as Jesus was passing by, I cried out with a loud voice,
Have pity upon me, thou son of David. And he had pity upon me, and laid his
hands upon my eyes, and I saw immediately. And another Jew starting up, said: I
was hunchbacked, and he straightened me with a word. And another said: I was
leprous, and he healed me with a word.
CHAP. 7.--And also a certain woman, Veronica by name, from afar off cried out to the
governor: I was flowing with blood for twelve years; and I touched the fringe of
his garment, and immediately the flowing of my blood stopped. The Jews say: We
have a law, that a woman does not come to bear witness.
CHAP. 8.--And certain others, a multitude of men and women, cried out, saying: That
man is a prophet, and the demons are subject to him. Pilate says to those who
said the demons are subject to him: And your masters, why are they not subject to
him? They say to Pilate: We do not know. And others said to Pilate: He raised
up dead Lazarus from the tomb after four days. The governor, hearing this, said
trembling to all the multitude of the Jews: Why do you wish to shed innocent
blood?
CHAP. 9.--And Pilate, calling Nicodemus and the twelve men who said that He was not
born of fornication, says to them: What am I to do, seeing that there is a
sedition among the people? They say to him: We do not know; let them see to it.
Again Pilate, calling all the multitude of the Jews, said: You know that you have a
custom during the day of unleavened bread, that I should release to you one
that is bound. I have a notable one bound in the prison, a murderer who is called
Barabbas, and Jesus who is called Christ, in whom I find no cause of death.
Whom do you wish that I should release unto you? And they all cried out, saying:
Release unto us Barabbas. Pilate says to them: What, then, am I to do with
Jesus who is called Christ? They all say: Let him be crucified. Again the Jews
said: Thou art no friend of Caesar's if thou release; this man, for he called
himself the Son of God, and a king; unless, perhaps, thou wishest this man to be
king, and not Caesar.
Then, filled with fury, Pilate said to them: Always has your nation been
seditious, and always have you been opposed to those who were for you. The Jews
answered: Who are for us? Pilate says to them: Your God,--who rescued you from
the hard slavery of the Egyptians, and led you forth out of Egypt through the
sea as if through dry land, and fed you in the desert with manna and quail, and
brought water to you out of the rock, and gave you to drink, and gave you a
law; and in all these things you provoked your God, and sought for yourselves a
god, a molten calf. And you exasperated your God, and He wished to slay you; and
Moses made supplication for you, that ye should not die. And now you say that I
hate the king.
And rising up from the tribunal, he wished to go outside. And the Jews
cried out, and said to him: We know that Caesar is king, and not Jesus. For the
Magi also presented gifts to him as to a king; and Herod, hearing from the Magi
that a king was born, wished to slay him. But when this was known, his father
Joseph took him and his mother, and fled into Egypt; and Herod hearing, destroyed
the infants of the Jews which were born in Bethlehem.
Pilate, hearing those words, was afraid. And silence being made among the
people, who were crying out, Pilate said: This, then, is he whom Herod sought?
They say to him: It is he. And taking water, Pilate washed his hands in
presence of the people, saying: I am innocent of the blood of this just man; see ye to
it. Again the Jews cried out, saying: His blood be upon us, and upon our
children.
Then Pilate ordered the veil to be loosened,(1) and said to Jesus: Thine
own nation have brought charges against thee as a king; and therefore I have
sentenced thee first to be scourged on account of the statutes of the emperors,
and then to be crucified on a cross.
CHAP. 10.--And when Jesus was scourged, he delivered Him to the Jews to be crucified,
and two robbers with Him; one by name Dismas, and the other by name Gestas. And
when they came to the place, they stripped Him of His garments, and girt Him
about with a linen cloth, and put a crown of thorns upon His head. Likewise also
they hanged the two robbers with Him, Dismas on the right and Gestas on the
left. And Jesus said: Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. And
the soldiers parted His garments among them. And the people stood waiting; and
their chief priests and judges mocked Him, saying among themselves: He saved
others, now let him save himself; if he is the Son of God, let him come down from
the cross. And the soldiers mocked Him, falling prostrate(2) before Him, and
offering vinegar with gall, and saying: If thou art the King of the Jews, set
thyself free.
And Pilate, after sentence, ordered a title to be written in Hebrew.
Greek, and Latin letters, according to what the Jews said: This is the King of the
Jews.
And one of the robbers who were hanged, by name Gestas, said to Him: If
thou art the Christ, free thyself and us. And Dismas answering, rebuked him,
saying: Dost not even thou fear God, who art in this condemnation? for we justly
and deservedly have received those things which we endure; but He has done no
evil. And he kept saying to Jesus: Remember me, Lord, in Thy kingdom. And Jesus
said to him: Verily I say unto thee, that to-day shalt thou be with me in
paradise.
CHAP. 11.--And it was about the sixth hour, and there was darkness over the whole
earth; and the sun was obscured, and the veil of the temple was rent in the midst.
And crying out with a loud voice, He said: Father, into Thy hands I commend my
spirit. And thus saying, He gave up the ghost. And the centurion, seeing what
was done, glorified God, saying: This was a just man. And all the people who were
present at that spectacle, seeing what was done, beating their breasts,
returned.
And the centurion reported to the governor what was done. And the governor
and his wife hearing, were very sorrowful, and neither ate nor drank that day.
And Pilate, calling together the Jews, said to them: Have you seen what has
been done? And they said to the governor: There has been an eclipse of the sun,
as is usual.
And his acquaintances also stood afar off, and the women who had followed
Him from Galilee, seeing these things. And lo, a certain man, by name Joseph,
holding office, a man good and just, who did not consent to their counsels nor
their deeds, from Arimathaea,(3) a city of the Jews, waiting, he also, for the
kingdom of God, went to Pilate and begged the body of Jesus. And taking Him down
from the cross, he wrapped Him in clean linen, and laid Him in his own new
tomb, in which no one had been laid.
CHAP. 12.--And the Jews, hearing that Joseph had begged the body of Jesus, sought for
him; and those twelve men who had said that He was not born of fornication, and
Nicodemus, and many others, who had stood before Pilate and declared His good
works. And all of them being hid, Nicodemus alone appeared to them, because he
was a chief man of the Jews; and he says to them: How have ye come into the
synagogue? The Jews say to him: And thou, how hast thou come into the synagogue,
seeing that thou consentest with him? May his portion be with thee in the world
to come! Nicodemus said: Amen, amen, amen. Likewise also Joseph, coming forth,
said to them: Why are you enraged against me because I begged the body of Jesus?
Lo, I have laid him in my own new tomb, wrapping him in clean linen; and I
have rolled a stone to the door of the cave. And ye have not acted well against a
just man, since you have not borne in mind how you crucified him, and pierced
him with a lance. The Jews therefore, laying hold of Joseph, ordered him to be
imprisoned because of the Sabbath-day; and they say to him: Know that the hour
compels us not to do anything against thee, because the Sabbath is dawning. But
understand that thou art worthy not even of burial, but we will give thy, flesh
to the birds of the air and the beasts of the earth. Joseph says to them:
That is the speech of proud Goliath, who reviled the living God against holy
David. And God hath said, Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord. And
Pilate, intercepted(1) in his heart, took water, and washed his hands before the
sun, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just man; see ye to it. And you
answered and said to Pilate, His blood be upon us, and upon our children. And now
I fear that some time or other the wrath of God will come upon you and your
children, as you have said. And the Jews, hearing this, were embittered in heart;
and taking Joseph, shut him up in a house where there was no window, and set
guards at the gates, and sealed the gate where Joseph had been shut up.
And on the Sabbath morning they took counsel with the priests and the
Levites, that they should all be assembled after the Sabbath-day. And awaking at
dawn, all the multitude in the synagogue took counsel by what death they should
slay him. And when the assembly was sitting, they ordered him to be brought with
much indignity; and opening the gate, they found him not. All the people
therefore were in terror, and wondered with exceeding astonishment, because they
found the seals sealed, and because Caiaphas had the keys. And no longer did they
dare to lay hand upon those who spoke before Pilate in Jesus' defence.
CHAP. 13.--And while they were sitting in the synagogue, and recriminating about
Joseph, there came certain of the guards whom they had asked from Pilate to guard
the sepulchre of Jesus, lest His disciples coming should steal Him. And they
reported, saying to the rulers of the synagogue, and the priests and the Levites,
what had happened: how there had happened a great earthquake, and we saw how
an angel of the Lord came down from heaven, and rolled away the stone from
the door of the tomb, and sat upon it; and his countenance was like lightning,
and his raiment like snow. And for fear. we became as dead. And we heard the
voice of the angel speaking to the women who had come to the sepulchre, and
saying, Be not ye afraid; for I know that ye seek Jesus who was crucified: He is not
here; He has risen, as He said: come and see the place where the Lord was
laid. And go immediately and tell His disciples that He has risen from the dead,
and will go before you into Galilee, as He said to you.
The Jews say: To what women was he speaking? The soldiers say: We do not
know who the women were. The Jews say: At what hour was it? The guards say: At
midnight. The Jews say: And why did you not detain them? The guards say: We
became as dead from fear of the angel, not hoping now to see the light of day; and
how could we detain them? The Jews says: As the Lord God liveth, we do not
believe you. And the guards said to the Jews: You have seen so great signs in that
man, and have not believed; and how can you believe us, that the Lord lives?
For well have ye sworn that the Lord Jesus Christ lives. Again the guards say to
the Jews: we have heard that you have shut up Joseph, who begged the body of
Jesus, in the prison, and have sealed it with your rings; and on opening, that
you have not found him. Give us Joseph, then, and we shall give you Jesus Christ.
The Jews said: Joseph has gone to Arimathea, his own city. The guards say to
the Jews: And Jesus, as we have heard from the angel, is in Galilee.
And the Jews, hearing these sayings, feared exceedingly, saying: Lest at
some time or other this saying be heard, and all believe in Jesus. And the Jews,
taking counsel among themselves, brought forth a sufficient number of silver
pieces, and gave to the soldiers, saying: Say that, while we slept, his
disciples came and stole him. And if this be heard by the governor, we shall
persuade(2) him, and make you secure. And the soldiers, taking the money, said as they
were advised by the Jews; and their saying was spread abroad among all.
CHAP. 14.--And Finees a certain priest, and Addas a teacher, and Egias a Levite, coming
down from Galilee to Jerusalem, reported to the rulers of the synagogue, and
the priests and the Levites, how they had seen Jesus sitting, and his disciples
with him, on tile Mount of Olivet, which is called Mambre or Malech. And he
said to his disciples: Go into all the world, and declare to every creature the
Gospel of the kingdom of God. He who believeth and is baptized shall be saved;
but he who believeth not shall be condemned. And these signs shall follow them
who believe: In my name shall they cast out demons; they shall speak in new
tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they have drunk any deadly thing, it
shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands upon the sick, and they shall be well.
And as Jesus was thus speaking to his disciples, we saw him taken up into
heaven.(1)
The priests and the Levites and the elders say to them: Give glory to the
God of Israel, and give confession to Him, whether you have both heard and seen
those things which you have related. Those who had made the report say: As the
Lord God of our fathers liveth, the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and
the God of Jacob, we have heard and seen. The Jews say to them: Have you come
for this--to tell us? or have you come to give prayer to God? They said: We have
come to give prayer to God. The elders and chief priests and Levites say to
them: And if you have come to give prayer to God, why have you murmured before
all the people about that foolish tale? Finees the priest, and Addas the teacher,
and Egias the Levite, say to the rulers of the synagogue, and the priests and
the Levites: If those words which we have spoken, which we have seen and heard,
be sin, behold, we are in your presence; do unto us according to that which is
good in your eyes. And they, taking the law, adjured them to report the words
to no one thereafter. And they gave them to eat and drink, and put them outside
of the city, giving them silver and pieces, and three men with them, who
should conduct them as far as Galilee.
Then the Jews took counsel among themselves when those men had gone up
into Galilee; and the rulers of the synagogue shut themselves in, and were cut
up(2) with great fury, saying: What sign is this which hath come to pass in
Israel? And Annas and Caiaphas say: Why are your souls sorrowful? Are we to believe
the soldiers, that an angel of the Lord came down from heaven, and rolled away
the stone from the door of the tomb? No; but that his disciples have given much
gold to those who were guarding the sepulchre, and have taken Jesus away, and
have taught them thus to say: Say ye that an angel of the Lord came down from
heaven, and rolled away the stone from the door of the tomb. Do you not know that
it is unlawful for Jews to believe foreigners in a single word, knowing that
these same who received sufficient gold from us have said as we taught them?
CHAP. 15.--And Nicodemus rising up, stood in the midst of the counsel, and said: You
have said rightly. And are not the men who have come down from Galilee
God-fearing, men of peace, hating a lie? And they recounted with an oath, how "we saw
Jesus sitting on Mount Mambre with his disciples, and he taught them in our
hearing," and that they saw him taken up into heaven. And no one asked them this: How
he was taken up into heaven. And, as the writing of the holy book teaches us,
holy Elias too was taken up into heaven, and Elisaeus cried out with a loud
voice, and Elias threw his sheepskin over Elisaeus; and again Elisaeus threw that
sheepskin over the Jordan, and went over and came to Jericho. And the sons of
the prophets met him, and said to Elisaeus, Where is thy master Elias? And he
said, He has been taken up into heaven. And they said to Elisaeus, Has a spirit
snatched him away, and thrown him upon one of the mountains? But rather let us
take our boys(3) with us and seek him. And they persuaded Elisaeus, and he went
with them. And they sought him for three days and three nights, and found him
not, because he was taken up. And now, men, hear me, and let us send into all
Israel, and see lest Jesus can have been taken up somewhere or other, and thrown
upon one of the mountains. And that saying pleased all. And they sent to all
the mountains of Israel to seek Jesus, and they found Him not; but they found
Joseph of Arimathaea, and no one dared to lay hold of him.
And they reported to the elders and priests and Levites: We have gone
round all the mountains of Israel, and not found Jesus; but we have found Joseph in
Arimathaea. And hearing of Joseph, they rejoiced, and gave glory to the God of
Israel. And the rulers of the synagogue, and the priests and the Levites,
taking counsel in what manner they should send to Joseph, took paper, and wrote to
Joseph:--
Peace to thee and all that is thine! We know that we have sinned against
God, and against thee; and thou hast prayed to the God of Israel, and He has
delivered thee out of our hands. And now deign to come to thy fathers and thy
children, because we have been vehemently grieved. We have all sought for thee--we
who opened the door, and found thee not. We know that we counselled evil
counsel against thee; but the Lord hath supplanted our counsel against thee. Thou art
worthy to be honoured, father Joseph, by all the people.
And they chose out of all Israel seven men friendly to Joseph, whom also
Joseph knew to be friendly; and the rulers of the synagogue and the priests and
the Levites say to them: See, if he take the letter and read it, for certain he
will come with you to us; but if he do not read it, you may know that he is
ill-disposed toward us, and, saluting him in peace, return to us. And blessing
them, they sent them away. And they came to Arimathaea to Joseph, and adored him
on their face upon the ground, and said: Peace to thee and all thine! And
Joseph said: Peace to you, and to all the people of Israel! And they gave him the
roll of the letter. And Joseph took and read it, and rolled up the letter, and
blessed God, and said: Blessed be the Lord God, who hath delivered Israel from
shedding innocent blood; and blessed be God, who sent His angel, and covered me
under his wings. And he kissed them, and set a table for them; and they ate and
drank, and slept there.
And they rose in the morning; and Joseph saddled his ass, and travelled
with them, and they came into the holy city Jerusalem. And there met them all the
people, crying out, and saying: Peace be in thy coming in, father Joseph! To
whom he answered and said: The peace of the Lord be upon all the people! And
they all kissed him. And they prayed with Joseph, and were terrified at the sight
of him. And Nicodemus took him into his house, and made a great feast, and
called Annas and Caiaphas, and the elders and chief priests and Levites, to his
house. And making merry, and eating and drinking with Joseph, they blessed God,
and went every one to his own house. And Joseph remained in the house of
Nicodemus.
And on the next day, which is the preparation, the priests and the rulers
of the synagogue and the Levites rose early, and came to the house of
Nicodemus. And Nicodemus met them, and said to them: Peace to you! And they said to him:
Peace to thee and Joseph, and to thy house and Joseph's house! And Nicodemus
brought them into his house. And the council sat; and Joseph sat between Annas
and Caiaphas, and no one dared to say a word. And Joseph said to them: Why have
you called me? And they made signs with their eyes to Nicodemus, that he should
speak with Joseph. And Nicodemus, opening his mouth, said: Father Joseph, thou
knowest that the reverend teachers, priests, and Levites seek to hear a word
from thee. And Joseph said: Ask. And Annas and Caiaphas, taking up the law,
adjured Joseph, saying: Give glory to the God of Israel, and give confession to
Him, that thou wilt not hide any word(1) from us. And they said to him: With grief
were we grieved that thou didst beg the body of Jesus, and wrap it in clean
linen, and lay it in a tomb. Therefore we shut thee up in a house where there was
no window, and put a lock and a seal on the gate; and on the first day of the
week we opened the gates, and found thee not. We were therefore exceedingly
grieved, and astonishment came over all the people of God. And therefore hast thou
been sent for; and now tell us what has happened.
Then said Joseph: On the day of the Preparation, about the tenth hour, you
shut me in, and I remained there the whole Sabbath in full. And when midnight
came, as I was standing and praying, the house where you shut me in was hung up
by the four corners, and there was a flashing of light in mine eyes. And I
fell to the ground trembling. Then some one lifted me up from the place where I
had fallen, and poured over me an abundance of water from the head even to the
feet, and put round my nostrils the odour of a wonderful ointment, and rubbed my
face with the water itself, as if washing me, and kissed me, and said to me,
Joseph, fear not; but open thine eyes, and see who it is that speaks to thee. And
looking, I saw Jesus; and being terrified, I thought it was a phantom. And
with prayer and the commandments I spoke to him, and he spoke with me. And I said
to him: Art thou Rabbi Elias? And he said to me: I am not Elias. And I said:
Who art thou, my lord? And he said to me: I am Jesus, whose body thou didst beg
from Pilate, and wrap in clean linen; and thou didst lay a napkin on my face,
and didst lay me in thy new tomb, and roll a stone to the door of the tomb. Then
I said to him that was speaking to me: Show me, Lord, where I laid thee. And he
led me, and showed me the place where I laid him, and the linen which I had
put on him, and the napkin which I had wrapped upon his face; and I knew that it
was Jesus. And he took hold of me with his hand, and put me in the midst of my
house though the gates were shut, and put me in my bed, and said to me: Peace
to thee! And he kissed me, and said to me: For forty days go not out of thy
house; for, lo, I go to my brethren into Galilee.
CHAP. 16.--And the rulers of the synagogue, and the priests and the Levites, hearing
these words from Joseph, became as it were dead, and fell to the ground, and
fasted until the ninth hour. And Joseph and Nicodemus entreated them, saying: Arise
and stand upon your feet, and taste bread, and comfort your souls, seeing that
to-morrow is the Sabbath of the Lord. And they arose, and entreated the Lord,
and ate and drank, and went every man to his own house.
And on the Sabbath the teachers and doctors sat questioning each other,
and saying: What is this wrath that has come upon us? because we know his father
and mother. Levi the teacher said: I know that his parents fear God, and never
depart from prayer, and give tithes thrice a-year. And when Jesus was born, his
parents brought him up to this place, and gave to God sacrifices and
burnt-offerings. And assuredly the great teacher Simeon took him into his arms, saying:
Now Thou sendest away Thy servant, O Lord, according to Thy word, in peace; for
mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, which Thou hast prepared before the face of
all peoples, a light for the revealing of the nations, and the glory of Thy
people Israel. And he blessed Mary his mother, and said, I make an announcement
to thee concerning this child. And Mary said, Well, my lord.(1) And Simeon said,
Well. And he said again, Lo, he has been set for the fall and rising again of
many in Israel, and for a sign which shall be spoken against; and a sword shall
pierce thine own soul, that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed.
And the Jews said to Levi: And how knowest thou these things? Levi says:
Do you note know that from him I learned the law? They of the council say: We
wish to see thy father. And they searched out his father, and got information;
for he said: Why did you not believe my son? The blessed and just Simeon taught
him the law. The council says to Rabbi Levi: The saying which thou hast spoken
is true. The chief priests and rulers of the synagogue, and Levites, said to
each other: Come, let us send into Galilee to the three men who came hither and
gave an account of his teaching and his being taken up, and let them tell us how
they saw him taken up into heaven. And that saying pleased all. Then they sent
three men into Galilee; and Go, said they, say to Rabbi Addas and Rabbi Finees
and Rabbi Egias, Peace to you and yours! Many investigations have been made in
the council concerning Jesus; therefore have we been instructed to call you to
the holy place, to Jerusalem.
The men went to Galilee, and found them sitting, and meditating on the
law. And they saluted them in peace. And they said: Why have you come? The
messengers said: The council summon you to the holy city Jerusalem. And the men,
hearing that they were sought for by the council, prayed to God, and reclined with
the men, and ate and drank with them. And rising in the morning, they went to
Jerusalem in peace.
And on the morrow the council sat; and they questioned them, saying: Did
you plainly see Jesus sitting on Mount Mambre teaching his disciples, and taken
up into heaven?
First Addas the teacher says: I really saw him sitting on Mount Mambre
teaching his disciples; and a shining cloud overshadowed him and his disciples,
and he went up into heaven; and his disciples prayed upon their faces on the
ground. And calling Finees the priest, they questioned him also, saying: How didst
thou see Jesus taken up? And he said the same as the other. And again they
called the third, Rabbi Egias, and questioned him, and he said the same as the
first and second. And those who were in the council said: The law of Moses holds
that by the mouth of two or three every word should stand. Abudem, a teacher, one
of the doctors, says: It is written in the law, Enoch walked with God, and was
translated; for God took him. Jairus, a teacher, said: And we have heard of
the death of holy Moses, and have not seen it; for it is written in the law of
the Lord, And Moses died according to the word(2) of the Lord, and no man knoweth
of his burying even to the present day. Rabbi Levi said: What is it that Rabbi
Simeon said: Lo, he lies for the fall and rising again of many in Israel, and
for a sign which shall be spoken against? Rabbi Isaac said: It is written in
the law, Lo, I send mine angel, who shall go before thy face to keep thee in
every good way, because I have brought his(3) new name.
Then Annas and Caiaphas said: Rightly have ye said that these things are
written in the law of Moses, that no one saw the death of Enoch, and no one has
named the burying of holy Moses. And Jesus gave account to(4) Pilate, and we
saw him scourged, and receiving spitting on his face; and the soldiers put a
crown of thorns on him, and he received sentence from Pilate; and then he was
crucified, and they gave him gall and vinegar to drink, and two robbers were
crucified with him, and the soldier Longinus pierced his side with a lance; and our
honourable father Joseph begged his body, and he has risen again, and, as they
say, the three teachers have seen him taken up into heaven. And Rabbi Levi has
borne witness to what was said by Simeon the elder--that he has been set for the
fall and rising again of many in Israel, and for a sign which shall be spoken
against.
Then Didas, a teacher, said to all the assembly: If all the things which
these have borne witness to have come to pass in Jesus, they are from God, and
let it not be wonderful in our eyes.(5) The chiefs of the synagogue, and the
priests and the Levites, said to each other how our law holds, saying: His name
shall be blessed for ever: His place endureth before the sun, and His seat before
the moon: and all the tribes of earth shall be blessed in Him, and all nations
shall serve Him; and kings shall come from far, adoring and magnifying Him.(6)
THE GOSPEL OF NICODEMUS
PART II.--CHRIST'S DESCENT INTO HELL
LATIN. FIRST VERSION
CHAP. 1 (17).--And Joseph rose up and said to Annas and Caiaphas: Truly and well do you
wonder, since you have heard that Jesus has been seen alive from the dead,
ascending up into heaven. But it is more to be wondered at that he is not the only one
who has risen from the dead: but he has raised up alive out of their tombs
many others of the dead, and they have been seen by many in Jerusalem. And hear me
now, that we all know the blessed Simeon, the great priest, who took up with
his hands Jesus, when an infant, in the temple. And Simeon himself had two sons,
full brothers; and we all were at their filling asleep, and at their burial.
Go, therefore, and see their tombs: for they are open, because they have risen;
and, behold, they are in the city of Arimathaea, living together in prayers.
And, indeed, they are heard crying out, but speaking with nobody, and they are
silent as the dead. But come, let us go to them; let us conduct them to us with
all honour and respect. And if we adjure them, perhaps they will speak to us of
the mystery of their resurrection.
At hearing this they all rejoiced. And Annas and Caiaphas, Nicodemus, and
Joseph, and Gamaliel, went, and did not find them in their sepulchres; but,
walking into the city of Arimathea, they found them there, on their bended knees,
and spending their time in prayer. And kissing them, they conducted them to
Jerusalem, into the synagogue, with all veneration and fear of God. And shutting
the doors, and lifting up the law of the Lord, they put it in their hands,
adjuring them by the God Adonai, and the God of Israel, who by the law and the
prophets spoke to our fathers, saying: Do you believe that it was Jesus who raised
you from the dead? Tell us how you have risen from the dead.
Karinus and Leucius, hearing this adjuration, trembled in their body, and
groaned, being disturbed in heart. And together they looked towards heaven, and
with their fingers made the sign of the cross on their tongues, and
immediately they spoke together, saying: Give each of us sheets of paper, and let us
write what we have seen and heard. And they gave it to them. And they sat down, and
each of them wrote, saying:--
CHAP. 2 (18).--O Lord Jesus Christ, the resurrection and the life of the dead, permit us to
speak mysteries through the death of Thy cross, because we have been adjured
by Thee. For Thou didst order Thy servants to relate to no one the secrets of
Thy divine majesty which Thou didst in Hades. And when we were, along with all
our fathers, lying in the deep, in the blackness of darkness, suddenly there
appeared a golden heat(1) of the sun, and a purple royal light shining upon us. And
immediately the father of all the human race, with all the patriarchs and
prophets, exulted, saying: That light is the source of eternal light, which hath
promised to transmit to us co-eternal light. And Esaias cried out, and said: This
is the light of the Father, the Son of God, as I predicted when I was alive
upon earth: The land of Zabulon and the land of Nephthalim across Jordan, Galilee
of the nations, the people who sat in darkness, have seen a great light; and
light was shining among those who are in the region of the shadow of death. And
now it has come and shone upon us sitting in death.
And when we were all exulting in the light which shone over us, there came
up to us our father Simeon; and he said, exulting: Glorify the Lord Jesus
Christ, the Son of God; because I took Him up when born, an infant, in my hands in
the temple; and instigated by the Holy Spirit, I said to Him, confessing: Now
mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, which Thou hast prepared in the sight of all
peoples, a light for the revealing of the nations, and the glory of Thy people
Israel. When they beard this, all the multitude of the saints exulted more.
And after this there comes up, as it were, a dweller m the desert; and he
is asked by all: Who art thou? To whom he says in answer: I am John, the voice
and prophet of the Most High, going before the face of His coming to prepare
His ways, to give the knowledge of salvation to His people for the remission of
their sins. And seeing Him coming to me, instigated by the Holy Spirit, I said:
Behold the Lamb of God! behold Him who taketh away the sins of the world! And I
baptized Him in the river of Jordan, and I saw the Holy Spirit descending upon
Him in the form of a dove; and I heard a voice from the heavens saying, This
is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. And now I have gone before His
face, and have descended to announce to you that the rising Son of God is close at
hand to visit us, coming from on high to us sitting in darkness and the shadow
of death.
CHAP. 3 (19).--And when the first created, father Adam, had heard this, that Jesus was
baptized in Jordan, he cried out to his son Seth: Tell thy sons, the patriarchs and
the prophets, all that thou heardest from Michael the archangel when I sent
thee to the gates of paradise to implore God that he might send thee His angel to
give thee oil from the tree of mercy, with which to anoint my body when I was
sick. Then Seth, coming near to the holy patriarchs and prophets, said: When I,
Seth, was praying to the Lord at the gates of paradise, behold Michael, the
angel of the Lord, appeared to me, saying, I have been sent to thee by the Lord.
I am set over the human race.(1) And to thee, Seth, I say, do not labour with
tears in prayers and supplications on account of the oil of the tree of mercy to
anoint thy father Adam for the pain of his body, because in no wise shalt thou
receive of it, except in the last days and times, except when five thousand
and five hundred years have been fulfilled: then will come upon the earth the
most beloved Son of God, to raise up again the body of Adam, and the bodies of the
dead; and He, when He comes, will be baptized in Jordan. And when he shall
have come out of the water of Jordan, then with the oil of His mercy shall He
anoint all that believe on Him; and that oil of mercy shall be for the generation
of those who shall be born out of water and the Holy Spirit into life eternal.
Then, descending upon earth, Christ Jesus, the most beloved Son of God, will
lead our father Adam into paradise to the tree of mercy.
And when they heard all these things from Seth, all the patriarchs and
prophets exulted with great exultation.
CHAP. 4 (20).--And when all the saints were exulting, lo, Satan, the prince and leader of
death, said to Hades: Make thyself ready to receive Jesus, who boasts himself to
be the Son of God, and is a man fearing death, and saying, My soul is
sorrowful, even unto death. And he has withstood me much, doing me evil; and many whom
I made blind, lame, deaf, leprous, and demoniac, he has healed with a word; and
those whom I have brought to thee dead, he has dragged away from thee.
Hades, answering, said to Prince Satan: Who is he that is so powerful,
when he is a man in fear of death? For all the powerful of the earth are kept in
subjection by my power, whom thou hast brought into subjection by thy power. If
then, thou art powerful, what is that man Jesus like, who, though fearing
death, withstands thy power? If he is so powerful in humanity, verily I say unto
thee, he is all-powerful in divinity, and his power can no one resist. And when he
says that he fears death, he wishes to lay hold on thee, and woe will be to
thee to the ages of eternity. And Satan, prince of Tartarus, answered and said:
Why hast thou doubted, and feared to receive this Jesus, thy adversary and mine?
For I have tempted him, and I have roused up my ancient people the Jews with
hatred and anger against him; I have sharpened a lance to strike him; I have
mixed gall and vinegar to give him to drink; and I have prepared wood to crucify
him, and nails to pierce him, and his death is near at hand, that I may bring
him to thee, subject to thee and me.
Tartarus answered and said: Thou hast told me that it is he himself who
has dragged away the dead from me. Now there are many who are here kept by me,
who, while they lived on earth, took the dead from me, not by their own powers,
but by godly prayers, and their almighty God dragged them away from me. Who is
that Jesus, who by his word has withdrawn the dead from me without prayers?
Perhaps he is the same who, by, the word of his command, brought alive Lazarus,
after he had been four days in stench and corruption, whom I kept dead. Satan
prince of death answered and said: That Jesus is the same. And when Hades heard
this he said to him: I adjure thee by thy powers and mine, do not bring him to me.
For I at that time, when I heard the command of his word, trembled with terror
and dismay, and all my officers at the same time were confounded along with
me. Nor could we keep that Lazarus; but, shaking himself like an eagle, he sprang
out, and went forth from us with all activity and speed, and the same ground
which held the dead body of Lazarus immediately gave him forth alive. So now, I
know that that man who could do these things is God, strong in authority,
powerful in humanity, and He is the Saviour of the human race. But if thou bring Him
to me, all who are here shut up in the cruelty of the prison, and bound by
their sins in chains that cannot be loosened, He will let loose, and will bring to
the life of His divinity for ever.
CHAP. 5 (21).--And as Prince Satan and Hades were thus speaking to each other in turn,
suddenly there was a voice as of thunders, and a shouting of spirits: Lift up your
gates, ye princes; and be ye lifted up, ye everlasting gates; and the King of
glory shall come in.(1) Hades hearing this, said to Prince Satan: Retire from
me, and go outside of my realms: if thou art a powerful warrior, fight against
the King of glory. But what hast thou to do with Him? And Hades thrust Satan
outside of his realms. And Hades said to his impious officers: Shut the cruel gates
of brass, and put up the bars of iron, and resist bravely, that we, holding
captivity, may not take Him captive.(2)
And all the multitude of the saints, hearing this, said to Hades, with the
voice of reproach: Open thy gates, that the King of glory may come in. And
David cried out, saying: Did I not, when I was alive upon earth, prophesy to you:
Let them confess to the Lord His tender mercies and His wonderful works to the
children of men: for He has shattered the brazen gates, and burst the iron
bars; He has taken them up out of the way of their iniquity?(3) And after this, in
like manner, Esaias said: Did not I, when I was alive upon earth, prophesy to
you: The dead shall rise up, and those who are in their tombs shall rise again,
and those who are upon earth shall exult; because the dew, which is from the
Lord, is their health?(4) And again I said, Where, O Death, is thy sting? where,
O Hades, is thy victory?(5)
And when all the saints heard this from Esaias, they said to Hades: Open
thy gates. Since thou art now conquered, thou wilt be weak and powerless. And
there was a great voice, as of thunders, saying: Lift up your gates, ye princes;
and be ye lifted up, ye infernal gates; and the King of glory shall come in.
Hades, seeing that they had twice shouted out this, says, as if not knowing: Who
is the king of glory? David says, in answer to Hades: I recognise those words
of the shout, since I prophesied the same by His Spirit. And now, what I have
said above I say to thee, The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle;
He is the King of glory.(6) And the Lord Himself hath looked down from heaven
upon earth, to hear the groans of the prisoners, and to release the sons of the
slain.(7) And now, most filthy and most foul Hades, open thy gates, that the
King of glory may come in. While David was thus speaking, there came to Hades, in
the form of a man, the Lord of majesty, and lighted up the eternal darkness,
and burst asunder the indissoluble chains; and the aid of unconquered power
visited us, sitting in the profound darkness of transgressions, and in the shadow
of death of sins.(8)
CHAP. 6 (22).--When this was seen by Hades and Death, and their impious officers, along
with their cruel servants, they trembled at perceiving in their own dominions the
clearness of so great a light, when they saw Christ suddenly in their abodes;
and they cried out, saying: We have been overcome by thee. Who art thou, that to
the Lord directest our confusion?(9) Who art thou, that, undestroyed by
corruption, the uncorrupted proof of thy majesty, with fury condemnest our power? Who
art thou, so great and little, lowly and exalted, soldier and commander,
wonderful warrior in the form of a slave, and the king of glory dead and alive, whom
slain the cross has carried? Thou, who didst lie dead in the sepulchre, hast
come down to us alive; and in thy death every creature trembled, and the stars
in a body were moved; and now thou hast been made free among the dead, and
disturbest our legions. Who art thou, that settest free those who art held captive,
bound by original sin, and recallest them to their former liberty? Who art
thou, who sheddest a divine, and splendid, and illuminating light upon those who
have been blinded by the darkness of their sins?
In like manner, also, all the legions of the demons, terror-stricken with
like fear from their fearful overthrow, cried out, saying: Whence art thou, O
Jesus, a man so powerful and splendid in majesty, so excellent, without spot,
and free from guilt? For that world of earth which has been subject to us always
until now, which used to pay tribute for our uses, has never sent us such a
dead man, has never destined such gifts for the powers below. Who therefore art
thou, that hast so intrepidly entered our bounds, and who hast not only no fear
of our punishments, but, moreover, attemptest to take all away from our chains?
Perhaps thou art that Jesus of whom our prince Satan said, that by thy death of
the cross thou wast destined to receive the dominion of the whole world.
Then the King of glory, trampling on death by His majesty, and seizing
Prince Satan, delivered him to the power of Hades, and drew Adam to His brightness.
CHAP. 7 (23).--Then Hades, receiving Prince Satan, said to him, with vehement revilings: O
prince of perdition, and leader of extermination, Beelzebub, derision of
angels, to be spit upon by the just, why didst thou wish to do this? Didst thou wish
to crucify the King of glory, in whose death thou didst promise us so great
spoils? Like a fool, thou didst not know what thou wast doing. For, behold, that
Jesus by the splendour of His divinity is putting to flight all the darkness of
death, and He has broken into the strong lowest depths of our dungeons, and has
brought out the captives, and released those who were bound. And all who used
to groan under our torments insult us, and by their prayers our dominions are
taken by stem, and our realms conquered, and no race of men has now any respect
for us. Moreover, also, we are grievously threatened by the dead, who have
never been haughty to us, and who have not at any time been joyful as captives. O
Prince Satan, father of all impious wretches and renegades, why didst thou wish
to do this? Of those who from the beginning, even until now, have despaired of
salvation and life, no bellowing after the usual fashion is now heard here; and
no groaning of theirs resounds, nor in any of their faces is a trace of tears
found. O Prince Satan, possessor of the keys of the lower regions, all thy
riches which thou hadst acquired by the tree of transgression and the loss of
paradise, thou hast now lost by the tree of the cross, and all thy joy has perished.
When thou didst hang up that Christ Jesus the King of glory, thou wast acting
against thyself and against me. Henceforth thou shall know what eternal
torments and infinite punishments thou art to endure in my everlasting keeping. O
Prince Satan, author of death, and source of all pride, thou oughtest first to have
inquired into the bad cause of that Jesus. Him in whom thou perceivedst no
fault, why, without reason, didst thou dare unjustly to crucify? and why hast thou
brought to our regions one innocent and just, and lost the guilty, the
impious, and the unjust of the whole world?
And when Hades had thus spoken to Prince Satan, then the King of glory
said to Hades: Satan the prince will be in thy power for ever, in place of Adam
and his sons, my just ones.
CHAP. 8 (24).--And the Lord stretched out His hand, and said: Come to me, all my saints,
who have my image and likeness. Do you, who have been condemned through the tree
and the devil and death, now see the devil and death condemned through the
tree. Immediately all the saints were brought together under the hand of the Lord.
And the Lord, holding Adam by the right hand, said to him: Peace be to thee,
with all thy children, my righteous ones! And Adam fell down at the knees of the
Lord, and with tearful entreaty praying, said with a loud voice: I will extol
Thee, O Lord; for Thou hast lifted me up, and hast not made my foes to rejoice
over me. O Lord God, I cried unto Thee, and Thou hast healed me. O Lord, Thou
hast brought out my soul from the powers below; Thou hast saved me from them that
go down into the pit. Sing praises to the Lord, all His saints, and confess to
the memory of His holiness; since there is anger in His indignation, and life
in His goodwill.[1] In like manner also all the saints of God, falling on their
knees at the feet of the Lord, said with one voice: Thou hast come, O Redeemer
of the world: as Thou hast foretold by the law and Thy prophets, so hast Thou
fulfilled by Thy deeds. Thou hast redeemed the living by Thy cross; and by the
death of the cross Thou hast come down to us, to rescue us from the powers
below, and from death, by Thy majesty. O Lord, as Thou hast set the title of Thy
glory in heaven, and hast erected as the title of redemption Thy cross upon
earth, so, O Lord, set in Hades the sign of the victory of Thy cross, that death may
no more have dominion.
And the Lord, stretching forth His hand, made the sign of the cross upon
Adam and upon all His saints; and holding Adam by the right hand, went up from
the powers below: and all the saints followed Him. Then holy David cried out
aloud, saying: Sing unto the Lord a new song, for He hath done wonderful things;
His right hand and His holy arm have brought salvation to Himself. The Lord hath
made known His salvation; His righteousness hath He revealed in the sight of
the heathen.[2] And all the multitude of the saints answered, saying: This is
glory to all His saints. Amen, alleluia.
And after this the prophet Habacuc cried out, saying: Thou wentest forth
for the salvation of Thy people, to deliver Thine elect.[3] And all the saints
answered, saying: Blessed is He who cometh in the name of the Lord; God is the
Lord, and He hath shone upon us.[1] Amen, alleluia. In like manner after this
the prophet Michaeas also cried out, saying: Who is a God like unto thee, O Lord,
taking away iniquities and passing by sins? And now Thou dost withhold Thine
anger for a testimony against us, because Thou delightest in mercy. And Thou
turnest again, and hast compassion upon us, and pardonest all our iniquities; and
all our sins hast Thou sunk in the multitude of death,[2] as Thou hast sworn
unto our fathers in the days of old.[3] And all the saints answered, saying: This
is our God to eternity, and for ever and ever; and He will direct us for
evermore.[4] Amen, alleluia. So also all the prophets, quoting the sacred writings
concerning His praises,[5] and all the saints crying, Amen, alleluia, followed
the Lord.
CHAP. 9 (25).--And the Lord, holding the hand of Adam, delivered him to Michael the
archangel: and all the saints followed Michael the archangel, and he led them all into
the glorious grace of paradise. And there met them two men, ancient of days.
The saints asked them: Who are you, that have not yet been dead, along with us
in the regions below, and have been placed in paradise in the body? One of them
answered, and said: I am Enoch, who by the word of the Lord have been
translated hither; and he who is with me is Elias the Thesbite, who was taken up by a
fiery chariot. Here also even until now we have not tasted death, but have been
reserved to the coming of Antichrist, by divine signs and wonders to do battle
with him, and, being killed by him in Jerusalem, after three days and half a day
to be taken up alive again in the clouds.[6]
CHAP. 10 (26).--And while the saints Enoch and Elias were thus speaking, behold, there came
up another man, most wretched, carrying on his shoulders the sign of the cross.
And seeing him, all the saints said to him: Who art thou? because thy
appearance is that of a robber. Anti what is the sign which thou carriest on thy
shoulders? In answer to them, he said: Truly have you said that I was a robber, doing
all sorts of evil upon the earth. And the Jews crucified me along with Jesus;
and I saw the miracles in created things which were done through the cross of
Jesus crucified, and I believed Him to be the Creator of all created things, and
the King omnipotent; and I entreated Him, saying, Be mindful of me, Lord, when
Thou shall have come into Thy kingdom. Immediately He accepted my entreaty,
and said to me, Amen; I say to thee, To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise.[7]
And He gave me this sign of the cross, saying, Walk into paradise carrying
this; and if the guardian angel of paradise will not let thee go in, show him the
sign of the cross, and thou shall say to him, Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who
has now been crucified, has sent me. Having done so, I said all this to the
guardian angel of paradise. And when he heard this, he immediately opened, and
led me in, and placed me at the right of paradise, saying, Lo, hold a little, and
there will come in the father of the whole human race, Adam, with all his
children, holy and just, after the triumph and glory of the ascension of Christ the
crucified Lord. Hearing all these words of the robber, all the holy patriarchs
and prophets with one voice said: Blessed art Thou, O Lord Almighty, Father of
everlasting benefits, and Father of mercies, who hast given such grace to Thy
sinners, and hast brought them back into the grace of paradise, and into Thy
rich pastures; for this is spiritual life most sure. Amen, amen.
CHAP. 11 (27).--These are the divine and sacred mysteries which we saw and heard, I Karinus,
and Leucius. More we are not allowed to tell of the other mysteries of God, as
Michael the archangel adjured us, and said: You shall go into Jerusalem with
your brethren, and continue in prayers, and you shall cry out, and glorify the
resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ, who has raised you up again from the dead
with Himself. And with none of men shall you speak; and you shall sit as if
dumb, until the hour shall come when the Lord Himself shall permit you to relate
the mysteries of His divinity. And Michael the archangel ordered us to walk
across Jordan into a place rich and fertile, where there are many who rose again
along with us for an evidence of the resurrection of Christ the Lord; because
only three days were allowed to us who have risen from the dead to celebrate in
Jerusalem the passover of the Lord, with our living relations, for an evidence
of the resurrection of Christ the Lord: and we have been baptized in the holy
river of Jordan, receiving each of us white robes. And after three days, when we
had celebrated the passover of the Lord, all who rose again along with us were
snatched up into the clouds. and taken across the Jordan, and were no longer
seen by any one. But we were told to remain in the city of Arimathaea in prayers.
These are the things which the Lord commanded us to relate to you. Give
Him praise and confession, and be penitent, that He may have mercy upon you.
Peace be to you from the same Lord Jesus Christ, and the Saviour of all of us! Amen.
And after they had finished all, writing on separate sheets of paper, they
arose. And Karinus gave what he wrote into the hands of Annas and Caiaphas and
Gamaliel; in like manner also Leucius gave what he wrote into the hands of
Nicodemus and Joseph. And being suddenly transfigured, they became exceedingly
white, and were seen no more. And their writings were found exactly the same, not
one letter more or less.
All the synagogue of the Jews, hearing all these wonderful sayings of
Karinus and Leucius, said to each other: Truly all these things have been done by
the Lord, and blessed be the Lord for ever and ever. Amen. And they all went out
with great anxiety, beating their breasts with fear and trembling; and they
went away, each to his own house.
All these things which were said by the Jews in their synagogue Joseph and
Nicodemus immediately reported to the proconsul. And Pilate himself wrote all
which had been done and said concerning Jesus by the Jews, and he placed all
the words in the public records of his praetorium.
CHAP. 12 (28).--After this, Pilate going into the temple of the Jews, assembled all the
chief priests, and learned men, and scribes, and teachers of the law, and went in
with them into the sanctuary of the temple, and ordered that all the gates
should be shut, and said to them: We have heard that you have a certain great
collection of books in this temple: therefore I ask you that it be presented before
us. And when four officers brought in that collection of books, adorned with
gold and precious gems, Pilate said to all: I adjure you by the God of your
fathers, who ordered you to build this temple in the place of his sanctuary, not to
conceal the truth from me. You all know what is written in that collection of
books; but now say whether you have found in the writings that Jesus, whom you
have crucified, to be the Son of God that was to come for the salvation of the
human race, and in how many revolutions of the seasons he ought to come. Declare
to me whether you crucified him in ignorance of this, or knowing it.
Being thus adjured, Annas and Caiaphas ordered all the others who were
with them to go out of the sanctuary; and themselves shut all the gates of the
temple and the sanctuary, and said to Pilate: We have been adjured by thee, O good
judge, by the building of this temple, to give thee the truth, and a clear
account of this matter. After we had crucified Jesus, not knowing Him to be the
Son of God, thinking that He did miracles by means of some charm, we made a great
synagogue in this temple. And conferring with each other of the signs of the
miracles which Jesus had done, we found many witnesses of our nation who said
that they had seen Jesus alive after suffering death, and that He had penetrated
into the height of heaven. And we have seen two witnesses, whom Jesus raised up
again from the dead, who told us many wonderful things that Jesus did among
the dead, which we have in our hands, written out. And our custom is, every year
before our synagogue, to open that holy collection of books, and seek out the
testimony of God. And we have found in the first book of the LXX., where the
archangel Michael spoke to the third son of Adam, the first man, of five thousand
and five hundred years, in which the Christ, the most beloved Son of God, was
to come from the heavens; and upon this we have considered that perhaps He was
the God of Israel who said to Moses,[1] Make to thee the ark of the covenant,
two cubits and a half in length, one cubit and a half in breadth, one cubit and a
half in height. In these five and a half cubits we have understood and
recognised, from the structure of the ark of the old covenant, that in five and a half
thousands of years, Jesus Christ was to come in the ark of the body; and we
have found Him to be the God of Israel, the Son of God. Because after His
passion, we, the chief priests, wondering at the signs which happened on account of
Him, opened this collection of books, searching out all the generations, even to
the generation of Joseph, and reckoning that Mary the mother of Christ was of
the seed of David; and we have found that from the time that God made the heaven
and the earth and the first man, to the deluge, are two thousand two hundred
and twelve[2] years; and from the deluge to the building of the tower, five
hundred and thirty-one[3] years; and from the building of the tower to Abraham, six
hundred and six[4] years; and from Abraham to the arrival of the children of
Israel from Egypt, four hundred and seventy years; from the coming of the
children of Israel out of Egypt to the building of the temple, five hundred and
eleven years; and from the building of the temple to the destruction of the same
temple, four hundred and sixty-four years. Thus far have we found in the book of
Esdras. After searching, we find that from the burning of the temple to the
advent of Christ, and His birth, there are six hundred and thirty-six[5] years,
which together were five thousand five hundred years, as we have found written in
the book that Michael the archangel foretold to Seth the third son of Adam,
that in five and a half thousands of years Christ the Son of God would come. Even
until now we have told no one, that there might be no dissension in our
synagogues. And now thou hast adjured us, O good judge, by this holy book of the
testimonies of God, and we make it manifest to thee. And now we adjure thee, by thy
life and safety, to make manifest these words to no one in Jerusalem.
CHAP. 13 (29).--Pilate, hearing these words of Annas and Caiaphas, laid them all up in the
acts of our Lord and Saviour, in the public records of his praetorium, and wrote
a letter to Claudius, king of the city of Rome,[2] saying:--
Pontius Pilate to Claudius his king, greeting. It has lately happened, as
I myself have also proved, that the Jews, through envy, have punished
themselves and their posterity by a cruel condemnation. In short, when their fathers had
a promise that their God would send them from heaven his holy one, who should
deservedly be called their king, and promised that he would send him by a
virgin upon the earth: when, therefore, while I was procurator, he had come into
Judaea, and when they saw him enlightening the blind, cleansing the lepers, curing
the paralytics, making demons flee from men, even raising the dead, commanding
the winds, walking dryshod upon the waves of the sea, and doing many other
signs of miracles; and when all the people of the Jews said that he was the Son of
God, the chief priests felt envy against him, and seized him, and delivered
him to me; and, telling me one lie after another, they said that he was a
sorcerer, and was acting contrary to their law.
And I believed that it was so, and delivered him to be scourged, according
to their will. And they crucified him, and set guards over him when buried.
And he rose again on the third day, while my soldiers were keeping guard. But so
flagrant was the iniquity of the Jews, that they gave money to my soldiers,
saying, Say that his disciples have stolen his body. But after receiving the money
they could not keep secret what had been done; for they bore witness both that
he had risen again, that they had seen him,[3] and that they had received
money from the Jews.
This accordingly I have done, test any one should give a different and a
false account of it, and lost thou shouldst think that the lies of the Jews are
to be believed.
LATIN. SECOND VERSION.
Chap. 1 (17).--Then Rabbi Addas, and Rabbi Finees, and Rabbi Egias, the three men who had
come from Galilee, testifying that they had seen Jesus taken up into heaven,
rose up in the midst of the multitude of the chiefs of the Jews, and said before
the priests and the Levites, who had been called together to the council of the
Lord: When we were coming from Galilee, we met at the Jordan a very great
multitude of men, fathers[1] who had been some time dead. And present among them we
saw Karinus and Leucius. And they came up to us, and we kissed each other,
because they were dear friends of ours; and we asked them, Tell us, friends and
brothers, what is this breath of life and flesh? and who are those with whom you
are going? and how do you, who have been some time dead, remain in the body?
And they said in answer: We have risen again along with Christ from the
lower world, and He has raised us up again from the dead. And from this you may
know that the gates of death and darkness have been destroyed, and the souls of
the saints have been brought out thence, and have ascended into heaven along
with Christ the Lord. And indeed to us it has been commanded by the Lord Himself,
that for an appointed time we should walk over the banks of Jordan and the
mountains; not, however, appearing to every one, nor speaking to every one, except
to those to whom He has permitted us. And just now we could neither have
spoken nor appeared to you, unless it had been allowed to us by the Holy Spirit.
And when they heard this, all the multitude who were present in the
council were struck with fear and trembling, and wondered whether these things had
really happened which these Galilaeans testified. Then Caiaphas and Annas said to
the council: What these have testified, first and last, must shortly be
altogether made clear: If it shall be found to be true that Karinus and Leucius
remain alive in the body, and if we shall be able to behold them with our own eyes,
then what they testify is altogether true; and if we find them, they will
inform us of everything; but if not, you may know that it is all lies.
Then the council having suddenly risen, it pleased them to choose men fit
for the duty, fearing God, and who knew when they died, and where they were
buried, to inquire diligently, and to see whether it was as they had heard. The
men therefore proceeded to the same place, fifteen in number, who through all
were present at their falling asleep, and had stood at their feet when they were
buried, and had beheld their tombs. And they came and found their tombs open,
and very many others besides, and found a sign neither of their bones nor of
their dust. And they returned in all haste, and reported what they had seen.
Then all their synagogue was in great grief and perplexity, and they said
to each other: What shall we do? Annas and Caiaphas said: Let us turn to where
we have heard that they are, and let us send to them men of rank, asking and
entreating them: perhaps they will deign to come to us. Then they sent to them
Nicodemus and Joseph, and the three men, the Galilaean rabbis who had seen them,
asking that they should deign to come to them. And they went, and walked round
all the region of Jordan and of the mountains, and they were coming back
without finding them.
And, behold, suddenly there appeared coming down from Mount Amalech a very
great number, as it were, twelve thousand men, who had risen with the Lord.
And though they recognised very many there, they were not able to say anything to
them for fear and the angelic vision; and they stood at a distance gazing and
hearing them, how they walked along singing praises, and saying: The Lord has
risen again from the dead, as He had said; let us all exult and be glad, since
He reigns for ever. Then those who had been sent were astonished, and fell to
the ground for fear, and received the answer from them, that they should see
Karinus and Leucius in their own houses.
And they rose up and went to their houses, and found them spending their
time in prayer. And going in to them, they fell on their faces to the ground,
saluting them; and being raised up, they said: O friends of God, all the
multitude of the Jews have directed us to you, hearing that you have risen from the
dead, asking and beseeching you to come to them, that we all may know the great
things of God which have happened around us in our times. And they immediately,
at a sign from God, rose up, and came with them, and entered their synagogue.
Then the multitude of the Jews, with the priests, put the books of the law in
their hands, and adjured them by the God Heloi, and the God Adonai, and by the law
and the prophets, saying: Tell us how you have risen from the dead, and what
are those wonderful things which have happened in our times, such as we have
never heard to have happened at any other time; because already for fear all our
bones have been benumbed, and have dried up, and the earth moves itself under
our feet: for we have joined all our hearts to shed righteous and holy blood.
Then Karinus and Leucius signed to them with their hands to give them a
sheet of paper and ink. And this they did, because the Holy Spirit did not allow
them to speak to them. And they gave each of them paper, and put them apart,
the one from the other in separate cells. And they, making with their fingers the
sign of the cross of Christ, began to write on the separate sheets; and after
they had finished, as if out of one mouth from the separate cells, they cried
out, Amen. And rising up, Karinus gave his paper to Annas, and Leucius to
Caiaphas; and saluting each other, they went out, and returned to their sepulchres.
Then Annas and Caiaphas, opening the sheet of paper, began each to read it
in secret. But all the people took it ill, and so all cried out: Read these
writings to us openly; and after they have been read through we shall keep them,
lest perchance this truth of God be turned through wilful blindness, by unclean
and deceitful men, into falsehood. At this Annas and Caiaphas fell
a-trembling, and delivered the sheet of paper to Rabbi Addas, and Rabbi Finees, and Rabbi
Egias, who had come from Galilee, and announced that Jesus had been taken up
into heaven. All the multitude of the Jews trusted to them to read this writing.
And they read the paper containing these words:--
Chap. 2 (18).--I Karinus. 0 Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the living God, permit me to speak of
Thy wonders which Thou hast done in the lower world. When, therefore, we were
kept in darkness and the shadow of death in the lower world, suddenly there
shone upon us a great light, and Hades and the gates of death trembled. And then
was heard the voice of the Son of the Father most high, as if the voice of a
great thunder; and loudly proclaiming, He thus charged them: Lift up your gates,
ye princes; lift up the everlasting gates; the King of glory, Christ the Lord,
will come up to enter in.
Then Satan, the leader of death, came up, fleeing in terror, saying to his
officers and the powers below: My officers, and all the powers below, run
together, shut your gates, put up the iron bars, and fight bravely, and resist,
lest they lay hold of us, and keep us captive in chains. Then all his impious
officers were perplexed, and began to shut the gates of death with all diligence,
and by little and little to fasten the locks and the iron bars, and to hold all
their weapons[1] grasped in their hands, and to utter howlings in a direful and
most hideous voice.
Chap. 3 (19).--Then Satan said to Hades: Make thyself ready to receive him whom I shall
bring down to thee. Thereupon Hades thus replied to Satan: That voice was from
nothing else than the cry of the Son of the Father most high, because the earth
and all the places of the world below so trembled trader it: wherefore I think
that myself and all my dungeons are now lying open. But I adjure thee, Satan,
head of all evils, [2] by thy power and my own, bring him not to me, lest, while
we wish to take him, we be taken captive by him. For if, at his voice only, all
my power has been thus destroyed, what do you think he will do when he shall
come in person?
To him Satan, the leader of death, thus replied: What art thou crying out
about? Do not be afraid, my old most wicked friend, because I have stirred up
the people of the Jews against him; I have told them to strike him with blows on
the face, and I have brought upon him betrayal by one of his disciples; and he
is a man in great fear of death, because from fear he said, My soul is
sorrowful, even unto death; and I have brought him to this, that he has just been
lifted up and hanged on the cross. Then Hades said to him: If he be the same who,
by the mere word of his command, made Lazarus fly away like an eagle from my
bosom, when he had already been dead four days, he is not a man in humanity, but
God in majesty. I entreat thee not to bring him to me. And Satan says to him:
Make thyself ready nevertheless; be not afraid; because he is already hanging on
the cross, I can do nothing else. Then Hades thus replied to Satan: If, then,
thou canst do nothing else, behold, thy destruction is at hand. I, in short,
shall remain cast down and dishonoured; thou, however, wilt be tortured under my
power.
Chap. 4 (20).--And the saints of God heard the wrangling of Satan and Hades. They, however,
though as yet not at all recognising each other, were, notwithstanding, in the
possession of their faculties. But our holy father Adam thus replied to Satan
at once: O captain of death, why dost thou fear and tremble? Behold, the Lord
is coming, who will now destroy all thy, inventions; and thou shalt be taken by
Him, and bound throughout eternity.
Then all the saints, hearing the voice of our father Adam, how boldly he
replied to Satan in all points, were strengthened in joy; and all running
together to father Adam, were crowded in one place. Then our father Adam, gazing on
all that multitude, wondered greatly whether all of them had been begotten from
him into the world. And embracing those who were standing everywhere around
him, and shedding most bitter tears, he addressed his son Seth, saying: Relate, my
son Seth, to the holy patriarchs and prophets what the guardian of paradise
said to thee, when I sent thee to bring to me of that oil of compassion, in order
to anoint my body when I was ill.
Then he answered: I, when thou sentest me before the gates of paradise,
prayed and en-treated the Lord with tears, and called upon the guardian of
paradise to give me of it therefrom. Then Michael the archangel came out, and said to
me, Seth, why then dost thou weep? Know, being informed beforehand, that thy
father Adam will not receive of this oil of compassion now, but after many
generations of time. For the most beloved Son of God will come down from heaven into
the world, and will be baptized by John in the river Jordan; and then shall
thy father Adam receive of this oil[3] of compassion, and all that believe in
him. And of those who have believed in him, their kingdom will endure for ever.
Chap. 5 (21).--Then all the saints, hearing this again, exulted in joy. And one of those
standing round, Isaias by name, cried out aloud, and thundered: Father Adam, and
all standing round, hear my declaration. When I was on earth, and by the
teaching of the Holy Spirit, in prophecy I sang of this light: The people who sat in
darkness have seen a great light; to them dwelling in the region of the shadow
of death light has arisen. At these words father Adam, and all of them, turned
and asked him: Who art thou? because what thou sayest is true. And he
subjoined, and said: My name is Isaias.
Then appeared. another near him, as if a hermit. And they asked him,
saying: Who art thou, who bearest such an appearance in thy body?[4] And he firmly
answered: I am John the Baptist, voice and prophet of the Most High. i went
before the face of the same Lord, that I might make the waste and rough places into
plain ways. I with my finger pointed out and made manifest the Lamb of the
Lord, and Son of God, to the inhabitants of Jerusalem. I baptized Him in the river
Jordan. I heard the voice of the Father from heaven thundering over Him, and
proclaiming, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. I received from
Him the answer that He would descend to the lower world.
Then father Adam, hearing this, cried with a loud voice, exclaiming:
Alleluia! which is, interpreted, The Lord is certainly coming.
Chap. 6 (22).--After that, another standing there, pre-eminent as it were, with a certain
mark of an emperor, David by name, thus cried out, and said: When I was upon
earth, I made revelations to the people of the mercy of God and His visitation,
prophesying future joys, saying through all ages, Let them make confession to the
Lord of His tender mercy and His wonderful works to the sons of men, because
He has shattered the gates of brass, and broken the bars of iron. Then the holy
patriarchs and prophets began mutually to recognise each other, and each to
quote his prophecies.
Then holy Jeremias, examining his prophecies, said to the patriarchs and
prophets: When was upon earth, I prophesied of the Son of God, that He was seen
upon earth, and dwelt with men.
Then all the saints, exulting in the light of the Lord, and in the sight
of father Adam, and in the answering of all the patriarchs and prophets, cried
out, saying: Alleluia! blessed is He who cometh in the name of the Lord; so that
at their crying out Satan trembled, and sought a way of escape. And he could
not, because Hades and his satellites kept him bound in the lower regions, and
guarded at all points. And they said to him: Why dost thou tremble? We by no
means allow thee to go forth hence. But receive this, as thou art worthy, from Him
whom thou didst daily assail; but if not, know that thou, bound by Him, shall
be in my keeping.
Chap. 7 (23).--And again there came the voice of the Son of the Father most high, as it
were the voice of a great thunder, saying: Lift up your gates, ye princes; and be
ye lifted up, ye everlasting gates, and the King of glory will come in. Then
Satan and Hades cried out, saying: Who is the king of glory? And it was answered
to them in the voice of the Lord: The Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty
in battle.
After this voice there came a man, whose appearance was that of a robber,
carrying a cross on his shoulder, crying from the outside of the door, and
saying: Open to me, that I may come in. And Satan, opening to him a little, brought
him inside into his dwelling,(1) and again shut the door after him. And all
the saints saw him most clearly, and said to him forthwith: Thy appearance is
that of a robber. Tell us what it is that thou carriest on thy back. And he
answered, and said with humility: Truly I was a robber altogether; and the Jews hung
me up on a cross, along with my Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the Father most
high. I, in fine, have come heralding(2) Him; He indeed is coming immediately
behind me.
Then holy David, inflamed with anger against Satan, cried out aloud: Open
thy gates, most vile wretch, that the King of glory may come in. In like manner
also all the saints of God rose up against Satan, and would have seized him,
and divided him among them. And again a cry was heard within: Lift up your
gates, ye princes; and be ye lifted up, ye everlasting gates; and the King of glory
shall come in. Hades and Satan, at that clear voice, again asked, saying: Who
is this king of glory? And it was said to them by that wonderful voice: The Lord
of powers, He is the King of glory.
Chap. 8 (24).--And, behold, suddenly Hades trembled, and the gates of death and the bolts
were shattered, and the iron bars were broken and fell to the ground, and
everything was laid open. And Satan remained in the midst, and stood confounded and
downcast, bound with fetters on his feet. And, behold, the Lord Jesus Christ,
coming in the brightness of light from on high, compassionate, great, and lowly,
carrying a chain in His hand, bound Satan by the neck; and again tying his
hands behind him, dashed him on his back into Tartarus, and placed His holy foot on
his throat, saying: Through all ages thou hast done many evils; thou hast not
in any wise rested. To-day I deliver thee to everlasting fire. And Hades being
suddenly summoned, He commanded him, and said: Take this most wicked and
impious one, and have him in thy keeping even to that day in which I shall command
thee. And he, as soon as he received him, was plunged under the feet of the Lord
along with him into the depth of the abyss.
Chap. 9 (25).--Then the Lord Jesus, the Saviour of all, affectionate and most mild,
saluting Adam kindly, said to him: Peace be to thee, Adam, with thy children, through
immeasurable ages of ages! Amen. Then father Adam, falling forward at the feet
of the Lord, and being raised erect, kissed His hands, and shed many tears,
saying, testifying to all: Behold. the hands which fashioned me! And he said to
the Lord: Thou hast come, O King of glory, delivering men, and bringing them into
Thy everlasting kingdom. Then also our mother Eve in like manner fell forward
at the feet of our Lord, and was raised erect, and kissed His hands, and poured
forth tears in abundance, and said, testifying to all: Behold the hands which
made me!
Then all the saints, adoring Him, cried out, saying: Blessed is He who
cometh in the name of the Lord! The Lord God hath shone upon us--amen--through all
ages. Alleluia for ever and ever! Praise, honour, power, glory! because Thou
hast come from on high to visit us. Singing Alleluia continually, and rejoicing
together concerning His glory, they ran together under the hands of the Lord.
Then the Saviour, inquiring thoroughly about all, seized Hades,(1) immediately
threw some down into Tartarus, and led some with Him to the upper world.
Chap. 10 (26).--Then all the saints of God asked the Lord to leave as a sign of victory the
sign of His holy cross in the lower world, that its most impious officers might
not retain as an offender any one whom the Lord had absolved. And so it was
done. And the Lord set His cross in the midst of Hades, which is the sign of
victory, and which will remain even to eternity.
Then we all went forth thence along with the Lord, leaving Satan and Hades
in Tartarus. And to us and many others it was commanded that we should rise in
the body, giving in the world a testimony of the resurrection of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and of those things which had been done in the lower world.
These are the things, dearest brethren, which we have seen, and which,
adjured by you, we testify, He bearing witness who died for us, and rose again;
because, as it was written, so has it been done in all points.
Chap. 11 (27).--And when the paper was finished and read through, all that heard it fell on
their faces, weeping bitterly, and cruelly beating their breasts, crying out,
and saying through all: Woe to us! Why has this happened to us wretched? Pilate
flees; Annas and Caiaphas flee; the priests and Levites flee; moreover also the
people of the Jews, weeping and saying, Woe to us wretched! we have shed
sacred blood upon the earth.
For three days, therefore, and three nights, they did not taste bread and
water at all; nor did any of them return to the synagogue. But on the third day
again the council was assembled, and the other paper of Leucius was read
through; and it was found neither more nor less, to a single letter, than that which
the writing of Karinus contained. Then the synagogue was perplexed; and they
all lamented forty days and forty nights, looking for destruction from God, and
the vengeance of God. But He, pitier affectionate and most high, did not
immediately destroy them, bountifully giving them a place of repentance. But they
were not found worthy to be turned to the Lord.
These are the testimonies of Karinus and Leucius, dearest brethren,
concerning Christ the Son of God, and His holy deeds in the lower world; to whom let
us all give praise and glory through immeasurable age of ages. Amen.