NARRATIVE OF JOSEPH OF ARIMATHAEA
THE NARRATIVE OF JOSEPH
NARRATIVE OF JOSEPH OF ARIMATHAEA, THAT BEGGED THE LORD'S BODY; IN WHICH ALSO
HE BRINGS IN THE CASES OF THE TWO ROBBERS.
CHAP. 1.--I am Joseph of Arimathaea, who begged from Pilate the body of the Lord Jesus
for burial, and who for this cause was kept close in prison by the murderous
and God-fighting Jews, who also, keeping to the law, have by Moses himself
become partakers in tribulation and having provoked their Lawgiver to anger, and not
knowing that He was God, crucified Him and made Him manifest to those that
knew God. in those days in which they condemned the Son of God to be crucified,
seven days before Christ suffered, two condemned robbers were sent from Jericho
to the procurator Pilate; and their case was as follows:--
The first, his name Gestas, put travellers to death, murdering them with
the sword, and others he exposed naked. And he hung up women by the heels, head
down, and cut off their breasts, and drank the blood of infants limbs, never
having known God, not obeying the laws, being violent from the beginning, and
doing such deeds.
And the case of the other was as follows: He was called Demas, and was by
birth a Galilaean, and kept an inn. He made attacks upon the rich, but was good
to the poor--a thief like Tobit, for he buried the bodies of the poor.(2) And
he set his hand to robbing the multitude of the Jews, and stole the law(3)
itself in Jerusalem, and stripped naked the daughter of Caiaphas, who was priestess
of the sanctuary, and took away from its place the mysterious deposit itself
placed there by Solomon. Such were his doings.
And Jesus also was taken on the third day before the passover, in the
evening. And to Caiaphas and the multitude of the Jews it was not a passover, but
it was a great mourning to them, on account of the plundering of the sanctuary
by the robber. And they summoned Judas Iscariot, and spoke to him, for he was
son of the brother(4) of Caiaphas the priest. He was not a disciple before the
face of Jesus; but all the multitude of the Jews craftily supported him, that he
might follow Jesus, not that he might be obedient to the miracles done by Him,
nor that he might confess Him, but that he might betray Him to them, wishing to
catch up some lying word of Him, giving him gifts for such brave, honest
conduct to the amount of a half shekel, of gold each day. And he did this for two
years with Jesus, as says one of His disciples called John.
And on the third day, before Jesus was laid hold of, Judas says to the
Jews: Come, let us hold a council; for perhaps it was not the robber that stole
the law, but Jesus himself, and I accuse him. And when these words had been
spoken, Nicodemus, who kept the keys of the sanctuary, came in to us, and said to
all: Do not do such a deed. For Nicodemus was true, more than all the multitude
of the Jews. And the daughter of Caiaphas, Sarah by name, cried out, and said:
He himself said before all against this holy place, I am able to destroy this
temple, and in three days to raise it. The Jews say to her: Thou hast credit with
all of us. For they regarded her as a prophetess. And assuredly, after the
council had been held, Jesus was laid hold of.
CHAP. 2.--And on the following day, the fourth day of the week, they brought Him at
the ninth hour into the hall of Caiaphas. And Annas and Caiaphas say to Him: Tell
us, why hast thou stolen our law, and renounced(5) the ordinances of Moses and
the prophets? And Jesus answered nothing. And again a second time, the
multitude also being present, they say to Him: The sanctuary which Solomon built in
forty and six years, why dost thou wish to destroy in one moment? And to these
things Jesus answered nothing. For the sanctuary of the synagogue had been
plundered by the robber.
And the evening of the fourth day being ended, all the multitude sought to
burn the daughter of Caiaphas, on account of the loss of the law; for they did
not know how they were to keep the passover. And she said to them: Wait, my
children, and let us destroy this Jesus, and the law will be found, and the holy
feast will be fully accomplished. And secretly Annas and Caiaphas gave
considerable money to Judas Iscariot, saying: Say as thou saidst to us before, I know
that the law has been stolen by Jesus, that the accusation may be turned against
him, and not against this maiden, who is free from blame. And Judas having
received this command, said to them: Let not all the multitude know that I have
been instructed by you to do this against Jesus; but release Jesus, and I
persuade the multitude that it is so. And craftily they released Jesus.
And Judas, going into the sanctuary at the dawn of the fifth day, says to
all the people: What will you give me, and I will give up to you the
overthrower[1] of the law, and the plunderer of the prophets? The Jews say to him: If
thou wilt give him up to us, we will give thee thirty pieces of gold. And the
people did not know that Judas was speaking about Jesus, for many of them confessed
that he was the Son of God. And Judas received the thirty pieces of gold.
And going out at the fourth hour, and at the fifth, he finds Jesus walking
in the street. And as evening was coming on, Judas says to the Jews: Give me
the aid of soldiers with swords and staves, and I will give him up to you. They
therefore gave him officers for the purpose of seizing Him. And as they were
going along, Judas says to them: Lay hold of the man whom I shall kiss, for he
has stolen the law and the prophets. Going up to Jesus, therefore, he kissed Him,
saying: Hail, Rabbi! it being the evening of the fifth day. And having laid
hold of Him, they gave Him up to Caiaphas and the chief priests, Judas saying:
This is he who stole the law and the prophets. And the Jews gave Jesus an unjust
trial, saying: Why hast thou done these things? And be answered nothing.
And Nicodemus and I Joseph, seeing the seat of the plagues,[2] stood off
from them, not wishing to perish along with the counsel of the ungodly.
CHAP. 3.--Having therefore done many and dreadful things against Jesus that night,
they gave Him up to Pilate the procurator at the dawn of the preparation, that he
might crucify Him; and for this purpose they all came together. After a trial,
therefore, Pilate the procurator ordered Him to be nailed to the cross, along
with the two robbers. And they were nailed up along with Jesus, Gestas on the
left. and Demas on the right.
And he that was on the left began to cry out, saying to Jesus: See how
many evil deeds I have done in the earth; and if I had known that thou wast the
king, I should have cut off thee also. And why dost thou call thyself Son of God,
and canst not help thyself in necessity? how canst thou afford it to another
one praying for help? If thou art the Christ, come down from the cross, that I
may believe in thee. But now I see thee perishing along with me, not like a man,
but like a wild beast. And many other things he began to say against Jesus,
blaspheming and gnashing his teeth upon Him. For the robber was taken alive in
the snare of the devil.[3]
But the robber on the right hand, whose name was Demas, seeing the Godlike
grace of Jesus, thus cried out: I know Thee, Jesus Christ, that Thou art the
Son of God. I see Thee, Christ, adored by myriads of myriads of angels. Pardon
me my sins which I have done. Do not in my trial make the stars come against me,
or the moon, when Thou shall judge all the world; because in the night I have
accomplished my wicked purposes. Do not urge the sun, which is now darkened on
account of Thee, to tell the evils of my heart, for no gift can I give Thee for
the remission of my sins. Already death is coming upon me because of my sins;
but Thine is the propitiation. Deliver me, O Lord of all, from Thy fearful
judgment. Do not give the enemy power to swallow me up, and to become heir of my
soul, as of that of him who is hanging on the left; for I see how the devil
joyfully takes his soul, and his body disappears. Do not even order me to go away
into the portion of the Jews; for I see Moses and the patriarchs in great
weeping, and the devil rejoicing over them. Before, then, O Lord, my spirit departs,
order my sins to be washed away, and remember me the sinner in Thy kingdom, when
upon the great most lofty throne[4] thou shalt judge the twelve tribes of
Israel.[5] For Thou hast prepared great punishment for Thy world on account of
Thyself.
And the robber having thus spoken, Jesus says to him: Amen, amen; I say to
thee, Demas, that to-day thou shalt be with me in paradise.[6] And the sons of
the kingdom, the children of Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and Moses, shall
be cast out into outer darkness; there shall be weeping and gnashing of
teeth.[7] And thou alone shalt dwell in paradise until my second appearing, when I am
to judge those who do not confess my name. And He said to the robber: Go away,
and tell the cherubim and the powers, that turn the flaming sword, that guard
paradise from the time that Adam, the first created, was in paradise, and sinned,
and kept not my commandments, and I cast him out thence. And none of the first
shall see paradise until I am to come the second time to judge living and
dead. And He wrote thus: Jesus Christ the Son of God, who have come down from the
heights of the heavens, who have come forth out of the bosom of the invisible
Father without being separated from Him,[1] and who have come down into the world
to be made flesh, and to be nailed to a cross, in order that I might save
Adam, whom I fashioned,--to my archangelic powers, the gatekeepers of paradise, to
the officers of my Father: I will and order that he who has been crucified
along with me should go in, should receive remission of sins through me; and that
he, having put on an incorruptible body, should go in to paradise, and dwell
where no one has ever been able to dwell.
And, behold, after He had said this, Jesus gave up the ghost, on the day
of the preparation, at the ninth hour. And there was darkness over all the
earth; and from a great earthquake that happened, the sanctuary fell down, and the
wing of the temple.
CHAP. 4.--And I Joseph begged the body of Jesus, and put it in a new tomb, where no
one had been put. And of the robber on the right the body was not found; but of
him on the left, as the form of a dragon, so was his body.
And after I had begged the body of Jesus to bury, the Jews, carried away
by hatred and rage, shut me up in prison, where evil-doers were kept under
restraint. And this happened to me on the evening of the Sabbath, whereby our nation
transgressed the law. And, behold, that same nation of ours endured fearful
tribulations on the Sabbath.
And now, on the evening of the first of the week, at the fifth hour of the
night, Jesus comes to me in the prison, along with the robber who had been
crucified with Him on the right, whom He sent into paradise. And there was a great
light in the building. And the house was hung up by the four corners, and the
place was opened, and I came out. Then I first recognised Jesus, and again the
robber, bringing a letter to Jesus. And as we were going into Galilee, there
shone a great light, which the creation did not produce. And there was also with
the robber a great fragrance out of paradise.
And Jesus, having sat down in a certain place, thus read: We, the cherubim
and the six-winged, who have been ordered by Thy Godhead to watch the garden
of paradise, make the following statement through the robber who was crucified
along with Thee, by Thy arrangement: When we saw the print of the nails of the
robber crucified along with Thee, and the shining light of the letter of Thy
Godhead,[2] the fire indeed was extinguished, not being able to bear the splendour
of the print;[3] and we crouched down, being in great fear. For we heard that
the Maker of heaven and earth, and of the whole creation, had come down from on
high to dwell in the lower parts of the earth, on account of Adam, the first
created. And when we beheld the undefiled cross shining like lightning from the
robber, gleaming with sevenfold the light of the sun, trembling fell upon us.
We felt a violent shaking of the world below;[4] and with a loud voice, the
ministers of Hades said, along with us: Holy, holy, holy is He who in the beginning
was in the highest. And the powers sent up a cry: O Lord, Thou hast been made
manifest in heaven and in earth, bringing joy to the world; and, a greater gift
than this, Thou hast freed Thine own image from death by the invisible purpose
of the ages.
CHAP. 5.--After I had beheld these things, as I was going into Galilee with Jesus and
the robber, Jesus was transfigured, and was not as formerly, before He was
crucified, but was altogether light; and angels always ministered to Him, and Jesus
spoke with them. And I remained with Him three days. And no one of His
disciples was with Him, except the robber alone.
And in the middle of the feast of unleavened bread, His disciple John
comes, and we no longer beheld the robber as to what took place. And John asked
Jesus: Who is this, that Thou hast not made me to be seen by him? But Jesus
answered him nothing. And falling down before Him, he said: Lord, I know that Thou
hast loved me from the beginning, and why dost Thou not reveal to me that man?
Jesus says to him: Why dost thou seek what is hidden? Art thou still without
understanding? Dost thou not perceive the fragrance of paradise filling the place?
Dost thou not know who it is? The robber on the cross has become heir of
paradise. Amen, amen; I say to thee, that it shall belong to him alone until that the
great day shall come. And John said: Make me worthy to behold him.
And while John was yet speaking, the robber suddenly appeared; and John,
struck with astonishment, fell to the earth. And the robber was not in his first
form, as before John came; but he was like a king in great power, having on
him the cross. And the voice of a great multitude was sent forth: Thou hast come
to the place prepared for thee in paradise. We have been commanded by Him that
has sent thee, to serve thee until the great day. And after this voice, both
the robber and I Joseph vanished, and I was found in my own house; and I no
longer saw Jesus.
And I, having seen these things, have written them down, in order that all
may believe in the crucified Jesus Christ our Lord, and may no longer obey the
law of Moses, but may believe in the signs and wonders that have happened
through Him, and in order that we who have believed may inherit eternal life, and
be found in the kingdom of the heavens. For to Him are due glory, strength,
praise, and majesty for ever and ever. Amen.