THE AVENGING OF THE SAVIOUR
THIS version of the legend of Veronica is written in very barbarous Latin,
probably of the seventh or eighth century. An Anglo-Saxon version, which
Tischendorf concludes to be derived from the Latin, was edited and translated for
the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, by C. W. Goodwin, in 1851. The Anglo-Saxon
text is from a MS. in the Cambridge Library, one of a number presented to the
Cathedral of Exeter by Bishop Leofric in the beginning of the eleventh century.
The reader will observe that there are in this document two distinct
legends, somewhat clumsily joined together--that of Nathan's embassy, and that of
Veronica.
HERE BEGINNETH THE AVENGING OF THE SAVIOUR.
IN the days of the Emperor Tiberius Caesar, when Herod was tetrarch,
Christ was delivered under Pontius Pilate by the Jews, and revealed by Tiberius.
In those days Titus[1] was a prince under Tiberius in the region of
Equitania, in a city of Libia which is called Burgidalla. And Titus had a sore in his
right nostril, on account of a cancer, and he bad his face torn even to the
eye. There went forth a certain man from Judaea, by name Nathan the son of Nahum;
for he was an Ishmaelite who went from land to land, and from sea to sea, and
in all the ends of the earth. Now Nathan was sent from Judaea to the Emperor
Tiberius, to carry their treaty to the city of Rome. And Tiberius was ill, and
full of ulcers and fevers, and had nine kinds of leprosy. And Nathan wished to go
to the city of Rome. But the north wind blew and hindered his sailing, and
carried him down to the harbour of a city of Libia. Now Titus, seeing the ship
coming, knew that it was from Judaea; and they all wondered, and said that they
had never seen any vessel so coming from that quarter. And Titus ordered the
captain to come to him, and asked him who he was. And he said: I am Nathan the son
of Nahum, of the race of the Ishmaelites, and I am a subject of Pontius Pilate
in Judaea. And I have been sent to go to Tiberius the Roman emperor, to carry a
treaty from Judaea. And a strong wind came down upon the sea, and has brought
me to a country that I do not know.
And Titus says: If thou couldst at any time find anything either of
cosmetics or herbs which could cure the wound that I have in my face, as thou seest,
so that I should become whole, and regain my former health, I should bestow
upon thee many good things. And Nathan said to him: I do not know, nor have I ever
known, of such things as thou speakest to me about. But for all that, if thou
hadst been some time ago in Jerusalem, there thou wouldst have found a choice
prophet, whose name was Emanuel, for He will save His people from their sins.
And He, as His first miracle in Cana of Galilee, made wine from water; and by His
word He cleansed lepers, He enlightened the eyes of one born blind, He healed
paralytics, He made demons flee, He raised up three dead; a woman caught in
adultery, and condemned by the Jews to be stoned, He set free; and another woman,
mined Veronica, who suffered twelve years from an issue of blood, and came up
to Him behind, and touched the fringe of His garment, He healed; and with five
loaves and two fishes He satisfied five thousand men, to say nothing of little
ones and women, and there remained of the fragments twelve baskets. All these
things, and many others, were accomplished before His passion. After His
resurrection we saw Him in the flesh as He had been before. And Titus said to Him: How
did he rise again from the dead, seeing that he was dead? And Nathan answered
and said: He was manifestly dead, and hung up on the cross, and again taken down
from the cross, and for three days He lay in the tomb: thereafter He rose
again from the dead, and went down to Hades, and freed the patriarchs and the
prophets, and the whole human race; thereafter He appeared to His disciples, and ate
with them; thereafter they saw Him going up into heaven. And so it is the
truth, all this that I tell you. For I saw it with my own eyes, and all the house
of Israel. And Titus said in his own words: Woe to thee, O Emperor Tiberius,
full of ulcers, and enveloped in leprosy, because such a scandal has been
committed in thy kingdom; because thou hast made such laws[1] in Judaea, in the land of
the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ, and they have seized the King, and put to
death the Ruler of the peoples; and they have not made Him come to us to cure
thee of thy leprosy, and cleanse me from mine infirmity: on which account, if
they had been before my face, with my own hands I should have slain the carcases
of those Jews, and hung them up on the cruel tree, because they have destroyed
my Lord, and mine eyes have not been worthy to see His face. And when he had
thus spoken, immediately the wound fell from the face of Titus, and his flesh and
his face were restored to health. And all the sick who were in the same place
were made whole in that hour. And Titus cried out, and all the rest with him,
in a loud voice, saying: My King and my God, because I have never seen Thee, and
Thou hast made me whole, bid me go with the ship over the waters to the land
of Thy birth, to take vengeance on Thine enemies; and help me, O Lord, that I
may be able to destroy them, and avenge Thy death: do Thou, Lord, deliver them
into my hand. And having thus spoken, he ordered that he should be baptized. And
he called Nathan to him, and said to him: How hast thou seen those baptized who
believe in Christ? Come to me, and baptize me in the name of the Father, and
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.[2] For I also firmly believe in the
Lord Jesus Christ with all my heart, and with all my soul; because nowhere in the
whole world is there another who has created me, and made me whole from my
wounds.
And having thus spoken, he sent messengers to Vespasian to come with all
haste with his bravest men, so prepared as if for war.
Then Vespasian brought with him five thousand armed men, and they went to
meet Titus. And when they had come to the city of Libia, he said to Titus: Why
is it that thou hast made me come hither? And he said: Know that Jesus has come
into this world, and has been born in Judaea, in a place which is called
Bethlehem, and has been given up by the Jews, and scourged, and crucified on Mount
Calvary,[3] and has risen again from the dead on the third day. And His
disciples have seen Him in the same flesh in which he was born, and He has shown
Himself to His disciples, and they have believed in Him. And we indeed wish to become
His disciples. Now, let us go and destroy His enemies from the earth, that
they may now know that there is none like the Lord our God on the face of the
earth.
With this design, then, they went forth from the city of Libia which is
called Burgidalla,[4] and went on board a ship, and proceeded to Jerusalem, and
surrounded the kingdom of the Jews, and began to send them to destruction. And
when the kings of the Jews heard of their doings, and the wasting of their land,
fear came upon them, and they were in great perplexity. Then Archelaus[5] was
perplexed in his words, and said to his son: My son, take my kingdom and judge
it; and take counsel with the other kings who are in the land of Judah, that
you may be able to escape from our enemies. And having thus said, he unsheathed
his sword and leant upon it; and turned his sword, which was very sharp, and
thrust it into his breast, and died. And his son allied himself with the other
kings who were under him, and they took counsel among themselves, and went into
Jerusalem with their chief men who were in their counsel, and stood in the same
place seven years. And Titus and Vespasian took counsel to surround their city.
And they did so. And the seven years being fulfilled, there was a very sore
famine, and for want of bread they began to eat earth. Then all the soldiers who
were of the four kings took counsel among themselves, and said: Now we are sure
to die: what will God do to us? or of what good is our life to us, because the
Romans have come to take our place and nation? It is better for us to kill each
other, than that the Romans should say that they have slain us, and gained the
victory over us. And they drew their swords and smote themselves, and died, to
the number of twelve thousand men of them. Then there was a great stench in
that city from the corpses of those dead men. And their kings feared with a very
great fear even unto death; and they could not bear the stench of them, nor
bury them, nor throw them forth out of the city. And they said to each other: What
shall we do? We indeed gave up Christ to death, and now we given up to death
ourselves. Let us bow our heads, and give up the keys of the city to the Romans,
because God has already given us up to death. And immediately they went up
upon the walls of the city, and all cried out with a loud voice, saying: Titus and
Vespasian, take the keys of the city, which have been given to you by Messiah,
who is called Christ.
Then they gave themselves up into the hands of Titus and Vespasian, and
said: Judge us, seeing that we ought to die, because we judged Christ; and he was
given up without cause. Titus and Vespasian seized them, and some they stoned,
and some they hanged on a tree, feet up and head down, and struck them through
with lances; and others they gave up to be sold, and others they divided among
themselves, and made four parts of them, just as they had done of the garments
of the Lord. And they said: They sold Christ for thirty pieces of silver, and
we shall sell thirty of them for one denarius. And so they did. And having done
so, they seized all the lands of Judaea and Jerusalem.
Then they made a search about the face or portrait[1] of Jesus, how they
might find it.[2] And they found a woman named Veronica who had it. Then they
seized Pilate, and sent him to prison, to be guarded by four quaternions of
soldiers at the door of the prison. Then they forthwith sent their messengers to
Tiberius, the emperor of the city of Rome, that he should send Velosianus to them.
And he said to him: Take all that is necessary for thee in the sea, and go
down into Judaea, and seek out one of the disciples of him who is called Christ
and Lord, that he may come to me, and in the name of his God cure me of the
leprosy and the infirmities by which I am daily exceedingly burdened, and of my
wounds, because I am ill at ease. And send upon the kings of the Jews, who are
subject to my authority, thy forces and terrible engines, because they have put to
death Jesus Christ our Lord, and condemn them to death. And if thou shalt there
find a man as may be able to free me from this infirmity of mine, I will
believe in Christ the Son of God, and will baptize myself in his name. And
Velosianus said: My lord emperor, if I find such a man as may be able to help and free
us, what reward shall I promise him? Tiberius said to him: The half of my
kingdom, without fail, to be in his hand.
Then Velosianus immediately went forth, and went on board the ship, and
hoisted the sail in the vessel, and went on sailing through the sea. And he
sailed a year and seven days, after which he arrived at Jerusalem. And immediately
he ordered some of the Jews to come to his power, and began carefully to ask
what had been the acts of Christ. Then Joseph, of the city of Arimathaea, and
Nicodemus, came at the same time. And Nicodemus said: I saw Him, and I know indeed
that He is the Saviour of the world. And Joseph said to him: And I took Him
down from the cross, and laid Him in a new tomb, which had been cut out of the
rock. And the Jews kept me shut up on the day of the preparation, at evening; and
while I was standing in prayer on the Sabbath-day, the house was hung up by the
four corners, and I saw the Lord Jesus Christ like a gleam of light, and for
fear I fell to the ground. And He said to me, Look upon me, for I am Jesus,
whose body thou buriedst in thy tomb. And I said to Him, Show me the sepulchre
where I laid Thee. And Jesus, holding my hand in His right hand, led me to the
place where I buried Him.[3]
And there came also the woman named Veronica, and said to him: And I
touched in the crowd the fringe of His garment, because for twelve years I had
suffered from an issue of blood; and He immediately healed me. Then Velosianus said
to Pilate: Thou, Pilate, impious and cruel, why hast thou slain the Son of God?
And Pilate answered: His own nation, and the chief priests Annas and Caiaphas,
gave him to me. Volosianus said: Impious and cruel, thou art worthy of death
and cruel punishment. And he sent him back to prison. And Velosianus at last
sought for the face or the countenance of the Lord. And all who were in that same
place said: It is the woman called Veronica who has the portrait of the Lord in
her house. And immediately he ordered her to be brought before his power. And
he said to her: Hast thou the portrait of the Lord in thy house? But she said,
No. Then Velosianus ordered her to be put to the torture, until she should give
up the portrait of the Lord. And she was forced to say: I have it in clean
linen, my lord, and I daily adore it. Velosianus said: Show it to me. Then she
showed the portrait of the Lord. When Velosianus saw it, he prostrated himself on
the ground; and with a ready heart and true faith he took hold of it, and
wrapped it in cloth of gold, and placed it in a casket, and sealed it with his ring.
And he swore with an oath, and said: As the Lord God liveth, and by the health
of Caesar, no man shall any more see it upon the face of the earth, until I
see the face of my lord Tiberius. And when he had thus spoken, the princes, who
were the chief men of Judaea, seized Pilate to take him to a seaport. And he
took the portrait of the Lord, with all His disciples, and all in his pay, and
they went on board the ship the same day. Then the woman Veronica, for the love of
Christ, left all that she possessed, and followed Velosianus. And Velosianus
said to her: What dost thou wish, woman, or what dost thou seek? And she
answered: I am seeking the portrait of our Lord Jesus Christ, who enlightened me, not
for my own merits, but through His own holy affection.(1) Give back to me the
portrait of my Lord Jesus Christ; for because of this I die with a righteous
longing. But if thou do not give it back to me, I will not leave it until I see
where thou wilt put it, because I, most miserable woman that I am, will serve Him
all the days of my life; because I believe that He, my Redeemer, liveth for
everlasting.
Then Velosianus ordered the woman Veronica to be taken down with him into
the ship And the sails being hoisted. they began to go in the vessel in the
name of the Lord, and they sailed through the sea. But Titus, along with
Vespasian, went up into Judaea, avenging all nations upon their land.(2) At the end of a
year Velosianus came to the city of Rome, brought his vessel into the river
which is called Tiberis, or Tiber, and entered the city which is called Rome. And
he sent his messenger to his lord Tiberius the emperor in the Lateran about
his prosperous arrival.
Then Tiberius the emperor, when he heard the message of Velosianus,
rejoiced greatly, and ordered him to come before his face. And when he had come, he
called him, saying: Velosianus, how hast thou come, and what hast thou seen in
the region of Judaea of Christ the Lord and his disciples? Tell me, I beseech
thee, that he is going to cure me of mine infirmity, that I may be at once
cleansed from that leprosy which I have over my body, and I give up my whole kingdom
into thy power and his.
And Velosianus said: My lord emperor, I found thy servants Titus and
Vespasian in Judaea fearing the Lord, and they were cleansed from all their ulcers
and sufferings. And I found that all the kings and rulers of Judaea have been
hanged by Titus; Annas and Caiaphas have been stoned, Archelaus has killed
himself with his own lance; and I have sent Pilate to Damascus in bonds, and kept him
in prison under safe keeping. But I have also found out about Jesus, whom the
Jews most wickedly attacked with swords, and staves, and weapons; and they
crucified him who ought to have freed and enlightened us, and to have come to us,
and they hanged him on a tree. And Joseph came from Arimathaea, and Nicodemus
with him, bringing a mixture of myrrh and aloes, about a hundred pounds, to
anoint the body of Jesus; and they took him down from the cross, and laid him in a
new tomb. And on the third day he most assuredly rose again froth the dead, and
showed himself to his disciples in the same flesh in which he had been born. At
length, after forty days, they saw him going up into heaven. Many, indeed, and
other miracles did Jesus before his passion and after. First, of water he made
wine; he raised the dead, he cleansed lepers, he enlightened the blind, he
cured paralytics, he put demons to flight; he made the deaf hear, the dumb speak;
Lazarus, when four days dead, he raised from the tomb; the woman Veronica, who
suffered from an issue of blood twelve years, and touched the fringe of his
garment, he made whole. Then it pleased the Lord in the heavens, that the Son of
God, who, sent into this world as the first-created, had died upon earth, should
send his angel; and he commanded Titus and Vespasian, whom I knew in that
place where thy throne is. And it pleased God Almighty that they went into Judaea
and Jerusalem, and seized thy subjects, and put them under that sentence, as it
were, in the same manner as they did when thy subjects seized Jesus and bound
him. And Vespasian afterwards said: What shall we do about those who shall
remain? Titus answered: They hanged our Lord on a green tree, and struck him with a
lance; now let us hang them on a dry tree, and pierce their bodies through and
through with the lance. And they did so. And Vespasian said: What about those
who are left? Titus answered: They seized the tunic of our Lord Jesus Christ,
and of it made four parts; now let us seize them, and divide them into four
parts,--to thee one, to me one, to thy men another, and to my servants the fourth
part. And they did so. And Vespasian said: But what shall we do about those who
are left? Titus answered him: The Jews sold our Lord for thirty pieces of
silver: now let us sell thirty of them for one piece of silver. And they did so. And
they seized Pilate, and gave him up to me, and I put him in prison, to be
guarded by four quaternions of soldiers in Damascus. Then they made a search with
great diligence to seek the portrait of the Lord; and they found a woman named
Veronica who had the portrait of the Lord. Then the Emperor Tiberius said to
Velosianus: How hast thou it? And he answered: I have it in clean cloth of gold,
rolled up in a shawl. And the Emperor Tiberius said: Bring it to me, and spread
it before my face, that I, falling to the ground and bending my knees, may adore
it on the ground. Then Velosianus spread out his shawl with the cloth of gold
on which the portrait of the Lord had been imprinted; and the Emperor Tiberius
saw it. And he immediately adored the image of the Lord with a pure heart, and
his flesh was cleansed as the flesh of a little child. And all the blind, the
lepers, the lame, the dumb, the deaf, and those possessed by various diseases,
who were there present, were healed, and cured, and cleansed. And the Emperor
Tiberius bowed his head and bent his knees, considering that saying: Blessed is
the womb which bore Thee, and the breasts which Thou hast sucked; and he groaned
to the Lord, saying with tears: God of heaven and earth, do not permit me to
sin, but confirm my soul and my body, and place me in Thy kingdom, because in
Thy name do I trust always: free me from all evils, as Thou didst free the three
children from the furnace of blazing fire.
Then said the Emperor Tiberius to Velosianus: Velosianus, hast thou seen
any of those men who saw Christ? Velosianus answered: I have. He said: Didst
thou ask how they baptize those who believed in Christ? Velosianus said: Here, my
Lord, we have one of the disciples of Christ himself. Then he ordered Nathan to
be summoned to come to him. Nathan therefore came and baptized him in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. Immediately the
Emperor Tiberius, made whole from all his diseases, ascended upon his throne, and
said: Blessed art Thou, O Lord God Almighty, and worthy to be praised, who
hast freed me from the snare of death, and cleansed me from all mine iniquities;
because I have greatly sinned before Thee, O Lord my God, and I am not worthy to
see Thy face. And then the Emperor Tiberius was instructed in all the articles
of the faith, fully, and with strong faith.
May that same God Almighty, who is King of kings and Lord of lords,
Himself shield us in His faith, and defend us, and deliver us from all danger and
evil, and deign to bring us to life everlasting, when this life, which is
temporary, shall fail; who is blessed for ever and ever. Amen.