ACTS OF PAUL AND THECLA
As Paul was going up to Iconium after the flight from Antioch, his
fellow-travellers were Demas and Ermogenes, full of hypocrisy; and they were
importunate with Paul,(1) as if they loved him. But Paul, looking only to the goodness
of Christ, did them no harm, but loved them exceedingly, so that he made the
oracles of the Lord sweet to them in the teaching both of the birth and the
resurrection of the Beloved; and he gave them an account, word for word, of the great
things of Christ, how He(2) had been revealed to him.
And a certain man, by name Onesiphorus, hearing that Paul had come to
Iconium, went out to meet him with his children Silas and Zeno, and his wife
Lectra, in order that he might entertain him: for Titus had informed him what Paul
was like in appearance: for he had not seen him in the flesh, but only in the
spirit. And he went along the road to Lystra, and stood waiting for him, and kept
looking at the passers by according to the description of Titus. And he saw
Paul coming, a man small in size, bald-headed, bandy-legged, well-built,(3) with
eyebrows meeting, rather long-nosed, full of grace. For sometimes he seemed like
a man, and sometimes he had the countenance of an angel. And Paul, seeing
Onesiphorus, smiled; and Onesiphorus said: Hail, O servant of the blessed God! And
he said: Grace be with thee and thy house. And Demas and Ermogenes were
jealous, and showed greater hypocrisy; so that Demas said: Are not we of the blessed
God, that thou hast not thus saluted us? And Onesiphorus said: I do not see in
you the fruit of righteousness; but if such you be, come you also into my house
and rest yourselves.
And Paul having gone into the house of Onesiphorus, there was great joy,
and bending of knees, and breaking of bread, and the word of God about
self-control and the resurrection; Paul saying: Blessed are the pure in heart, for they
shall see God:(4) blessed are they that have kept the flesh chaste, for they
shall become a temple of God:(5) blessed are they that control themselves, for
God shall speak with them: blessed are they that have kept aloof from this world,
for they shall be called upright:(6) blessed are they that have wives as not
having them, for they shall receive God for their portion:(7) blessed are they
that have the fear of God, for they shall become angels of God:(8) blessed are
they that have kept the baptism, for they shall rest beside the Father and the
Son: blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy,(9) and shall not see
the bitter day of judgment: blessed are the bodies of the virgins, for they
shall be well pleasing to God, and shall not lose the reward of their chastity;
for the word of the Father shall become to them a work of salvation against the
day of His Son, and they shall have rest for ever and ever.(10)
And while Paul was thus speaking in the midst of the church in the house
of Onesiphorus, a certain virgin Thecla, the daughter of Theocleia, betrothed to
a man named Thamyris, sitting at the window close by, listened night and day
to the discourse of virginity and prayer, and did not look away from the window,
but paid earnest heed to the faith, rejoicing exceedingly. And when she still
saw many women going in beside Paul, she also had an eager desire to be deemed
worthy to stand in the presence of Paul, and to hear the word of Christ; for
never had she seen his figure, but heard his word only.
And as she did not stand away from the window, her mother sends to
Thamyris; and he comes gladly, as if already receiving her in marriage. And Theocleia
said: I have a strange story to tell thee, Thamyris; for assuredly for three
days and three nights Thecla does not rise from the window, neither to eat nor to
drink; but looking earnestly as if upon some pleasant sight, she is so devoted
to a foreigner teaching deceitful and artful discourses, that I wonder how a
virgin of such modesty is so painfully put about. Thamyris, this man will
overturn the city of the Iconians, and thy Thecla too besides; for all the women and
the young men go in beside him, being taught to fear God and to live in
chastity. Moreover also my daughter, tied to the window like a spider, lays hold of
what is said by Paul with a strange eagerness and awful emotion; for the virgin
looks eagerly at what is said by him, and has been captivated. But do thou go
near and speak to her, for she has been betrothed to thee.
And Thamyris going near, and kissing her, but at the same time also being
afraid of her overpowering emotion, said: Thecla, my betrothed, why dost thou
sit thus? and what sort of feeling holds thee overpowered? Turn round to thy
Thamyris, and be ashamed. Moreover also her mother said the same things: Why dost
thou sit thus looking down, my child, and answering nothing, but like a mad
woman? And they wept fearfully, Thamyris indeed for the loss of a wife, and
Theocleia of a child, and the maidservants of a mistress: there was accordingly much
confusion in the house of mourning.(1) And while these things were thus going
on, Thecla did not turn round, but kept attending earnestly to the word of Paul.
And Thamyris starting up, went forth into the street, and kept watching
those going in to him and coming out. And be saw two men bitterly contending with
each other; and he said: Men, tell me who this is among you, leading astray
the souls of young men, and deceiving virgins, so that they do not marry, but
remain as they are. I promise, therefore, to give you money enough if you tell me
about him; for I am the first man(2) of the city. And Demas and Ermogenes said
to him: Who this is, indeed, we do not know; but he deprives young men of
wives, and maidens of husbands, saying, There is for you a resurrection in no other
way, unless you remain chaste, and pullute not the flesh, but keep it chaste.
And Thamyris said to them: Come into my house, and rest yourselves. And they
went to a sumptuous dinner, and much wine, and great wealth, and a splendid table;
and Thamyris made them drink, from his love to Thecla, and his wish to get her
as his wife. And Thamyris said during the dinner: Ye men, what is his
teaching, tell me, that I also may know; for I am no little distressed about Thecla,
because she thus loves the stranger, and I am prevented from marrying.
Demas and Ermogenes said: Bring him before the governor Castelios on the
charge of persuading the multitudes to embrace the new teaching of the
Christians, and he will speedily destroy him, and thou shalt have Thecla as thy wife.
And we shall teach thee that the resurrection of which this man speaks has taken
place, because it has already taken place in the children which we have;(3)
and we rose again when we came to the knowledge of the true God.
And Thamyris, hearing these things, being filled with anger and rage,
rising up early, went to the house of Onesiphorus with archons and public officers,
and a great crowd with batons, saying: Thou hast corrupted the city of the
Iconians, and her that was betrothed to me, so that she will pot have me: let us
go to the governor Castelios. And all the multitude said: Away with the
magician; for he has corrupted all our wives, and the multitudes have been persuaded to
change their opinions.
And Thamyris, standing before the tribunal, said with a great shout: O
proconsul, this man, who he is we know not, who makes virgins averse to marriage;
let him say before thee on what(4) account he teaches these things. And Demas
and Ermogenes said to Thamyris: Say that he is a Christian, and thus thou wilt
do away with him. But the proconsul stayed his intention, and called Paul,
saying: Who art thou, and what dost thou teach? for they bring no shall charges
against thee. And Paul lifted up his voice, saying: Since I am this day examined as
to what I teach, listen, O proconsul: A living God, a God of retributions, a
jealous God, a God in need of nothing, consulting for the salvation of men, has
sent me that I may reclaim them from corruption and uncleanness, and from all
pleasure, and from death, that they may not sin. Wherefore God sent His own Son,
whom I preach, and in whom I teach men to rest their hope, who alone has had
compassion upon a world led astray, that they may be no lover trader judgment, O
proconsul, but may, have faith, and the fear of God, and the knowledge of
holiness, and the love of truth. If, therefore, I teach what has been revealed to
me by God, wherein do I do wrong? And the proconsul having heard, ordered Paul
to be bound, and sent to prison, until, said he, I, being at leisure, shall hear
him more attentively.
And Thecla by night having taken off her bracelets, gave them to the
gatekeeper; and the door having been opened to her, she went into the prison; and
having given the jailor a silver mirror, she went in beside Paul, and, sitting at
his feet, she heard the great things of God. And Paul was afraid of nothing,
but ordered his life in the confidence of God. And her faith also was increased,
and she kissed his bonds.
And when Thecla was sought for by her friends, and Thamyris, as if she had
been lost, was running up and down the streets, one of the gatekeeper's
fellow-slaves informed him that she had gone out by night. And having gone out, they
examined the gatekeeper; and he said to them: She has gone to the foreigner
into the prison. And having gone, they found her, as it were, enchained by
affection. And having gone forth thence, they drew the multitudes together, and
informed the governor of the circumstance. And he ordered Paul to be brought to the
tribunal; but Thecla was wallowing on the ground(1) in the place where he sat
and taught her in the prison; and he ordered her too to be brought to the
tribunal. And she came, exulting with joy. And the crowd, when Paul had been brought,
vehemently cried out: He is a magician! away with him! But the proconsul gladly
heard Paul upon the holy works of Christ. And having called a council, he
summoned Thecla, and said to her: Why dost thou not obey Thamyris, according to the
law of the Iconians? But she stood looking earnestly at Paul. And when she
gave no answer, her mother cried out, saying: Burn the wicked wretch; burn in the
midst of the theatre her that will not marry, in order that all the women that
have been taught by this man may be afraid.
And the governor was greatly moved; and having scourged Paul, he cast him
out of the city, and condemned Thecla to be burned. And immediately the
governor went away to the theatre, and all the crowd went forth to the spectacle of
Thecla. But as a lamb in the wilderness looks round for the shepherd, so she kept
searching for Paul. And having looked upon the crowd, she saw the Lord sitting
in the likeness of Paul, and said: As I am unable to endure my lot, Paul has
come to see me. And she gazed upon him with great earnestness, and he went up
into heaven. But the maid-servants(2) and virgins brought the faggots, in order
that Thecla might be burned. And when she came in naked, the governor wept, and
wondered at the power(3) that was in her. And the public executioners arranged
the faggots for her to go up on the pile. And she, having made the sign of the
cross, went up on the faggots; and they lighted them. And though a great fire
was blazing, it did not touch her; for God, having compassion upon her, made an
underground rumbling, and a cloud overshadowed them from above, full of water
and hail; and all that was in the cavity of it was poured out, so that many were
in danger of death. And the fire was put out, and Thecla saved.
And Paul was fasting with Onesiphorus and his wife, and his children, in a
new tomb, as they were going from Iconium to Daphne. And when many clays were
past, the fasting children said to Paul: We are hungry, and we cannot buy
loaves; for Onesiphorus had left the things of the world, and followed Paul, with
all his house. And Paul, having taken off his cloak, said: Go, my child, buy more
loaves, and bring them. And when the child was buying, he saw Thecla their
neighbour, and was astonished, and said: Thecla, whither art thou going? And she
said: I have been saved from the fire, and am following Paul. And the boy said:
Come, I shall take thee to him; for he is distressed about thee, and is praying
six days. And she stood beside the tomb where Paul was with bended knees, and
praying, and saying: O Saviour Christ, let not the fire touch Thecla, but stand
by her, for she is Thine. And she, standing behind him, cried out: O Father,
who hast made the heaven and the earth, the Father of Thy holy Son, I bless Thee
that Thou hast saved me that I may see Paul. And Paul, rising up, saw her, and
said: O God, that knowest the heart, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, I
bless Thee that Thou, having heard me, hast done quickly what I wished.
And they had five loaves, and herbs, and water; and they rejoiced in the
holy works of Christ. And Thecla said to Paul: I shall cut my hair, and follow
thee whithersoever thou mayst go. And he said: It is a shameless age, and thou
art beautiful. I am afraid lest another temptation come upon thee worse than the
first, and that thou withstand it not, but be cowardly. And Thecla said: Only
give me the seal(4) in Christ, and temptation shall not touch me. And Paul
said: Thecla, wait with patience, and thou shalt receive the water.
And Paul sent away Onesiphorus and all his house to Iconium; and thus,
having taken Thecla, he went into Antioch. And as they were going in, a certain
Syriarch, Alexander by name, seeing Thecla, became enamoured of her, and tried to
gain over Paul by gifts and presents. But Paul said: I know not the woman whom
thou speakest of, nor is she mine. But he, being of great power, himself
embraced her in the street. But she would not endure it, but looked about for Paul.
And she cried out bitterly, saying: Do not force the stranger; do not force the
servant of God. I am one of the chief persons of the Iconians; and because I
would not have Thamyris, I have been cast out of the city. And taking hold of
Alexander, she tore his cloak, and pulled off his crown, and made him a
laughing-stock. And he, at the same time loving her, and at the same time ashamed of
what had happened, led her before the governor; and when she had confessed that
she had done these things, he condemned her to the wild beasts. And the women
were struck with astonishment, and cried out beside the tribunal: Evil judgment!
impious judgment! And she asked the governor, that, said she, I may remain pure
until I shall fight with the wild beasts. And a certain Tryphaena,(1) whose
daughter was dead, took her into keeping, and had her for a consolation.
And when the beasts were exhibited, they bound her to a fierce lioness;
and Tryphaena accompanied her. But the lioness, with Thecla sitting upon her,
licked her feet; and all the multitude was astonished. And the charge on her
inscription was: Sacrilegious. And the women cried out from above: An impious
sentence has been passed in this city! And after the exhibition, Tryphaena again
receives her. For her daughter Falconilla had died, and said to her in a dream:
Mother, thou shaft have this stranger Thecla in my place, in order that she may
pray concerning me, and that I may be transferred to the place of the just.
And when, after the exhibition, Tryphaena received her, at the same time
indeed she grieved that she had to fight with the wild beasts on the day
following; and at the same time, loving her as much as her daughter Falconilla, she
said: My, second child Thecla, come and pray for my child, that she may live for
ever; for this I saw in my sleep. And she, nothing hesitating, lifted up her
voice, and said: God most high,(2) grant to this woman according to bet wish,
that her daughter Falconilla may live for ever. And when Thecla had thus spoken,
Tryphaena lamented, considering so much beauty thrown to the wild beasts.
And when it was dawn, Alexander came to take her, for it was he that gave
the hunt,(3) saying: The governor is sitting, and the crowd is in uproar
against us. Allow me to take away her that is to fight with the wild beasts. And
Tryphaena cried aloud, so that he even fled, saying: A second mourning for my
Falconilla has come upon my house and there is no one to help; neither child, for
she is dead, nor kinsman, for I am a widow. God of Thecla, help her!
And immediately the governor sends an order that Thecla should be brought.
And Tryphaena, taking her by the hand, said: My daughter Fal-conillia, indeed,
I took away to the tomb; and thee, Thecla, I am taking to the wild-beast
fight. And Thecla wept bitterly, saying: O Lord, the God in whom I believe, to whom
I have fled for refuge, who deliveredst me from the fire, do Thou grant a
recompense to Tryphaena, who has had compassion on Thy servant, and because she has
kept me pure. Then a tumult arose, and a cry of the people, and the women
sitting together, the one saying: Away with the sacrilegious person! the others
saying: Let the city be raised(4) against this wickedness. Take off all of us, O
proconsul! Cruel sight! evil sentence!
And Thecla, having been taken out of the hand of Tryphaena, was stripped,
and received a girdle,(5) and was thrown into the arena, and lions and bears
and a fierce lioness were let loose upon her; and the lioness having run up to
her feet, lay down; and the multitude of the women cried aloud. And a bear ran
upon her; but the lioness, meeting the bear, tore her to pieces. And again a lion
that had been trained against men, which belonged to Alexander, ran upon her;
and she, the lioness, encountering the lion, was killed along with him. And the
women made great lamentation, since also the lioness, her protector, was dead.
Then they send in many wild beasts, she standing and stretching forth her
hands, and praying. And when she had finished her prayer, she turned and saw a
ditch full of water, and said: Now it is time to wash myself. And she threw
herself in, saying: In the name of Jesus Christ I am baptized on my last day. And
the women seeing, and the multitude, wept, saying: Do not throw thyself into
the water; so that also the governor shed tears, because the seals were going to
devour such beauty. She then threw herself in the name of Jesus Christ; but the
seals having seen the glare of the fire of lightning, floated about dead. And
there was round her, as she was naked, a cloud of fire; so that neither could
the wild beasts touch her, nor could she be seen naked.
And the women, when other wild beasts were being thrown in, wailed. And
some threw sweet-smelling herbs, others nard, others cassia, others amomum, so
that there was abundance of perfumes. And all the wild beasts that had been
thrown in, as if they had been withheld by sleep, did not touch her; so that
Alexander said to the governor: I have bulls exceedingly terrible; let us bind to them
her that is to fight with the beasts. And the governor, looking gloomy,
turned, and said: Do what thou wilt. And they bound her by the feet between them, and
put red-hot irons under the privy parts of the bulls, so that they, being
rendered more furious, might kill her. They rushed about, therefore; but the
burning flame consumed the ropes, and she was as if she had not been bound. But
Tryphaena fainted standing beside the arena, so that the crowd said: Queen Tryphaena
is dead. And the governor put a stop to the games, and the city was in dismay.
And Alexander entreated the governor, saying: Have mercy both on me and the
city, and release this woman. For if Caesar hear of these things, he will
speedily destroy the city also along with us, because his kins- woman Queen Tryphaena
has died beside the ABACI.(1)
And the governor summoned Thecla out of the midst of the wild beasts, and
said to her: Who art thou? and what is there about thee, that not one of the
wild beasts touches thee? And she said: I indeed am a servant of the living God;
and as to what there is about me, I have believed in the Son of God, in whom
He is well pleased; wherefore not one of the beasts has touched me. For He
alone is the end(2) of salvation, and the basis of immortal life; for He is a
refuge to the tempest-tossed, a solace to the afflicted, a shelter to the
despairing; and, once for all, whoever shall not believe on Him, shall not live for ever.
And the governor having heard this, ordered her garments to be brought,
and to be put on. And Thecla said: He that clothed me naked among the wild
beasts, will in the day of judgment clothe thee with salvation. And taking the
garments, she put them on. The governor therefore immediately issued an edict,
saying: I release to you the God-fearing Thecla, the servant of God. And the women
shouted aloud, and with one mouth returned thanks to God, saying: There is one
God, the God of Thecla; so that the foundations of the theatre were shaken by
their voice. And Tryphaena having received the good news, went to meet the holy
Thecla, and said: Now I believe that the dead are raised: now I believe that my
child lives. Come within, and I shall assign to thee all that is mine. She
therefore went in along with her, and rested eight days, having instructed her in
the word of God, so that most even of the maid-servants believed.And there was
great joy in the house.
And Thecla kept seeking Paul; and it was told her that he was in Myra of
Lycia. And taking young men and maidens, she girded herself; and having sewed
the tunic so as to make a man's cloak, she came to Myra, and found Paul speaking
the word of God. And Paul was astonished at seeing her, and the crowd with her,
thinking that some new trial was coming upon her. And when she saw him, she
said: I have received the baptism, Paul; for He that wrought along with thee for
the Gospel has wrought in me also for baptism. And Paul, taking her, led her to
the house of Hermaeus, and hears everything from her, so that those that heard
greatly wondered, and were comforted, and prayed over Tryphaena. And she rose
up, and said: I am going to Iconium. And Paul said: Go, and teach the word of
God. And Tryphaena sent her much clothing and gold, so that she left to Paul
many things for the service of the poor.
And she went to Iconium. And she goes into the house of Onesiphorus, and
fell upon the pavement where Paul used to sit and teach her, and wept, saying:
God of myself and of this house, where Thou didst make the light to shine upon
me, O Christ Jesus, the Son of the living God, my help in the fire, my help
among the wild beasts, Thou art glorified for ever. Amen. And she found Thamyris
dead, but her mother alive. And having sent for her mother, she said: Theocleia,
my mother, canst thou believe that the Lord liveth in the heavens? For whether
thou desirest wealth, God gives it to thee through me; or thy child, I am
standing beside thee. And having thus testified, she departed to Seleucia, and dwelt
in a cave seventy-two years, living upon herbs and water. And she enlightened
many by the word of God.
And certain men of the city, being Greeks by religion, and physicians by
profession, sent to her insolent young men to destroy(3) her. For they said:
She is a virgin, and serves Artemis, and from this she has virtue in healing. And
by the providence of God she entered into the rock alive, and went under
ground. And she departed to Rome to see Paul, and found that he had fallen
asleep.(4) And after staying there no long time, she rested in a glorious sleep; and she
is buried about two or three stadia from the tomb of her master Paul.
She was cast, then, into the fire when seventeen years old, and among the
wild beasts when eighteen. And she was an ascetic in the cave, as has been
said, seventy-two years, so that all the years of her life were ninety. And having
accomplished many cures, she rests in the place of the saints, having fallen
asleep on the twenty-fourth of the month of September in Christ Jesus our Lord,
to whom be glory and strength for ever and ever. Amen.
Instead of the last two sections, the MS. which Dr. Grabe used has the
following:--
And a cloud of light guided her. And having come into Seleucia, she went
forth outside of the city one stadium. And she was afraid of them also, for they
worshipped idols. And it guided her to the mountain called Calamon or Rhodeon;
and having there found a cave, she went into it. And she was there many years,
and underwent many and grievous trials by the devil, and bore them nobly,
being assisted by Christ. And some of the well-born women, having learned about the
virgin Thecla, went to her, and learned the oracles of God. And many of them
bade adieu to the world, and lived an ascetic life with her. And a good report
was spread everywhere concerning her, and cures were done by her. All the city,
therefore, and country round, having known this, brought their sick to the
mountain; and before they came near the door they were speedily released from
whatever disease they were afflicted by; and the unclean spirits went out shrieking,
and all received their own in health, glorifying God, who had given such grace
to the virgin Thecla. The physicians, therefore, of the city of the Seleucians
were thought nothing of, having lost their trade, and no one any longer had
regard to them; and being filled with envy and hatred, they plotted against the
servant of Christ, what they should do to her. The devil then suggests to them a
wicked device; and one day, being assembled, and having taken counsel, they
consult with each other, saying: This virgin is a priestess of the great goddess
Artemis; and if she ask anything of her, she hears her as being a virgin, and
all the gods love her. Come, then, let us take men of disorderly lives, and
make them drunk with much wine, and let us give them much gold, and say to them,
If you can corrupt and defile her, we shall give you even more money. The
physicians therefore said to themselves, that if they should be able to defile her,
neither the gods nor Artemis would listen to her in the case of the sick. They
therefore did so. And the wicked men, having gone to the mountain, and rushed
upon the cave like lions, knocked at the door. And the holy martyr Thecla opened,
emboldened By the God in whom she believed; for she knew of their plot
beforehand. And she says to them: What do you want, my children? And they said: Is
there one here called Thecla? And she said: What do you want with her? They say to
her: We want to sleep with her. The blessed Thecla says to them: I am a humble
old woman, but the servant of my Lord Jesus Christ; and even though you want
to do something to me out of place, you cannot. They say to her: It is
impossible for us not to do to thee what we want. And having said this, they laid fast
hold of her, and wished to insult her. And she says to them with mildness: Wait,
my children, that you may see the glory of the Lord. And being laid hold of by
them, she looked up into heaven, and said: God, terrible and incomparable, and
glorious to Thine adversaries, who didst deliver me out of the fire, who didst
not give me up to Thamyris, who didst not give me up to Alexander, who didst
deliver me from the wild beasts, who didst save me in the abyss, who hast
everywhere worked with me, and glorified Thy name in me, now also deliver me from
these lawless men, and let me not insult my virginity, which through Thy name I
have preserved till now, because I love Thee, and desire Thee, and adore Thee,
the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost for ever. Amen. And there came a
voice out of the heaven, saying: Fear not, Thecla, my true servant, for I am with
thee. Look and see where an opening has been made before thee, for there shall
be for thee an everlasting house, and there thou shalt obtain shelter. And the
blessed Thecla regarding it, saw the rock opened as far as to allow a man to
enter, and did according to what had been said to her: and nobly fleeing from the
lawless ones entered into the rock; and the rock was straightway shut together,
so that not even a joining appeared. And they, beholding the extraordinary
wonder, became as it were distracted; and they were not able to detain the servant
of God, but only caught hold of her veil, and were able to tear off a certain
part; and that by the permission of God for the faith of those seeing the
venerable place, and for a blessing in the generations afterwards to those that
believe in our Lord Jesus Christ out of a pure heart.
Thus, then, suffered the first martyr of God, and apostle, and virgin,
Thecla, who came from Iconium at eighteen years old; and with the journeying, and
the going round, and the retirement in the mountain, she lived other
seventy-two years. And when the Lord took her, she was ninety years old. And thus is her
consummation. And her holy commemoration is on the twenty-fourth of the month
of September, to the glory of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, now
and ever, and to ages of ages. Amen.