ACTS OF THE HOLY APOSTLE THOMAS (WHEN HE CAME INTO INDIA, AND BUILT THE PALACE
IN THE HEAVENS; ABOUT THE DRAGON AND THE YOUNG MAN; ABOUT THE DEMON THAT DWELT
IN THE WOMAN; ABOUT THE YOUNG MAN WHO KILLED THE MAIDEN; CONSUMMATION OF
THOMAS THE APOSTLE)
ACTS OF THE HOLY APOSTLE THOMAS
AT that time we the apostles were all in Jerusalem--Simon called Peter,
and Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother; Philip
and Bartholomew; Thomas, and Matthew the tax-gatherer; James of Alphaeus and
Simon the Cananaean; and Judas of James;(1)--and we portioned out the regions of
the world, in order that each one of us might go into the region that fell to
him, and to the nation to which the Lord sent him. By lot, then, India fell to
Judas Thomas,(2) also called Didymus. And he did not wish to go, saying that he
was not able to go on account of the weakness of the flesh; and how can I, being
an Hebrew man, go among the Indians to proclaim the truth? And while he was
thus reasoning and speaking, the Saviour appeared to him through the night, and
said to him: Fear not, Thomas; go away to India, and proclaim the word; for my
grace shall be with thee. But he did not obey, saying: Wherever Thou wishest to
send me, send me elsewhere; for to the Indians I am not going.
And as he was thus speaking and growing angry, there happened to be there
a certain merchant come from India, by name Abbanes, sent from the king
Gundaphoros, and having received an order froth him to buy a carpenter and bring him
to him. And the Lord, having seen him walking about in the market at noon, said
to him: Dost thou wish to buy a carpenter? And he said to Him: Yes. And the
Lord said to him: I have a slave a carpenter, and I wish to sell him. And having
said this, He showed him Thomas at a distance, and agreed with him for three
pounds of uncoined silver; and He wrote a bill of sale, saying: I Jesus, the son
of Joseph the carpenter, declare that I have sold my slave, Judas by name, to
thee Abbanes, a merchant of Gundaphoros, the king of the Indians. And the
purchase(3) being completed, the Saviour taking Judas, who also is Thomas, led him to
Abbanes the merchant; and Abbanes seeing him, said to him: Is this thy master?
And the apostle answered and said: Yes, He is my Lord. And he says: I have
bought thee from him. And the apostle held his peace.
And at dawn of the following day, the apostle having prayed and entreated
the Lord, said: I go wherever Thou wishest, O Lord Jesus; Thy will be done. And
he went to Abbanes the merchant, carrying nothing at all with him, but only
his price. For the Lord had given it to him, saying: Let thy worth also be with
thee along with my grace, wherever thou mayst go. And the apostle came up with
Abbanes, who was carrying his effects into the boat. He began therefore also to
carry them along with him. And when they had gone on board and sat down,
Abbanes questioned the apostle, saying: What kind of work dost thou know? And he
said: In wood, ploughs, and yokes, and balances,(4) and boats, and boats' oars, and
masts, and blocks; in stone, slabs,(5) and temples, and royal palaces. And
Abbanes the merchant said to him: Of such a workman, to be sure, we have need.
They began, therefore, to sail away. And they had a fair wind, and they sailed
fist until they came to Andrapolis, a royal city.
And having gone out of the boat, they went into the city. And, behold, the
voices of flute-players, and of water-organs, and trumpets, sounding round
them; and the apostle inquired, saying: What festival is this in this city? And
those who were there said to him: The gods have brought thee also, that thou
mayst be feasted in this city. For the king has an only-begotten daughter, and he
is now giving her to a husband in marriage: this festival, then, which thou
seest to-day, is the rejoicing and public assembly for the marriage. And the king
has sent forth heralds to proclaim everywhere that all are to come to the
marriage, rich and poor, bond and free, strangers and citizens. And if any one shall
refuse and not come to the marriage, he will be answerable to the king.(6) And
Abbanes having heard, said to the apostle: Let us also go, then, that we may
not offend the king, and especially as we are strangers. And he said: Let us go.
And having turned into the inn, and rested a little, they went to the marriage.
And the apostle seeing them all reclining, reclined he also in the midst. And
they all looked at him as a stranger, and coming from a foreign land. And
Abbanes the merchant, as being a lord, reclined in another place.
And when they had dined and drunk, the apostle tasted nothing. Those,
then, about him said to him: Why hast thou come hither, neither eating nor
drinking? And he answered and said to them: For something greater than food or even
drink have I come hither, even that I might accomplish the will of the King. For
the heralds proclaim the wishes of the King, and whoever will not hear the
heralds will be liable to the judgment of the King. When, therefore, they had dined
and drunk, and crowns and perfumes had been brought, each took perfume, and one
anointed his face, another his cheek,(1) and one one part of his body, and
another another. And the apostle anointed the crown of his head, and put a little
of the ointment in his nostrils, and dropped it also into his ears, and applied
it also to his teeth, and carefully anointed the parts round about his heart;
and having taken the crown that was brought to him wreathed of myrtle and other
flowers, he put it on his head, and took a branch of reed in his hand, and
held it.
And the flute-girl, holding the flutes in her hand, went round them all;
and when she came to the place where the apostle was, she stood over him,
playing the flute over his head a long time. And that flute-girl was Hebrew by race.
And as the apostle looked away to the ground, a certain one of the
wine-pourers(2) stretched forth his hand and struck him. And the apostle, having
raised his eyes, and regarded him who had struck him, said: My God will forgive thee
this wrong in the world to come, but in this world He will show His wonders,
and I shall soon see that hand that struck me dragged along by a dog. And having
thus spoken, he began to sing and to repeat this song:--
Maiden, daughter of the light, in whom there exists and abides the
majestic splendour of kings; and delightsome is the sight of her, resplendent with
brilliant beauty. Her garments are like spring flowers, and the odour of a sweet
smell is given forth from them; and on the crown of her head the king is seated,
feeding with his own ambrosia those who are seated beside him; and truth rests
upon her head, and she shows forth joy with her feet; and becomingly does she
open her mouth; thirty-and-two are they who sing her praises, and their tongue
is like a curtain of the door which is drawn for them who go in; and her neck
is made in the likeness of the stairs which the first Creator created; and her
two hands signify and represent the choral dance of the blessed ages,
proclaiming it; and her fingers represent the gates of the city. Her chamber lighted up
breathes forth scent from balsam and every perfume, and gives forth a sweet
odour of myrrh and savoury herbs; and within are strewn myrtles and sweet-smelling
flowers of all kinds; and the bridal chambers are adorned with calamus.(3) And
her groomsmen, of whom the number is seven, whom she has chosen for herself,
surround her like a wall; and her bridesmaids are seven, who dance before her;
and twelve are they in number who minister before her and are at her bidding,
having their gaze and their sight upon the bridegroom, that through the sight of
him they may be enlightened. And they shall be with him to everlasting in that
everlasting joy, and they shall sit down in that wedding to which the great ones
are gathered together, and they shall abide in the festivities of which the
eternals are deemed worthy; and they shall be arrayed in royal raiment, and shall
put on shining robes; and in joy and exultation both of them shall be, and
they shall glorify the Father of the universe, whose majestic light they have
received, and they have been enlightened by the sight of Him their Lord, whose
ambrosial food they have received, of which there is no failing at all; and they
have drunk also of the wine which brings to them no thirst, neither desire of the
flesh; and they have with the living spirit glorified and praised the father
of truth and the mother of wisdom.
And when he had sung and finished this song, all who were there present
looked upon him and kept silence, and they also saw his form changed; and what
had been said by him they did not understand, since he was a Hebrew, and what had
been said by him had been said in Hebrew. But the flute-girl alone heard all,
for she was Hebrew by race, and standing off from him she played the flute to
the others; but at him she mostly turned her eyes and looked, for she altogether
loved him as a man of the same nation with herself, and he was also beautiful
in appearance above all who were there. And when the flute-girl had come to the
end of all her flute-playing, she sat down opposite him, and looked and gazed
upon him. But he looked at no one at all, neither did he regard any one, but
only kept his eyes on the ground, waiting until he should depart thence. And that
wine-pourer that struck him came down to the fountain to draw water; and there
happened to be a lion there, and it came forth and killed him, and left him
lying in the place, after tearing up his limbs; and dogs immediately seized his
limbs, among which also one black dog, laying hold of his right hand in his
mouth, brought it to the place of the banquet.
And all seeing were terror-struck, inquiring which of them had been taken
off. And when it was clear that it was the hand of the wine-pourer who had
struck the apostle, the flute-girl broke her flutes in pieces, and threw them away,
and went and sat down at the feet of the apostle, saying: This man is either
God or God's apostle; for I heard him saying in Hebrew to the wine-pourer, I
shall soon see the hand that struck me dragged about by dogs, which also you have
now seen; for as he said, so also it has come to pass. And some believed her,
and some not. And the king, having heard, came up and said to him: Rise up, and
go with me, and pray for my daughter; for she is my only child, and today I
give her away. And the apostle would not go with him; for his Lord had not at all
been revealed to him there. And the king took him away against his will to the
bridal-chamber, that he might pray for them.
And the apostle stood, and began to pray and speak thus: My Lord and my
God, who accompanies His servants on their way, guiding and directing those who
trust in Him, the refuge and the repose of the afflicted, the hope of the
mourners, and the deliverer of the captives, the physician of the souls that are
lying under disease, and Saviour of every creature, who gives life to the world,
and invigorates our souls! Thou knowest what will come to pass, who also for our
sakes makest these things perfect: Thou, Lord, who revealest hidden mysteries,
and declarest unspeakable words; Thou, Lord, the planter of the good tree, also
through the tree makest words to spring up; Thou, Lord, who art in all, and
camest through all, and existest in all Thy works, and makest Thyself manifest
through the working of them all; Jesus Christ, the Son of compassion, and perfect
Saviour; Christ, Son of the living God, the undaunted Power which has
overthrown the enemy; and the voice heard by the rulers,(1) which shook all their
powers; the ambassador who was sent to them from on high, and who wentest down even
to Hades; who also, having opened the doors, didst bring out thence those that
had been shut in for many ages by the controller of the world, and didst show
them the way up that leads up on high: I beseech Thee, Lord Jesus Christ, I
offer Thee supplication for these young persons, that Thou mayst make what happens
and befalls them to be for their good. And having laid his hands on them, and
said, The Lord will be with you, he left them in the place, and went away.(2)
And the king requested the groomsmen to go out of the bridal-chamber; and
all having gone forth, and the doors having been shut, the bridegroom raised
the curtain of the bridal-chamber, that he might bring the bride to himself. And
he saw the Lord Jesus talking with the bride, and having the appearance of
Judas Thomas, who shortly before had blessed them, and gone out from them; and he
says to him: Didst thou not go out before them all? And how art thou found here?
And the Lord said to him: I am not Judas, who also is Thomas; I am his
brother. And the Lord sat down on the bed, and ordered them also to sit down on the
seats;(3) and He began to say to them:--
Keep in mind, my children, what my brother said to you, and to whom he
commended you; and this know, that if you refrain from this filthy intercourse,
you become temples holy and pure, being released from afflictions and troubles,
known and unknown, and you will not be involved in the cares of life, and of
children, whose end is destruction; but if you get many children, for their sakes
you become grasping and avaricious, plundering orphans, coveting the property
of widows, and by doing this you subject yourselves to most grievous
punishments. For many children become unprofitable, being harassed by demons, some openly
and others secretly: for they become either lunatics, or half-withered, or
lame, or deaf, or dumb, or paralytics, or idiots; and even if they be in good
health, they will be again good-for-nothing, doing unprofitable and abominable
works: for they will be detected either in adultery, or in murder, or in theft, or
in fornication, and by all these you will be afflicted. But if you will be
persuaded, and preserve your souls pure to God, there will be born to you living
children, whom these hurtful things do not touch; and you will be without care,
spending an untroubled life, free from grief and care, looking forward to receive
that marriage incorruptible and true; and you will be in it companions of the
bridegroom, going in along with Him into that bridal-chamber full of
immortality and light.(4)
And when the young people heard this, they believed the Lord, and gave
themselves over into His keeping, and refrained from filthy lust, and remained
thus spending the night in the place. And the Lord went out from before them,
having spoken thus to them: The grace of the Lord shall be with you. And the dawn
having come on, the king arrived, and having supplied the table, brought it in
before the bridegroom and the bride; and he found them sitting opposite each
other, and he found the face of the bride uncovered, and the bridegroom was quite
cheerful. And the mother having come to the bride, said: Wherefore dost thou
sit thus, child, and art not ashamed, but thus as if thou hadst for a long time
lived with thine own husband? And her father said: Is it because of thy great
love to thy husband that thou art uncovered?
And the bride answered and said: Truly, father, I am in great love, and I
pray to my Lord to continue to me the love which I have experienced this night,
and I shall beg for myself this husband whom I have experienced today. For
this reason, then, I am no longer covered, since the mirror(1) of shame has been
taken away from me, and I am no longer ashamed nor abashed, since the work of
shame and bashfulness has been removed far from me; and because I am not under
any violent emotion, since violent emotion does not abide in me; and because I am
in cheerfulness and joy, since the day of joy has not been disturbed; and
because I hold of no account this husband, and these nuptials that have passed away
from before mine eyes, since I have been joined in a different marriage; and
because I have had no intercourse with a temporary husband, whose end is with
lewdness and bitterness of soul, since I have been united to a true Husband.
And when the bride is saying yet more, the bridegroom answers and says: I
thank Thee, Lord, who hast been proclaimed by the stranger and found by us;(2)
who hast put corruption far from me, and hast sown life in me; who hast
delivered me from this disease, hard to heal, and hard to cure, and abiding for ever,
and established in me sound health; who hast shown Thyself to me, and hast
revealed to me all that concerns me, in which I am; who hast redeemed me from
falling, and hast led me to something better, and who hast released me from things
temporary, and hast deemed me worthy of things immortal and ever existing; who
hast brought Thyself down even to me and to my littleness, in order that, having
placed me beside Thy greatness, Thou mightest unite me to Thyself; who hast
not withheld Thine own compassion from me lost, but hast shown me how to search
myself, and to know what(3) I was and what(3) and how I am now, in order that I
may again become as I was; whom I indeed did not know, but Thou Thyself whom I
knew not hast sought me out and taken me to Thyself; whom I have experienced,
and am not now able to forget, whose love is fervent in me; and speak indeed as
I ought I cannot. But what I have time to say about Him is short, and
altogether little, and not in proportion to His glory; but He does not find fault with
me for not being ashamed to say to Him even what I do not know; because it is
through the love of Him that I say even this.
And the king, having heard these things from the bridegroom and the bride,
rent his garments, and said to those standing near him: Go out quickly, and go
round the whole city, and seize and bring me that man, the sorcerer, who has
come for evil into this city: for I led him with my own hands into my house, and
I told him to play for my most unfortunate daughter; and whoever shall find
him and bring him to me, whatever service be shall ask of me, I give him. They
went away, therefore, and went round seeking him, and found him not; for he had
sailed. They went, therefore, also into the inn where he had stayed, and found
there the flute-girl weeping and in distress, because he had not taken her with
him. And they having recounted what had happened in the case of the young
people, she was altogether glad when she heard it, and dismissed her grief, and
said: Now have I found, even I, repose here. And she arose and went to them, and
was with them a long time, until they had instructed the king also. And many also
of the brethren were gathered together there, until they heard word of the
apostle, that he had gone down to the cities of India, and was teaching there.And
they went away, and joined him.
ACTS OF THE HOLY APOSTLE THOMAS, WHEN HE CAME INTO INDIA, AND BUILT THE PALACE
IN THE HEAVENS.
AND when the apostle came into the cities of India, with Abbanes the
merchant, Abbanes went away to salute Gundaphoros the king, and reported to him
about the carpenter whom he bad brought with him; and the king was glad, and
ordered him to come in to himself. And when he had come in, the king said to him:
What trade knowest thou? The apostle says to him: The carpenter's and house
builder's. The king says to him: What work in wood knowest thou, then, and what in
stone? The apostle says: In wood, ploughs, yokes, balances, pulleys, and boats,
and oars, and masts; and in stone, monuments, temples, royal palaces. And the
king said: Wilt thou build me a palace? And he answered: Yes, I shall build it,
and finish it; for because of this I came, to build houses, and to do
carpenter's work.
And the king having taken him, went forth out of the gates of the city,
and began to talk with him on the way about the building of the palace, and about
the foundations, how they should be laid, until they came to that place in
which he wished the building to be. And he said: Here I wish the building to be.
And the apostle says: Yes; for assuredly this place is convenient for the
building. For the place was well wooded, and there was much water there. The king
therefore says: Begin to build. And he said: I cannot begin to build at this time.
And the king says: When wilt thou be able? And he says: I shall begin in
Dius and end in Xanthicus.(1) And the king wondering, said: Every building is
built in summer; but canst thou build and make a palace in winter itself? And the
apostle said: Thus it must be, and otherwise it is impossible. And the king
said: If, therefore, this be thy opinion, mark out for me how the work is to be,
since I shall come here after some time. And the apostle, having taken a reed,
measured the place, and marked it out; and he set the doors towards the rising
of the sun, to look to the light, and the windows towards its setting, to the
winds; and he made the bakehouse to be towards the south, and the water-tank,
for abundance, towards the north. And the king seeing this, said to the apostle:
Thou art a craftsman indeed, and it is fitting that thou shouldst serve kings.
And having left many things for him, he went away.
And from time to time he also sent the money that was necessary, for the
living both of him and the other workmen. And he taking it, dispenses it all,
going about the cities and the places round, distributing and doing kindnesses to
the poor and the afflicted, and gave them rest,(2) saying: The king knows how
to obtain royal recompense, and it is necessary for the poor to have repose for
the present.
And after this, the king sent a messenger to the apostle, having written
to him as follows: Show me what thou hast done, or what I am to send thee, or
what thou needest. The apostle sends to him, saying: The palace is built, and
only the roof remains to be done. And the king, having heard, sent him again gold
and silver uncoined, and wrote to him: Let the palace, if it be done, be
roofed. And the apostle said to the Lord: I thank Thee, Lord, as to all things, that
Thou didst die for a short time, that I might live in Thee for ever; and hast
sold me, so that Thou mayst deliver many through me. And he did not cease to
teach and refresh the afflicted, saying: These things the Lord hath dispensed to
us, and He gives to each his food; for He is the support of the orphans, and the
provider of the widows, and to all that are afflicted He is rest and repose.
And when the king came into the city, he inquired of his friends about the
palace which Judas, who also is Thomas, had built; and they said to him: He
has neither built a palace, nor done anything else of what he promised to do; but
he goes round the cities and the districts, and if he has anything he gives
all to the poor, and teaches one new God,(3) and heals the diseased, and drives
out demons, and does many other extraordinary things; and we think that he is a
magician. But his acts of compassion, and the cures done by him as a free gift,
and still more, his single-mindedness, and gentleness, and fidelity, show that
he is a just man, or an apostle of the new God whom he preaches; for he
continually fasts and prays, and eats only bread with salt, and his drink is water,
and he carries one coat, whether in warm weather or in cold, and he takes
nothing from any one, but gives to others even what he has. The king having heard
this, stroked his face with his hands, shaking his head for a long time.
And he sent for the merchant that had brought him, and for the apostle,
and said to him: Hast thou built me the palace? And he said: Yes, I have built
it. And the king said: When, then, are we to go and see it? And he answered and
said: Now thou canst not see it; but when thou hast departed this life, thou
shalt see it. And the king, quite enraged, ordered both the merchant, and Judas
who also is Thomas, to be put in chains, and to be cast into prison, until he
should examine, and learn to whom he had given the king's property. And thus I
shall destroy him along with the merchant. And the apostle went to prison
rejoicing, and said to the merchant: Fear nothing at all, but only believe in the God
proclaimed by me, and thou shalt be freed from this world, and thou shall obtain
life in the world to come.
And the king considered by what death he should kill them; and when it
seemed good to him to flay them, and burn them with fire, on that very night Gad
the king's brother fell ill, and through the grief and imposition which the king
suffered he was grievously depressed; and having sent for the king, he said to
him: My brother the king, I commend to thee my house and my children; for I,
on account of the insult that has befallen thee, have been grieved, and am
dying; and if thou do not come down with vengeance upon the head of that magician,
thou wilt give my soul no rest in Hades. And the king said to his brother:
During the whole night I have considered this, how I shall put him to death; and
this has seemed good to me--to flay him and burn him up with fire, both him and
with him the merchant that brought him.
And as they were talking together, the soul of Gad his brother departed.
And the king mourned for Gad exceedingly, for he altogether loved him. And he
ordered him to be prepared for burial in a royal and costly robe. And as this was
being done, angels received the soul of Gad the king's brother, and took it up
into heaven, showing him the places and dwellings there, asking him: In what
sort of a place dost thou wish to dwell? And when they came near the edifice of
Thomas the apostle, which he had built for the king, Gad, seeing it, said to
the angels, I entreat you, my lords, permit me to dwell in one of the underground
chambers of this palace. And they said to him: Thou canst not dwell in this
building.(1) And he said: Wherefore? They say to him: This palace is the one
which that Christian built for thy brother. And he said: I entreat you, my lords,
permit me to go to thy brother, that I may buy this palace from him; for my
brother does not know what it is like, and he will sell it to me.
Then the angels let the soul of Gad go. And as they were putting on him
the burial robe, his soul came into him. And he said to those standing round him:
Call my brother to me, that I may beg of him one request. Straightway,
therefore, they sent the good news to their king, saying: Thy brother has come alive
again. And the king started up, and along with a great multitude went to his
brother, and went in and stood beside his bed as if thunderstruck, not being able
to speak to him. And his brother said: I know and am persuaded, brother, that
if any one asked of thee the haft of thy kingdom, thou wouldst give it for my
sake; wherefore I entreat thee to grant me one favour, which I beg of thee to do
me. And the king answered and said: And what is it that thou askest me to do
for thee? And he said: Assure me by an oath that thou wilt grant it me. And the
king swore to him: Of what belongs to me, whatever thou shalt ask, I will give
thee. And he says to him: Sell me that palace which thou hast in the heavens.
And the king said: Whence does a palace in the heavens belong to me? And he said:
That which the Christian who is now in the prison, whom the merchant bought
froth a certain Jesus, and brought to thee, built for thee. And as he was at a
loss, he says to him again: I speak of that Hebrew slave whom thou didst wish to
punish, as having suffered some imposition from him, on account of whom I also
was grieved and died, and now have come alive again.
Then the king, having come to know, understood about the eternal benefits
that were conferred upon him and destined for him, and said: That palace I
cannot sell thee, but I pray thee to go into it, and dwell there, and become worthy
to be of its inhabitants; but if thou really wishest to buy such a palace,
behold, the man is alive, and will build thee a better than that.(2) And having
sent immediately, he brought out of the prison the apostle, and the merchant who
had been shut up along with him, saying: I entreat thee, as a man entreating
the servant of God, that thou wilt pray for me, and entreat him whose servant
thou art, to pardon me, and overlook what I have done to thee, or even what I
meant to do, and that I may be worthy to be an inhabitant of that house for which
indeed I have laboured nothing, but which thou labouring alone hast built for
me, the grace of thy God working with thee; and that I may become a servant, I
also, and slave of this God whom thou proclaimest. And his brother, falling down
before the apostle, said: I entreat thee, and supplicate before thy God, that I
may become worthy of this ministry and service, and may be allotted to become
worthy of those things which were shown me by his angels.
And the apostle, seized with joy, said: I make full confession(3) to Thee,
Lord Jesus, that Thou hast revealed Thy truth in these men: for Thou alone art
a God of truth, and not another; and Thou art He who knowest all things that
are unknown to many: Thou art He, Lord, who in all things showest compassion and
mercy to men; for men, through the error that is in them, have overlooked
Thee, but Thou hast not overlooked them. And now, when I am entreating and
supplicating Thee, accept the king and his brother, and unite them into Thy fold,
having cleansed them by Thy purification, and anointed them with Thy oil, from the
error which encompasseth them; and protect them also from the wolves, bringing
them into Thy meadows; and give them to drink of Thy ambrosial fountain, that is
never muddy and never faileth: for they entreat Thee, and supplicate, and wish
to become Thy ministers and servants; and on account of this they are well
pleased even to be persecuted by Thine enemies, and for Thy sake to be hated by
them, and insulted, and to die; as Thou also for our sakes didst suffer all these
things, that Thou mightst gain us to Thyself, as being Lord, and truly a good
shepherd. And do Thou grant them that they may have confidence in Thee alone,
and aid from Thee, and hope of their salvation, which they obtain from Thee
alone, and that they may be confirmed in Thy mysteries; and they shall receive the
perfect benefits of Thy graces and gifts, and flourish in Thy service, and bear
fruit to perfection in Thy Father.
King Gundaphoros, therefore, and Gad, having been altogether set apart by
the apostle, followed him, not at all going back, they also providing for those
that begged of them, giving to all, and relieving all. And they entreated him
that they might also then receive the seal of baptism; and they said to him: As
our souls are at ease, and as we are earnest about God, give us the seal; for
we have heard thee saying that the God whom thou proclaimest recognises through
his seal his own sheep. And the apostle said to them: And I am glad, and
entreat you to receive this seal, and to communicate with me in this thanksgiving(1)
and blessing of God, and to be made perfect in it;(2) for this Jesus Christ
whom I proclaim is Lord and God of all, and He is the Father of truth, in whom I
have taught you to believe. And he ordered to bring them oil, in order that
through the oil they might receive the seal. They brought the oil, therefore, and
lighted many lamps, for it was night.(3)
And the apostle arose, and sealed them; and the Lord was revealed to them,
through a voice saying, Peace to you, brethren! And they heard His voice only,
but His form they saw not; for they had not yet received the ratification(4)
of the seal. And the apostle, having taken oil, and poured it over their head,
and salved and anointed them, began to say: Come, holy name of Christ, which is
above every name; come, power of the Most High, and perfect compassion; come,
grace most high; come, compassionate mother; come, thou that hast charge(6) of
the male child; come, thou who revealest secret mysteries; come, mother of the
seven houses, that there may be rest for thee in the eighth house; come, thou
presbyter of the five members--intelligence, thought, purpose, reflection,
reasoning--communicate with these young persons; come, Holy Spirit, and purify their
reins and heart, and seal them in the name of Father, and Son, and Holy
Spirit. And when they had been sealed, there appeared to them a young man holding a
burning torch, so that their lamps were even darkened by the approach(6) of its
light. And he went out, and disappeared from their sight. And the apostle said
to the Lord: Thy light, Lord, is too great for us, and we cannot bear it; for
it is too much for our sight. And when light came, and it was dawn, having
broken bread, he made them partakers of the thanksgiving(7) of Christ. And they
rejoiced and exulted; and many others also believed, and were added, and came to
the refuge of the Saviour.
And the apostle ceased not proclaiming, and saying to them: Men and women,
boys and girls, young men and maidens, vigorous and aged, both bond and free,
withhold yourselves from fornication, and covetousness, and the service of the
belly; for under these three heads all wickedness comes. For fornication maims
the mind, and darkens the eyes of the soul, and becomes a hindrance of the due
regulation of the body, changing the whole man into feebleness, and throwing
the whole body into disease. And insatiableness puts the soul into fear and
shame, existing by what pertains to the body,(8) and forcibly seizing what belongs
to another; . . . and the service of the belly throws the soul into cares and
troubles and griefs. . . . Since, therefore, you have been set free from these,
you are without care, and without grief, and without fear; and there remains to
you that which was said by the Saviour: Take no care for the morrow, for the
morrow will take care of itself.(9) Keep in mind also that saying before
mentioned: Look upon the ravens, and behold the fowls of the heaven, that they neither
sow nor reap, nor gather into barns, and God takes care of them; bow much more
you, O ye of little faith!(10) But look for His appearing, and have your hopes
in Him, and believe in His name: for He is the Judge of living and dead, and He
requites to each one according to his deeds; and at His coming and appearance
at last no one will have as a ground of excuse, when he comes to be judged by
Him, that he has not heard. For His heralds are proclaiming in the four quarters
of the world. Repent, therefore, and believe the message,(1) and accept the
yoke of gentleness and the light burden,(2) that you may live and not die. These
things lay hold of, these things keep; come forth from the darkness, that the
light may receive yen; come to Him who is truly good, that from Him you may
receive grace, and place His sign upon your souls.
When he had thus said, some of the bystanders said to him: It is time for
this debtor to receive his debt. And he said to them: The creditor,(3) indeed,
always wishes to receive more; but let us give him what is proper. And having
blessed them, he took bread and oil, and herbs and salt, and gave them to eat.
But he continued in his fasting, for the Lord's day was about to dawn. And on
the night following, while he was asleep, the Lord came and stood by his head,
saying: Thomas, rise up early and bless them all; and after the prayer and
service go along the eastern road two miles, and there I shall show in thee my glory.
For because thou goest away, many shall flee to me for refuge, and thou shalt
reprove the nature and the power of the enemy. And having risen up from sleep,
he said to the brethren who were with him: Children and brethren, the Lord
wishes to do something or other to-day through me; but let us pray and entreat Him
that nothing may be a hindrance to us towards Him, but as at all times let it
now also be done unto us according to His purpose and will. And having thus
spoken, he laid his hands upon them and blessed them. And having broken the bread
of the Eucharist, he gave it to them, saying: This Eucharist shall be(4) to you
for compassion, and mercy, and recompense, and not for judgment. And they said:
Amen.
ABOUT THE DRAGON AND THE YOUNG MAN.
And the apostle went forth to go where the Lord had bidden him. And when
he came near the second milestone he turned a little out of the way, and saw
the body of a beautiful youth lying; and he said: Lord, was it for this that Thou
broughtest me out to come here, that I might see this trial? Thy will
therefore be done, as Thou purposest. And he began to pray, and to say: Lord, Judge of
the living, and of those that are lying dead, and Lord of all, and
Father--Father not only of the souls that are in bodies, but also of those that have gone
out of them; for of the souls that are in pollutions Thou art Lord and
Judge--come at this time, when I call upon Thee, and show Thy glory upon him that is
lying down here. And he turned and said to those that followed him: This affair
has not happened idly; but the enemy has wrought and effected this, that he might
make an assault upon him; and you see that he has availed himself of no other
form, and has wrought through no other living being, but through his subject.
And when the apostle had thus spoken, behold, a great dragon came forth
from his den, knocking his head, and brandishing his tail down to the ground,
and, using a loud voice, said to the apostle: I shall say before thee for what
cause I have put him to death, since thou art here in order to reprove my works.
And the apostle says: Yes, say on. And the dragon: There is a certain woman in
this place exceedingly beautiful; and as she was once passing by, I saw her, and
fell in love with her, and I followed and watched her; and I found this young
man kissing her, and he also had intercourse with her, and did with her other
shameful things. And to me indeed it was pleasant to tell thee this, for I know
that thou art the twin-brother of Christ, and always bringest our race to
nought. But, not wishing to harass her, I did not at this time put him to death; but
I watched him passing by in the evening, and struck him, and killed him, and
especially as he had dared to do this on the Lord's day.(5) And the apostle
inquired of him, saying: Tell me, of what seed and of what race art thou?
And he said to him: I am the offspring of the race of the serpent, and
hurtful of the hurtful; I am son of him who hurt and struck the four brothers that
stood; I am son of him who sits on the throne of destruction, and takes his
own from what he has lent;(6) I am son of that apostate who encircles the globe;
I am kinsman to him who is outside of the ocean, whose tail lies in his mouth;
I am he who went into paradise through the hedge, and spoke with Eve what my
father bade me speak to her; I am he who inflamed and fired Cain to kill his
brother, and through me thorns and prickles sprang up in the ground; I am he who
cast down the angels from above, and bound them down by the desires of women,
that earth-born(7) children might be produced froth them, and that I might work my
will in them;(8) I am he who hardened the heart of Pharaoh, that he should
murder the children of Israel, and keep them down by the hard yoke of slavery; I
am he who caused the multitude to err in the desert when they made the calf; I
am he who inflamed Herod and incited Caiaphas to the lying tales of falsehood
before Pilate, for this became me; I am he who inflamed Judas, and bought him,
that he should betray Christ; I am he who inhabits and holds the abyss of
Tartarus, and the Son of God has wronged me against my will, and has gathered his own
out of me; I am the kinsman of him who is to come from the east, to whom also
power has been given to do whatever he will upon the earth.
And that dragon having thus spoken in the hearing of all the multitude,
the apostle raised his voice on high, and said: Cease henceforth, O thou most
unabashed, and be ashamed and altogether put to death; for the end of thy
destruction is at hand, and do not dare to say what thou hast done through thy
dependants. And I order thee, in the name of that Jesus who even until now makes a
struggle against you for the sake of His own human beings, to suck out the poison
which thou hast put into this man, and to draw it forth, and take it out of
him. And the dragon said: The time of our end is by no means at hand, as thou
hast said. Why dost thou force me to take out what I have put into him, and to die
before the time? Assuredly, when my father shall draw forth and suck out what
he has put into the creation, then his end will come. And the apostle said to
him: Show us, therefore, now the nature of thy father. And the dragon went up,
and put his mouth upon the wound of the young man, and sucked the gall out of
it. And in a short time the skin of the young man, which was like purple, grew
white, and the dragon swelled. And when the dragon had drawn up all the gall into
himself, the young man sprang up and stood, and ran and fell at the apostle's
feet. And the dragon, being swelled up, shrieked out and died, and his poison
and gall were poured forth; and in the place where his poison was poured forth
there was made a great chasm, and that dragon was swallowed up. And the apostle
said to the king and his brother: Take workmen, and fill up the place in which
the dragon has been swallowed up, and lay foundations, and build houses-above
it, that it may be made a dwelling-place for the strangers.
And the young man said to the apostle, with many tears: I have sinned
against the God proclaimed by thee, and against thee, but I ask pardon of thee; for
thou art a man having two forms, and wherever thou wishest there art thou
found, and thou art held in by no one, as I see. For I beheld that man, when I
stood beside thee, who also said to thee, I have many wonders to show by means of
thee, and I have great works to accomplish by means of thee, for which thou
shall obtain a reward; and thou shall make many to live, and they shall be in
repose and eternal light as the children of God: do thou therefore bring alive--he
says, speaking to thee about me--this young man who has been cast down by the
enemy, and in all time be the overseer of him. Thou hast, then, well come hither,
and again thou shall well go away to him, he being not at all forsaken by
thee. And I am without care and reproach, for the dawn has risen upon me from the
care of the night, and I am at rest; and I have also been released from him who
exasperated me to do these things: for I have sinned against Him who taught me
the contrary, and I have destroyed him who is the kinsman of the night, who
forced me to sin by his own practices; and I have found that kinsman of mine who
is like the light. I have destroyed him who darkens and blinds those who are
subject to him, lest they should know what they are doing, and, ashamed of their
works, withdraw themselves from them, and their deeds have an end: and I have
found Him whose works are light, and whose deeds are truth, of which whoever does
them shall not repent. I have been set free also from him in whom falsehood
abides, whom darkness as a covering goes before, and shame conducting herself
impudently in idleness follows after. And I have found also Him who shows me what
is beautiful, that I should lay hold of it, the Son of the truth, who is
kinsman of concord, who, driving away the mist, enlightens His own creation, and
heals its wounds, and overturns its enemies. But I entreat thee, O man of God, make
me again to behold and see Him, now become hidden from me, that I may also
hear His voice, the wonders of which I cannot declare: for it is not of the nature
of this bodily organ.
And the apostle said to him: If, as thou hast also said, thou hast cast
off the knowledge of those things which thou hast received, and if thou knowest
who has wrought these things in thee, and if thou shalt become a disciple and
hearer of Him of whom, through thy living love, thou now desirest the sight, thou
shalt both see Him, and shalt be with Him for ever, and shalt rest in His
rest, and shalt be in His joy. But if thou art rather carelessly disposed towards
Him, and again returnest to thy former deeds, and lettest go that beauty and
that beaming countenance which has now been displayed to thee, and if the
splendour of the light of Him whom thou now desirest be forgotten by thee, thou shalt
be deprived not only of this life, but also of that which is to come; and thou
shalt go to him whom thou hast said thou hast destroyed, and shalt no longer
behold Him whom thou hast said thou hast found.
And when the apostle had thus spoken, he went into the city, holding that
young man by the hand, and saying to him: Those things which thou hast beheld,
my child, are a few out of the many which God has: for it is not about these
things that appear that the good news is brought to us, but greater things than
these are promised to us; but inasmuch as we are in the body, we cannot tell and
speak out what He will do for our souls. If we say that He affords us light,
it is seen by us, and we have it; and if riches, they exist and appear in this
world, and we name them, since it has been said, With difficulty will a rich man
enter into the kingdom of the heavens.(1) And if we speak of fine clothing,
which they who delight in this life put on, it has been said, They that wear soft
things are in kings' palaces;(2) and if costly dinners, about these we have
received a commandment to keep away from them, not to be burdened by carousing
and drunkenness and the cares of life;(3) as also in the Gospel it has been said,
Take no heed for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor for
your body, what ye shall put on: because the life is more than food, and the
body than clothing.(4) And if we speak of this rest lasting only for a season,
its judgment has also been ordained. But we speak about the upper world, about
God and angels, about ambrosial food, about garments that last and become not
old, about those things which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath there
come into the heart of sinful men what God has prepared for those that love
Him.(5) Do thou also therefore believe in Him, that thou mayst live; and have
confidence in Him, and thou shall never die. For He is not persuaded by gifts, that
thou shouldst offer them to Him; nor does He want sacrifices, that thou shouldst
sacrifice to Him. But look to Him, and thou shalt not look in vain, for His
comeliness and desirable beauty will make thee love Him; and neither will He
allow thee to turn thyself away from Him.
And when the apostle was thus speaking to that young man, a great
multitude joined them. And the apostle looked, and saw them lifting themselves up that
they might see him; and they went up into elevated places. And the apostle said
to them: Ye men who have come to the assembly of Christ, and who wish to
believe in Jesus, take an example from this, and see that if you do not get high up,
you cannot see me, who am small, and cannot get a look of me, who am like
yourselves. If, then, you cannot see me, who am like yourselves, unless you raise
yourselves a little from the earth, how can you see Him who lives above, and is
now found below, unless you first raise yourselves out of your former
behaviour, and unprofitable deeds, and troublesome desires, and the riches that are left
behind here, and create things that are of the earth, and that grow old, and
the garments that are destroyed, and the beauty that ages and vanishes away,
yea, even out of the whole body in which all these have been stored past, and
which grows old, and becomes dust, returning into its own nature? for all these
things the body itself sets up.(6) But rather believe in our Lord Jesus Christ,
whom we proclaim to you, in order that your hope may be upon Him, and that you
may have life in Him to ages of ages, that He may be your fellow-traveller in
this land, and may release you from error, and may become(7) a haven for you in
this troublous sea. And there shall be for yon also a fountain welling out in
this thirsty land, and a fold full of food in the place of the hungry, and rest
for your souls, and also a physician for your bodies.
Then the multitude of those assembled that heard, wept, and said to the
apostle: O man of God, as for the God whom thou proclaimest, we dare not say that
we are his, because our works which we have done are alien from him, not
pleasing to him; but if he has compassion upon us, and pities us, and delivers us,
overlooking our former doings; and if he set us free from the evil things which
we did when we were in error, and shall not take into account nor keep the
recollection of our former sins, we shall become his servants, and we shall do his
will to the end. And the apostle answered and said to them: He does not reckon
against you the sins which you did, being in error; but He overlooks your
transgressions which you have done in ignorance.(3)
ABOUT THE DEMON THAT DWELT IN THE WOMAN.
And the apostle went into the city, all the multitude accompanying him;
and he thought of going to the parents of the young man whom, when killed by the
dragon, he had brought to life; for they earnestly entreated him to come to
them, and to enter info their house.
And a certain woman, exceedingly beautiful, suddenly uttered a loud cry,
saying: O apostle of the new God, who hast come into India, and servant of that
holy and only good God--for through thee he is proclaimed the Saviour of the
souls that come unto him, and through thee he heals the bodies of those that are
punished by the enemy, and thou hast become the cause of life to all who turn
to him--order me to be brought before thee, that I may declare to thee what has
happened to me, and that perhaps there may be hope to me from thee and those
who stand beside thee may have more and more hope in the God whom thou
proclaimest. For I am not a little tormented by the adversary, who has assailed me for
now a period of five years. As a woman, I formerly sat down in peace. and peace
encompassed me on all sides and I had nothing to trouble me, for of nothing
else(1) had I a care. And it happened on one of the days as I was coming forth
from the bath, there met me one like a man troubled and disturbed; and his voice
and utterance seemed to me to be indistinct and very weak And he said, standing
over against me, Thou and I shall be in one love, and we shall have intercourse
with each other, as a man is coupled with his wife: And I answered him,
saying, To my betrothed I consented not, entreating him not to marry me; anti to
thee, wishing to have intercourse with me as it were in adultery, how shall I give
myself up? And having thus spoken, went away from him. And to my maid I said,
Hast thou seen the young man and his shamelessness, how shamelessly and boldly
he talks to me? And she said to me, It was an old man I saw talking with thee.
And when I was in my own house, and had supped, my mind suggested to me some
suspicion, and especially because he had appeared to me in two forms. I fell
asleep, having this same thing in my thoughts. And he came that night, and made me
share in his filthy commerce. And I saw him when it was day, and fled from him;
but, according to his wont, he came at night and abused me. And now, as thou
seest me, I have been tormented by him five years, and he has not departed from
me. But I know and am persuaded that even demons, and spirits, and avenging
deities, are subject to thee, and tremble at thy prayer. Pray, then, for me, and
drive away from me the demon that torments me, that I also may become free, and
may be brought to my former nature, and I shall receive the gift, that has been
granted to my kindred.
And the apostle said: O irrepressible wickedness: O the shamelessness of
the enemy! O the sorcerer that is never at rest! O the ill-favoured one, bring
to subjection the well-favoured! O the many-formed one! He appears just as he
may wish, but his essence cannot be changed. O offspring of the crafty and
insatiable one! O bitter tree, which also his fruits are like! O thou who art of the
devil, who fights over those who do not belong to him! O thou who art of the
deceit that uses shamelessness! O thou who art of the wickedness that creeps like
a serpent, and art thyself his kindred! And when the apostle had thus spoken
the fiend stood before him, no one seeing him but the woman and the apostle, and
with a very loud voice he said in the hearing of all: What have we to do with
thee, O apostle of the Most High? What have we to do with thee, O servant of
Jesus Christ? What have we to do with thee, O thou that sittest in council with
the Holy Spirit. Wherefore dost thou wish to destroy us, when our time has not
yet come? On what account dost thou wish to take away our power? for until the
present hour we have had hope and time left us.(3) What have we to do with thee?
Thou hast power over thine own, and we over our own. Why dost thou wish to use
tyranny against us, and especially thou who teachest others not to use
tyranny? Why dost thou want those who do not belong to thee, as if thou wert not
satisfied with thine own? Why dost thou liken thyself to the Son of God, who has
done us hurt? For thou art like him altogether, just as if thou hadst been brought
forth by him. For we thought to bring him also under the yoke, like the rest;
but he turned, and held us under his hand. For we did not know him; but he
deceived us by the form which he had put on, and his poverty and his want; for when
we saw him such, we thought him to be a man clothed with flesh, not knowing
that it was he who makes men live. And he gave us power over our own, and, in the
time in which we live, not to let our own go, but to employ ourselves about
them. But thou wishest to get more than is necessary, or than has been given
thee, and to overpower us.
And having thus spoken, the demon wept, saying: I let thee go, my most
lovely yoke-fellow,(4) whom I found long ago and was at rest; I leave thee, my
beloved and trusty sister, in whom I was well pleased. What I shall do I know not,
or whom I shall call upon to hear me and protect me. I know what I shall do. I
shall go to some place where the fame of this man has not been heard, and
perhaps I shall call thee, my beloved, by a new name.(5) And lifting up his voice,
he said: Abide in peace, having received an asylum with a greater than I; but
I, as I have said, will go away and seek thy like, and if I find her not I shall
again return to thee: for I know that when thou art beside this man, thou hast
an asylum in him; but when he has gone away, thou shalt be as thou wast before
he made his appearance, and him indeed wilt thou forget, and to me there will
again be opportunity and boldness; but now I am afraid of the name of him who
has delivered thee. And having thus said, the demon disappeared. And just when
he had disappeared, fire and smoke were seen there, and all there present were
struck with amazement.
And the apostle seeing this, said to them: Nothing strange or unusual has
that demon shown, but his own nature, in which also he shall be burnt up; for
the fire shall consume him, and the smoke of him shall be scattered abroad. And
he began to say: O Jesus Christ, the secret mystery which has been revealed to
us, Thou art He who disclosest to us all manner of mysteries, who hast set me
apart from all my companions, and who hast told me three words with which I am
set on fire, and I cannot tell them to others; O Jesus, man slain, dead, buried;
Jesus, God of God, and Saviour who bringest the dead to life, and healest
those who are diseased; O Jesus, who appearest to be in want, and savest as if in
want of nothing, catching the fishes for the morning and the evening meal, and
establishing all in abundance with a little bread; Jesus, who didst rest from
the toil of the journey as a man, and walk upon the waves as God;(1) Jesus Most
High, voice arising from perfect compassion, Saviour of all, the right hand of
the light overthrowing him that is wicked in his own kind, and bringing all his
kind into one place; Thou who art only begotten, the first-born of many
brethren,(2) God of God Most High, man despised until now; Jesus Christ, who
overlookest us not when we call upon Thee; who hast been shown forth to all in Thy human
life; who for our sakes hast been judged and kept in prison, and freest all
that are in bonds; who hast been called a deceiver,(3) and who deliverest Thine
own from deception: I entreat Thee in behalf of those standing and entreating
Thee, and those that believe in Thee; for they pray to obtain Thy gifts, being of
good hope in Thine aid, occupying Thy place of refuge in Thy majesty; they
give audience, so as to hear from us the words that have been spoken to them. Let
Thy peace come and dwell in them, that they may be purified from their former
deeds, and may put off the old man with his deeds, and put on the new now
declared to them by me.(4)
And having laid his hands on them, he blessed them, saying: The grace of
our Lord Jesus Christ be upon you for ever!(5) And they said, Amen. And the
woman begged of him, saying: Apostle of the Most High, give me the seal, that that
foe may not come back upon me again. Then he made her come near him; and
putting his hand upon her, he sealed her in the name of Father, and Son, and Holy
Ghost. And many others also were sealed along with her. And the apostle ordered
his servant(6) to set out a table; and they set out a bench(7) which they found
there. And having spread a linen cloth upon it, he put on it the bread of the
blessing. And the apostle standing by it, said: Jesus Christ, Son of God, who
hast deemed us worthy to communicate of the Eucharist of Thy sacred body and
honourable blood, behold, we are emboldened by the thanksgiving(8) and invocation of
Thy sacred name; come now, and communicate with us. And he began to say: Come,
perfect compassion; come, communion with mankind; come, Thou that knowest the
mysteries of the chosen one; come, Thou that communicatest in all the
combats(9) of the noble combatant; come, peace that revealest the great things of all
greatness; come, Thou that disclosest secrets, and makest manifest things not to
be spoken; the sacred dove which has brought forth twin young; come, thou
secret mother; come, Thou who art manifest in Thy deeds, and givest joy and rest to
those who are united to Thee; come anti communicate with us in this Eucharist,
which we make in The name, and in the love(10) in which we are united in
calling upon Thee.(11) And having thus said, he made the sign of the cross upon the
bread, and broke it, and began to distribute it. And first he gave it to the
woman, saying: This shall be to thee for remission of sins, and the ransom of
everlasting transgressions. And after her, he gave also to all the others who had
received the seal.
ABOUT THE YOUNG MAN WHO KILLED THE MAIDEN.
And there was a certain young man who had done a nefarious deed; and
having come to the apostle, he took the bread of the Eucharist into his mouth, and
his two hands immediately withered, so that he could no longer bring them to his
mouth. And those who were present and saw him told the apostle what had
happened. And he, having summoned him, said: Tell me, my child, and be ashamed of
nothing,(12) what thou hast done, and why thou hast come hither; for the Eucharist
of the Lord has convicted thee. For this gracious gift coming to many is
especially healing to those who approach it through faith and love; but thee it has
withered away, and what has happened has happened not without some working
cause. And the young man who had been convicted by the Eucharist of the Lord came
up, and fell at the apostle's feet, and prayed him, saying: An evil deed has
been done by me, yet I thought to do something good. I was in love with a certain
woman living outside of the city in an inn, and she loved me. And I having
heard from thee, and believed that thou proclaimest the living God, came and
received the seal from thee along with the others; and thou saidst, Whoever shall
indulge in filthy intercourse, and especially in adultery, shall not have life
with the God whom I proclaim.(1) Since, then, I altogether loved her, I begged of
her, and persuaded her to live with me in chaste and pure intercourse, as thou
thyself teachest; but she would not. When therefore she would not, I took a
sword and killed her; for I could not see her living in adultery with another.
The apostle, having heard this, said: O maddening intercourse, into what
shamelessness dost thou lead! O unrestrained lust, how hast thou brought him into
subjection to do this! O work of the serpent, how dost thou rage in thine own!
And the apostle ordered water to be brought him in a dish. And when the water
had been brought, he said: Come waters from the living waters, existing from
the existing, and sent to us; the fountain sent to us from repose, the power of
salvation coming froth that power that subdues all things, and subjects them to
its own will; come and dwell in these waters, that the gracious gift of the
Holy Spirit may be fully perfected in them. And he said to the young man: Go, wash
thy hands in these waters. And when he had washed, they were restored. And the
apostle said to him: Dost thou believe in our Lord Jesus Christ, that He can
do all things? And he said: Even though I am least of all, I believe; but this I
did, thinking to do a good thing: for I implored her, as also I told thee; but
she would not be persuaded by me to keep herself chaste.
And the apostle said to him: Come, let us go to the inn where thou didst
this deed, and let us see what has happened. And the young man went before the
apostle on the road; and when they came to the inn, they found her lying. And
the apostle, seeing her, was disheartened, for she was a beautiful maiden; and he
ordered her to be brought into the middle of the inn. And having put her on a
Couch, they brought it, and set it in the midst of the court-yard of the inn.
And the apostle laid his hand on her, and began to say: Jesus, who always
appearest to us--for this Thou always wishest, that we should seek Thee--and Thou
Thyself hast given us this power of asking and receiving;(2) and not only hast
Thou given us this, but hast also taught us how to pray;(3) who art not seen by
bodily eyes, but who art not altogether hidden from those of our soul, and who
art hidden in Thy form, but manifested to us by Thy works; and by Thy many deeds
we have recognised Thee as we go on, and Thou hast given us Thy gifts without
measure, saying, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock,
and it shall be opened unto you.(4) We pray, therefore, having suspicion of
our sins;(5) and we ask of Thee not riches, nor gold, nor silver, nor
possessions, nor any of those things that come from the earth and go into the earth again;
but this we beg of Thee, and entreat that in Thy holy name Thou raise this
woman lying here by Thy power, to the glory and faith of those standing by.
And when he had thus prayed, he sealed the young man, and said to him: Go,
and take her by the hand, and say to her, I through my hands killed thee with
the sword;(6) and again I raise thee by my hands, in the faith of our Lord
Jesus Christ. And the young man went and stood by her, saying: I have believed in
Thee, O Christ Jesus. And looking upon Judas Thomas the apostle, he said to him:
Pray for me, that my Lord, upon whom also I call, may come to my help. And
having laid his hand on her hand, he said: Come, Lord Jesus Christ, giving this
woman life, and me the earnest of Thy faith. And immediately, as he drew her
hand, she sprang up, and sat, looking at the great multitude standing round. And
she also saw the apostle standing opposite to her; and having left the couch, she
sprang up, and fell at his feet, and took hold of his garments, saying: I pray
thee, my lord, where is that other who is with thee, who has not left me to
remain in that fearful and grievous place, but has given me up to thee, saying,
Do thou take her, that she may be made perfect, and thereafter brought into her
own place?
And the apostle says to her: Tell us where thou hast been. And she
answered: Dost thou, who wast with me, to whom also I was entrusted, wish to hear? And
she began to say: A certain man received me, hateful in appearance, all black,
and his clothing exceedingly filthy; and he led me away to a place where there
were many chasms, and a great stench and most hateful odour were given forth
thence; and he made me bend down into each chasm, and I saw in the chasm blazing
fire; and wheels of fire ran there, and souls were hung upon those wheels, and
were dashed against each other. And there was there crying and great
lamentation, and there was none released. And that man said to me, These souls are of
thine own nation, and for a certain number of days(7) they have been given over
to punishment and torture; and then others are brought in instead of them; and
likewise also these are again succeeded by others. These are they who have
exchanged the intercourse of man and wife. And again I looked down, and saw infants
heaped upon each other, and struggling and lying upon each other; and he
answered and said to me, These are their children, and for this have they been placed
here for a testimony against them.
And he brought me to another chasm, and I bent down and saw mud, and worms
spouting forth, and souls wallowing there; and a great gnashing of teeth was
heard thence from them. And that man said to me, These are the souls of women
that left their own husbands, and went and committed adultery with others, and
who have been brought to this torment. He showed me another chasm, into which I
bent down and saw souls hung up, some by the tongue, some by the hair, some by
the hands, some by the feet, head downwards, and smoked with smoke and sulphur;
about whom that man who was with me answered me, These souls which are hung up
by the tongue are slanderers, and such as have uttered false and disgraceful
words; those that are hung up by the hair(1) are those that are shameless, and
that have gone about with uncovered heads in the world; these hung up by the
hands are those who have taken what belongs to others, and have stolen, and who
have never given anything to the poor, nor assisted the afflicted; but they so
acted, wishing to get everything, and giving no heed at all to justice and the
laws; and these hung up by the feet are those who lightly and eagerly ran in
wicked ways, and disorderly wickedness, not looking after the sick, and not aiding
those departing this life, and on account of this each individual soul is
requited for what has been done by it.
Again leading me away, he showed me a cavern, exceedingly dark, exhaling a
great stench; and many souls were peeping out thence, wishing to get some
share of the air, but their keepers would not let them peep out. And he who was
with me said, This is the prison of those souls which thou seest; for when they
shall complete their punishments for those things which each one has done,
afterwards again others succeed them--and there are some also quite used up--and are
given up to other punishments. Those, then, who guarded the souls that were in
the dark cave said to the man that had charge of me, Give her to us, that we
may take her in beside the others, until the time comes for her to be given up to
punishment. And he answered them, I will not give her to you, for I am afraid
of him who gave her up to me; for I received no orders to leave her here, and I
shall take her up with me until I get some injunction about her. And he took
me and brought me to another place, in which were men who were bitterly
tortured. And he that is like thee took me and gave me up to thee, having thus said to
thee, Take her, since she is one of the creatures that have been led astray.
And I was taken by thee, and am now before thee. I beg, therefore, and supplicate
thee that I may not go into those places of punishment which I saw.
And the apostle said to the multitudes standing by: You have heard,
brethren, what this woman has recounted; and these are not the only punishments, but
there are others worse than these; and if you do not turn to this God whom I
proclaim, and refrain from your former works and deeds which you have done without
knowledge, in these punishments you shall have your end. Believe, therefore,
in our Lord Jesus Christ, and He will forgive you the sins done by you
heretofore, and will purify you from all the bodily desires that abide in the earth, and
will heal you from the faults that follow after you, and go along with you,
and are found before you. And let each of you put off the old man, and put on
the new, and leave your former course of conduct and behaviour; and let those
that steal steal no more, but let them live, labouring and working;(2) and let the
adulterers no more commit adultery, lest they give themselves up to
everlasting punishment; for adultery is with God an evil altogether grievous above other
evils. Put away also from yourselves covetousness, and lying, and drunkenness,
and slandering, and requiting evil for evil: for all these are alien and
strange to the God proclaimed by us; but rather live in faith, and meekness, and
holiness, and hope, in which God rejoices, that ye may become His servants, having
received from Him gracious gifts, which few or none receive.
All the people therefore believed, and presented their souls obedient to
the living God and Christ Jesus, enjoying His blessed works, and His holy
service. And they brought much money for the service of the widows; for he had them
collected in the cities, and he sent to all of them by his own servants(3) what
was necessary, both clothing and food. But he did not cease proclaiming and
saying to them, and showing that this is Jesus the Christ, concerning whom the
Scriptures proclaimed that He should come, and be crucified, and be raised from
the dead after three days. And he showed them a second time, beginning from the
prohets, and explaining the things concerning Christ, and that it was necessary
for Him to come, and for all things to be fulfilled that had been said to us
beforehand concerning Him.(1)
And the report of him ran through all the cities and countries; and all
who had persons sick or tormented by unclean spirits brought them, and they were
healed. Some also they laid on the road by which he was to pass, and he healed
them all by the power of the Lord.(2) Then said all with one accord who had
been healed by him, with one voice: Glory to Thee, Jesus, who givest Thy healing
to all alike by means of Thy servant and apostle Thomas. And being in good
health, and rejoicing, we pray Thee that we may be of Thy flock, and be numbered
among Thy sheep; receive us, therefore, O Lord, and consider not our
transgressions and former offences which we did, being in ignorance.
And the apostle said: Glory to the only-begotten from the Father;(3) glory
to the first-born of many brethren;(4) Glory to Thee, the defender and helper
of those who come to Thy place of refuge; Thou that sleepest not, and raisest
those that are asleep; that livest and bringest to life those that are lying in
death; O God Jesus Christ, Son of the living God, redeemer and helper, refuge
and rest of all that labour in Thy work, who affordest health to those who for
Thy name's sake bear the burden of the day, and the icy coldness of the night;
we give thanks for the gracious gifts that have been given us by Thee, and for
the help from Thee bestowed upon us, and Thy providential care that has come
upon us froth Thee. Perfect these things upon us, therefore, unto the end, that we
may have confidence in Thee; look upon us, because for Thy sake we have left
our homes, and for Thy sake have become strangers gladly and willingly; look
upon us, O Lord, because for Thy sake we have abandoned our possessions, that we
may have Thee for a possession that shall not be taken away; look upon us, O
Lord, because we have left those related to us by ties of kindred in order that we
may be united in relationship to Thee; look upon us, O Lord, who have left our
fathers and mothers, and those that nourished us, that we may behold Thy
Father, and be satisfied with His divine nourishment: look upon us, O Lord, because
for Thy sake we have left our bodily yoke-fellows,(5) and our earthly fruit, in
order that we may share in that intercourse which is lasting and true, and
bring forth true fruits, whose nature is from above, the enjoyment of which no
one can take away from us, with which we abide, and they abide with us.
CONSUMMATION OF THOMAS THE APOSTLE(1)
AT the command of King Misdeus(2) the blessed Apostle Thomas was cast into
prison; and he said: I glorify God, and I shall preach the word to the
prisoners, so that all rejoiced at his presence. When, therefore, Juzanes the king's
son, and Tertia his mother, and Mygdonia, and Markia, had become believers, but
were not yet thought worthy of baptism, they took it exceedingly ill that the
blessed one had been shut up. And having come to the prison, and given much
money to the jailor,(3) they went in to him. And he, seeing them, was glad, and
glorified the Lord, and blessed them. And they entreated and begged the seal in
the Lord, a beautiful young man having appeared to them in a dream, and ordered
the apostle into the house of Juzanes.
And again the beautiful young man coming to them and Thomas, bade them do
this on the coming night. And he ran before them, and gave them light on the
way, and without noise opened the doors that had been secured, until all the
mystery was completed. And having made them communicate in the Eucharist, and
having talked much with them, and confirmed them in the faith, and commended them to
the Lord, he went forth thence, leaving the women, and again went to be shut
up.(4) And they grieved and wept because Misdeus the king was to kill him.
And Thomas went and found the jailors fighting, and saying: What wrong
have we done to that sorcerer, that, availing himself of his magic art, he has
opened the doors of the prison, and wishes to set all the prisoners free? But let
us go and let the king know about his wife and his son.(5) And when he came
they stripped him, and girded him with a girdle; and thus they stood before the
king.
And Misdeus said to him: Art thou a slave, or a freeman? And Thomas
answered and said to him: I am not(1) a slave, and thou hast no power against me at
all. And how, said Misdeus, hast thou run away and come to this country? And
Thomas said: I came here that I might save many, and that I might by thy bands
depart from this body. Misdeus says to him: Who is thy master? and what is his
name? and of what country, and of whom is he? My Lord, says Thomas, is my Master
and thine, being the Lord of heaven and earth. And Misdeus said: What is he
called? And Thomas said: Thou canst not know His true name at this time; but I tell
thee the name that has been given Him for a season--Jesus the Christ. And
Misdeus said: I have not been in a hurry(2) to destroy thee, but have restrained
myself; but thou hast made a display of works, so that thy sorceries have been
heard of in all the country. But now this will I do,(3) that thy sorceries may
also perish with thee, that our nation may be purified from them. And Thomas
said: Dost thou call these things which will follow me sorceries? They shall never
be removed from the people here.
And while these things were saying, Misdeus was considering in what manner
he should put him to death; for he was afraid of the multitude standing round,
many, even some of the chief men, having believed in him. And he arose, I and
took Thomas outside of the city; and a few soldiers accompanied him with their
arms. And the rest of the multitude thought that the king was wishing to learn
something from him; and they stood and observed him closely. And when they had
gone forth three stadia, he delivered him to four soldiers, and to one of the
chief officers,(4) and ordered them to take him up into the mountain and spear
him; but he himself returned to the city.
And those present ran to Thomas, eager to rescue him; but he was led away
by the soldiers who were with him. For there were two on each side having hold
of him, because of sorcery, And the chief officer held him by the hand, and led
him with honour. And at the same time the blessed apostle said: O the hidden
mysteries of Thee, O Lord! for even to the close of life is fulfilled in us the
riches of Thy grace, which does not allow us to be without feeling as to the
body. For, behold, four have laid hold of me, and one leads me, since I belong to
One, to whom I am going always invisibly. But now I learn that my Lord also,
since He was a stranger, to whom I am going, who also is always present with me
invisibly, was struck by one; but I am struck by four.(5)
And when they came to that place where they were to spear him, Thomas
spoke thus to those spearing him: Hear me now, at least, when I am departing from
my body; and let not your eyes be darkened in understanding, nor your ears shut
up so as not to hear those things in which you have believed the God whom I
preach, after being delivered in your souls from rashness; and behave in a manner
becoming those who are free, being void of human glory, and live the life
towards God. And he said to Juzanes: Son of an earthly king, but servant of Jesus
Christ, give what is due to those who are to fulfil the command(6) of Misdeus, in
order that I may go apart from them and pray. And Juzanes having paid the
soldiers, the apostle betook himself to prayer; and it was as follows:--
My Lord, and my God, and hope, and leader, and guide in all countries, I
follow Thee along with all that serve Thee, and do Thou guide me this day on my
way to Thee. Let no one take my sold, which Thou hast given to me. Let not
publicans and beggars look upon me, nor let serpents slander me, and let not the
children of the dragon hiss at me. Behold, I have fulfilled Thy work, and
accomplished what Thou gavest me to do. I have become a slave, that I might receive
freedom from Thee; do then give it to me, and make me perfect. And this I say not
wavering, but that they may hear who need to hear. I glorify Thee in all, Lord
and Master; for to Thee is due glory for ever. Amen.
And when he had prayed, he said to the soldiers: Come and finish the work
of him that sent you. And the four struck him at once, and killed him. And all
the brethren wept, and wrapped him up in beautiful shawls, and many linen
cloths, and laid him in the tomb in which of old the kings used to be buried.
And Syphor and Juzanes did not go to the city, but spent the whole day
there, and waited during the night. And Thomas appeared to them, and said: I am
not there; why do you sit watching? for I have gone up, and received the things I
hoped for; but rise up and walk, and after no long time you shall be brought
beside me. And Misdeus and Charisius(7) greatly afflicted Tertia and Mygdonia,
but did not persuade them to abandon their opinions. And Thomas appeared, and
said to them: Forget not the former things, for the holy and sanctifying Jesus
Himself will aid you. And Misdeus and Charisius, when they could not persuade
them not to be of this opinion, granted them their own will. And all the brethren
assembled together For the blessed one had made Syphorus(1) a presbyter in the
mountain, and Juzanius(1) a deacon, when he was led away to die. And the Lord
helped them, and increased the faith by means of them.
And after a long time, it happened that one of the sons of Misdeus was a
demoniac; and the demon being stubborn, no one was able to heal him. And Misdeus
considered, and said I shall go and open the tomb, and take a bone of the
apostle's body, and touch my son with it, and I know that he will be healed. And he
went to do what he had thought of. And the blessed apostle appeared to him,
and said: Thou didst not believe in me when alive; how wilt thou believe in me
when I am dead? Fear not. Jesus Christ is kindly disposed to thee, through His
great clemency. And Misdeus, when he did not find the bones (for one of the
brethren had taken them, and carried them into the regions of the West(2)), took
some dust from where the bones had lain, and touched his son with it, and said: I
believe in Thee, Jesus, now when he has left me who always afflicts men, that
they may not look to Thy light which giveth understand ing, O Lord, kind to men.
And his son being healed in this manner, he met with the rest of the brethren
who were under the rule of Sypho-i rus, and entreated the brethren to pray for
him, that he might obtain mercy from our Lord Jesus Christ; to whom be glory
for ever and ever. Amen.