��������������������� The GOSPEL of NICODEMUS, formerly called
���������������������������������������� the ACTS of
��������������������������������� PONTIUS PILATE.
��� [Although this Gospel is, by some among the learned, supposed to have been really written by Nicodemus, who became a
��� disciple of Jesus Christ, and conversed with him; others conjecture that it was a forgery towards the close of the third
��� century by some zealous believer, who observing that there had been appeals made by the Christians of the former age, to
��� the Acts of Pilate, but that such Acts could not be produced, imagined it would be of service to Christianity to
��� fabricate and publish this Gospel; as it would both confirm the Christians under persecution, and convince the Heathens
��� of the truth of the Christian religion. The Rev. Jeremiah Jones says, that such pious frauds were very common among
��� Christians even in the first three centuries; and that a forgery of this nature, with the view above mentioned, seems
��� natural and probable.
��� The same author, in noticing that Eusebius, in his Ecclesiastical history. charges the Pagans with having forged and
��� published a book, called "The Acts of Pilate," takes occasion to observe, that the internal evidence of this Gospel
��� shows it was not the work of any Heathen; but that if in the latter end of the third century we find it in use among
��� Christians (as it was then certainly in some churches) and about the same time find a forgery of the Heathens under the
��� same title, it seems exceedingly probable that some Christians, at that time, should publish such a piece as this, in
��� order partly to confront the spurious one of the Pagans, and partly to support those appeals which had been made by
��� former Christians to the Acts of Pilate; and Mr. Jones says, he thinks so more particularly as we have innumerable
��� instances of forgeries by the faithful in the primitive ages, grounded on less plausible reasons. Whether it be
��� canonical or not, it is of very great antiquity, and is appealed to by several of the ancient Christians. The present
��� translation is made from the Gospel published by Grynaeus in the Orthodoxographa, vol. i. tom. ii. p.643.]
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�������������������������� The Gospel of Nicodemus the disciple, concerning the sufferings and
�������������������������������� Resurrection of our master and Saviour Jesus Christ.
��������������������������������������������� CHAP. I
��� ( 1 Christ accused to Pilate by the Jews of healing on the Sabbath,
��� 9 summoned before Pilate by a messenger who does him honour,
��� 20 worshipped by the standards bowing down to him.)
��� Annas and Caiaphas, and Summas, and Datam, Gamaliel, Judas, Levi, Nepthalim, Alexander, Cyrus, and other
���Jews, went to Pilate about Jesus, accusing him with many bad crimes.
��� 2 And said, We are assured that Jesus is the son of Joseph the carpenter, and born of Mary, and
��� that he declares himself the Son of God, and a king ; and not only so, but attempts the dissolution of
��� the sabbath, and the laws of our fathers.
��� 3 Pilate replied; What is it which he declares? and what is it which he attempts dissolving?
��� 4 The Jews told him, We have a law which forbids doing cures on the Sabbath day; but he
��� cures both the lame and the deaf, those afflicted with the palsy, the blind, and lepers, and demoniacs,
��� on that day by wicked methods.
��� 5 Pilate replied, How can he do this by wicked methods? They answered,
��� He is a conjurer, and casts out devils by the prince of the devils ; and so all things become subject to him.
��� 6 Then said Pilate, Casting out devils seems not to be the work of an unclean spirit,
��� but to proceed from the power of God.
��� 7 The Jews replied to Pilate, We entreat your highness to summon him to appear before your
��� tribunal, and hear him yourself.
��� 8 Then Pilate called a messenger and said to him, By what means will Christ be brought hither?
��� 9 Then went the messenger forth, and knowing Christ, worshipped him; and having spread
��� the cloak which he had in his hand upon the ground, he said, Lord, walk upon this, and go in,
��� for the governor calls thee.
��� 10 When the Jews perceived what the messenger had done they exclaimed (against him) to
��� Pilate, and said, Why did you not give him his summons by a beadle, and not by a messenger? ‑
��� For the messenger, when he saw him, worshipped him, and spread the cloak which he had in his
��� hand upon the ground before him, and said to him, Lord, the governor calls thee.
��� 11 Then Pilate called the messenger, and said, Why hast thou done thus?
��� 12 The messenger replied, When thou sentest me from Jerusalem to Alexander, I saw Jesus
��� sitting in a mean figure upon a she‑ass, and the children of the Hebrews cried out, Hosannah,
��� holding boughs of trees in their hands.
��� 13 Others spread their garments in the way, and said, Save us, thou who art in heaven;
��� blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord.?
���14 Then the Jews cried out, against the messenger, and said,
��� The children of the Hebrews made their acclamations in the Hebrew language;
��� and how couldst thou, who art a Greek, understand the Hebrew?
�������������������������������������� �MARY OFFERING IN THE TEMPLE.
���������������������������������� From a Greek diptychon of the thirteenth or fourteenth century.
��� 15 The messenger answered them and said, I asked one of the Jews and said, What is this
��� which the children do cry out in the Hebrew language?
��� 16 And he explained it to me, saying, they cry out Hosannah, which being interpreted,
��� is, 0, Lord, save me; or, 0 Lord, save.
��� 17 Pilate then said to them, Why do you yourselves testify to the words spoken by the children,
��� namely, by your silence?
��� In what has the messenger done amiss? And they were silent.
��� 18 Then the governor said unto the messenger, Go forth and endeavour by any means to
��� bring him in.
��� 19 But the messenger went forth, and did as before; and said, Lord, come in, for the governor calleth thee.
��� 20 And as Jesus was going in by the ensigns, who carried the standards, the tops of them
��� bowed down and worshipped Jesus.
��� 21 Whereupon the Jews exclaimed more vehemently against the ensigns.
��� 22 But Pilate said to the Jews, I know it is not pleasing to you that the tops of the standards
��� did of themselves bow and worship Jesus; but why do ye exclaim against the ensigns,
��� as if they had bowed and worshipped?
��� 23 They replied to Pilate, We saw the ensigns themselves bowing and worshipping Jesus.
��� 24 Then the governor called the ensigns and said unto them, Why did you do thus?
��� 25 The ensigns said to Pilate, We are all Pagans and worship the gods in temples; and how
��� should we think anything about worshipping him?
��� We only held the standards in our hands and they bowed themselves and
��� worshipped him.
��� 26 Then said Pilate to the rulers of the synagogue, Do ye yourselves choose some strong men,
��� and let them hold the standards, and we shall see whether they will then bend of themselves.
��� 27 So the elders of the Jews sought out twelve of the most strong and able old men,
��� and made them hold the standards and they stood in the presence of the governor.
��� 28 Then Pilate said to the messenger, Take Jesus out, and by some means bring him in again.
��� And Jesus and the messenger went out of the hall.
��� 29 And Pilate called the ensigns who before had borne the standards, and swore to them,
��� that if they had not borne the standards in that manner when Jesus before entered in,
��� he would cut off their heads.
��� 30 Then the governor commanded Jesus to come in again.
��� 31 And the messenger did as he had done before, and very much entreated Jesus that he
��� would go upon his cloak, and walk on it, and he did walk upon it, and went in.
��� 32 And when Jesus went in, the standards bowed themselves as before, and worshipped him.
��������������������������������������������� CHAP. II
��� (2 Is compassionated by Pilate's wife,
��� 7 charged with being born in fornication.
��� 12 Testimony to the betrothing of his
��� parents. Hatred of the Jews to him.)
��� Now when Pilate saw this, he was afraid, and was about to rise from his seat.
��� 2 But while he thought to rise, his own wife who stood at a distance, sent to him, saying,
��� Have thou nothing to do with that just man; for I have suffered much concerning him in a
��� Vision this night.
��� 3 When the Jews heard this they said to Pilate, Did we not say unto thee,
��� He is a conjuror?
��� Behold, he hath caused thy wife to dream.
��� 4 Pilate then calling Jesus, said, thou hast heard what they testify against thee,
��� and makest no answer?
��� 5 Jesus replied, If they had not a power of speaking, they could not have spoke;
��� but because every one has the command of his own tongue, to speak both good and bad,
��� let him look to it.
��� 6 But the elders of the Jews answered, and said to Jesus,
��� What shall we look to?
��� 7 In the first place, we know this concerning thee, that thou wast born through fornication;
��� secondly, that upon the account of thy birth the infants were slain in Bethlehem;
��� thirdly, that thy father and mother Mary fled into Egypt, because they could
��� not trust their own people.
��� 8 Some of the Jews who stood by spake more favourably, We cannot say that he was born
��� through fornication ; but we know that his mother Mary was betrothed to Joseph, and so he
��� was not born through fornication.
��� 9 Then said Pilate to the Jews who affirmed him to be born through fornication,
��� This your account is not true, seeing there was a betrothment, as they testify
��� who are of your own nation.
��� 10 Annas and Caiaphas spake to Pilate, All this multitude of people is to be regarded,
��� who cry out, that he was born through fornication, and is a conjuror;
��� but they who deny him to be born through fornication, are his proselytes and disciples.
��� 11 Pilate answered Annas and Caiaphas, Who are the proselytes?
��� They answered, They are those who are the children of Pagans, and are not become Jews, but
��� followers of him.
��� 12 Then replied Eleazer, and Asterius, and Antonius, and James, Caras and Samuel, Isaac
��� and Phinees, Crispus and Agrippa, Annas and Judas, We are not proselytes, but children of
��� Jews, and speak the truth, and were present when Mary was betrothed.
��� 13 Then Pilate addressing himself to the twelve men who spake this, said to them, I conjure you
��� by the life of Caesar, that ye faithfully declare whether he was born through fornication, and
��� those things be true which ye have related.
��� 14 They answered Pilate, We have a law, where by we are forbid to swear, it being a sin:
��� Let them swear by the life of Caesar that it is not as we have said, and we
��� will be contented to be put to death.
��� 15 Then said Annas and Caiaphas to Pilate, Those twelve men will not believe that we know
��� him to be basely born, and to be a conjuror, although he pretends that he is the son of God,
��� and a king :
��� which we are so far from believing, that we tremble to hear.
��� 16 Then Pilate commanded every one to go out except the twelve men who said he was not
��� born through fornication, and Jesus to withdraw to a distance, and said to them,
���Why have the Jews a mind to kill Jesus?
��� 17 They answered him, They are angry because he wrought cures on the Sabbath day.
��� Pilate said, Will they kill him for a good work ? They say unto him, Yes, Sir.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. III.
��� (1 Is exonerated by Pilate.
��� 11 Disputes with Pilate
��� concerning Truth.)
��� THEN Pilate, filled with anger, went out of the hall, and said to the Jews,
��� I call the whole world to witness that I find no fault in that man.
��� 2 The Jews replied to Pilate, If he had not been a wicked person, we had not brought him before thee.
��� 3 Pilate said to them, Do ye take him and try him by your law.
��� 4 Then the Jews said, It is not lawful for us to put any one to death.
��� 5 Pilate said to the Jews, The command, therefore thou shalt not kill, belongs to you, but not
��� to me.
��� 6 And he went again into the hall, and called Jesus by himself, and said to him,
��� Art thou the king of the Jews?
��� 7 And Jesus answering, said to Pilate,
��� Dost thou speak this of thyself, or did the Jews tell it thee concerning me?
��� 8 Pilate answering, said to Jesus, Am I a Jew?
��� The whole nation and rulers of the Jews have delivered thee up to me.
��� What hast thou done?
��� 9 Jesus answering, said, My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world,
��� then would my servants fight, and I should not have been delivered to the Jews; but now my
��� kingdom is not from hence.
��� 10 Pilate said, Art thou a king then? Jesus answered,
��� Thou sayest that I am a king: to this end was I born, and for this end came I into the world;
��� and for this purpose I came, that I should bear witness to the truth; and
��� every one who is of the truth, heareth my voice.
��� 11 Pilate saith to him, What is truth?
��� 12 Jesus said, Truth is from heaven.
��� 13 Pilate said, Therefore truth is not on earth.
��� 14 Jesus said to Pilate, Believe that truth is on earth among those, who when they have the power of judgment, are governed by truth,
��� and form right judgment.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. IV.
��� (1 Pilate finds no fault in Jesus.
��� 16 The Jews demand his crucifixion.)
��� THEN Pilate left Jesus in the hall, and went out to the Jews, and said, I find not any one fault in Jesus.
��� 2 The Jews say unto him, But he said, I can destroy the temple of God, and in three days
��� build it up again.
��� 3 Pilate saith unto them, What sort of temple is that of which he speaketh?
��� 4 The Jews say unto him, That which Solomon was forty‑six years in building, he said he
��� would destroy, and in three days build up.
��� 5 Pilate said to them again, I am innocent from the blood of that man; do ye look to it.
��� 6 The Jews say to him, His blood be upon us and our children.
��� Then Pilate calling together the elders and scribes, priests and Levites, saith to them
��� privately, Do not act thus; I have found nothing in your charge (against him) concerning
��� his curing sick persons, and breaking the Sabbath, worthy of death.
��� 7 The Priests and Levites replied to Pilate, By the life of Caesar, if any one be a blasphemer,
��� he is worthy of death , but this man hath blasphemed against the Lord.
��� 8 Then the governor again commanded the Jews to depart out of the hall; and calling Jesus,
��� said to him, What shall I do with thee?
��� 9 Jesus answered him, Do according as it is written.
��� 10 Pilate said to him, How is it written?
��� 11 Jesus saith to him, Moses and the prophets have prophesied concerning my suffering and resurrection.
��� 12 The Jews hearing this, were provoked, and said to Pilate, Why wilt thou any longer
��� hear the blasphemy of that man?
��� 13 Pilate saith to them, If these words seem to you blasphemy, do ye take him, bring
��� him to your court, and try him according to your law.
��� 14 The Jews reply to Pilate, Our law saith, he shall be obliged to receive nine and thirty stripes,
��� but if after this manner he shall blaspheme against the Lord, he shall be stoned.
��� 15 Pilate saith unto them, If that speech of his was blasphemy, do ye try him according to your law.
��� 16 The Jews say to Pilate, Our law commands us not to put any one to death :
��� we desire that he may be crucified, because he deserves the death of the cross.
��� 17 Pilate saith to them, It is not fit he should be crucified:
��� let him be only whipped and sent away.
��� 18 But when the governor looked upon the people that were
��� present and the Jews, he saw many of the Jews in tears, and said to the chief priests of the
��� Jews, All the people do not desire his death.
��� 19 The elders of the Jews answered to Pilate, We and all the people came hither for this very
��� purpose, that he should die.
��� 20 Pilate saith to them, Why should he die?
��� 21 They said to him, Because he declares himself to be the Son of God, and a King.
��������������������������������������������� CHAP. V.
��� (1 Nicodemus speaks in defense of Christ,
��� and relates his miracles. 12 Another
��� Jew, 26 with veronica, 34 Centurio,
��� and others, testify of other miracles.)
��� BUT Nicodemus, a certain Jew, stood before the governor, and said, I entreat thee,
��� O righteous judge, that thou wouldst favour me with the liberty of speaking a few words.
��� 2 Pilate said to him, Speak on.
��� 3 Nicodemus said, I spake to the elders of the Jews, and the scribes, and priests and Levites,
��� and all the multitude of the Jews, in their assembly; What is it ye would do with this man?
��� 4 He is a man who hath wrought many useful and glorious miracles, such as no man
��� on earth ever wrought before, nor will ever work. Let him go, and do him no harm; if he cometh from God, his miracles, (his miraculous
��� Cures) will continue; but if from men, they will Come to nought.
��� 5 Thus Moses, when he was sent by God into Egypt, wrought the miracles which God commanded him, before Pharaoh king of Egypt;
��� and though the magicians of that country, Jannes and Jambres,
��� wrought by their magic the same miracles which Moses did , yet they could not work all which he did;
��� 6 And the miracles which the magicians wrought, were not of God,
��� as ye know, 0 Scribes and Pharisees; but they who wrought them perished, and all who believed them.
��� 7 And now let this man go; because the very miracles for which ye accuse him, are from God;
��� and he is not worthy of death.
��� 8 The Jews then said to Nicodemus, Art thou become his disciple, and making speeches in his favour?
��� 9 Nicodemus said to them, Is the governor become his disciple also and does he make speeches for him?
��� Did not Caesar place him in that high post?
��� 10 When the Jews heard this they trembled, and gnashed their teeth at Nicodemus, and said to him,
��� Mayest thou receive his doctrine for truth, and have thy lot with Christ!
��� 11 Nicodemus replied, Amen; I will receive his doctrine, and my lot with him, as ye have said.
��� 12 � Then another certain Jew rose up, and desired leave of the governor to hear him a few words.
��� 13 And the governor said, Speak what thou hast a mind.
��� 14 And he said, I lay for thirty ‑ eight years by the sheep‑ pool at Jerusalem, labouring
��� under a great infirmity, and waiting for a cure which should be wrought by the coming of an
��� angel, who at a certain time troubled the water; and whosoever first after the troubling of the
��� water stepped in, was made whole of whatsoever disease he had.
��� 15 And when Jesus saw me languishing there, he said to me, Wilt thou be made whole? And
��� I answered, Sir, I have no man, when the water is troubled, to put me into the pool.
��� 16 And he said unto me, Rise, take up thy bed and walk. And I was immediately made whole,
��� and took up my bed and walked.
��� 17 The Jews then said to Pilate, Our Lord Governor, pray ask him what day it was on which
��� he was cured of his infirmity.
��� 18 The infirm person replied, It was on the Sabbath.
��� 19 The Jews said to Pilate, Did we not say that he wrought his cures on the Sabbath, and cast
��� out devils by the prince of devils?
��� 20 Then another certain Jew came forth, and said, I was blind, could hear sounds, but could not
��� see any one; and as Jesus was going along, I heard the multitude passing by, and I asked
� ��what was there?
��� 21 They told me that Jesus was passing by: then I cried out, saying, Jesus, Son of David,
��� have mercy on me. And he stood still, and commanded that I should be brought to him, and
��� said to me, What wilt thou?
��� 22 I said, Lord, that I may receive my sight.
��� 23 He said to me, Receive thy sight: and presently I saw, and followed him, rejoicing and
��� giving thanks.
��� 24 Another Jew also came forth, and said, I was a leper, and he cured me by his word only,
�� �saying, I will, be thou clean; and presently I was cleansed from my leprosy.
��� 25 And another Jew came forth, and said, I was crooked, and he made me straight by his word.
��� 26 And a certain woman named Veronica, said, I was afflicted with an issue of blood
��� twelve years, and I touched the hem of his garments, and presently the issue of my blood stopped.
��� 27 The Jews then said, We have a law, that a woman shall not be allowed as an evidence.
��� 28 And, after other things, another Jew said, I saw Jesus invited to a wedding with his disciples,
��� and there was a want of wine in Cana of Galilee;
��� 29 And when the wine was all drank, he commanded the servants that they should fill six
��� pots which were there with water, and they filled them up to the brim, and he blessed them,
��� and turned the water into wine, and all the people drank, being surprised at this miracle.
��� 30 And another Jew stood forth, and said, I saw Jesus teaching in the synagogue at
��� Capernaum; and there was in the synagogue a certain man who had a devil; and he cried
��� out, saying, let me alone; what have we to do with thee, Jesus of Nazareth?
��� Art thou come to destroy us? I know that thou art the Holy One of God.
��� 31 And Jesus rebuked him, saying, Hold thy peace, unclean spirit, and come out of the man;
��� and presently he came out of him, and did not at all hurt him.
��� 32 The following things were also said by a Pharisee; I saw that a great company came to
��� Jesus from Galilee and Judaea, and the sea‑coast, and many countries about Jordan, and
��� many infirm persons came to him, and he healed them all.
��� 33 And I heard the unclean spirits crying out, and saying, Thou art the Son of God.
��� And Jesus strictly charged them, that they should not make him known.
��� 34 � After this another person, whose name was Centurio, said, I saw Jesus in Capernaum,
��� and I entreated him, saying, Lord, my servant lieth at home sick of the palsy.
��� 35 And Jesus said to me, I will come and cure him.
��� 36 But I said, Lord, I am not worthy that thou shouldst come under my roof;
��� but only speak the word, and my servant shall be healed.
��� 37 And Jesus said unto me, Go thy way; and as thou hast believed, so be it done unto thee.
��� And my servant was healed from that same hour.
��� 38 Then a certain nobleman said, I had a son in Capernaum, who lay at the point of death;
��� and when I heard that Jesus was come into Galilee, I went and besought him that he would come
��� down to my house, and heal my son, for he was at the point of death.
��� 39 He said to me, Go thy way, thy son liveth.
��� 40 And my son was cured from that hour.
��� 41 Besides these, also many others of the Jews, both men and women, cried out and said,
��� He is truly the Son of God, who cures all diseases only by his word, and to whom
��� the devils are altogether subject.
��� 42 Some of them farther said, This power can proceed from none but God.
��� 43 Pilate said to the Jews, Why are not the devils subject to your doctors?
��� 44 Some of them said, The power of subjecting devils cannot proceed but from God.
��� 45 But others said to Pilate, That he had raised Lazarus from the dead, after he had been
��� four days in his grave.
��� 46 The governor hearing this, trembling said to the multitude of the Jews,
��� What will it profit you to shed innocent blood?
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. VI.
��� (1 Pilate dismayed by the turbulence of
��� the Jews, 5 who demand Barabbas to
��� be released, and Christ to be crucified,
��� 9 Pilate warmly expostulates with
��� them, 20 washes his hands of Christ's
��� blood, 23 and sentences him to be
��� whipped and crucified.)
��� THEN Pilate having called together Nicodemus, and the fifteen men who said that
��� Jesus was not born through fornication, said to them, What shall I do, seeing there is like to
��� be a tumult among the people.
��� 2 They said unto him, We know not; let them look to it who raise the tumult.
��� 3 Pilate then called the multitude again, and said to them, Ye know that ye have a custom, that
��� I should release to you one prisoner at the feast of the Passover;
��� 4 I have a noted prisoner, a murderer, who is called Barabbas, and Jesus who is called
��� Christ, in whom I find nothing that deserves death; which of them therefore have
��� you a mind that I should release to you?'
��� 5 They all cry out, and say, Release to us Barabbas.
��� 6 Pilate saith to them, What then shall I do with Jesus who is called Christ?
��� 7 They all answer, Let him be crucified.
��� 8 Again they cry out and say to Pilate, You are not the friend of Caesar, if you release this
��� man? for he hath declared that he is the Son of God, and a king.
��� But are you inclined that he should be king, and not Caesar?
��� 9 Then Pilate filled with anger said to them, Your nation hath always been seditious, and
��� you are always against those who have been serviceable to you?
��� 10 The Jews replied, Who are those who have been serviceable to us?
��� 11 Pilate answered them, Your God who delivered you from the hard bondage of the Egyptians,
��� and brought you over the Red Sea as though it had been dry land, and fed you in the wilderness
��� with manna and the flesh of quails, and brought water out of the rock, and gave you a law
��� from heaven:
��� 12 Ye provoked him all ways, and desired for yourselves a molten calf, and worshipped it,
��� and sacrificed to it, and said, These are Thy Gods, 0 Israel, which brought thee out of the
��� land of Egypt!
��� 13 On account of which your God was inclined to destroy you;
��� but Moses interceded for you, and your God heard him, and forgave your iniquity.
��� 14 Afterwards ye were enraged against, and would have killed your prophets, Moses and Aaron,
��� when they fled to the tabernacle, and ye were always murmuring against God and his prophets.
��� 15 And arising from his judgment seat, he would have gone out; but the Jews all cried out,
��� We acknowledge Caesar to be king, and not Jesus.
��� 16 Whereas this person, as soon as he was born, the wise men came and offered gifts unto
��� him; which when Herod heard, he was exceedingly troubled, and would have killed him.
��� 17 When his father knew this, he fled with him and his mother Mary into Egypt. Herod, when
��� he heard he was born, would have slain him; and accordingly sent and slew all the children which
��� were in Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof, from two years old and under.
��� 18 When Pilate heard this account, he was afraid; and commanding silence among the people,
��� who made a noise, he said to Jesus, Art thou therefore a king?
��� 19 All the Jews replied to Pilate, he is the very person whom Herod sought to have slain.
��� 20 Then Pilate taking water, washed his hands before the people and said, I am innocent of
��� the blood of this just person; look ye to it.
��� 21 The Jews answered and said, His blood be upon us and our children.
��� 22 Then Pilate commanded Jesus to be brought before him, and spake to him in the following words:
��� 23 Thy own nation hath charged thee as making thyself a king; wherefore I,
��� Pilate sentence thee to be whipped according to the laws of former governors; and that thou be first
��� bound, then hanged upon a cross in that place where thou art now a prisoner; and also two
��� criminals with thee, whose names are Dimas and Gestas.
����������������� ����������������������������CHAP. VII
��� (1 Manner of Christ's crucifixion with
��� the two thieves.)
��� THEN Jesus went out of the hall, and the two thieves with him.
��� 2 And when they came to the place which is called Golgotha, they stript him of his raiment,
��� and girt him about with a linen cloth, and put a crown of thorns upon his head, and put a reed in
��� his hand.
��� 3 And in like manner did they to the two thieves who were crucified with him, Dimas on his
��� right hand and Gestas on his left.
��� 4 But Jesus said, My Father, forgive them; For they know not
��� what they do.
��� 5 And they divided his garments, and upon his vesture they
��� cast lots.
��� 6 The people in the mean time stood by, and the chief priests and elders of the Jews mocked
��� him, saying, he saved others, let him now save himself if he can;
��� if he be the son of God, let him now come down from the cross.
��� 7 The soldiers also mocked him, and taking vinegar and gall
��� offered it to him to drink, and said to him, If thou art king of
��� the Jews deliver thyself.
��� 8 Then Longinus, a certain soldier, taking a spear, pierced his
��� side, and presently there came forth blood and water.
��� 9 And Pilate wrote the title upon the cross in Hebrew, Latin,
��� and Greek letters, viz. This is the king of the Jews.
��� 10 But one of the two thieves who were crucified with Jesus,
��� whose name was Gestas, said to Jesus, If thou art the Christ, deliver thyself and us.
��� 11 But the thief who was crucified on his right hand, whose
��� name was Dimas, answering, rebuked him, and said, Dost not
��� thou fear God, who art condemned to this punishment? We indeed
��� receive rightly and justly the demerit of our actions; but this
��� Jesus, what evil bath he done?
��� 12 After this groaning, he said to Jesus, Lord, remember me
��� when thou comest into thy kingdom.
��� 13 Jesus answering, said to him, Verily I say unto thee, that
��� this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise.
������������������������������������������� CHAP. VIII.
��� (1 Miraculous appearance at his death.
��� 10 The Jews say the eclipse was natural.
��� 12 Joseph of Arimathaea embalms
��� Christ's body and buries it.)
��� AND it was about the sixth hour, and darkness was upon the face of the whole earth until
��� the ninth hour.
��� 2 And while the sun was eclipsed, behold the vail of the temple was rent from the top to
��� the bottom; and the rocks also were rent, and the graves opened, and many bodies of saints,
��� which slept, arose.
��� 3 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice,
��� saying, Hely, Hely, lama zabacthani ?
��� which being interpreted, is, My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?
��� 4 And after these things, Jesus said, Father, into thy hands I
��� commend my spirit; and having said this, he gave up the ghost
��� 5 But when the centurion saw that Jesus thus crying out gave
��� up the ghost, he glorified God, and said, Of a truth this was a just man.
��� 6 And all the people who stood by, were exceedingly troubled at
��� the sight; and reflecting upon what had passed, smote upon their
��� breasts, and then returned to the city of Jerusalem.
��� 7 The centurion went to the governor, and related to him all that had passed;
��� 8 And when he had heard all these things, he was exceeding sorrowful ;
��� 9 And calling the Jews together, said to them, Have ye seen the miracle of the sun's eclipse,
��� and the other things which came to pass, while Jesus was dying?
��� 10 Which when the Jews heard, they answered to the governor,
��� The eclipse of the sun happened according to its usual custom.
��� 11 But all those who were the acquaintance of Christ, stood at a distance,
��� as did the women who had followed Jesus from Galilee,
��� observing all these things.
���������������������������� THE BIRTH OF CHRIST . THE MURDER OF THE INNOCENTS.
������������������������ FROM A PAINTING ON WOOD BY FRA FILIPPO LIPPI. FROM A PAINTING ON WOOD BY
������������������������������������������ MATTEO DI GIOVANNI.
��� 12 And behold a certain man of Arimathaea, named Joseph,
��� who also was a disciple of Jesus, but not openly so, for fear of the
��� Jews, came to the governor, and entreated the governor that he
��� would give him leave to take away the body of Jesus from the cross.
��� 13 And the governor gave him leave.
��� 14 And Nicodemus came, bringing with him a mixture of myrrh and aloes about a hundred
��� pound weight; and they took down Jesus from the cross with tears, and bound him with linen
��� cloths with spices, according to the custom of burying among the Jews,
��� 15 And placed him in a new tomb, which Joseph had built, and caused to be cut out of a rock,
��� in which never any man had been put; and they rolled a great stone to the door of the sepulchre.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. IX.
��� ( 1 The Jews angry with Nicodemus;
��� 5 and with Joseph of Arimathaea,
��� 7 whom they imprison.)
��� WHEN the unjust Jews heard that Joseph had begged and buried the body of Jesus,
��� they sought after Nicodemus; and those fifteen men who had testified before the Governor,
��� that Jesus was not born through fornication, and other good persons who had shewn any good
��� actions towards him.
��� 2 But when they all concealed themselves through fear of the Jews
��� Nicodemus alone shewed himself to them, and said, How can such persons as these enter
��� into the synagogue?
��� 3 The Jews answered him, But how durst thou enter into the synagogue who
��� wast a confederate with Christ? Let thy lot be along with him in the other world.
��� 4 Nicodemus answered, Amen; so may it be, that I may have my lot with him in his kingdom.
��� 5 In like manner Joseph, when he came to the Jews, said to them
��� Why are ye angry with me for desiring the body of Jesus of Pilate?
��� Behold, I have put him in my tomb, and wrapped him up in clean linen, and
��� put a stone at the door of the sepulchre:
��� 6 I have acted rightly towards him; but ye acted unjustly towards
��� aginst that just person, In crucifying him, giving him vinegar to drink,
��� crowning him with thorns, tearing his body with whips, and
��� prayed down the guilt of his blood upon you.
��� 7 The Jews at the hearing of this were disquieted, and troubled;
��� and they seized Joseph, and commanded him to be put in custody before the Sabbath,
��� and kept there till the Sabbath was over.
��� 8 And they said to him, Make confession; for at this time it is
��� not lawful to do thee any harm, till the first day of the week come.
��� But we know that thou wilt not be thought worthy of a burial;
���� but we will give thy flesh to the birds of the air, and the beasts of the earth.
��� 9 Joseph answered, That speech is like the speech of proud Goliath,
��� who reproached the living God in speaking against David. But ye scribes and doctors
��� know that God saith by the prophet, Vengeance is mine, and I
��� will repay to you evil equal to that which ye have threatened to me.
��� 10 The God whom you have hanged upon the cross, is able to deliver me
��� out of your hands.
��� All your wickedness will return upon you.
��� 11 For the governor, when he washed his hands, said, I am clear from the
��� blood of this just person. But ye answered and cried out,
��� His blood be upon us and our children. According as ye have said,
��� may ye perish for ever.
��� 12 The elders of the Jews hearing these words, were exceedingly enraged;
��� and seizing Joseph, they put him into a chamber where there was no window;
��� they fastened the door, and put a seal upon the lock;
��� 13 And Annas and Caiaphas placed a guard upon it, and took counsel
��� with the priests and Levites, that they should all meet after the Sabbath,
��� and they contrived to what death they should put Joseph.
��� 14 When they had done this, the rulers, Annas and Caiaphas,
��� ordered Joseph to be brought forth.
��� �In this place there is a portion of the Gospel lost or omitted, which cannot be supplied.
��������������������������������������������� CHAP. X.
��� (1 Joseph's escape. 2 The soldiers relate
��� Christ's resurrection. 18 Christ is seen
��� preaching in Galilee. 21 The Jews repent
��� of their cruelty to him.)
��� When all the assembly heard this, they admired and were astonished,
��� because they found the same seal upon the lock of the chamber, and could
��� not find Joseph.
��� 2 Then Annas and Caiaphas went forth, and while they were
��� all admiring at Joseph's being gone, behold one of the soldiers,
��� who kept the sepulchre of Jesus, spake in the assembly.
��� 3 That while they were guarding the sepulchre of Jesus, there
��� was an earthquake; and we saw an angel of God roll away the
��� stone of the sepulchre and sit upon it;
��� 4 And his countenance was like lightning and his garment
��� like snow; and we became through fear like persons dead.
��� 5 And we heard an angel saying to the women at the sepulchre of Jesus, Do not fear;
��� I know that you seek Jesus who was crucified; he is risen as he foretold.
��� 6 Come and see the place where he was laid; and go presently, and tell his disciples that
��� he is risen from the dead, and he will go before you into Galilee;
��� there ye shall see him as he told you.
��� 7 Then the Jews called together all the soldiers who kept the
��� sepulchre of Jesus, and said to them, Who are those women, to
��� whom the angel spoke? Why did ye not seize them?
��� 8 The soldiers answered and said, We know not whom the women were;
��� besides we became as dead persons through fear, and
��� how could we seize those women?
��� 9 The Jews said to them, As the Lord liveth we do not believe you.
��� 10 The soldiers answering said to the Jews, when ye saw and
��� heard Jesus working so many miracles, and did not believe him,
�� �how should ye believe us? Ye well said, As the Lord liveth, for
��� the Lord truly does live.
��� 11 We have heard that ye shut up Joseph, who buried the body
��� of Jesus, in a chamber, under a lock which was sealed, and when
��� ye opened it, found him not there.
��� 12 Do ye then produce Joseph whom ye put under guard in the
��� chamber, and we will produce Jesus whom we guarded in the sepulchre.
��� 13 The Jews answered and said, We will produce Joseph, do ye produce Jesus.
��� But Joseph is in his own city of Arimathaea.
��� 14 The soldiers replied If Joseph be in Arimathaea, and Jesus in Galilee,
��� we heard the angel inform the women.
��� 15 The Jews hearing this, were afraid, and said among themselves,
��� If by any means these things should become public, then every body will believe
��� in Jesus.
��� 16 Then they gathered a large sum of money, and gave it to the soldiers, saying, Do ye tell the
��� people that the disciples of Jesus came in the night when ye were asleep and stole away the body
��� of Jesus; and if Pilate the governor should hear of this, we will satisfy him and secure you
��� 17 The soldiers accordingly took the money, and said as they were instructed by the Jews,
��� and their report was spread abroad among all the people.
��� 18 � But a certain priest Phinees, Ada a schoolmaster, and a Levite, named Ageus, they three
��� came from Galilee to Jerusalem, and told the chief priests and all
��� who were in the synagogues, saying,
��� 19 We have seen Jesus, whom ye crucified, talking with his eleven disciples,
��� and sitting in the midst of them in Mount Olivet, and saying to them,
��� 20 Go forth into the whole world, preach the Gospel to all nations, baptizing them in the
��� name of the Father, and the son, and the Holy Ghost; and whosoever shall believe
��� and be baptized, shall be saved.
��� 21 And when he had said these things to his disciples, we saw him ascending up to heaven.
��� 22 When the chief priests, and elders, and Levites heard these
��� things, they said to these three men, Give glory to the God of Israel,
��� and make confession to him, whether those things are true, which ye say ye
��� have seen and heard.
��� 23 They answering said, As the Lord of our fathers liveth, the God of Abraham,
��� and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, according as we heard Jesus talking
��� with his disciples, and according as we saw him ascending up to heaven,
��� so we have related the truth to you.
��� 24 And the three men farther answered, and said, adding these words,
��� If we should not own the words which we heard Jesus speak, and that we saw him
��� ascending into heaven, we should be guilty of sin.
��� 25 Then the chief priests immediately rose up, and holding the book of the law in their
��� hands, conjured these men, saying, Ye shall no more here after declare those things
��� which ye have spoke concerning Jesus.
��� 26 And they gave them a large sum of money, and sent
��� other persons along with them, who should conduct them to
��� their own country, that they might not by any means make any stay at Jerusalem.
��� 27 Then the Jews did assemble all together, and having expressed the most lamentable
��� concern, said, What is this extraordinary thing which is come
��� to pass in Jerusalem?
��� 28 But Annas and Caiaphas comforted them, saying, Why should we believe the soldiers
��� who guarded the sepulchre of Jesus, in telling us, that an angel rolled away the stone from the
��� door of the sepulchre?
��� 29 Perhaps his own disciples told them this, and gave them money that they should say so,
��� and they themselves took away the body of Jesus.
��� 30 Besides, consider this, that there is no credit to be given to foreigners, because they also
��� took a large sum of us, and they have declared to us according to the instructions
��� which we gave them. They must either be faithful to us, or to the disciples of Jesus.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. XI.
��� (1 Nicodemus counsels the Jews.
��� 6 Joseph found. 11 invited by the
��� Jews to return. 19 Relates the
��� manner of his miraculous escape.)
��� THEN Nicodemus arose, and said, Ye say right, 0 sons of Israel, ye have heard what
��� those three men have sworn by the Law of God, who said, We have seen Jesus speaking with
��� his disciples upon Mount Olivet, and we saw him ascending up to heaven.
��� 2 And the scripture teacheth us that the blessed prophet Elijah was taken up to
��� heaven; and Elisha being asked by the sons of the prophets, Where is our
��� father Elijah? He said to them, that he is taken up to heaven.
��� 3 And the sons of the prophets said to him, Perhaps the spirit hath carried him into one of the
��� mountains of Israel, there perhaps we shall find him. And they besought Elisha,
��� and he walked about with them three days, and they could not find him.
��� 4 And now hear me, 0 sons of Israel, and let us send men into the mountains of Israel, lest
��� perhaps the spirit hath carried away Jesus, and there perhaps we shall find him, and be satisfied.
��� 5 And the counsel of Nicodemus pleased all the people; and they sent forth men who sought
��� for Jesus, but could not find him:
��� and they returning, said, We went all about, but could not find Jesus, but we have found
��� Joseph in his city of Arimathea.
��� 6 The rulers hearing this, and all the people, were glad, and praised the God of Israel, because
��� Joseph was found, whom they had shut up in a chamber, and could not find.
��� 7 And when they had formed a large assembly, the chief priests said,
��� By what means shall we bring Joseph to us to speak with him?
��� 8 And taking a piece of paper, they wrote to him, and said, Peace be with thee,
��� and all thy family. We know that we have offended against God and thee.
��� Be pleased to give a visit to us your fathers, for we were perfectly surprised
��� at your escape from prison.
��� 9 We know that it was malicious counsel which we took against thee, and that the Lord
��� took care of thee, and the Lord himself delivered thee from our designs.
�� �Peace be unto thee, Joseph, who art honourable among all the people.
��� 10 And they chose seven of Joseph's friends, and said them, When ye come to Joseph,
��� salute him in peace, and give him this letter.
��� 11 Accordingly, when the men came to Joseph, they did salute him in peace, and gave him the
��� letter.
��� 12 And when Joseph had read it, he said, Blessed be the Lord God, who didst deliver me from
��� the Israelites, that they could not shed my blood. Blessed be God, who has protected
��� me under thy wings.
��� 13 And Joseph kissed them, and took them into his house.
��� And on the morrow, Joseph mounted his ass, and went along
��� with them to Jerusalem.
��� 14 And when all the Jews heard these things, they went out to meet him, and cried out
��� saying, Peace attend thy coming hither, father Joseph.
��� 15 To which he answered, Prosperity from the Lord attend all the people.
��� 16 And they all kissed him;
��� and Nicodemus took him to his house, having prepared a large entertainment.
��� 17 But on the morrow, being a preparation‑day, Annas, and Caiaphas, and Nicodemus, said
��� to Joseph, Make confession to the God of Israel, and answer to us all those questions
��� which we shall ask thee;
��� 18 For we have been very much troubled, that thou didst bury the body of Jesus;
��� and that when we had locked thee in a chamber, we could not find thee;
��� and we have been afraid ever since, till this time of thy appearing among us.
��� Tell us therefore before God, all that came to pass.
��� 19 Then Joseph answering, said, Ye did indeed put me under confinement, on the day of
��� preparation, till the morning.
��� 20 But while I was standing at prayer in the middle of the night, the house was surrounded
��� with four angels; and I saw Jesus as the brightness of the sun, and fell down upon the
��� earth for fear.
��� 21 But Jesus laying hold on my hand, lifted me from the ground, and the dew was then
��� sprinkled upon me; but he, wiping my face, kissed me, and said unto me,
��� Fear not, Joseph; look upon me, for it is I.
��� 22 Then I looked upon him, and said, Rabboni Elias! He answered me, I am not Elias,
��� but Jesus of Nazareth, whose body thou didst bury.
��� 23 I said to him, Shew me the tomb in which I laid thee.
��� 24 Then Jesus, taking me by the hand, led me unto the place
��� where I laid him, and shewed me the linen clothes, and napkin which I put round his head.
��� Then I knew that it was Jesus, and worshipped him, and said,
��� Blessed be he who cometh in the name of the Lord.
��� 25 Jesus again taking me by the hand, led me to Arimathaea to my own house, and said to me,
��� Peace be to thee; but go not out of thy house till the fortieth day;
��� but I must go to my disciples.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. XII
��� (1 The Jews astonished and confounded.
��� 17 Simeon's two sons, Charinus and
��� Lenthius, rise from the dead at Christ's
��� crucifixion. 19 Joseph proposes to get
��� them to relate the mysteries of their resurrection.
��� 21 They are sought and found,
��� 22 brought to the synagogue,
��� 23 privately sworn to secrecy,
��� 25 and undertake to write what they had seen.)
��� WHEN the chief priests and Levites heard all these things, they were astonished,
��� and fell down with their faces on the ground as dead men, and crying out
���� to one another said, What is this extraordinary sign which is come to pass in Jerusalem?
��� We know the father and mother of Jesus.
��� 2 And a certain Levite said, I know many of his relations, religious persons,
��� who are wont to offer sacrifices and burnt ‑ offerings to the God of Israel, in the temple, with prayers.
��� 3 And when the high priest Simeon took him up in his arms he said to him,
��� Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word; for mine
��� eyes have seen thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all people:
��� a light to enlighten the Gentiles, and the glory of thy people Israel.
��� 4 Simeon in like manner blessed Mary the mother of Jesus, and said to her,
��� I declare to thee concerning that child; He is appointed for the fall and rising again
��� of many, and for a sign which shall be spoken against.
��� 5 Yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also, and the thoughts
��� of many hearts shall be revealed.
��� 6 Then said all the Jews, Let us send to those three men, who said they saw him talking with
��� his disciples in Mount Olivet.
��� 7 After this, they asked them what they had seen; who answered with one accord,
��� In the presence of the God of Israel we affirm, that we plainly saw Jesus
��� talking with his disciples in Mount Olivet, and ascending up
��� to heaven.
��� 8 Then Annas and Caiaphas took them into separate places,
��� and examined them separately; who unanimously confessed the
��� truth, and said, they had seen Jesus.
��� 9 Then Annas and Caiaphas said "Our law saith,
��� By the mouth of two or three witnesses every word shall be established."
��� 10 But what have we said?
��� The blessed Enoch pleased God,
��� and was translated by the word of God; and the burying ‑ place of
��� the blessed Moses is known.
��� 11 But Jesus was delivered to Pilate, whipped, crowned with thorns,
��� spit upon, pierced with a spear, crucified, died upon the cross, and was buried,
��� and his body the honorable Joseph buried in a new sepulchre, and he
��� testifies that he saw him alive
��� 12 And besides these men have declared, that they saw him
��� talking with his disciples in Mount Olivet, and ascending up
���� to heaven.
��� 13 � Then Joseph rising up, said to Annas and Caiaphas, Ye
��� may be justly under a great surprise, that you have been told,
��� that Jesus is alive, and gone up to heaven.
��� 14 It is indeed a thing really surprising, that he should not
��� only himself arise from the dead, but also raise others from their graves,
��� who have been seen by many in Jerusalem.
��� 15 And now hear me a little:
��� We all knew the blessed Simeon, the high ‑ priest, who took Jesus
��� when an infant into his arms in the temple.
��� 16 This same Simeon had two sons of his own, and we were all present at
��� their death and funeral.
��� 17 Go therefore and see their tombs, for these are open, and they are risen:
��� and behold, they are in the city of Arimathaea, spending their time together in
��� offices of devotion.
��� 18 Some, indeed, have heard the sound of their voices in prayer, but they will not discourse
��� with any one, but they continue as mute as dead men.
��� 19 But come, let us go to them, and behave ourselves towards
��� them with all due respect and caution. And if we can bring
��� them to swear, perhaps they will tell us some of the mysteries of their resurrection.
��� 20 When the Jews heard this, they were exceedingly rejoiced.
��� 21 Then Annas and Caiaphas, Nicodemus, Joseph, and Gamaliel, went to Arimathaea,
��� but did not find them in their graves; but walking about the city, they found them on their
��� bended knees at their devotions:
�� �22 Then saluting them with all respect and deference to God, they brought them to the
��� synagogue at Jerusalem: and having shut the gates, they took the book of the law of the Lord,
��� 23 And putting it in their hands, swore them by God Adonai, and the God of Israel,
��� who spake to our fathers by the law and the prophets, saying,
��� If ye believe him who raised you from the dead, to be Jesus, tell
��� us what ye have seen, and how ye were raised from the dead.
��� 24 Charinus and Lenthius, the two sons of Simeon, trembled when they heard these things,
��� and were disturbed, and groaned; and at the same time looking up to heaven,
��� they made the sign of the cross with their fingers on their tongues,
��� 25 And immediately they spake, and said, Give each of us some paper, and we will write
��� down for you all those things which we have seen.
��� And they each sat down and wrote, saying,
������������������������������������������� CHAP. XIII.
��� (1 The narrative of Charinus and Lenthius
��� commences. 3 A great light in hell.
��� 7 Simeon arrives, and announces
��� the coming of Christ.)
��� O LORD Jesus and Father, who art God, also the resurrection and life of the dead,
��� give us leave to declare thy mysteries,
��� which we saw after death, belonging to thy cross; for we are sworn by thy name.
��� 2 For thou hast forbid thy servants to declare the secret things, which were wrought by
��� by divine power in hell.
��� 3 � When we were placed with our fathers in the depth of hell,
��� in the blackness of darkness, on a sudden there appeared the colour of the sun like gold,
���and a substantial purple ‑ coloured light enlightening the place.
��� 4 Presently upon this, Adam, the father of all mankind, with all the patriarchs and prophets,
��� rejoiced and said, That light is the author of everlasting light, who hath promised to translate
��� us to everlasting light.
��� 5 Then Isaiah the prophet cried out, and said, This is the light of the Father,
��� and the Son of God, according to my prophecy, when I was alive upon earth.
��� 6 The land of Zabulon, and the land of Nephthalim beyond Jordan,
��� a people who walked in darkness, saw a great light; and to them who dwelled in the
��� region of the shadow of death, light is arisen. And now he is come, and hath enlightened us
��� who sat in death.
��� 7 And while we were all rejoicing in the light which shone upon us, our father Simeon came
��� among us, and congratulating all the company, said, Glorify the
��� Lord Jesus Christ the Son of God.
��� 8 Whom I took up in my arms when an infant in the temple, and being moved by the
��� Holy Ghost, said to him, and acknowledged, That now mine eyes have seen
��� thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all people, a light to
��� enlighten the Gentiles and the glory of thy people Israel.
��� 9 All the saints who were in the depth of hell, hearing this, rejoiced the more.
��� 10 Afterwards there came forth one like a little hermit, and was asked by every one,
��� Who art thou?
��� 11 To which he replied, I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness,
��� John the Baptist, and the prophet of the Most High, who went before his coming to
��� prepare his way, to give the knowledge of salvation to his people for the forgiveness of sins.
��� 12 And I John, when I saw Jesus coming to me, being moved by the Holy Ghost, I said,
��� Behold the Lamb of God, behold him who takes away the sins of the world.
��� 13 And I baptized him in the river Jordan, and saw the Holy Ghost descending upon him in
��� the form of a dove, and heard a voice from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom
��� I am well pleased.
��� 14 And now while I was going before him, I came down hither to acquaint you, that
��� the son of God will next visit us, and, as the day ‑ spring from on high,
���� will come to us, who are in darkness and the shadow of death.
��� ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST.
��� From a Triptychon by an Italian painter of the
��� thirteenth or fourteenth century.
������������������������������������������� CHAP. XIV.
��� ( 1 Adam causes Seth to relate what he
��� heard from Michael the archangel,
��� when he sent him to Paradise to entreat
��� God to anoint his head in his sickness.)
��� BUT when the first man our father Adam heard these things, that Jesus was baptized in Jordan,
��� he called out to his son, Seth, and said,
��� 2 Declare to your sons, the patriarchs and prophets, all those things, which thou didst hear
��� from Michael, the archangel, when I sent thee to the gates of Paradise, to entreat God that he
��� would anoint my head when I was sick.
��� 3 Then Seth, coming near to the patriarchs and prophets, said, I Seth, when I was
��� praying to God at the gates of Paradise, beheld the angel of the Lord, Michael appear unto me
��� saying, I am sent unto thee from the Lord; I am appointed to preside over human bodies.
��� 4 I tell thee Seth, do not pray to God in tears, and entreat him for the oil of the tree of mercy
��� wherewith to anoint thy father Adam for his head ‑ ache;
��� 5 Because thou canst not by any means obtain it till the last day and times, namely,
��� till five thousand and five hundred years be past.
��� 6 Then will Christ, the most merciful Son of God, come on earth to raise again the human
���body of Adam, and at the same time to raise the bodies of the dead,
��� and when he cometh he will be baptized in Jordan:
��� 7 Then with the oil of his mercy he will anoint all those who believe on him;
��� and the oil of his mercy will continue to future generations, for those who
��� shall be born of the water and the Holy Ghost unto eternal life.
��� 8 And when at that time the most merciful Son of God, Christ Jesus,
��� shall come down on earth, he will introduce our father Adam into Paradise, to the tree
��� of mercy.
��� 9 When all the patriarchs and prophets heard all these things from Seth, they rejoiced more.
�������������� �������������������������������CHAP. XV,
��� (1 Quarrel between Satan and
��� the prince of hell concerning
��� the expected arrival
��� of Christ in hell.)
��� WHILE all the saints were rejoicing, behold Satan, the prince and captain of death,
��� said to the prince of hell,
��� 2 Prepare to receive Jesus of Nazareth himself, who boasted that he was the Son of God,
��� and yet was a man afraid of death, and said, My soul is sorrowful even to death.
��� 3 Besides he did many injuries to me and to many others; for those whom I made blind
��� and lame and those also whom I tormented with several devils, he cured by his word;
��� yea, and those whom I brought dead to thee, he by force takes away from thee.
��� 4 To this the prince of hell replied to Satan, Who is that so ‑ powerful prince, and yet a man
��� who is afraid of death?
��� 5 For all the potentates of the earth are subject to my power, whom thou broughtest to
��� subjection by thy power.
��� 6 But if he be so powerful in his human nature, I affirm to thee for truth, that he is almighty
��� in his divine nature, and no man can resist his power.
��� 7 When therefore he said he was afraid of death, he designed to ensnare thee,
��� and unhappy it will be to thee for everlasting ages.
��� 8 Then Satan replying, said to the prince of hell, Why didst thou express a doubt,
��� and wast afraid to receive that Jesus of Nazareth, both thy adversary and mine?
��� 9 As for me, I tempted him and stirred up my old people the Jews with zeal and anger
��� against him?
��� 10 I sharpened the spear for his suffering; I mixed the gall and vinegar, and commanded
��� that he should drink it; I prepared the cross to crucify him,
��� and the nails to pierce through his hands and feet; and now his
��� death is near at hand, I will bring him hither, subject both to thee and me.
��� 11 Then the prince of hell answering, said, Thou saidst to me just now, that he took
��� away the dead from me by force.
��� 12 They who have been kept here till they should live again upon earth, were taken away
��� hence, not by their own power, but by prayers made to God, and their almighty
��� God took them from me.
��� 13 Who then is that Jesus of Nazareth that by his word bath taken away the dead
��� from me without prayer to God?
��� 14 Perhaps it is the same who took away from me Lazarus, after
��� he had been four days dead, and did both stink and was rotten, and
��� of whom I had possession as a dead person, yet he brought him
��� to life again by his power.
��� 15 Satan answering, replied to the prince of hell, It is the very same person,
��� Jesus of Nazareth.
��� 16 Which when the prince of hell heard, he said to him, I adjure thee by the powers which
��� belong to thee and me, that thou bring him not to me.
��� 17 For when I heard of the power of his word, I trembled for fear,
��� and all my impious company were at the same time disturbed;
��� 18 And we were not able to detain Lazarus, but he gave himself a shake,
��� and with all the signs of malice, he immediately went away from us;
��� and the very earth, in which the dead body of Lazarus was lodged,
��� presently turned him out alive.
��� 19 And I know now that he is Almighty God who could perform such things,
��� who is mighty in his dominion, and mighty in his human nature, who is the
��� Saviour of mankind.
��� 20 Bring not therefore this person hither, for he will set at liberty all those whom I hold in
��� prison under unbelief, and bound with the fetters of their sins, and will conduct
��� them to everlasting life.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. XVI
��� (1 Christ's arrival at hell ‑ gates;
� ��the confusion thereupon.
��� 10 He descends into hell.)
��� AND while Satan and the prince of hell were discoursing thus to each other,
��� on a sudden there was a voice as of thunder and the rushing of winds,
��� saying, Lift up your gates, O ye princes; and be ye lift up, 0 everlasting gates,
��� and the King of Glory shall come in.
��� 2 When the prince of hell heard this, he said to Satan, Depart from me, and begone out of
��� my habitations; if thou art a powerful warrior, fight with the King of Glory.
��� But what hast thou to do with him?
��� 3 And he cast him forth from his habitations.
��� 4 And the prince said to his impious officers, Shut the brass gates of cruelty,
��� and make them fast with iron bars, and fight courageously, lest we be taken
��� captives.
��� 5 But when all the company of the saints heard this they spake
��� with a loud voice of anger to the prince of hell:
��� 6 Open thy gates that the King of Glory may come in.
��� 7 And the divine prophet David, cried out saying, Did not I when on earth truly prophesy
��� and say, 0 that men would praise the Lord for his goodness, and for his
��� wonderful works to the children of men.
��� 8 For he hath broken the gates of brass, and cut the bars of iron in sunder.
��� He hath taken them because of their iniquity, and because of their unrighteousness
��� they are afflicted.
��� 9 After this another prophet, namely, holy Isaiah, spake in like
��� manner to all the saints, did not I rightly prophesy to you when I
��� was alive on earth?
��� 10 The dead men shall live, and they shall rise again who are
��� in their graves, an they shall rejoice who are in earth; for the
��� dew which is from the Lord shall bring deliverance to them.
��� 11 And I said in another place, O death, where is thy victory?
��� O death, where is thy sting?
��� 12 When all the saints heard these things spoken by Isaiah,
��� they said to the prince of hell, Open now thy gates, and take
��� away thine iron bars; for thou wilt now he bound, and have no
��� power.
��� 13 Then there was a great voice, as of the sound of thunder saying,
��� Lift up your gates, 0 princes; and be ye lifted up, ye
��� gates of hell, and the King of Glory will enter in.
��� 14 The prince of hell perceiving the same voice repeated,
��� cried out as though he had been ignorant,
��� Who is that King of Glory?
��� 15 David replied to the prince of hell, and said, I understand the words of that voice,
��� because I spake them by his spirit. And now, as I have above said, I say
��� unto thee, the Lord strong and powerful, the Lord mighty in battle:
��� he is the King of Glory, and he is the Lord in heaven and in earth;
��� 16 He hath looked down to hear the groans of the prisoners,
��� and to set loose those that are appointed to death.
��� 17 And now, thou filthy and stinking prince of hell, open thy gates,
��� that the King of Glory may enter in;
��� for he is the Lord of heaven and earth.
��� 18 While David was saying this, the mighty Lord appeared in the form of a man,
��� and enlightened those places which had ever before been in darkness,
��� 19 And broke asunder the fetters which before could not be broken;
��� and with his invincible power visited those who sate in the deep
��� darkness by iniquity, and the shadow of death by sin.
������������������������������������� �������CHAP XVII.
��� ( 1 Death and the devils in great horror at Christ's coming.
��� 13 He tramples on death, seizes the prince of hell, and
��� takes Adam with him to heaven.)
��� IMPIOUS Death and her cruel officers hearing these things,
��� were seized with fear in their several kingdoms, when they saw
��� the clearness of the light,
��� 2 And Christ himself on a sudden appearing in their habitations;
��� they cried out therefore, and said, We are bound by thee;
��� thou seemest to intend our confusion before the Lord.
��� 3 Who art thou, who hast no sign of corruption, but that bright appearance
��� which is a full proof of thy greatness, of which yet thou seemest to take no
��� notice?
��� 4 Who art thou, so powerful and so weak, so great and so little,
��� a mean and yet a soldier of the first rank, who can command in the form of a servant
��� as a common soldier?
��� 5 The King of Glory, dead and alive, though once slain upon the cross?
��� 6 Who layest dead in the grave, and art come down alive to us, and in thy death all the
��� creatures trembled, and all the stars were moved, and now hast thou thy liberty
��� among the dead, and givest disturbance to our legions?
��� 7 Who art thou, who dost release the captives that were held in chains by original sin,
��� and bringest them into their former liberty?
��� 8 Who art thou, who dost spread so glorious and divine a light over
��� those who were made blind by the darkness of sin?
��� 9 In like manner all the legions of devils were seized with the like horror, and with the
��� most submissive fear cried out, and said,
��� 10 Whence comes it, 0 thou Jesus Christ, that thou art a man so powerful and
��� glorious in majesty, so bright as to have no spot, and so pure as to have no crime?
��� For that lower world of earth, which was ever till now subject to us,
��� and from whence we received tribute, never sent us such a dead man
��� before, never sent such presents as these to the princes of hell.
��� 11 Who therefore art thou, who with such courage enterest among our abodes,
��� and art not only not afraid to threaten us with the greatest punishments,
��� but also endeavourest to rescue all others from the chains in
��� which we hold them?
��� 12 Perhaps thou art that Jesus, of whom Satan just now spoke to our prince, that by the
��� death of the cross thou wert about to receive the power of death.
��� 13 Then the King of Glory trampling upon death, seized the prince of hell, deprived him
��� of all his power, and took our earthly father Adam with him to his glory.
������������������������������������������� CHAP. XVIII.
��� ( 1 Beelzebub, prince of hell, vehemently
��� upbraids Satan for persecuting Christ and
��� bringing him to hell. 4 Christ gives
��� Beelzebub dominion over Satan for ever,
��� as a recompense for taking away Adam
��� and his sons.)
��� THEN the prince of hell took Satan, and with great indignation said to him, 0 thou
��� prince of destruction, author of Beelzebub's defeat and banishment,
��� the scorn of God's angels and loathed by all righteous persons!
��� What inclined thee to act thus?
��� 2 Thou wouldst crucify the King of Glory, and by his destruction,
��� hast made us promises of very large advantages, but as a fool wert
��� ignorant of what thou wast about.
��� 3 For behold now that Jesus of Nazareth, with the brightness of his glorious
��� divinity, puts to flight all the horrid powers of darkness and death;
��� 4 He has broke down our prisons from top to bottom, dismissed all the captives, released
��� all who were bound, and all who were wont formerly to groan under the weight
��� of their torments have now insulted us, and we are like to be defeated by their
��� prayers.
��� 5 Our impious dominions are subdued, and no part of mankind is now left in our
��� subjection, but on the other hand, they all boldly defy us;
��� 6 Though, before, the dead never durst behave themselves insolently towards us,
��� nor, being prisoners, could ever on any occasion be merry.
��� 7 � 0 Satan, thou prince of all the wicked, father of the impious and abandoned,
��� why wouldest thou attempt this exploit, seeing our prisoners were hitherto
��� always without the least hopes of salvation and life?
��� 8 But now there is not one of them does ever groan, nor is there the least
��� appearance of a tear in any of their faces.
��� 9 0 prince Satan, thou great keeper of the infernal regions, all thy advantages
��� which thou didst acquire by the forbidden tree, and the loss of Paradise,
��� thou hast now lost by the wood of the cross;
��� 10 And thy happiness all then expired, when thou didst
��� crucify Jesus Christ the King of Glory.
��� 11 Thou hast acted against thine own interest and mine,
��� as thou wilt presently perceive by those large torments and
��� infinite punishments which thou art about to suffer.
��� 12 0 Satan, prince of all evil, author of death, and source of all pride,
��� thou shouldest first have inquired into the evil crimes of Jesus of Nazareth,
��� and then thou wouldest have found that he was guilty of no fault worthy of death.
��� 13 Why didst thou venture, without either reason or justice to crucify him,
��� and hast brought down to our regions a person innocent and righteous, and thereby
��� hast lost all the sinners, impious and unrighteous persons in the whole world?
��� 14 While the prince of hell was thus speaking to Satan, the King of Glory
��� said to Beelzebub, the prince of hell, Satan, the prince shall he subject to
��� thy dominion for ever, in the room of Adam and his righteous sons, who are mine.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. XIX
��� (1 Christ takes Adam by the hand, the
��� rest of the saints join hands, and they
��� all ascend with him to Paradise.)
��� THEN Jesus stretched forth his hand, and said, Come to me, all ye my saints,
��� who were created in my image, who were condemned by the
��� tree of forbidden fruit, and by the devil and death;
��� 2 Live now by the wood of my cross; the devil, the prince of this world, is overcome,
��� and death is conquered.
��� 3 Then presently all the saints were joined together under the hand of the most high God;
��� and the Lord Jesus laid hold on Adam's hand and said to him,
��� Peace be to thee, and all thy righteous posterity, which is mine.
��� 4 Then Adam, casting himself at the feet of Jesus, addressed himself to him,
��� with tears, in humble language, and a loud voice, saying,
��� 5 I will extol thee, 0 Lord, for thou hast lifted me up, and hast not made my foes to rejoice
��� over me. 0 Lord my God, I cried unto thee, and thou hast healed me.
��� 6 0 Lord thou hast brought up my soul from the grave;
��� thou hast kept me alive, that I should not go down to the pit.
���� 7 Sing unto the Lord, all ye saints of his, and give thanks at the remembrance of his holiness.
��� For his anger endureth but for a moment; in his favour is life.
��� 8 In like manner all the saints, prostrate at the feet of Jesus,
��� said with one voice, Thou art come, 0 Redeemer of the world,
��� and hast actually accomplished all things, which thou didst foretell by the law
��� and thy holy prophets.
��� 9 Thou hast redeemed the living by thy cross, and art come
��� down to us, that by the death of the cross thou mightest deliver us from hell,
��� and by thy power from death.
��� 10 0, Lord, as thou hast put the ensigns of thy glory in heaven,
��� and hast set up the sign of thy redemption, even thy cross on earth!
��� so, Lord, set the sign of the victory of thy cross in hell,
��� that death may have dominion no longer.
��� 11 Then the Lord stretching forth his hand, made the sign of
��� the cross upon Adam, and upon all his saints.
��� 12 And taking hold of Adam by his right hand, he ascended
��� from hell, and all the saints of God followed him.
��� 13 Then the royal prophet David boldly cried, and said,
��� O sing unto the Lord a new song, for he hath done marvelous things;
��� his right hand and his holy arm have gotten him the victory.
��� 14 The Lord hath made known his salvation, his righteousness hath he openly shewn
��� in the sight of the heathen.
��� 15 And the whole multitude of saints answered, saying,
��� This honour have all his saints, Amen, Praise ye the Lord.
��� 16 Afterwards, the prophet Habakkuk cried out, and said,
��� Thou wentest forth for the salvation of thy people, even for
��� the salvation of thy people.
��� 17 And all the saints said, Blessed is he who cometh in the
���name of the Lord; for the Lord hath enlightened us. This is
��� our God for ever and ever; he shall reign over us to everlasting
��� ages, Amen.
��� 18 In like manner all the prophets spake the sacred things
��� of his praise, and followed the Lord.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. XX.
��� ( 1 Christ delivers Adam to Michael
��� the archangel. 3 They meet Enoch
��� and Elijah in heaven, 5 and also the
��� blessed thief, who relates how he
��� came to Paradise.)
��� THEN the Lord holding Adam by the hand, delivered him to Michael the archangel;
��� and he led them into Paradise, filled with mercy and glory;
��� 2 And two very ancient men met them, and were asked by the saints,
��� Who are ye, who have not yet been with us in hell, and
��� have had your bodies placed in Paradise?
��� 3 One of them answering, said, I am Enoch, who was translated by the word of God :
��� and this man who is with me, is Elijah the Tishbite, who was
��� translated in a fiery chariot.
��� 4 Here we have hitherto been and have not tasted death, but
��� are now about to return at the coming of Antichrist, being
��� armed with divine signs and miracles, to engage with him in battle,
��� and to be slain by him at Jerusalem, and to be taken up
��� alive again into the clouds, after three days and a half.
��� 5 � And while the holy Enoch and Elias were relating this,
��� behold there came another man in a miserable figure carrying
��� the sign of the cross upon his shoulders.
��� 6 And when all the saints saw him, they said to him, Who art thou?
��� For thy countenance is like a thief's;
��� and why dost thou carry a cross upon thy shoulders?
��� 7 To which he answering, said, Ye say right, for I was a thief,
��� who committed all sorts of wickedness upon earth.
��� 8 And the Jews crucified me with Jesus; and I observed the surprising
��� things which happened in the creation at the crucifixion of the Lord Jesus.
��� 9 And I believed him to be the Creator of all things, and the
��� Almighty King; and I prayed to him, saying, Lord, remember me,
��� when thou comest into thy kingdom.
��� 10 He presently regarded my supplication, and said to me,
��� Verily I say unto thee, this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise.
��� 11 And he gave me this sign of the cross saying,
��� Carry this, and go to Paradise; and if the angel who is the guard of Paradise
��� will not admit thee, shew him the sign of the cross, and
��� say unto him:
��� Jesus Christ who is now crucified, hath sent me hither to thee.
��� 12 When I did this, and told the angel who is the guard of
��� Paradise all these things, and he heard them, he presently opened the gates,
��� introduced me, and placed me on the right ‑ hand In Paradise,
��� 13 Saying, Stay here a little time, till Adam, the father of all mankind, shall enter in,
��� with all his sons, who are the holy and righteous servants of
��� Jesus Christ, who was crucified.
��� 14 When they heard all this account from the thief, all the patriarchs said with one voice,
��� Blessed be thou, 0 Almighty God, the Father of everlasting goodness,
��� and the Father of mercies, who hast shewn such favour to those who were sinners
��� against him, and hast brought them to the mercy of Paradise, and hast
��� placed them amidst thy large and spiritual provisions, in a spiritual and holy life.
��� Amen.
�������������������������������������������� CHAP. XXI
��� ( 1 Charinus and Lenthius being only
��� allowed three days to remain on earth,
�� �7 deliver in their narratives, which
��� miraculously correspond; they vanish,
��� 13 and Pilate records these transactions.)
��� THESE are the divine and sacred mysteries which we saw and heard.
��� I, Charinus and Lenthius are not allowed to declare the other mysteries of God,
��� as the archangel Michael ordered us,
��� 2 Saying, ye shall go with my brethren to Jerusalem, and shall
��� continue in prayers, declaring and glorifying the resurrection
��� of Jesus Christ, seeing he hath raised you from the dead at the
��� same time with himself.
��� 3 And ye shall not talk with any man, but sit as dumb persons
��� till the time come when the Lord will allow you to relate the mysteries of his divinity.
��� 4 The archangel Michael farther commanded us to go beyond
��� Jordan, to an excellent and fat country, where there are many
��� who rose from the dead along with us for the proof of the resurrection of Christ
��� 5 For we have only three days allowed us from the dead, who
��� arose to celebrate the Passover of our Lord with our parents, and
��� to bear our testimony for Christ the Lord, and we have been
��� baptized in the holy river of Jordan. And now they are not
��� seen by any one.
��� 6 This is as much as God allowed us to relate to you; give ye
��� therefore praise and honour to him, and repent, and he will have
��� mercy upon you. Peace be to you from the Lord God Jesus Christ,
��� and the Saviour of us all.
��� Amen, Amen, Amen.
��� 7 And after they had made an end of writing and had wrote in
��� two distinct pieces of paper, Charinus gave what he wrote into the
��� hands of Annas, and Caiaphas, and Gamaliel.
��� 8 Lenthius likewise gave what he wrote into the hands of Nicodemus and Joseph;
��� and immediately they were changed into exceeding white forms and were
��� seen no more.
��� 9 But what they had wrote was found perfectly to agree, the one
��� not containing one letter more or less than the other.
��� 10 When all the assembly of the Jews heard all these surprising relations of
��� Charinus and Lenthius, they said to each other,
��� Truly all these things were wrought by God, and blessed be
��� the Lord Jesus for ever and ever, Amen.
��� 11 And they went about with great concern, and fear, and trembling,
��� and smote upon their breasts and went away every one
��� to his home.
��� 12 But immediately all these things which were related by the
��� Jews in their synagogues concerning Jesus, were presently
��� told by Joseph and Nicodemus to the governor.
��� 13 And Pilate wrote down all these transactions, and placed all
��� these accounts in the public records of his hall.
���������������������������������� THE BAPTISM OF CHRIST IN THE JORDAN.
������ ������������������������From a "Book of the Evangelists" Greek manuscript of the twelfth century.
������������������������������������������� CHAP XXII.
��� (1Pilate goes to the temple; calls together
��� the rulers, and scribes, and doctors.
��� 2 Commands the gates to be shut; orders
��� the book of the Scripture; and causes
��� the Jews to relate what they really
��� knew concerning Christ. 14 They
��� declare that they crucified Christ in
��� ignorance, and that they now know
��� him to be the Son of God, according
��� to the testimony of the Scriptures;
��� which, after they put him to death,
��� they are examined.)
��� AFTER these things Pilate went to the temple of the
��� Jews, and called together all the rulers and scribes, and doctors of
��� the law, and went with them into a chapel of the temple.
��� 2 And commanding that all the gates should be shut, said to them,
��� I have heard that ye have a certain large book in this temple;
��� I desire you therefore, that it may be brought before me.
��� 3 And when the great book, carried by four ministers of the
��� temple, and adorned with gold and precious stones, was brought,
��� Pilate said to them all, I adjure you by the God of your Fathers,
��� who made and commanded this temple to be built, that ye conceal
��� not the truth from me.
��� 4 Ye know all the things which are written in that book; tell me
��� therefore now, if ye in the Scriptures have found any thing of
��� that Jesus whom ye crucified, and at what time of the world
��� he ought to have come: Shew it me.
��� 5 Then having sworn Annas and Caiaphas, they commanded
��� all the rest who were with them to go out of the chapel.
��� 6 And they shut the gates of the temple and of the chapel, and
��� said to Pilate, Thou hast made us to swear, 0 judge, by the
���building of this temple, to declare to thee that which is true and
��� right.
��� 7 After we had crucified Jesus, not knowing that he was the Son of God,
��� but supposing he wrought his miracles by some magical arts,
��� we summoned a large assembly in this temple.
��� 8 And when we were deliberating among one another about the miracles
��� which Jesus had wrought, we found many witnesses of our own country,
��� who declared that they had seen him alive after his death, and that
��� they heard him discoursing with his disciples, and saw him ascending
��� unto the height of the heavens, and entering into them;
��� 9 And we saw two witnesses, whose bodies Jesus raised from the dead,
��� who told us of many strange things which Jesus did among the dead,
��� of which we have a written account in our hands.
��� 10 And it is our custom annually to open this holy hook
��� before an assembly, and to search there for the counsel of God.
��� 11 And we found in the first of the seventy books,
��� where Michael the archangel is speaking to the third son of Adam
��� the first man, an account that after
��� five thousand five hundred years,
��� Christ the most beloved Son of God was come on earth,
��� 12 And we further considered, that perhaps he was the very
��� God of Israel who spoke to Moses, Thou shallot make the ark
��� of the testimony; two cubits and a half shall be the length thereof,
��� and a cubit and a half the breadth thereof; and
��� a cubit and a half the height thereof.
��� 13 By these five cubits and a half for the building of the ark
��� of the Old Testament, we perceived and knew that in
��� five thousand years and a half (one thousand) years,
��� Jesus Christ was to come in the ark or tabernacle of a body;
��� 14 And so our scriptures testify that he is the son of God,
��� and the Lord and King of Israel.
��� 15 And because after his suffering, our chief priests were surprised at the
��� signs which were wrought by his means, we opened that book to search
��� all the generations down to the generation of Joseph and Mary the mother of Jesus,
��� supposing him to be of the seed of David;
��� 16 And we found the account of the creation, and at what
��� time he made the heaven and the earth and the first man Adam,
��� and that from thence to the flood, were
��� two thousand, two hundred and twelve years.
��� l7 And from the flood to Abraham, nine hundred and twelve.
��� And from Abraham to Moses, four hundred and thirty.
��� And from Moses to David the king, five hundred and ten.
��� 18 And from David to the Babylonish captivity, five hundred years.
��� And from the Babylonish captivity to the incarnation of Christ,
��� four hundred years.
��� 19 The sum of all which amounts to five thousand and half (a thousand).
��� 20 And so it appears, that Jesus whom we crucified, is Jesus Christ the Son of God,
��� and true and Almighty God. Amen.
��� In the name of the Holy Trinity, thus end the Acts of our Saviour Jesus Christ,
��� which the Emperor Theodosius the Great found at Jerusalem, in the hall of Pontius Pilate
��� among the public records; the things were acted in the nineteenth year of Tiberius Caesar,
��� Emperor of the Romans, and in the seventeenth year of the government of Herod the son
��� of Herod king of Galilee, on the eighth of the calends of April, which is the twenty‑third
��� day of the month of March, in the CCIId Olympiad, when Joseph and Caiaphas
��� were Rulers of the Jews; being a History written in Hebrew by Nicodemus,
��� of what happened after our Saviour's crucifixion.
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