Opening- True Gospel of Jesus, called Christ, a new prophet sent
by God to the
world: according to the description of Barnabas his apostle.
Barnabas, apostle of Jesus the Nazarene, called Christ, to all them
that dwell upon the
earth desireth peace and consolation.
Dearly beloved the great and wonderful God hath during these past
days visited us by
his prophet Jesus Christ in great mercy of teaching and miracles, by
reason whereof many,
being deceived of Satan, under presence of piety, are preaching most
impious doctrine,
calling Jesus son of God, repudiating the circumcision ordained of God
for ever, and
permitting every unclean meat: among whom also Paul hath been deceived,
whereof I speak
not without grief; for which cause I am writing that truth which I have
seen and heard, in
the intercourse that I have had with Jesus, in order that ye may be
saved, and not be
deceived of Satan and perish in the judgment of God. Therefore beware of
every one that
preacheth unto you new doctrine contrary to that which I write, that ye
may be saved
eternally. The great God be with you and guard you from Satan and from
every evil. Amen.
Chapter 1 The angel Gabriel visits Virgin Mary concerning the birth
of Jesus.
In these last years a virgin called Mary, of the lineage of David, of
the tribe of
Judah, was visited by the angel Gabriel from God. This virgin, living in
all holiness
without any offense, being blameless, and abiding in prayer with
fastings, being one day
alone, there entered into her chamber the angel Gabriel, and he saluted
her, saying: 'God
be with thee, O Mary'.
The virgin was affrighted at the appearance of the angel; but the
angel comforted her,
saying: 'Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found favour with God, who hath
chosen thee to be
mother of a prophet, whom he will send to the people of Israel in order
that they may walk
in his laws with truth of heart.'
The virgin answered: 'Now how shall I bring forth sons, seeing I know
not a man?' The
angel answered: 'O Mary, God who made man without a man is able to
generate in thee man
with- out a man, because with him nothing is impossible.'
Mary answered: 'I know that God is almighty, therefore his will be
done.' The angel
answered: 'Now be conceived in thee the prophet, whom thou shalt name
Jesus: and thou
shalt keep him from wine and from strong drink and from every unclean
meat, because the
child is an holy one of God.' Mary bowed herself with humility, saying:
'Behold the handmaid of God, be it done according to thy word.'
The angel departed, and the virgin glorified God, saying: 'Know, O my
soul, the
greatness of God, and exult, my spirit, in God my Saviour; for he hath
regarded the
lowliness of his handmaiden, insomuch that I shall be called blessed by
all the nations,
for he that is mighty hath made me great, and blessed be his holy name.
For his mercy
extendeth from generation to generation of them that fear him. Mighty
hath he made his
hand, and he hath scattered the proud in the imagination of his heart.
He hath put down
the mighty from their seat, and hath exalted the humble. Him who hath
been hungry hath he
filled with good things, and the rich he hath sent empty away. For he
keepeth in memory
the promises made to Abraham and to his son for ever'.
Chapter 2 The warning of the angel Gabriel given to Joseph
concerning the
conception of the Virgin Mary.
Mary having known the will of God, fearing the people, lest they
should take offense at
her being great with child, and should stone her as guilty of
fornication, chose a
companion of her own lineage, a man by name called Joseph, of blameless
life: for he as a
righteous man feared God and served him with fastings and prayers,
living by the works of
his hands, for he was a carpenter. Such a man the virgin knowing, chose
him for her
companion and revealed to him the divine counsel.
Joseph being a righteous man, when he perceived that Mary was great
with child, was
minded to put her away because he feared God. Behold, whilst he slept,
he was rebuked by
the angel of God, saying 'O Joseph, why art thou minded to put away Mary
thy wife? Know
that whatsoever hath been wrought in her hath all been done by the will
of God. The virgin
shall bring forth a son, whom thou shall call by the name Jesus; whom
thou shalt keep from
wine and strong drink and from every unclean meat, because he is an holy
one of God from
his mother's womb. He is a prophet of God sent unto the people of
Israel, in order that he
may convert Judah to his heart, and that Israel may walk in the law of
the Lord, as it is
written in the law of Moses. He shall come with great power, which God
shall give him, and
shall work great miracles, whereby many shall be saved'. Joseph, arising
from sleep, gave
thanks to God, and abode with Mary all his life, serving God with all
sincerity.
Chapter 3 Wonderful birth of Jesus, and appearance of angels
praising God.
There reigned at that time in Judaea Herod, by decree of Caesar
Augustus, and Pilate
was governor in the priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas. Wherefore, by
decree of Augustus,
all the world was enrolled; wherefore each one went to his own country,
and they presented
themselves by their own tribes to be enrolled. Joseph accordingly
departed from Nazareth,
a city of Galilee, with Mary his wife, great with child, to go to
Bethlehem (for that it
was his city, he being of the lineage of David), in order that he might
be enrolled
according to the decree of Caesar. Joseph having arrived at Bethlehem,
for that the city
was small, and great the multitude of them that were strangers there, he
found no place,
wherefore he took lodging outside the city in a lodging made for a
shepherds' shelter.
While Joseph abode there the days were fulfilled for Mary to bring
forth.
The virgin was surrounded by a light exceeding bright, and brought
forth her son
without pain, whom she took in her arms, and wrapping him in
swaddling-clothes, laid him
in the manger, because there was no room in the inn. There came with
gladness a great
multitude of angels to the inn, blessing God and announcing peace to
them that fear God.
Mary and Joseph praised
the Lord for the birth of Jesus, and with greatest joy nurtured him.
Chapter 4 Angels announced to the shepherds the birth of Jesus, and
they, after
having found him, announce him.
At that time the shepherds were watching over their flock, as is
their custom. And,
behold, they were surrounded by an exceeding bright light, out of which
appeared to them
an angel, who blessed God. The shepherds were filled with fear by reason
of the sudden
light and the appearance of the angel; whereupon the angel of the Lord
comforted them,
saying:
'Behold, I announce to you a great joy, for there is born in the city
of David a child
who is a prophet of the Lord; who bringeth great salvation to the house
of Israel. The
child ye shall find in the manger, with his mother, who blesseth
God.'
And when he had said this there came a great multitude of angels
blessing God,
announcing peace to them that have good will. When the angels were
departed, the shepherds
spake among themselves, saying: 'Let us go even unto Bethlehem, and see
the word which God
by his angel hath announced to us.' There came many shepherds to
Bethlehem seeking the
new-born babe. and they found outside the city the child that was born.
according to the
word of the angel. lying in the manger.
They therefore made obeisance to him, and gave to the mother that
which they had,
announcing to her what they had heard and seen. Mary therefore kept all
these things in
her heart, and Joseph [likewise], giving thanks to God. The shepherds
returned to their
flock, announcing to everyone how great a thing they had seen. And so
the whole
hill-country of Judaea was filled with fear, and every man laid up this
word in his heart,
saying: 'What, think we, shall this child be?'
Chapter 5 Circumcision of Jesus
When the eight days were fulfilled according to the law of the Lord,
as it is written
in the book of Moses, they took the child and carried him to the temple
to circumcise him.
And so they circumcised the child, and gave him the name Jesus, as the
angel of the Lord
had said before he was conceived in the womb. Mary and Joseph perceived
that the child
must needs be for the salvation and ruin of many. Wherefore they feared
God, and kept the
child with fear of God.
Chapter 6 Three Magi are led by a star in the east to Judaea, and,
finding
Jesus, make obeisance to him and gifts.
In the reign of Herod, king of Judaea, when Jesus was born, three
magi in the parts of
the east were observing the stars of heaven. Whereupon appeared to them a
star of great
brightness, wherefore having concluded among themselves, they came to
Judaea, guided by
the star, which went before them, and having arrived at Jerusalem they
asked where was
born the King of the Jews. And when Herod heard this he was affrighted,
and all the city
was troubled. Herod therefore called together the priests and the
scribes, saying: 'Where
should Christ be born?' They answered that he should be born in
Bethlehem; for thus it is
written by the prophet:
'And thou, Bethlehem, art not little among the princes of Judah: for
out of thee shall
come forth a leader, who shall lead my people Israel.'
Herod accordingly called together the magi and asked them concerning
their coming: who
answered that they had seen a star in the east, which had guided them
thither, wherefore
they wished with gifts to worship this new King manifested by his star.
Then said Herod: 'Go to Bethlehem and search out with all diligence
concerning the
child; and when ye have found him, come and tell it to me, because I
also would fain
come and worship him.' And this he spake deceitfully.
Chapter 7 The visitation of Jesus by magi, and their return to their
own country,
with the warning of Jesus given to them in a dream.
The magi therefore departed out of Jerusalem, and lo, the star which
appeared to them
in the east went before them. Seeing the star the magi were filled with
gladness. And so
having come to Bethlehem, outside the city, they saw the star standing
still above the inn
where Jesus was born. The magi therefore went thither, and entering the
dwelling found the
child with his mother, and bending down they did obeisance to him. And
the magi presented
unto him spices, with silver and gold, recounting to the virgin all that
they had seen.
Whereupon, while sleeping, they were warned by the child not to go to
Herod: so departing
by another way they returned to their own home, announcing all that they
had seen in
Judaea.
Chapter 8 Jesus is carried in flight to Egypt, and herod
massacres the innocent
children.
Herod seeing that the magi did not return, believed himself mocked of
them; whereupon
he determined to put to death the child that was born. But behold while
Joseph was
sleeping there appeared to him the angel of the Lord, saying: 'Arise up
quickly, and take
the child with his mother and go into Egypt for Herod willeth to slay
him'. Joseph arose
with great fear, and took Mary with the child, and they went into Egypt,
and there they
abode until the death of Herod: who, believing himself derided of the
magi, sent his
soldiers to slay all the new-born children in Bethlehem. The soldiers
therefore came and
slew all the children that were there, as Herod had commanded them.
Whereby were fulfilled
the words of the prophet, saying: 'Lamentation and great weeping are
there in Ramah;
Rachel lamenteth for her sons, but consolation is not given her because
they are not.'
Chapter 9 Jesus, heving returned to Judaea, holds a wondrous
disputation with
doctors, having come to the age of twelve years.
When Herod was dead, behold the angel of the Lord appeared in a dream
to Joseph,
saying: 'Return into Judaea, for they are dead that willed the death of
the child.' Joseph
therefore took the child with Mary (he having come to the age of seven
years), and came to
Judaea; whence, hearing that Archelaus, son of Herod, was reigning in
Judaea, he went into
Galilee, fearing to remain in Judaea; and they went to dwell at
Nazareth. The child grew
in grace and
wisdom before God and before men.
Jesus, having come to the age of twelve years, went up with Mary and
Joseph to
Jerusalem, to worship there according to the law of the Lord written in
the book of Moses.
When their prayers were ended they departed, having lost Jesus, because
they thought that
he was returned home with their kinsfolk. Mary therefore returned with
Joseph to
Jerusalem, seeking Jesus among kinsfolk and neighbours. The third day
they found the child
in the temple, in the midst of the doctors, disputing with them
concerning the law. And
every one was amazed at his questions and answers, saying: "How can
there be such
doctrine in him, seeing he is so small and hath not learned to read?'
Mary reproved him, saying: 'Son, what hast thou done to us? Behold I
and thy father
have sought thee for three days sorrowing.' Jesus answered: 'Know ye not
that the service
of God ought to come before father and mother?' Jesus then went down
with his mother and
Joseph to Nazareth, and was subject to them with humility and reverence.
Chapter 10
Jesus having come to the age of thirty years, as he himself said unto
me, went up to
Mount Olives with his mother to gather olives. Then at midday as he
was praying, when
he came to these words: 'Lord, with mercy . . . ,' he was surrounded by
an exceeding
bright light and by an infinite multitude of angels, who were saying:
'Blessed be God.'
The angel Gabriel presented to him as it were a shining mirror, a book,
which descended
into the heart of Jesus, in which he had knowledge of what God hath done
and what hath
said and what God willeth insomuch that everything was laid bare and
open to him; as he
said unto me: 'Believe, Barnabas, that I know every prophet with every
prophecy, insomuch
that whatever I say the whole bath come forth from that book.'
Jesus, having received this vision, and knowing that he was a prophet
sent to the house
of Israel, revealed all to Mary his mother, telling her that he needs
must suffer great
persecution for the honour of God, and that he could not any longer
abide with her to
serve her. Whereupon, having heard this, Mary answered: 'Son. ere thou
west born all was
announced to me; wherefore blessed be the holy name of God. Jesus
departed therefore that
day from his mother to attend to his prophetic office.
Chapter 11 Jesus Miraculously healeth a leper, and goeth into
Jerusalem.
Jesus descending from the mountain to come into Jerusalem, met a
leper, who by divine
inspiration knew Jesus to be a prophet. Therefore with tears he prayed
him, saying;
'Jesus, thou son of David, have mercy on me.' Jesus answered: 'What wilt
thou, brother,
that I should do unto thee?'
The leper answered: 'Lord, give me health.'
Jesus reproved him, saying: 'Thou art foolish; pray to God who
created thee, and he
will give thee health; for I am a man, as thou art.'
The leper answered: 'I know that thou, Lord, art a man, but an holy
one of the Lord.
Wherefore pray thou to God, and he will give me health.'
Then Jesus, sighing, said: 'Lord God Almighty, for the love of thy
holy prophets give
health to this sick man.' Then, having said this, he said, touching the
sick man with his
hands in the name of God: 'O brother, receive thy health!' And when he
had said this the
leprosy was cleansed, insomuch that the flesh of the leper was left unto
him like that of
a child. Seeing which namely, that he was healed, the leper with a loud
voice cried out:
'Come hither, Israel, to receive the prophet whom God sendeth unto
thee'. Jesus prayed
him, saying: 'Brother, hold thy peace and say nothing,' but the more he
prayed him the
more he cried out, saying: 'Behold the prophet! behold the holy one of
God!' At which
words many that were going out of Jerusalem ran back, and entered with
Jesus into
Jerusalem, recounting that which God through Jesus had done unto the
leper.
Chapter 12 First sermon of Jesus delivered to the people: wonderful
in doctrine
concerning the name of God.
The whole city of Jerusalem was moved by these words, wherefore they
all ran together
to the temple to see Jesus, who had entered therein to pray, so that
they could scarce be
contained there. Therefore the priests besought Jesus, saying: 'This
people desireth to
see thee and hear thee; therefore ascend to the pinnacle, and if God
give thee a word
speak it in the name of the Lord.'
Then ascended Jesus to the place whence the scribes were wont to
speak. And having
beckoned with the hand for silence, he opened his mouth, saying:
'Blessed be the holy name
of God, who of his goodness and mercy willed to create his creatures
that they might
glorify him. Blessed be the holy name of God, who created the splendour
of all the saints
and prophets before all things to send him for the salvation of the
world, as he spoke by
his servant David, saying: "Before Lucifer in the brightness of the
saints I created
thee." Blessed be the holy name of God, who created the angels that they
might serve
him. And blessed be God, who punished and reprobated Satan and his
followers, who would
not reverence him whom God willeth to be reverenced. Blessed be the holy
name of God, who
created man out of the clay of the earth, and set him over his works.
Blessed be the holy
name of God, who drove man out of paradise for having transgressed his
holy precept.
Blessed be the holy name of God, who with mercy looked upon the tears of
Adam and Eve,
first parents of the human race. Blessed be the holy name of God who
just punished Cain
the fratricide, sent the deluge upon the earth. burned up three wicked
cities, scourged
Egypt, overwhelmed Pharaoh in the Red Sea, scattered the enemies of his
people, chastised
the unbelievers and punished the impenitent. Blessed be the holy name of
God, who with
mercy looked upon his creatures, and therefore sent them his holy
prophets, that they
might walk in truth and righteousness before him; who delivered his
servants from every
evil, and gave them this land, as he promised to our father Abraham and
to his son for
ever. Then by his servant Moses he gave us his holy law, that Satan
should not deceive us:
and he exalted us above all other peoples.
'But, brethren, what do we to-day, that we be not punished for our
sins?'
And then Jesus with greatest vehemence rebuked the people for that
they had forgotten
the word of God, and gave themselves only to vanity; he rebuked the
priests for their
negligence in God's service and for their worldly greed; he rebuked the
scribes because
they preached vain doctrine, and forsook the law of God; he rebuked the
doctors because
they made the law of God of none effect through their traditions. And in
such wise did
Jesus speak to the people, that all wept, from the least to the
greatest, crying mercy,
and beseeching Jesus that he would pray of them; save only their priests
and leaders, who
on that day conceived hatred against Jesus for having thus spoken
against the priests,
scribes, and doctors. And they meditated upon his death, but for fear of
the people, who
had received him as a prophet of God, they spoke no word.
Jesus raised his hands to the Lord God and prayed, and the people
weeping said: 'So be
it, O Lord, so be it.' The prayer being ended, Jesus descended from the
temple; and that
day he departed from Jerusalem, with many that followed him. And the
priests spoke evil of
Jesus among themselves.
Chapter 13 The remarkable fear of Jesus and his prayer, and the
wonderful
comfort of the angel Gabriel.
Some days having passed, Jesus having in spirit perceived the desire
of the priests,
ascended the Mount of Olives to pray. And having passed the whole night
in prayer, in the
morning Jesus praying said: 'OLord, I know that the scribes hate me, and
the priests are
minded to kill me, thy servant; therefore, Lord God almighty and
merciful, in mercy hear
the prayers of the servant, and save me from their snares, for thou art
my salvation. Thou
knowest, Lord, that I thy servant seek thee alone, O Lord, and speak thy
word; for thy
word is truth, which endureth for ever.'
When Jesus had spoken these words, behold there came to him the angel
Gabriel, saying:
'Fear not, O Jesus, for a thousand thousand who dwell above the heaven
guard thy garments,
and thou shalt not die till everything be fulfilled, and the world shall
be near its end.'
Jesus fell with his face to the ground, saying: 'O great Lord God,
how great is thy
mercy upon me, and what shall I give thee, Lord, for all that thou hast
granted me?' The
angel Gabriel answered: 'Arise, Jesus, and remember
Abraham, who being willing to make sacrifice to God of his
only-begotten son Ishmael,
to fulfil the word of God, and the knife not being able to cut his son,
at my word offered
in sacrifice a sheep. Even so therefore shalt thou do, O Jesus, servant
of God.
Jesus answered: 'Willingly, but where shall I find the lamb, seeing I
have no money,
and it is not lawful to steal it?' Thereupon the angel Gabriel showed
unto him a sheep,
which Jesus offered in sacrifice, praising and blessing God, who is
glorious for ever.
Chapter 14 After the fast of forty days, Jesus chooseth twelve
apostles.
Jesus descended from the mount, and passed alone by night to the
farther side of
Jordan, and fasted forty days and forty nights, not eating anything day
nor night, making
continual supplication to the Lord for the salvation of his people to
whom God had sent
him. And when the forty days were passed he was an hungered. Then
appeared Satan unto him,
and tempted him in many words, but Jesus drove him away by the power of
words of God.
Satan having departed, the angels came and ministered unto Jesus that
whereof he had need.
Jesus, having returned to the region of Jerusalem, was found again of
the people with
exceeding great joy, and they prayed him that he would abide with them;
for his words were
not as those of the scribes, but were with power, for they touched the
heart.
Jesus, seeing that great was the multitude of them that returned to
their heart for to
walk in the law of God, went up into the mountain, and abode all night
in prayer, and when
day was come he descended from the mountain, and chose twelve, whom he
called apostles,
among whom is Judas, who was slain upon the cross. Their names are:
Andrew and Peter his
brother, fishermen; Barnabas, who wrote this, with Matthew the publican,
who sat at the
receipt of custom; John and James, sons of Zebedee; Thaddaeus and Judas;
Bartholomew and
Philip; James, and Judas Iscariot the traitor. To these he always
revealed the divine
secrets; but the Iscariot Judas he made his dispenser of that which was
given in alms, but
he stole the tenth part of everything.
Chapter 15 Miracle wrought by Jesus at the marriage, turning the
water into wine.
When the feast of tabernacles was nigh, a certain rich man invited
Jesus with his
disciples and his mother to a marriage. Jesus therefore went, and as
they were feasting
the wine ran short. His mother accosted Jesus, saying: 'They have no
wine.' Jesus
answered: 'What is that to me, mother mine?' His mother commanded the
servants that
whatever Jesus should command them they should obey. There were there
six vessels for
water according to the custom of Israel to purify themselves for prayer.
Jesus said: 'Fill
these vessels with water.' The servants did so. Jesus said unto them:
'In the name of God,
give to drink unto them that are feasting.' The servants thereupon bare
unto the master of
the ceremonies, who rebuked the attendants saying: 'O worthless servants
why have ye kept
the better wine till now?' For he knew nothing of all that
Jesus had done.
The servants answered: 'O sir, there is here a holy man of God, for
he hath made of
water, wine.' The master of the ceremonies thought that the servants
were drunken; but
they that were sitting near to Jesus, having seen the whole matter, rose
from the table
and paid him reverence, saying: 'Verily thou art an holy one of God, a
true prophet sent
to us from God!'
Then his disciples believed on him, and many returned to their heart,
saying: 'Praised
be God, who hath mercy upon Israel, and visiteth the house of Judah with
love, and blessed
be his holy name.'
Chapter 16 Wonderful teaching giving by Jesus to his apostles
concerning
conversion from the evil life.
One day Jesus called together his disciples and went up on to the
mountain, and when he
had sat down there his disciples came near unto him; and he opened his
mouth and taught
them, saying: 'Great are the benefits which God bath bestowed on us
wherefore it is
necessary that we should serve him with truth of heart. And forasmuch as
new wine is put
into new vessels, even so ought ye to become new men, if ye will contain
the new doctrine
that shall come out of my mouth. Verily I say unto you, that even as a
man cannot see with
his eyes the heaven and the earth at one and the same time, so it is
impossible to love
God and the world.
'No man can in any wise serve two masters that are at enmity one with
the other: for if
the one shall love you, the other will hate you. Even so I tell you in
truth that ye
cannot serve God and the world for the world lieth in falsehood,
covetousness, and
malignity. Ye cannot therefore find rest in the world, but rather
persecution and loss.
Wherefore serve God and despise the world, for from me ye shall find
rest for your souls,
Hear my words for I speak unto you in truth.
'Verily, blessed are they that mourn this earthly life, for they
shall be comforted.
'Blessed are the poor who truly hate the delights of the world, for
they shall abound
in the delights of the kingdom of God.
'Verily, blessed are they that eat at the table of God, for the
angels shall minister
unto them.
'Ye are journeying as pilgrims. Doth the pilgrim encumber himself
with palaces and
fields and other earthly matters upon the way? Assuredly not: but he
beareth things light
and prized for their usefulness and convenience upon the road. This now
should be an
example unto you; and if ye desire another example I will give it you,
in order that ye
may do all that I tell you.
'Weigh not down your hearts with earthly desires, saying: "Who shall
clothe
us?" or "Who shall give us to eat?" But behold the flowers and the
trees,
with the birds, which God our Lord clotheth and nourisheth with greater
glory than all the
glory of Solomon. And he is able to nourish you, even God who created
you and called you
to his service; who for forty years caused the manna to fall from heaven
for his people
Israel in the wilderness, and did not suffer their clothing to wax old
or perish, they
being six hundred and forty thousand men, besides women and children.
Verily I say unto
you, that heaven and earth shall fail, yet shall not fail his mercy unto
them that fear
him. But the rich of the world in their prosperity are hungry and
perish. There was a rich
man whose incomings increased, and he said, "What shall I do, O my soul?
I will pull
down my barns because they are small, and I will build new and greater
ones: therefore
thou shalt triumph my soul!" Oh, wretched ban! for that night he died.
He ought to
have been mindful of the poor, and to have made himself friends with the
alms of
unrighteous riches of this world; for they bring treasures in the
kingdom of heaven.
'Tell me, I pray you, if ye should give your money into the bank to a
publican, and he
should give unto you tenfold and twentyfold, would ye not give to such a
man everything
that ye had? But I say unto you, verily, that whatsoever ye shall give
and shall forsake
for love of God, ye receive it back an hundred-fold, and life
everlasting. See then how
much ye ought to be content to serve God.
Chapter 17 In this chapter is clearly perceived the unbelief of
Christians, and
the true faith of Mumin.
When Jesus had said this, Philip answered: 'We are content to serve
God, but we desire,
however, to know God, for Isaiah the prophet said: "Verily thou art a
hidden
God," and God said to Moses his servant: "I am that which I am."
Jesus answered: 'Philip, God is a good without which there is naught
good; God is a
being without which there is naught that is; God is a life without which
there is naught
that liveth; so great that he filleth all and is everywhere. He alone
hath no equal. He
hath had no beginning, nor will he ever have an end, but to everything
hath he given a
beginning, and to everything shall he give an end. He hath no father nor
mother; he hath
no sons. nor brethren. nor companions. And because God hath no body,
therefore he eateth
not, sleepeth not, dieth not, walketh not, moveth not, but abideth
eternally without human
similitude, for that he is incorporeal, uncompounded, immaterial, of the
most simple
substance. He is so good that he loveth goodness only; he is so just
that when he
punisheth or pardoneth it cannot be gainsaid. In short, I say unto thee,
Philip, that here
on earth thou canst not see him nor know him perfectly; but in his
kingdom thou shalt see
him for ever: wherein consisteth all our happiness and glory.'
Philip answered: 'Master, what sayest thou? It is surely written in
Isaiah that God is
our father; how, then, hath he no sons?'
Jesus answered: 'There are written in the prophets many parables,
wherefore thou
oughtest not to attend to the letter, but to the sense. For all the
prophets, that are one
hundred and forty-four thousand, whom God hath sent into the world, have
spoken darkly.
But after me shall come the Splendour of all the prophets and holy ones,
and shall shed
light upon the darkness of all that the prophets have said, because he
is the messenger of
God' And having said this, Jesus sighed and said: 'Have mercy on Israel,
O Lord God; and
look with pity upon Abraham and upon his seed, in order that they may
serve thee with
truth of heart.
His disciples answered: 'So be it, O Lord our God!'
Jesus said: 'Verily I say unto you, the scribes and doctors have made
void the law of
God with their false prophecies, contrary to the prophecies of the true
prophets of God:
wherefore God is wrath with the house of Israel and with this faithless
generation.' His
disciples wept at these words, and said: 'Have mercy, O God, have mercy
upon the temple
and upon the holy city, and give it not into contempt of the nations
that they despise not
thy holy covenant.' Jesus answered: 'So be it, Lord God of our fathers.'
Chapter 18 Here is shown forth the persecution of the servants of
God by the
world, and God's protection saving them.
Having said this, Jesus said: 'Ye have not chosen me, but I have
chosen you, that ye
may be my disciples. If then the world shall hate you, ye shall be truly
my disciples; for
the world hath been ever an enemy of servants of God. Remember [the]
holy prophets that
have been slain by the world, even as in the time of Elijah ten thousand
prophets were
slain by Jezebel, insomuch that scarcely did poor Elijah escape, and
seven thousand sons
of prophets who were hidden by the captain of Ahab's host. Oh,
unrighteous world, that
knowest not God! Fear not therefore ye, for the hairs of your head are
numbered so that
they shall not perish. Behold the sparrows and other
birds, whereof falleth not one feather without the will of God. Shall
God, then, have
more care of the birds than of man, for whose sake he hath created
everything. Is there
any man, perchance, who careth more for his shoes than for his own son?
Assuredly not. Now
how much less ought ye to think that God would abandon you, while taking
care of the
birds! And why speak I of the birds? A leaf of a tree falleth not
without the will of God.
'Believe me, because I tell you the truth, that the world will
greatly fear you if ye
shall observe my words. For if it feared not to have its wickedness
revealed it would not
hate you, but it feareth to be revealed, therefore it will hate you and
persecute you. If
ye shall see your words scorned by the world lay it not to heart, but
consider how that
God is greater than you; who is in such wise scorned by the world that
his wisdom is
counted madness If God endureth the world with patience, wherefore will
ye lay it to
heart, O dust and clay of the earth? In your patience ye shall possess
your soul.
Therefore if one shall give you a blow on one side of the face, offer
him the other that
he may smite it. Render not evil for evil, for so do all the worst
animals; but render
good for evil, and pray God for them that hate you. Fire is not
extinguished with fire,
but rather with water; even so I say unto you that ye shall not overcome
evil with evil,
but rather with good. Behold God, who causeth the sun to come upon the
good and evil, and
likewise the rain. Soought ye to do good to all; for it is written in
the law: "Be ye
holy, for I your God am holy; be ye pure, for I am pure; and be ye
perfect, for I am
perfect." Verily I say unto you that the servant studieth to please his
master, and
so he putteth not on any garment that is displeasing to his master. Your
garments are your
will and your love. Beware, then, not to will or to love a thing that is
displeasing to
God, our Lord. Be ye sure that God hateth the pomps and lusts of the
world, and therefore
hate ye the world.'
Chapter 19 Jesus foretelleth his betrayal, and, descending from the
mountain,
healeth ten lepers.
When Jesus had said this, Peter answered: 'O teacher, behold we have
felt all to follow
thee, what shall become of us?' Jesus answered: 'Verily ye in the day of
judgment shall
sit beside me, giving testimony against the twelve tribes of Israel.'
And having said this
Jesus sighed, saying: 'O Lord, what thing is this? for I have chosen
twelve, and one of
them is a devil.'
The disciples were sore grieved at this word; whereupon he who
writeth secretly
questioned Jesus with tears, saying: 'O master, will Satan deceive me,
and shall I then
become reprobate?'
Jesus answered: "Be not sore grieved, Barnabas; for those whom God
hath chosen
before the creation of the world shall not perish. Rejoice, for thy name
is written in the
book of life.' Jesus comforted his disciples, saying: 'Fear not, for he
who shall hate me
is not grieved at my saying, because in him is not the divine feeling.'
At his words the
chosen were comforted. Jesus made his prayers, and his disciples said:
'Amen, so be it,
Lord God almighty and merciful.' Having finished his devotions, Jesus
came down from the
mountain with his disciples, and met ten lepers, who from afar off cried
out: 'Jesus, son
of David, have mercy on us!'
Jesus called them near to him, and said unto them: 'What will ye of
me, O brethren?'
They all cried out: 'Give us health!' Jesus answered: 'Ah, wretched that
ye are, have ye
so lost your reason for that ye say: "Give us health?" See ye not me to
be a man
like yourselves. Call unto our God that hath created you: and he that is
almighty and
merciful will heal you. With tears the lepers answered: 'We know that
thou art man like
us, but yet an holy one of God and a prophet of the Lord; wherefore pray
thou to God, and
he will heal us.
Thereupon the disciples prayed Jesus, saying: 'Lord, have mercy upon
them.' Then
groaned Jesus and prayed to God, saying: 'Lord God almighty and
merciful, have mercy and
hearken to the words of thy servant: and for love of Abraham our father
and for thy holy
covenant have mercy on the request of these men, and grant them health.'
Whereupon Jesus,
having said this, turned himself to the lepers and said: 'Go and show
yourselves to the
priests according to the law of God.'
The lepers departed and on the way were cleansed. Whereupon one of
them. seeing that he
was healed, returned to find Jesus, and he was an Ishmaelite. And having
found Jesus he
bowed himself, doing reverence unto him, and saying: 'Verily thou art an
holy one of God'
and with thanks he prayed him that he would receive him for servant.
Jesus answered: 'Ten
have been cleansed; where are the nine?' And he said to him that was
cleansed: 'I am not
come to be served, but to serve: wherefore go to shine home, and recount
how much God hath
done in thee, in order that they may know that the promises made to
Abraham and his son,
with the kingdom of God, are drawing nigh.' The cleansed leper departed,
and having
arrived in his own neighbourhood recounted how much God through Jesus
had wrought in him.
Chapter 20 Miracle on the sea wrought by Jesus, and Jesus declares
where
the prophet is received.
Jesus went to the sea of Galilee, and having embarked in a ship
sailed to his city of
Nazareth; whereupon there was a great tempest in the sea, insomuch that
the ship was nigh
unto sinking. And Jesus was sleeping upon the prow of the ship. Then
drew near to him his
disciples, and awoke him, saying: 'O master, save thyself, for we
perish!' They were
encompassed with very great fear, by reason of the great wind that was
contrary and the
roaring of the sea. Jesus arose, and raising his eyes to heaven, said:
'O Elohim Sabaoth,
have mercy upon thy servants.' Then, when Jesus had said this, suddenly
the wind ceased,
and the sea became calm. Wherefore the
seamen feared, saying: 'And who is this, that the sea and the wind
obey him?"
Having arrived at the city of Nazareth the seamen spread through the
city all that
Jesus had wrought, whereupon the house where Jesus was, was surrounded
by as many as dwelt
in the city. And the scribes and doctors having presented themselves
unto him said: 'We
have heard how much thou hast wrought in the sea and in Judaea: give us
therefore some
sign here in thine own country.'
Jesus answered: 'This faithless generation seek a sign, but it shall
not be given them,
because no prophet is received in his own country. In the time of Elijah
there were many
widows in Judaea, but he was not sent to be nourished save unto a widow
of Sidon. Many
were the lepers in the time of Elisha in Judaea; nevertheless only
Naaman the Syrian was
cleansed.'
Then were the citizens enraged and seized him and carried him on to
the top of a
precipice to cast him down. But Jesus walking through the midst of them,
departed from
them.
Chapter 21 Jesus healeth a demoniac, and the swine are cast into
the sea.
Afterwards he healeth the daughter of the Canaanites.
Jesus went up to Capernaum, and as he drew near to the city behold
there came out of
the tombs one that was possessed of a devil, and in such wise that no
chain could hold
him, and he did great harm to the man.
The demons cried out through his mouth, saying: 'O holy one of God,
why art thou come
before the time to trouble us?' And they prayed him that he would not
cast them forth.
Jesus asked them how many they were. They answered: 'Six thousand six
hundred and
sixty-six.' When the disciples heard this they were affrighted, and
prayed Jesus that he
would depart. Then said Jesus: 'Where is your faith? It is necessary
that the demon should
depart, and not I.' The demons therefore cried: 'We will come out, but
permit us to enter
into those swine.' There were feeding there, near to the sea, about ten
thousand swine
belonging to the Canaanites. Thereupon Jesus said: 'Depart, and enter
into the swine.'
With a roar the demons entered into the swine, and cast them headlong
into the sea. Then
fled into the city they that fed the swine, and recounted all that had
been brought to
pass by Jesus.
Accordingly the men of the city came forth and found Jesus and the
man that was healed.
The men were filled with fear and prayed Jesus that he would depart out
of their borders.
Jesus accordingly departed from them and went up into the parts of Tyre
and Sidon.
And lo! a woman of Canaan with her two sons, who had come forth out
of her own country
to find Jesus. Having therefore seen him come with his disciples, she
cried out: 'Jesus,
son of David, have mercy on my daughter, who is tormented of the devil!
Jesus did not
answer even a single word, because they were of the uncircumcised
people. The disciples
were moved to pity, and said: 'O master, have pity on them! Behold how
much they cry out
and weep!'
Jesus answered: 'I am not sent but unto the people of Israel.' Then
the woman, with her
sons, went before Jesus, weeping and saying: 'O son of David, have mercy
on me!' Jesus
answered: 'It is not good to take the bread from the children's hands
and give it to the
dogs.' And this said Jesus by reason of their uncleanness, because they
were of the un-
circumcised people.
The woman answered: 'O Lord, the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from
their masters'
table.' Then was Jesus seized with admiration at the words of the woman,
and said: 'O
woman, great is thy faith.' And having raised his hands to heaven he
prayed to God, and
then he said: 'O woman, thy daughter is freed, go thy way in peace.' The
woman departed,
and returning to her home found her daughter, who was blessing God.'
Wherefore the woman
said: 'Verily there is none other God than the God of Israel.' Whereupon
all her kinsfolk
joined themselves unto the law of [God], according to the law written in
the book of
Moses.
Chapter 22 Miserable condition of the uncircumcised in that a dog
is better
than they.
The disciples questioned Jesus on that day, saying: 'O master, why
didst thou make such
answer to the woman, saying that they were dogs?'
Jesus answered: 'Verily I say unto you that a dog is better than an
uncircumcised man.'
Then were the disciples sorrowful, saying: 'Hard are these words, and
who shall be able to
receive them?'
Jesus answered: "If ye consider, O foolish ones, what the dog doth,
that hath no
reason, for the service of his master, ye will find my saying to be
true. Tell me, doth
the dog guard the house of his master, and expose his life against the
robber? Yea,
assuredly. But what receiveth he? Many blows and injuries with little
bread, and he always
showeth to his master a joyful countenance. Is this true?'
'True it is, O master,' answered the disciples.
Then said Jesus: 'Consider now how much God hath given to man, and ye
shall see how
unrighteous he is in not observing the covenant of God made with Abraham
his servant.
Remember that which David said to Saul king of Israel, against Goliath
the Philistine:
"My lord," said David, "while thy servant was keeping thy servant's
flock
there came the wolf, the bear, and the lion and seized thy servant's
sheep: whereupon thy
servant went and slew them, rescuing the sheep. And what is this
uncircumcised one but
like unto them ? Therefore will thy servant go in the name of the Lord
God of Israel, and
will slay this unclean one that blasphemeth the holy people of God."
Then said the disciples: 'Tell us O master for what reason man must
needs be
circumcised?"
Jesus answered: 'Let it suffice you that God hath commanded it to
Abraham. saying:
"Abraham, circumcise thy foreskin and that of all thy house, for this is
a covenant
between me and thee for ever.''
Chapter 23 Orgin of Circumcision, and covenant of God with
Abraham, and damnation
of the uncircumcised.
And having said this, Jesus sat nigh unto the mountain which they
looked upon. And his
disciples came to his side to listen to his words. Then said Jesus:
'Adam the first man
having eaten, by fraud of Satan, the food forbidden of God in paradise,
his flesh rebelled
against the spirit; whereupon he swore, saying: "By God, I will cut
thee!"
And having broken a piece of rock, he seized his flesh to cut it with
the sharp edge of
the stone: whereupon he was rebuked by the angel Gabriel. And he
answered: "I
have sworn by God to cut it; I will never be a liar!"
'Then the angel showed him the superfluity of his flesh, and that he
cut off. And
hence, just as every man taketh flesh from the flesh of Adam, so is he
bound to observe
all that Adam promised with an oath. This did Adam observe in his sons,
and from
generation to generation came down the obligation of circumcision. But
in the time of
Abraham there were but few circumcised upon the earth, because that
idolatry was
multiplied up the earth. Whereupon God told to Abraham the fact
concerning circumcision,
and made this covenant, saying: "The soul that shall not have his flesh
circumcised,
I will scatter him from among my people for ever." '
The disciples trembled with fear at these words of Jesus, for with
vehemence of spirit
he spoke. Then said Jesus: Leave fear to him that hath not circumcised
his foreskin, for
he is deprived of paradise. And having said this, Jesus spoke again,
saying: 'The spirit
in many is ready in the service of God, but the flesh is weak. The man
therefore that
feareth God ought to consider what the flesh is, and where it had its
origin, and whereto
it shall be reduced. Of the clay of the earth created God flesh, and
into it he breathed
the breath of life, with an inbreathing therein. And therefore when the
flesh shall hinder
the service of God it ought to be spurned like clay and
trampled on, forasmuch as he that hateth his soul in this world shall
keep it in life
eternal.
'What the flesh is at this present its desires make manifest -that it
is a harsh enemy
of all good: for it alone desireth sin.
'Ought then man for the sake of satisfying one of his enemies to
leave off pleasing
God, his creator? Consider ye this. All the saints and prophets have
been enemies of their
flesh for service of God: wherefore readily and with gladness they went
to their death, so
as not to offend against the law of God given by Moses his servant, and
go and serve the
false and lying gods.
'Remember Elijah, who fled through desert places of the mountains,
eating only grass,
clad in goats' skin. Ah, how many days he supped not! Ah, how much cold
he endured! Ah,
how many showers drenched him, and [that] for the space of seven years,
wherein endured
that fierce persecution of the unclean Jezebel!
Remember Elisha, who ate barley-bread, and wore the Coarsest raiment.
Verily I say unto
you that they, not fearing to spurn the flesh, were feared with great
terror by the king
and princes. This should suffice for the spurning of the flesh, O men.
But if ye will gaze
at the sepulchres, ye shall know what the flesh is.'
Chapter 24 Natable example how one ought to flee from banqueting
and
feasting.
Having said this, Jesus wept, saying: 'Woe to those who are servants
to their flesh,
for they are sure not to have any good in the other life, but only
torments for their
sins. I tell you that there was a rich glutton who paid no heed to aught
but gluttony, and
so every day held a splendid feast. There stood at his gate a poor man
by name Lazarus,
who was full of wounds, and was fain to have those crumbs that fell from
the glutton's
table. But no one gave them to him; nay, all mocked him. Only the dogs
had pity on him,
for they licked his wounds. It came to pass that the poor man died, and
the angels carried
him to the arms of Abraham our father. The rich man also died, and the
devils carried him
to the arms of Satan; whereupon, undergoing the greatest torment, he
lifted up his eyes
and from afar saw Lazarus in the arms of Abraham. Then cried the rich
man: "O father
Abraham, have mercy on me, and send Lazarus, who upon his fingers may
bring me a drop of
water to cool my tongue, which is tormented in this flame."
'Abraham answered: "Son, remember that thou receivedst thy good in
the other life
and Lazarus his evil; wherefore now thou shalt be in torment, and
Lazarus in
consolation."
'The rich man cried out again, saying: "O father Abraham, in my house
there are
three brethren of mine. Therefore send Lazarus to announce to them how
much I am
suffering, in order that they may repent and not come hither."
'Abraham answered: "They have Moses and the prophets, let them hear
them."
'The rich man answered: "Nay, father Abraham; but if one dead shall
arise they
will believe."
'Abraham answered: "Whoso believeth not Moses and the prophets will
not believe
even the dead if they should arise.
'See then whether the poor are blessed,' said Jesus, 'who have
patience, and only
desire that which is necessary, hating the flesh. O wretched they, who
bear others to the
burial, to give their flesh for food of worms, and do not learn the
truth. So far from it
that they live here like immortals, for they build great houses and
purchase great
revenues and live in pride.'
Chapter 25 How one ought to despise the flesh, and how one ought to
live in the
world.
Then said he who writeth: 'O master, true are thy words and therefore
have we forsaken
all to follow thee. Tell us, then how we ought to hate our flesh: for
to kill
oneself is not lawful, and living we needs must give it its livelihood.'
Jesus answered: 'Keep thy flesh like a horse, and thou shalt live
securely. For
unto a horse food is given by measure, and labour without measure, and
the bridle is put
on him that he may walk at thy will, he is tied up that he may not annoy
any one, he is
kept in a poor place, and beaten when he is not obedient: so do thou,
then, O Barnabas,
and thou shalt live always with God.
'And be not offended at my words, for David the prophet did the same
thing, as he
confesseth , saying: "I am as an horse before thee: and am always by
thee."
'Now tell me, whether is poorer he who is content with little, or he
who desireth much?
Verily I say unto you, that if the world had but a sound mind no one
would amass
anything for himself, but all would be in common. But in this is known
its madness,
that the more it amasseth the more it desireth, And much as it
amasseth, for the
fleshly repose of others doth it amass the same. Therefore let one
single robe suffice for
you, cast away your purse, carry no wallet, no sandals on your feet; and
do not think,
saying: "What shall happen to us ?" but have thought to do the will of
God, and
he will provide for your need, insomuch that nothing shall be lacking
unto you.
'Verily I say unto you. that the amassing much in this life giveth
sure witness of not
having anything to receive in the other. For he that hath Jerusalem for
his native
country buildeth not houses in Samaria, for that there is enmity between
there cities.
Understand ye?'
'Yea, answered the disciples.
Chapter 26 How one ought to love God. And in this chapter is
contained the
wonderful contention of Abraham with his father.
Then Jesus said: "There was a man on a journey who, as he was
walking, discovered
a treasure in a field that was to be sold for five pieces of money.
Straightway the man,
when he knew this, sold his cloak to buy that field. Is that credible?"
The disciples
answered: "He who would not believe this is mad."
Thereupon Jesus said: "You will be mad if you do not give your senses
to God to
buy your soul in which resides the treasure of love; for love is an
incomparable treasure.
For he that loves God has God for his own; and whoever has God has
everything." Peter
answered: "O master, how can one love God with true love? Tell us."
Jesus replied: "Truly I say to you that he who shall not hate his
father and his
mother, and his own life, and children and wife for love of God, such is
not worthy to be
loved of God." Peter answered: "O master, it is written in the Law of
God in the
Book of Moses: Honour your father, that you may live long upon the
earth. And further he
says: Cursed be the son that obeys not his father and his mother" God
commanded that
such a disobedient son should be stoned by the wrath of the people
before the gate of the
city. [Why] do you bid us to hate father and mother?"
Jesus replied: "Every word of mine is true, because it is not mine,
but God's, who
has sent me to the House of Israel. Therefore I say to you that all that
which you possess
God has bestowed it upon you: and so, what is more precious, the gift or
the giver? When
your father and your mother with every other thing is a stumbling block
to you in the
service of God, abandon them as enemies. Did not God say to Abraham: Go
forth from the
house of your father and of your kindred, and come to dwell in the land
which I will give
to you and to your seed? Why did God say this, except that the father of
Abraham was an
image-maker, who made and worshipped false gods? [For this reason] there
was enmity
between them, such that the father wished to burn his son." Peter
answered:
"Your words are true. I pray you tell us how Abraham mocked his father."
Jesus replied: "Abraham was seven years old when he began to seek
God. So one day
he said to his father: 'Father, what made man?' The foolish father
answered: 'Man [made
man]; for I made you, and my father made me.' Abraham answered: 'Father,
it is not so; for
I have heard an old man weeping and saying: 'O my God, why have you not
given me
children?'' His father replied: 'It is true, my son, that God helps man
to make man, but
he does not put his hands to [the task]; it is only necessary that man
come to pray to his
God and to give him lambs and sheep, and his God will help him.' Abraham
answered: 'How
many gods are there, father?' The old man replied: 'They are infinite in
number, my son.'
Then Abraham said: 'O father, what shall I do if I serve one god and
another [god]
wishes me evil because I do not serve him? In any case discord will come
between them, and
so war will arise among the gods. And if, perhaps, the god that wills me
evil shall slay
my own god, what shall I do? It is certain that he will slay me also.
The old man,
laughing, answered: "O son, have no fear, for no god makes war upon
another god; no,
in the great temple there are a thousand gods with the great god Baal;
and I am now near
seventy years old, and yet never have I seen that one god has smitten
another god. And
assuredly all men do not serve one god, but one man one, and another."
Abraham answered: "So, then, they have peace among themselves?" His
father
said: "They have." Then said Abraham: "O father, what be the gods
like?" The old man answered: "Fool, every day I make a god, which I sell
to
others to buy bread, and you know not what the gods are like!" And then
at that
moment he was making an idol. "This," said he, "is of palm wood, that
one
is of olive, that little one is of ivory: see how fine it is! Does it
not seem as though
it were alive? Assuredly, it lacks but breath!"
Abraham answered: "And so, father, the gods are without breath? Then
how do they
give breath? And being without life, how give they life? It is certain,
father, that these
are not God." The old man was wroth at these words, saying: "If you were
of age
to understand, I would break your head with this axe: But hold your
peace, because you
have not understanding!" Abraham answered: "Father, if the gods help to
make
man, how can it be that man should make the gods? And if the gods are
made of wood, it is
a great sin to burn wood. But tell me, father, how is it that, when you
have made so many
gods, the gods have not helped you to make so many other children that
you should become
the most powerful man in the world?"
The father was beside himself, hearing his son speak so; the son went
on: "Father,
was the world for some time without men?" Yes," answered the old man,
"and
why?" "Because," said Abraham, "I should like to know who made the
first God." "Now go out of my house!" said the old man, "and leave me
to make this god quickly, and speak no words to me; for, when you are
hungry you desire
bread and not words." Abraham said: "A fine god, truly, that you cut him
as you
will, and he defends not himself!" Then the old man was angry, and said:
"All
the world says that it is a god, and you, mad fellow, say that it is
not. By my gods, if
you were a man I could kill you!" And having said this, he gave blows
and kicks to
Abraham, and chased him from the house."
Chapter 27 In this chapter is clearly seen how improper is laughter
in men: also
the prudence of Abraham.
The disciples laughed over the madness of the old man, and stood
amazed at the prudence
of Abraham. But Jesus reproved them, saying: "You have forgotten the
words of the
prophet, who says: Present laughter is a herald of weeping to come, and
further, You shall
not go where is laughter, but sit where they weep, because this life
passes in
miseries." Then Jesus said, "In the time of Moses, know you not that for
laughing and mocking at others God turned into hideous beasts many men
of Egypt? Beware
that in anywise you laugh not at any one, for you shall surely weep [for
it]."
The disciples answered: "We laughed over the madness of the old man."
Then
Jesus said: "Truly I say to you, every like loves his like, and therein
finds
pleasure. Therefore, if you were not mad you would not laugh at madness.
They answered:
"My God have mercy on us. Jesus said: "So be it."
Then said Philip: "O master, how came it to pass that Abraham's
father wished to
burn his son?" Jesus answered: "One day, Abraham having come to the age
of
twelve years, his father said to him: "Tomorrow is the festival of all
the gods;
therefore we shall go to the great temple and bear a present to my god,
great Baal. And
you shall choose for yourself a god, for you are of age to have a god."
Abraham answered with guile: "Willingly, O my father." And so betimes
in the
morning they went before every one else to the temple. But Abraham bare
beneath his tunic
an axe hidden. Whereupon, having entered into the temple, as the crowd
increased Abraham
hid himself behind an idol in a dark part of the temple. His father,
when he departed,
believed that Abraham had gone home before him, wherefore he did not
stay to seek him.
Chapter 28
When every one had departed from the temple, the priests closed the
temple and went
away. Then Abraham took the axe and cut off the feet of all the idols,
except the great
god Baal. At its feet he placed the axe, amid the ruins which the
statues made, for they,
through being old and composed of pieces, fell in pieces. Thereupon,
Abraham, going forth
from the temple, seen by certain men, who suspected him of having gone
to thieve something
from the temple. So they laid hold on him, and having arrived at the
temple, when they saw
their gods so broken in pieces, they cried out with lamentation: "Come
quickly, O
men, and let us slay him who has slain our gods!" There ran together
there about ten
thousand men, with the priests, and questioned Abraham of the reason why
he had destroyed
their gods.
Abraham answered: "You are foolish! Shall then a man slay God? It is
the great God
that has slain them. See you not that axe which he has near his feet?
Certain it is that
he desires no fellows." Then arrived there the father of Abraham, who,
mindful of the
many discourses of Abraham against their gods, and recognizing the axe
wherewith Abraham
had broken in pieces the idols, cried out: "It has been this traitor of a
son of
mine, who has slain our gods! for this axe is mine." And he recounted to
them all
that had passed between him and his son. Accordingly the men collected a
great quantity of
wood, and having bound Abraham's hands and feet put him upon the wood,
and put fire
underneath.
'Lo! God, through his angel, commanded the fire that it should not
burn Abraham his
servant. The fire blazed up with great fury, and burned about two
thousand men of those
who had condemned Abraham to death. Abraham truly found himself free,
being carried by the
angel of God near to the house of his father, without seeing who carried
him; and thus
Abraham escaped death."
Chapter 29
Then Philip said: "Great is the mercy of God upon whoever loves him.
Tell us, O
master, how Abraham came to [have] the knowledge of God." Jesus
answered:
"Having arrived near to the house of his father, Abraham feared to go
into the house;
so he removed [himself] some distance from the house and sat under a
palm tree, where,
being by himself, he said:"There must be a God who has life and power
more than man,
since he makes man, and man without God could not make man."
Thereupon, looking round upon the stars, the moon, and the sun, he
thought that they
had been God. But after considering their variableness with their
movements, hesaid:
"It must be [necessarily] that God does not move and that clouds do not
hide him [as
they hide the planets]; otherwise men would be reduced to nothing."
Remaining thus in
suspense, he heard himself called by name, "Abraham!" And so, turning
round and
not seeing any one on any side, he said: "I am sure I heard myself
called by name,
'Abraham. " Then, two other times in a similar manner, he heard himself
called by
name, "Abraham!"
He answered: "What calls me?" Then he heard [the voice] say: "I am
the
angel of God, Gabriel." Abraham was filled with fear; but the angel
comforted him,
saying: "Do not fear, Abraham, for you are friend of God When you broke
in pieces the
gods of men, you were chosen [by] the God of the angels and prophets
such that you are
written in the Book of Life." Then said Abraham: "What should I do [so
as] to
serve the God of the angels and holy prophets?" The angel answered: "Go
to that
fount and wash yourself, for God wishes to speak with you."
Abraham answered: "How should I wash myself?" Then the angel appeared
to him
as a beautiful youth, and washed himself in the fount, saying: "Do the
same as this,
O Abraham." When Abraham had washed himself, the angel said: "Go up that
mountain, for God wilshes to speak to you there." Abraham ascended the
mountain as
the angel [had instructed him], and having sat down upon his knees he
said to himself:
"When will the God of the angels speak to me?" He heard himself called
with a
gentle voice: "Abraham!" Abraham answered him: "Who calls me?" The
voice answered: "I am your God, O Abraham."
Abraham, filled with fear, bent his face to earth, saying: "How shall
your servant
who is dust and ashes hearken to you!" Then said God: "Fear not, but
rise up,
for I have chosen you as my servant, and I will bless you and make you
increase into a
great people. Therefore go forth from the house of your father and of
your kindred, and
come to dwell in the land which I will give to you and to your seed."
Abraham answered: "I will do everything, Lord; but guard me [so] that
no other god
may harm me." Then God spoke, saying: "I am God alone, and there is none
other
god but me. I strike down, and make whole; I slay, and give life; I lead
down to hell, and
I bring out thereof, and no-one is able to deliver himself out of my
hands." Then God
gave him the covenant of circumcision; and so our father Abraham knew
God." And
having said this, Jesus lifted up his hands, saying: "To you be honour
and glory, O
God. So be it!"
Chapter 30
Jesus went to Jerusalem, near to the Senofegia, a feast of our nation
. The scribes and
Pharisees having perceived this, took counsel to catch him in his talk.
Whereupon, there
came to him a doctor, saying: "Master, what must I do to have eternal
life?"
Jesus answered: "How is it written in the Law?" The tempter answered,
saying:
"Love the Lord your God, and your neighbour. You shall love your God
above all
things, with all your heart and your mind, and your neighbour as
yourself." Jesus
answered: "You have answered well: therefore go and do you so, I say,
and you shall
have eternal life." He said to him: "And who is my neighbour?"
Jesus answered, lifting up his eyes: "A man was going down from
Jerusalem to go to
Jericho, a city rebuilt under a curse. This man on the road was seized
by robbers, wounded
and stripped; whereupon they departed, leaving him half dead. It chanced
that a priest
passed by that place, and he, seeing the wounded man, passed on without
greeting him. In
like manner passed a Levite, without saying a word. It chanced that
there passed [also] a
Samaritan, who, seeing the wounded man, was moved to compassion, and
alighted from his
horse, and took the wounded man and washed his wounds with wine, and
anointed them with
ointment, and binding up his wounds for him and comforting him, he set
him upon his own
horse.
Whereupon, having arrived in the evening at the inn, he gave him into
the charge of the
host. And when he had risen on the morrow, he said: "Take care of this
man, and I
will pay you all." And having presented four gold pieces to the sick man
for the
host, he said: "Be of good cheer, for I will speedily return and conduct
you to my
own home." "Tell me," said Jesus, "which of these was the
neighbour?" The doctor answered: "He who showed mercy." Then Jesus said:
"You have answered rightly; therefore go and do you likewise." The
doctor
departed in confusion.
Chapter 31
Then drew near to Jesus the priests, and said: "Master, is it lawful
to give
tribute to Caesar?" Jesus turned round to Judas, and said: "Have you any
money?" And taking a penny in his hand, Jesus turned himself to the
priests, and said
to them: "This penny has an image: tell me, whose image is it?" They
answered:
"Caesar"s". "Give therefore," said Jesus, "that which is
Caesar's to Caesar, and that which is God's give it to God." Then they
departed in
confusion.
And behold there drew near a centurion, saying: "Lord, my son is
sick; have mercy
on my old age!" Jesus answered: "The Lord God of Israel have mercy on
you!"
The man was departing; and Jesus said: "Wait for me, for I will come to
your house,
to make prayer over your son." The centurion answered: "Lord, I am not
worthy
that you, a prophet of God, should come to my house, sufficient to me is
the word that you
have spoken for the healing of my son; for your God has made you lord
over every sickness,
even as his angel said to me in my sleep."
Then Jesus marvelled greatly, and turning to the crowd, he said:
"Behold this
stranger, for he has more faith than all that I have found in Israel."
And turning to
the centurion, he said: "Go in peace, because God, for the great faith
that he has
given you, has granted health to your son." The centurion went his way,
and on the
road he met his servants, who announced to him how his son was healed.
The man answered:
"At what hour did the fever leave him?" They said: "Yesterday, at the
sixth
hour, the heat departed from him."
The man knew that when Jesus said: "The Lord God of Israel have mercy
on
you," his son received his health. *Whereupon the man believed in our
God, and having
entered into his house, he brake in pieces all his own gods, saying:
"There is only
the God of Israel, the true and living God." Therefore said he: "None
shall eat
of my bread that does not worship the God of Israel."
Chapter 32
One skilled in the Law invited Jesus to supper, in order to tempt
him. Jesus came
thither with his disciples, and many scribes, to tempt him, waited for
him in the house.
Whereupon, the disciples sat down to table without washing their hands.
The scribes called
Jesus, saying: "Wherefore do not your disciples observe the traditions
of our elders,
in not washing their hands before they eat bread?" Jesus answered: "And I
ask
you, for what cause have you annulled the precept of God to observe your
traditions? You
say to the sons of poor fathers: "Offer and make vows to the Temple."
And they make vows of that little wherewith they ought to support
their fathers. And
when their fathers wish to take money, the sons cry out: "This money is
consecrated
to God"; whereby the fathers suffer. O false scribes, hypocrites, does
God use this
money? Assuredly not, for God eats not, as he says by his servant David
the prophet: Shall
I then eat the flesh of bulls and drink the blood of sheep? Render to me
the sacrifice of
praise, and offer to me your vows; for if I should be hungry I will not
ask aught of you,
seeing that all things are in my hands, and the abundance of paradise is
with me.
Hypocrites! you do this to fill your purse, and therefore you tithe rue
and mint.
Oh miserable ones! for to others you show the most clear way, by
which you will not go.
'You scribes and doctors lay upon the shoulders of others weights of
unbearable weight,
but you yourselves the while are not willing to move them with one of
your fingers. Truly
I say to you, that every evil has entered into the world under the
pretext of the elders.
Tell me, who made idolatry to enter into the world, if not the usage of
the elders? For
there was a king who exceedingly loved his father, whose name was Baal.
Whereupon, when the father was dead, his son for his own consolation,
caused to be made
an image like to his father, and set it up in the market-place of the
city. And he made a
decree that every one who approached that statue within a space of
fifteen cubits should
be safe, and no one any account should do him hurt. Hence the
malefactors, by reason of
the benefit they received therefrom, began to offer to the statue roses
and flowers, and
in a short time the offerings were changed into money and food, insomuch
that they called
it god, to honour it. Which thing from custom was transformed into a
law, insomuch that
the idol of Baal spread through all the world;
and how much does God lament this by the prophet Isaiah, saying:
"Truly this
people worships me in vain, for they have annulled my Law given to them
by my servant
Moses, and follow the traditions of their elders.
Truly I say to you, that to eat bread with unclean hands defiles not a
man, because
that which enters into the man defiles not the man, but that which comes
out of the man
defiles the man." Thereupon, said one of the scribes: "If I shall eat
pork, or
other unclean meats, will they not defile my conscience?" Jesus
answered:
"Disobedience will not enter into the man, but will come out of the man,
from his
heart; and therefore will he be defiled when he shall eat forbidden
food."
Then said one of the doctors: "Master, you have spoken much against
idolatry as
though the people of Israel had idols, and so you have done us wrong."
Jesus
answered: "I know well that in Israel today there are not statues of
wood; but there
are statues of flesh." Then answered all the scribes in wrath: "And so
we are
idolaters?" Jesus answered: "Truly I say to you, the precept says not
"You
shall worship", but "You shall love the Lord your God with all your
soul, and
with all your heart, and with all your mind." Is this true?" said Jesus.
"It is true" answered every one.
Chapter 33
Then Jesus said: "Truly all that which a man loves, for which he
leaves everything
else but that, is his god. And so the fornicator has for his image the
harlot, the glutton
and drunkard has for image his own flesh, and the covetous has for his
image silver and
gold, and so likewise every other sinner." Then said he who had invited
him:
"Master, which is the greatest sin?"
Jesus answered: "Which is the greatest ruin of a house?" Every one
was
silent, when Jesus with his finger pointed to the foundation, and said:
"If the
foundation give way, immediately the house falls in ruin, in such wise
that it is
necessary to build it up anew: but if every other part give way it can
be repaired. Even
so then say I to you, that idolatry is the greatest sin, because it
deprives a man
entirely of faith, and consequently of God; so that he can have no
spiritual affection.
But every other sin leaves to man the hope of obtaining mercy: and
therefore I say that
idolatry is the greatest sin." All stood amazed at the speaking of
Jesus, for they
perceived that it could not in any wise be assailed.
Then Jesus continued: "Remember that which God spoke and which Moses
and Joshua
wrote in the Law, and you shall see how grave is this sin. God said,
speaking to Israel:
"You shall not make to yourself any image of those things which are in
heaven nor of
those things which are under the heaven, nor shall you make it of those
things which are
above the earth, nor of those which are under the earth; nor of those
which are above the
water, nor of those which are under the water. For I am your God, strong
and jealous, who
will take vengeance for this sin upon the fathers and upon their
children even to the
fourth generation."
Remember how, when our people had made the calf, and when they had
worshipped it, by
commandment of God Joshua and the tribe of Levi took the sword and slew
of them one
hundred and twenty thousand of those that did not crave mercy of God.
Oh, terrible
judgment of God upon the idolaters!"
Chapter 34
There stood before the door one who had his right hand shrunken in
such fashion that he
could not use it. Whereupon Jesus, having lift up his heart to God,
prayed, and then said:
"In order that you may know that my words are true, I say, "In the name
of God,
man, stretch out your infirm hand! " He stretched it out whole, as if it
had never
had anything wrong with it.
Then with fear of God they began to eat. And having eaten somewhat,
Jesus said again:
"Truly I say to you, that it were better to burn a city than to leave an
evil custom.
For on account of such is God wroth with the princes and kings of the
earth, to whom God
has given the sword to destroy iniquities."
Afterwards said Jesus: "When you are invited, remember not to set
yourself in the
highest place, in order that if a greater friend of the host come the
host say not to you:
"Arise and sit lower down!' which were a shame to you. But go and sit in
the meanest
place, in order that he who invited you may come and say: "Arise,
friend, and come
and sit here, above!" For then shall you have great honour: for every
one that exalts
himself shall be humbled, and he that humbles himself shall be exalted.
'Truly I say to you, that Satan became not reprobate for any other
sin than for his
pride. Even as says the prophet Isaiah;, reproaching him with these
words: "How are
you fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, that were the beauty of the angels,
and did shine like
the dawn: truly to earth is fallen your pride!"
'Truly I say to you, that if a man knew his miseries, he would always
weep here on
earth and account himself most mean, beyond every other thing. For no
other cause did the
first man with his wife weep for a hundred years without ceasing,
craving mercy of God.
For they knew truly where they had fallen through their pride."
And having said this, Jesus gave thanks; and that day it was
published through
Jerusalem how great things Jesus had said, with the miracle he had
wrought, insomuch that
the people gave thanks to God blessing his holy name.
But the scribes and priests, having understood that he spoke against
the traditions of
the elders, were kindled with greater hatred. And like Pharaoh they
hardened their heart:
wherefore they sought occasion to slay him, but found it not.
Chapter 35
Jesus departed from Jerusalem, and went to the desert beyond Jordan:
and his disciples
that were seated round him said to Jesus: "O master, tell us how Satan
fell through
pride, for we have understood that he fell through disobedience, and
because he always
tempts man to do evil."
Jesus answered: "God having created a mass of earth, and having left
it for
twenty-five thousand years without doing aught else; Satan, who was as
it were priest and
head of the angels, by the great understanding that he possessed, knew
that God of that
mass of earth was to take one hundred and forty and four thousand signed
with the mark of
prophecy, and the Messenger of God, the soul of which messenger he had
created sixty
thousand years before aught else;. Therefore, being indignant, he
instigated the angels,
saying: "Look you, one day God shall will that this earth be revered by
us. Wherefore
consider that we are spirit, and therefore it is not fitting so to do."
Many
therefore forsook God. Whereupon said God, one day when all the angels
were assembled:
"Let each one that holds me for his lord straightway do reverence to
this
earth."
They that loved God bowed themselves, but Satan, with them that were
of his mind, said:
"O Lord, we are spirit, and therefore it is not just that we should do
reverence to
this clay;." Having said this, Satan became horrid and of fearsome look,
and his
followers became hideous; because for their rebellion God took away from
them the beauty
wherewith he had endued them in creating them. Whereat the holy angels,
when, lifting
their heads, they saw how terrible a monster Satan ;had become, and his
followers, cast
down their face to earth in fear. Then said Satan: "O Lord, you have
unjustly made me
hideous, but I am content thereat, because I desire to annul all that
you shall do. And the other devils said: "Calf him not Lord, O
Lucifer;, for you
are Lord."
Then said God to the followers of Satan: "Repent you, and recognize
me as God,
your creator." They answered: "We repent of having done you any
reverence, for
that
you are not just; but Satan is just. Then said God: "Depart from me, O
you cursed,
for I have no mercy on you." And in his departing Satan spat up that
mass of earth,
and that spittle the angel Gabriel lifted up with some earth, so that
therefore now man
has the navel in his belly."
Chapter 36
The disciples stood in great amazement at the rebellion of the
angels. Then Jesus said:
"Truly I say to you, that he who makes not prayer is more wicked than
Satan, and
shall suffer greater torments. Because Satan had, before his fall, no
example of fearing,
nor did God so much as send him any prophet to invite him to repentance:
but man now that
all the prophets are come except the Messenger of God who shall come
after me, because so
God wills, and that I may
prepare his way and man, I say, albeit he have infinite examples of
the justice of God,
lives carelessly without any fear, as though there were no God. Even as
of such spoke the
prophet David;: "The fool has said in his heart, there is no God.
Therefore are they
corrupt and become abominable, without one of them doing good."
Make prayer unceasingly, O my disciples' 'in order that you may
receive. For he who
seeks finds, and he who knocks to him it is opened, and he who asks
receives. And in your
prayer do not look to much speaking, for God looks on the heart; as he
said through
Solomon;: "O my servant, give me your heart." Truly I say to you, as God
lives,
the hypocrites make much prayer in every part of the city in order to be
seen and held for
saints by the multitude: but their heart is full of wickedness, and
therefore they do not
mean that which they ask. It is needful that you mean your prayer if you
will that God
receive it. Now tell me: who would go to speak to the Roman governor
to Herod, except he first have made up his mind to whom he is going,
and what he is
going to do? Assuredly none. And if man does so in order to speak with
man, what ought man
to do in order to speak with God, and ask of him mercy for his sins,
while thanking him
for all that he has given him?
Truly I say to you, that very few make true prayer, and therefore
Satan has power over
them, because God wills not those who honour him with their lips: who in
the Temple ask
[with] their lips for mercy, and their heart cries out for justice. Even
as he says to
Isaiah the prophet, saying: "Take away this people that is irksome to
me, because
with their lips they honour me, but their heart is far from me." Truly I
say to you,
that he that goes to make prayer without consideration mocks God.
Now who would go to speak to Herod with his back towards him, and
before him speak well
of Pilate the governor, whom he hates to the death? Assuredly none. Yet
no less does the
man who goes to make prayer and prepares not himself. He turns his back
to God and his
face to Satan, and speaks well of him. For in his heart is the love of
iniquity, whereof
he has not repented. If one, having injured you, should with his lips
say to you,
"Forgive me,' and with his hands should strike you a blow, how would you
forgive him?
Even so shall God have mercy on those who with their lips say: "Lord,
have mercy on
us," and with their heart love iniquity and think on fresh sins."
Chapter 37
The disciples wept at the 'words of Jesus and besought him, saying:
"Lord, teach
us to make prayer." Jesus answered: "Consider what you would do if the
Roman
governor seized you to put you to death, and that same do you when you
go to make prayer.
And let your words be these:
"O Lord our God, hallowed be your holy name, your kingdom come in us,
your will be
done always, and as it is done in heaven so be it done in earth; give us
the bread for
every day, and forgive us our sins, as we forgive them that sin against
us, and suffer us
not to fall into temptations, but deliver us from evil, for you are
alone our God, to whom
pertains glory and honour for ever."
Chapter 38
Then answered John: "Master let us wash ourselves as God commanded by
Moses."
* Jesus said: "Do you think that I have come to destroy the Law and the
prophets?
Truly I say to you, as God lives, I have not come to destroy it, but
rather to observe it.
For every prophet has observed the Law of God and all that God by the
other prophets has
spoken. As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, no one that
breaks one least
precept can be pleasing to God, but shall be least in the kingdom of
God, for he shall
have no part there. Moreover I say to you, that one syllable of the Law
of God cannot be
broken without the. gravest sin. But I do you to wit that it is
necessary to observe that
which God says by Isaiah the prophet, with these words: "Wash you and be
clean, take
away your thoughts from my eyes. 'Truly I say to you, that all the water
of the sea will
not wash him who with his heart loves iniquities.
And furthermore I say to you, that no one will make prayer pleasing
to God if he be not
washed, but will burden his soul with sin like to idolatry. 'Believe me,
in sooth, that if
man should make prayer to God as is fitting, he would obtain all that he
should ask.
Remember Moses the servant of God, who with his prayer scourged Egypt,
opened the Red Sea,
and there drowned Pharaoh and his host. Remember Joshua, who made the
sun stand still,
Samuel, who smote with fear the innumerable host of the Philistines; ,
Elijah, who made
the fire to rain from heaven, Elisha raised a dead man, and so many
other holy prophets,
who by prayer obtained all that they asked. But those men truly did not
seek their own in
their matters, but sought only God and his honour."
Chapter 39
Then said John: "Well have you spoken, O master, but we lack to know
how man
sinned through pride." Jesus answered: "When God has expelled Satan, and
the
angel Gabriel had purified that mass of earth whereon Satan spat, God
created everything
that lives, both of the animals that fly and of them that walk and swim,
and he adorned
the world with all that it has. One day Satan approached to the gates of
paradise, and,
seeing the horses eating grass, he announced to them that if that mass
of earth should
receive a soul there would be for them grievous labour; and that
therefore it would be to
their advantage to trample that piece of earth in such wise that it
should be no more good
for anything.
The horses aroused themselves and impetuously set themselves to run
over that piece of
earth which lay among lilies and roses;. Whereupon God gave spirit to
that unclean portion
of earth upon which lay the spittle of Satan, which Gabriel had taken up
from the mass;
and raised up the dog, who, barking, filled the horses with fear, and
they fled. Then God
gave his soul to man, while all the holy angels sang: "Blessed be your
holy name, O
God our Lord." "Adam, having sprung upon his feet, saw in the air a
writing that
shone like the sun;, which said: "There is only one God, and Muhammad is
the
Messenger of God."
Whereupon Adam opened his mouth and said: "I thank you, O Lord my
God, that you
have deigned to create me; but tell me. I pray you, what means the
message of these words:
"Muhammad is Messenger of God. Have there been other men before me?"
'Then said
God: "Be you welcome, O my servant Adam. . I tell you that you are the
first man whom
I have created. And he whom you have seen [mentioned] is your son, who
shall come into the
world many years hence, and shall be my Messenger, for whom I have
created all things; who
shall give light to the world when he shall come; whose soul was set in a
celestial
splendour ;sixty thousand years before I made any. thing."
Adam besought God, saying: "Lord, grant me this writing upon the
nails of the
fingers of my hands." Then God gave to the first man upon his thumbs
that writing;
upon the thumb-nail of the right hand it said: "There is only one God;,"
and
upon the thumb-nail of the left it said: "Muhammad is Messenger ;of
God." Then
with fatherly affection the first man kissed those words, and rubbed his
eyes, and said:
"Blessed be that day when you shall come to the world."
Seeing the man alone, God said: "It is not well that he should remain
alone."
Wherefore he made him to sleep, and took a rib from near his heart,
filling the place with
flesh. * Of that rib made he Eve, and gave her to Adam for his wife. He
set the twain of
them as lords of Paradise, to whom he said: "Behold I give to you every
fruit to eat,
except the apples and the corn" whereof he said: "Beware that in no wise
you eat
of these fruits, for you shall become unclean, insomuch that I shall not
suffer. You to
remain here, but shall drive you forth, and you shall suffer great
miseries."
Chapter 40
When Satan had knowledge of this he became mad with indignation, and
so he drew near to
the gate of paradise where a horrid serpent with legs like a camel, and
nails on his feet
[that] cut like a razor on every side, stood on guard. The enemy said to
him: 'Let me to
enter into paradise.'
The serpent answered: 'How shall I let you enter [since] God has
commanded me to cast
you out?' Satan answered: 'You see how much God loves you; he has set
you outside of
paradise to keep guard over a lump of clay, which is man! If you bring
me into paradise I
will make you so terrible that every one shall flee you, and so you
shall go and stay at
your pleasure.' Then the serpent said: 'And how shall I set you within
[paradise]?'
Satan said, 'You are great: therefore, open your mouth, and I will
enter into your
belly, and so [when] you enter into paradise [you] shall place me near
to those two lumps
of clay that are newly walking upon the earth.' Then the serpent did so,
and placed Satan
near Eve, for Adam, her husband, was sleeping. Satan presented himself
before the woman
like a beauteous angel, and said to her: 'Why do you not eat of those
apples and corn?'
Eve answered: 'Our God has said to us that [if we] eat [them] we shall
be unclean, and he
will drive us from paradise.'
Satan answered: 'He does not speak the truth! You must know that God
is wicked and
envious, and suffers no equals, but keeps every one as a slave. [This
is] why he has said
this [to you]; in order that you may not become equal to him. But if you
and your
companion do according to my counsel, you shall eat of those fruits as
[you eat] of the
other [fruits], and you shall not remain subject to others but like God
you shall know
good and evil, and you shall do whatever you please, because you shall
be equal to God.'
Then Eve took and ate of those [fruits], and when her husband awoke
she told [him
everything] that Satan had said; and he took and ate the fruit [when]
his wife offered
them to him. But, as the food was going down, he remembered the words of
God, and, wishing
to stop the food, he put his hand into his throat, where every man has
the mark.
Chapter 41
Then both of them knew that they were naked, and, being ashamed, they
took fig leaves
and made a clothing for their secret parts. When midday was passed, God
appeared to them,
and called Adam, saying: 'Adam, where are you?' He answered: 'Lord, I
hid myself from your
presence because my wife and I are naked, and so we are ashamed to
present ourselves
before you.' Then God said: 'And who has robbed you of your innocence,
unless you have
eaten the fruit
[that makes you] unclean, and will not be able to abide [any] longer
in paradise?'
Adam answered: 'O Lord, the wife whom you have given me [urged] me to
eat [it] and so I
have eaten it.' Then God said to the woman: 'Why did you give [this]
food to your
husband?' Eve answered: 'Satan deceived me, and so I ate [the fruit].'
'And how did that
reprobate enter into [the garden]?' said God. Eve answered: 'A serpent
that stands at the
northern gate brought him near to me.'
Then God said to Adam: 'Because you have [listened to] your wife and
have eaten the
fruit, cursed be the earth in your works; it shall bring forth brambles
and thorns for
you, and you shall eat bread by the sweat of your face. Remember that
you are earth, and
to earth you return.' And he spoke to Eve, saying: 'And you who did
[listen] to Satan, and
gave the food to your husband, shall abide under the dominion of man,
who shall keep you
as a slave, and you shall bear children with travail.'
And having called the serpent, God called the angel Michael, who
holds the sword of
God, [and] said: 'First drive this wicked serpent forth from paradise,
and when outside
cut off his legs: for if he wants to walk, he must trail his body upon
the earth.'
Afterwards God called Satan, who came laughing, and he said to him:
'Because you,
reprobate, have deceived [Adam and Eve] and have made them unclean, I
will that every
uncleanness [from] them and [from] all their children - [of which] they
shall be truly
penitent and shall serve me - in going forth from their body shall enter
through your
mouth, and so shall you be satiated with uncleanness.'
Satan then gave a horrible roar, and said: 'Since you will to make me
[continually]
worse, I will make me that which I shall be able!' Then said God:
'Depart, cursed one,
from my presence!' Then Satan departed, and God said to Adam [and] Eve,
who were both
weeping: 'Go forth from paradise, and do penance, and do not let your
hope fail, for I
will send your son so that your seed shall lift the dominion of Satan
from off the human
race: for I will give all things to he who shall come, my Messenger.'
God hid himself [from Adam and Eve], and the angel Michael drove them
forth from
paradise. Then, Adam, turning around, saw written above the gate, There
is only one God,
and Muhammad is Messenger of God. Weeping, he said: 'May it be pleasing
to God, O my son,
that you come quickly and draw us out of misery.' And thus," said Jesus,
"Satan
and Adam sinned through pride, the one by despising man, the other by
wishing to make
himself equal with God."
Chapter 42
Then the disciples wept after this discourse, and Jesus was weeping,
when they saw many
who came to find him, for the chiefs of the priests took counsel among
themselves to catch
him in his talk. Wherefore they sent the Levites and some of the scribes
to question him,
saying: "Who are you?"
Jesus confessed, and said the truth: "I am not the Messiah." They
said:
"Are you Elijah or Jeremiah, or any of the ancient prophets?" Jesus
answered:
"No." Then said they: "Who are you? Say, in order that we may give
testimony to those who sent us." Then Jesus said: "I am a voice that
cries
through all Judea, and cries: "Prepare you the way for the messenger of
the
Lord," even as it is written in Esaias;."
They said: "If you be not the Messiah nor Elijah, or any prophet,
wherefore do you
preach new doctrine, and make yourself of more account than the
Messiah?" Jesus
answered: "The miracles which God works by my hands show that I speak
that which God
wills; nor indeed do I make myself to be accounted as him of whom you
speak. For I am not
worthy to unloose the ties of the hosen or the ratchets of the shoes of
the Messenger of
God whom you call "Messiah," who was made before me, and shall come
after me,
and shall bring the words of truth, so that his faith shall have no
end."
The Levites and scribes departed in confusion, and recounted all to
the chiefs of the
priests, who said: "He has the devil on his back who recounts all to
him." Then
Jesus said to his disciples: "Truly I say to you, that the chiefs and
the elders of
our people seek occasion against me." Then said Peter: "Therefore go not
you any
more into Jerusalem." Therefore said Jesus to him: "You are foolish, and
know
not what you say, for it is necessary that I should suffer many
persecutions, because so
have suffered all the prophets and holy one of God. But fear not, for
there be that are
with us and there be that are against us."
And having said this, Jesus departed and went to the mount Tabor, and
there ascended
with him Peter ;and James ;and John ;his brother, with him who writes
this. Whereupon
there shone a great light above him, and his garments became white like
snow and his face
glistened as the sun;, and lo! there came Moses and Elijah; speaking
with Jesus concerning
all that needs must come upon our race and upon the holy city.
Peter spoke, saying: "Lord, it is good to be here. Therefore, if you
will, we will
make here three tabernacles, one for you and one for Moses and the other
for Elijah."
And while he spoke they were covered with a white cloud, and they heard a
voice saying:
"Behold my servant, in whom I am well pleased; hear you him."
The disciples were filled with fear, and fell with their face upon
the earth as dead.
Jesus went down and raised up his disciples, saying: "Fear not, for God
loves you,
and has done this in order that you may believe on my words."
Chapter 43
Jesus went down to the eight disciples who were awaiting him below.
And the four
narrated to the eight all that they had seen: and so there departed that
day from their
heart all doubt of Jesus, save [from] Judas Iscariot, who believed
nothing. Jesus seated
himself at the foot of the mountain, and they ate ofthe wild fruits,
because they had not
bread. Then said Andrew: "You have told us many things of the Messiah,
therefore of
your kindness tell us clearly all." And in like
manner the other disciples besought him.
Accordingly Jesus said: "Everyone that works works for an end in
which he finds
satisfaction. Wherefore I say to you that God, truly because he is
perfect, has not need
of satisfaction, seeing that he has satisfaction himself. And so,
willing to work, he
created before all things the soul of his Messenger, for whom he
determined to create the
whole, in order that the creatures should find joy and blessedness in
God, whence his
Messenger should take delight in all his creatures, which he has
appointed to be his
slaves. And wherefore is this, so save because thus he has willed?
Truly I say to you, that every prophet when he is come has borne to
one nation only the
mark of the mercy of God. And so their words were not extended save to
that people to
which they were sent. But the Messenger of God, when he shall come, God
shall give to him
as it were the seal of his hand, insomuch that he shall carry salvation
and mercy to all
the nations of the world that shall receive his doctrine. He shall come
with power upon
the ungodly, and shall destroy idolatry, insomuch that he shall make
Satan confounded; for
so promised God to Abraham, saying: "Behold, in your seed I will bless
all the tribes
of the earth; and as you have broken in pieces the
idols, O Abraham;, even so shall your seed do.""
James answered: "O master, tell us in whom this promise was made; for
the Jews say
"in Isaac," and the Ishmaelites say "in Ishmael;." Jesus answered:
David, whose son was he, and of what lineage?" James answered: "Of
Isaac; for
Isaac was father of Jacob, and Jacob was father of Judah, of whose
lineage is David."
Then Jesus said: "And the Messenger of God when he shall come, of
what lineage
will he be?" The disciples answered: "Of David." Whereupon Jesus said:
"You deceive yourselves; for David in spirit calls him lord, saying
thus: God said to
my lord, sit you on my right hand until I make your enemies your
footstool. God shall send
forth your rod which shall have lordship in the midst of your enemies.
If the Messenger of
God whom you call Messiah were son of David, how should David call him
lord? Believe me,
for truly I say to you, that the promise was made in Ishmael, not in
Isaac."
Chapter 44
The disciples said: "O master, it is written in the Book of Moses,
that the
promise was made in Isaac." Jesus answered with a groan: "It is so
written, but
Moses did not write it, nor Joshua, but rather our rabbins, who do not
fear God! Truly I
say to you, that if you consider the words of the angel Gabriel, you
shall discover the
malice of our scribes and doctors. For the angel said: "Abraham, all the
world shall
know how God loves you; but how shall the world know the love
that you bear to God? Assuredly it is necessary that you do something
for love of
God." Abraham answered: 'Behold the servant of God, ready to do all that
which God
shall will.'
Then spoke God, saying to Abraham: "Take your son, your firstborn
Ishmael;, and
come up the mountain to sacrifice him." How is Isaac firstborn, if when
Isaac was
born Ishmael was seven years old? Then said the disciples: "Clear is the
deception of
our doctors: therefore tell us you the truth, because we know that you
are sent from
God." Then answered Jesus: "Truly I say to you, that Satan ever seeks to
annul
the laws of God; and therefore he with his followers, hypocrites and
evil-doers, the
former with false doctrine, the latter with lewd living, to day have
contaminated almost
all things, so that scarcely is the truth found. Woe to the hypocrites!
for the praises of
this world shall turn for them into insults and torments in hell.
"I therefore say to you that the Messenger of God is a splendour that
shall give
gladness to nearly all that God has made, for he is adorned with the
spirit of
understanding and of counsel, the spirit of wisdom and might, the spirit
of fear and love,
the spirit of prudence and temperance, he is adorned with the spirit of
charity and mercy,
the spirit of justice and Piety, the spirit of gentleness and patience,
which he has
received from God three times more than he has given to all his
creatures.
O blessed time, when he shall come to the world! Believe me that I
have seen him and
have done. him reverence, even as every prophet has seen him: seeing
that of his spirit
God gives to them prophecy. And when I saw him my soul was filled with
consolation,
saying: "O Muhammad;, God be with you, and may he make me worthy to
untie, your
shoelatchet;, for obtaining this I shall be a great prophet and holy one
of God." And
having said this, Jesus rendered his thanks to God.
Chapter 45
Then came the angel Gabriel to Jesus, and spoke to him in such wise
that we also heard
his voice, which said: "Arise, and go to Jerusalem!" Accordingly Jesus
departed
and went up to Jerusalem. And on the sabbath day he entered into the
Temple;, and began to
teach the people. Whereupon the people ran together to the Temple with
the high priest and
priests, who drew near to Jesus, saying: "O master, it has been said to
us that you
say evil of us; therefore beware lest
some evil befall you." Jesus answered: "Truly I say to you, that I
speak evil
of the hypocrites; therefore if you be hypocrites I speak against you."
They
answered: "Who is a hypocrite? Tell us plainly."
Jesus said: "Truly I say to you, that he who does a good thing in
order that men
may see him, even he is a hypocrite, forasmuch as his work penetrates
not the heart which
men cannot see, and so leaves therein every unclean thought and every
filthy lust. Know
you who is hypocrite? He who with his tongue serves God, but with his
heart serves men. O
wretched man! for dying he loses all his reward. For on this matter says
the prophet
David: "Put not your confidence in princes, [nor] in the children of
men, in whom is
no salvation; for at death their thoughts perish": no, before death they
find
themselves deprived of reward, for "man is," as said Job the prophet of
God, "unstable, so that he never continues in one stay." So that if
today he
praises you, tomorrow he will abuse you, and if today he wills to reward
you, tomorrow he
will be fain to despoil you. Woe, then, to the hypocrites, because their
reward is vain.
As God lives, in whose presence I stand, the hypocrite is a robber and
commits sacrilege,
inasmuch as he makes use of the Law to appear good, and thieves the
honour of God, to whom
alone pertains praise and honour for ever.
Furthermore I say to you, that the hypocrite has not faith, forasmuch
as if he believed
that God sees all and with terrible judgment would punish wickedness, he
would purify his
heart, which, because he has not faith, he keeps full of iniquity. Truly
I say to you,
that the hypocrite is as a sepulchre, that [on the outside] is white,
but within is full
of corruption and worms. So then if you, O priests, do the service of
God because God has
created you and asks it of you, I speak not against you, for you are
servants of God; but
if you do all for gain, and so buy and sell in the Temple as in a
market-place, not
regarding that the Temple of God is a house of prayer and not of
merchandise, which you
convert into a cave of robbers: if you do all to please men, and have
put God out of your
mind; then cry I against you that you are sons of the devil, and not
sons of Abraham, who
left his father's house for love of God, and was willing to slay his own
son. Woe to you,
priests and doctors, if you be such, for God will take away from you the
priesthood!"
Chapter 46
Again spoke Jesus, saying: "I set before you an example. There was a
householder
who planted a vineyard, and made a hedge for it in order that it should
not be trampled
down of beasts. And in the midst of it he built a press for the wine,
and thereupon let it
out to husbandman. Whereupon, when the time was come to collect the wine
he sent his
servants; whom when the husbandman saw, they stoned some and burned
some, and others they
ripped open with a knife. And this they did many times. Tell me, what
will the lord of the
vineyard do to the husbandmen"
Every one answered: "In evil wise will he make them to perish, and
his vineyard
will he give to other husbandman." Therefore said Jesus: "Know you not
that the
vineyard is the House of Israel, and the husbandman are the people of
Judah and Jerusalem?
Woe to you; for God is wroth with you, having ripped open so many
prophets of God; so that
at the time of Ahab ;there was not found one to bury the holy ones of
God!" And when
he had said this the chief priests wished to seize him, but they feared
the common people,
which magnified him.
Then Jesus, seeing a woman who from her birth had remained with her
head bent toward
the ground, said: "Raise your head, O woman, in the name of our God, in
order that
these may know that I speak truth, and that he wills that I announce
it." Then the
woman raised herself up whole, magnifying God. The chief of the priests
cried out, saying:
"This man is not sent of God, seeing he keeps not the sabbath; for today
he has
healed an infirm person."
Jesus answered: "Now tell me, is it not lawful to speak on the
sabbath day, and to
make prayer for the salvation of others? And who is there among you who,
if on the sabbath
his ass or his ox fell into the ditch, would not pull him out on the
sabbath? Assuredly
none. And shall I then have broken the sabbath day by having given
health to a daughter of
Israel? Surely, here is known your hypocrisy! Oh, how many are there
today that fear the
smiting of a straw in another's eye, while a beam is ready to cut off
their own head! Oh,
how many there are that fear an ant, but reck not of an elephant!" And
having said
this, he went forth from the Temple;. But the priests chafed with rage
among themselves,
because they were not able to seize him and to work their will upon him,
even as their
fathers have done against the holy ones of God.
Chapter 47
Jesus went down, in the second year of his prophetic ministry, from
Jerusalem, and went
to Nain. Whereupon, as he drew near to the gate of the city, the
citizens were bearing to
the sepulchre the only son of his mother, a widow, over whom every one
was weeping.
Whereupon, when Jesus had arrived, the men understood how that Jesus, a
prophet of
Galilee;, was come: and so they set themselves to beseech him for the
dead man, that he
being a prophet should raise him up; which also his disciples did. Then
Jesus feared
greatly, and turning himself to God, said: "Take me from the world, O
Lord, for the
world is mad, and they well near call me God!". And having said this, he
wept.
Then came the angel Gabriel, and said: "O Jesus, fear not, for God
has given you
power over every infirmity, insomuch that all that you shall grant in
the name of God
shall be entirely accomplished." Hereupon Jesus gave a sigh, saying:
"Thy will
be done, Lord God almighty and merciful. And having said this, he drew
near to the mother
of the dead, and with pity said to her: "Woman, weep not." And having
taken the
hand of the dead , he said: "I say to you, young man, in the name of God
arise up
healed!" Then the boy revived, whereupon all were filled with fear,
saying: "God
has raised up a great prophet amongst us, and he has visited his
people."
Chapter 48
At that time the army of the Romans was in Judea, our country being
subject to them for
the sins of our forefathers. Now it was the custom of the Romans to call
god and to
worship him that did any new thing of benefit to the common people. And
so [some] of these
soldiers finding themselves in Nain, they rebuked now one, now another,
saying: "One
of your gods has visited you, and you make no account of it. Assuredly
if our gods should
visit us we would give them all
that we have. And you see how much we fear our gods, since to their
images we give the
best of all we have."
Satan did so instigate this manner of speaking that he aroused no
small sedition among
the people of Nain." But Jesus did not tarry in Nain, but turned to go
into
Capernaum. The discord of Nain was such that some said: "He is our God
who has
visited us"; others said: "God is invisible, so that none has seen him,
not even
Moses, his servant; therefore it is not God, but rather his son." Others
said:
"He is not God, nor son of God, for God has not a body to beget
anything; but he is a
great prophet of God." And so did Satan instigate that, in the third
year of the
prophetic ministry of Jesus, great ruin to our people was like to arise
therefrom.
Jesus went into Capernaum: whereupon the citizens, when they knew
him, assembled
together all the sick folk they had, and placed them in front of the
porch of the house
where Jesus was lodging with his disciples. And having called Jesus
forth, they besought
him for the health of them. Then Jesus laid his hands upon each of them,
saying: "God
of Israel, by your holy name, give health to this sick person."
Whereupon each one
was healed. On the sabbath Jesus entered into the synagogue, and all the
people ran there
together to hear him speak.
Chapter 49
The scribe that day read the psalm of David, where says David: When I
shall find a
time, I will judge uprightly. Then, after the reading of the prophets,
arose Jesus, and
made sign of silence with his hands, and opening his mouth he spoke
thus: "Brethren,
you have heard the words spoken by David the prophet, our father, that
when he should have
found a time he would judge uprightly. I tell you in truth that many
judge, in which
judgment they fall for no other reason than
because they judge that which is not meet for them, and that which is
meet for them
they judge before the time. Wherefore the God of our fathers cries to us
by his prophet
David, saying: Justly judge, O sons of men.
Miserable therefore are those who set themselves at street corners,
and do nothing but
judge all those who pass by, saying: "That one is fair, this one is
ugly, that one is
good, this one is bad." Woe to them, because they lift the sceptre of
his judgment
from the hand of God, who says: "I am witness and judge, and my honour I
will give to
none.'" Truly I tell you that these testify of that which they have not
seen nor
really heard, and judge without having been constituted judges.
Therefore are they
abominable on the earth before the eyes of God, who will pass tremendous
judgment upon
them in the last day.
Woe to you, woe to you who speak good of the evil, and call the evil
good, for you
condemn as a malefactor God, who is the author of good, and justify as
good Satan, who is
the origin of all evil. Consider what punishment you shall have, and
that it is horrible
to fall into the judgment of God, which shall be then upon those who
justify the wicked
for money, and judge not the cause of the orphans and widows. Truly I
say to you, that the
devils shall tremble at the judgment of such, so terrible shall it be.
You man who are set
as a judge, regard no other thing; neither kinsfolk nor friends, neither
honour nor gain,
but look solely with fear of God to the truth, which you shall seek with
greatest
diligence, because it will secure you in the judgment of God. But I warn
you that without
mercy shall he be judged who judges without mercy".
Chapter 50
Tell me, O man, you that judge another man, do you not know that all
men had their
origin in the same clay? Do you not know that none is good save God
alone? wherefore
every man is a liar and a sinner. Believe me man, that if you judge
others of a fault your
own heart has whereof to be judged. Oh, how dangerous it is to judge!
oh, how many have
perished by their false judgment! Satan judged man to be more vile than
himself; therefore
he rebelled against God, his creator: whereof he is impenitent, as I
have knowledge by
speaking with him. Our first parents judged the speech of Satan to be
good, therefore they
were cast out of paradise, and condemned all their progeny. Truly I say
to you, as God
lives in whose presence I stand, false judgment is the father of all
sins. Forasmuch as
none sins without will, and none wills that which he does not know. Woe,
therefore, to the
sinner who with the judgment judges sin worthy and goodness unworthy,
who on that account
rejects goodness and chooses sin. Assuredly he shall bear an intolerable
punishment when
God shall come to judge the world.
Oh, how many have perished through false judgment, and how many ha+ve
been near to
perishing! Pharaoh judged Moses and the people of Israel to be impious,
Saul judged David
to be worthy of death, Ahab judged Elijah, Nebuchadnezzar the three
children who would not
worship their lying gods. The two elders judged Susanna, and all the
idolatrous princes
judged the prophets. Oh, tremendous judgment of God! the judge perishes,
the judged is
saved. And wherefore this, O man, if not because [in] rashness they
falsely judge the
innocent?
How nearly then the good approached to ruin by judging falsely, is
shown by the
brethren of Joseph, who sold him to the Egyptians, by Aaron and Miriam,
sister of Moses,
who judged their brother. Three friends of Job ;judged the innocent
friend of God, Job.
David judged Mephibosheth and Uriah. Cyrus judged Daniel to be meat for
the lions; and
many others, the which were near to their ruin for this. Therefore I say
to you, Judge not
and you shall not be judged."
And then, Jesus having finished his speech, many forthwith were
converted to
repentance, bewailing their sins; and they would fain have forsaken all
to go with him.
But Jesus said: "Remain in your homes, and forsake sin and serve God
with fear, and
thus shall you be saved; because I am not come to receive service, but
rather to
serve." And having said thus, he went out of the synagogue and the city,
and retired
into the desert to pray, because he loved solitude greatly.
Chapter 51
When he had prayed to the Lord, his disciples came to him and said:
"O master, two
things we would know; one is, how you talked with Satan, who
nevertheless you say is
impenitent; the other is, how God shall come to judge in the day of
judgment.' Jesus
replied: "Truly I say to you I had compassion on Satan, knowing his
fall; and I had
compassion on mankind whom he tempts to sin. Therefore I prayed and
fasted to our God, who
spoke to me by his angel Gabriel: "What seek you, O Jesus, and what is
your
request?" I answered: "Lord, you know of what evil Satan is the cause,
and that
through his temptations many perish; he is your creature, Lord, whom you
did create;
therefore, Lord, have mercy upon him." God answered: "Jesus, behold I
will
pardon him. Only cause him to say, "Lord, my God, I have sinned, have
mercy upon
me," and I will pardon him and restore him to his first state." 'I
rejoiced
greatly," said Jesus, when I heard this, believing that I had made this
peace.
Therefore I called Satan, who came, saying: "What must I do for you, O
Jesus?"I
answered: "You shall do it for yourself, O Satan, for I love not your
services, but
for your good have I called you."
Satan replied: "If you desire not my services neither desire I yours;
for I am
nobler than you, therefore you are not worthy to serve me you who are
clay, while I am
spirit." "Let us leave this," I said, "and tell me if it were not well
you should return to your first beauty and your first state. You must
know that the angel
Michael must needs on the day of judgment strike you with the sword of
God one hundred
thousand times, and each blow will give you the pain of ten hells."
Satan replied:
"We shall see in that day who can do most; certainly I shall have on my
side many
angels and most potent idolaters who will trouble God, and he shall know
how great a
mistake he made to banish me for the sake of a vile [piece of ] clay."
Then I said:
"O Satan, you are infirm in mind, and know not what you say."
Then Satan, in a derisive manner wagged his head, saying: "Come now,
let us make
up this peace between me and God; and what must be done say you, O
Jesus, since you are
sound in mind." I answered: "Two words only need be spoken." Satan
replied:
"What words?" I answered: "These: I have sinned; have mercy on me."
Then Satan said: "Now willingly will I make this peace if God will say
these words to
me." "Now depart from me," I said, "O cursed one, for you are the
wicked author of all injustice and sin, but God is just and without any
sin." Satan
departed shrieking, and said: "It is not so, O Jesus, but you tell a lie
to please
God." Now consider," said Jesus to his disciples, "how he will find
mercy.
They answered: "Never, Lord, because he is impenitent. Speak to us now
of the
judgment of God."
Chapter 52
The judgment day of God will be so dreadful that, truly I say to you,
the reprobates
would sooner choose ten hells than go to hear God speak in wrath against
them against whom
all things created will witness. Truly I say to you, that not alone
shall the reprobates
fear, but the saints and the elect of God, so that Abraham shall not
trust in his
righteousness, and Job shall have no confidence in his innocence. And
what say I? Even the
Messenger of God shall fear, for that God, to make known his majesty,
shall deprive his
Messenger of memory, so that he shall have no remembrance how that God
has given him all
things. Truly I say to you that, speaking from the heart, I tremble
because by the world I
shall be called God, and for this I shall have to render an account.
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, I am a mortal man as
other men are, for
although God has placed me as prophet over the House of Israel for the
health of the
feeble and the correction of sinners, I am the servant of God, and of
this you are
witness, how I speak against those wicked men who after my departure
from the world shall
annul the truth of my gospel by the operation of Satan. But I shall
return towards the
end, and with me shall come Enoch and Elijah, and we will testify
against the wicked,
whose end shall be accursed."
And having thus spoken, Jesus shed tears, whereat his disciples wept
aloud, and lifted
their voices, saying: "Pardon O Lord God, and have mercy on your
innocent
servant." Jesus answered: "Amen, Amen."
Chapter 53
"Before that day shall come," said Jesus, "great destruction shall
come
upon the world, for there shall be war so cruel and pitiless that the
father shall slay
the son, and the son shall slay the father by reason of the factions of
peoples. Wherefore
the cities shall be annihilated, and the country shall become desert.
Such pestilences
shall come that none shall be found to bear the dead to burial, so that
they shall be left
as food for beasts. To those who remain upon the earth
God shall send such scarcity that bread shall be valued above gold,
and they shall eat
all manner of unclean things. O miserable age, in which scarce any one
shall be heard to
say: "I have sinned, have mercy on me, O God"; but with horrible voices
they
shall blaspheme him who is glorious and blessed for ever.
After this, as that day draws near, for fifteen days, shall come
every day a horrible
sign over the inhabitants of the earth.
The first day the sun shall run its course in heaven without light,
but black as the
dye of cloth; and it shall give groans, as a father who groans for a son
near to death.
The second day the moon shall be turned into blood, and blood shall come
upon the earth
like dew. The third day the stars shall be seen to fight among
themselves like an army of
enemies. The fourth day the stones and rocks shall dash against each
other as cruel
enemies. The fifth day every plant and herb shall weep blood. The sixth
day the sea shall
rise without leaving its place to the height of one hundred and fifty
cubits, and shall
stand all day like a wall. The seventh day it shall on the contrary sink
so
low as scarcely to be seen. The eighth day the birds and the animals
of the earth and
of the water shall gather themselves close together, and shall give
forth roars and cries.
The ninth day there shall be a hailstorm so horrible that it shall kill
[such] that
scarcely the tenth part of the living shall escape. The tenth day shall
come such horrible
lightning and thunder [such] that the third part of the mountains shall
be split and
scorched. The eleventh day every river shall run backwards, and shall
run blood and
not water. The twelfth day every created thing shall groan and cry.
The
thirteenth day the heaven shall be rolled up like a book, and it shall
rain fire, so that
every living thing shall die. The fourteenth day there shall be an
earthquake so
horrible that the tops of the mountains shall fly through the air like
birds, and all the
earth shall become a plain. The fifteenth day the holy angels shall
die, and God
alone shall remain alive; to whom be honour and glory."
And having said this, Jesus smote his face with both his hands, and
then smote the
ground with his head. And having raised his head, he said: "Cursed be
every one who
shall insert into my sayings that I am the son of God." At these words
the disciples
fell down as dead, whereupon Jesus lifted them up, saying: 'Let us fear
God now, if we
would not be affrighted in that day.'
Chapter 54
When these signs be passed, there shall be darkness over the world
forty years, God
alone being alive, to whom be honour and glory forever. When the forty
years have passed,
God shall give life to his Messenger, who shall rise again like the sun,
but resplendent
as a thousand suns. He shall sit, and shall not speak, for he shall be
as it were beside
himself. God shall raise again the four angels favoured of God, who
shall seek the
Messenger of God, and, having found him, shall
station themselves on the four sides of the place to keep watch upon
him. Next shall
God give life to all the angels, who shall come like bees circling round
the Messenger of
God. Next shall God give life to all his prophets, who, following Adam,
shall go every one
to kiss the hand of the Messenger of God, committing themselves to his
protection. Next
shall God give life to all the elect, who shall cry out: "O Muhammad be
mindful of
us!" At whose cries pity shall awake in the
Messenger of God, and he shall consider what he ought to do, fearing
for their
salvation.
Next shall God give life to every created thing and they shall return
to their former
existence, but every one shall besides possess the power of speech. Next
shall God give
life to all the reprobates, at whose resurrection, by reason of their
hideousness, all the
creatures of God shall be afraid, and shall cry: "Let not your mercy
forsake us, O
Lord our God." After this shall God cause Satan ;to be raised up, at
whose aspect
every creature shall be as dead, for fear of the horrid form of his
appearance. May it
please God," said Jesus, "that I behold not that monster on that day.
The
Messenger of God alone shall not be affrighted by such shapes, because
he shall fear God
only.
"Then the angel, at the sound of whose trumpet all shall be raised,
shall sound
his trumpet again, saying: "Come to the judgment, O creatures, for your
Creator wills
to judge you." Then shall appear in the midst of heaven over the valley
of
Jehoshaphat; a glittering throne over which shall come a white cloud,
whereupon the angels
shall cry out: "Blessed be you our God, who has created us and saved us
from the fall
of Satan." Then the Messenger ;of God shall fear, for that he shall
perceive that
none has loved God as he should. For he who would get in change a piece
of gold must have
sixty mites; wherefore, if he have but one mite he cannot change it. But
if the Messenger
of God shall fear, what shall the ungodly do who are full of
wickedness?"
Chapter 55
The Messenger of God shall go to collect all the prophets, to whom he
shall speak
praying them to go with him to pray God for the faithful. And every one
shall excuse
himself for fear; nor, as God lives, would I go there, knowing what I
know. Then God,
seeing this, shall remind his Messenger how he created all things for
love of him, and so
his fear shall leave him, and he shall go near to the throne with love
and reverence,
while the angels sing: "Blessed be your holy name O God, our God."
And when he has drawn near to the throne, God shall open [his mind]
to his Messenger,
even as a friend to a friend when for a long while they have not met.
The first to speak
shall be the Messenger of God, who shall say: "I adore and love you, O
my God, and
with all my heart and soul I give you thanks for that you did vouchsafe
to create me to be
your servant, and made all for love of me, so that I might love you for
all things and in
all things and above all things; therefore let all your creatures praise
you, O my
God." Then God shall say: "We give you thanks, O Lord, and bless your
holy
name." Truly I say to you, the demons and reprobates with Satan shall
then weep so
that more water shall flow from the eyes of one of them than is in the
river of Jordan.
Yet shall they not see God "And God shall speak to his Messenger,
saying: "You
are welcome, O my faithful servant; therefore ask what you will, for you
shall obtain
all." The Messenger of God shall answer. "O Lord, I remember that when
you did
create me, you said that you had willed to make for love of me the world
and paradise, and
angels and men, that they might glorify you by me your servant.
Therefore, Lord God,
merciful and just. I pray you that you recollect your promise made to
your servant."
And God shall make answer even as a friend who jests with a friend,
and shall say:
'Have you witnesses of this, my friend Muhammad?' And with reverence he
shall say:
"Yes, Lord." Then God shall answer: "Go, call them, O Gabriel;." The
angel Gabriel shall come to the Messenger of God, and shall say: "Lord
who are your
'witnesses?" The Messenger of God shall answer: "They are Adam;,
Abraham,
Ishmael;, Moses;, David;, and Jesus son of Mary.?" "Then shall the angel
departs
and he shall call the aforesaid witnesses, who with fear shall go
thither. And when they
are present God shall say to them: Remember you that which my Messenger
affirms?"
They shall reply: "What thing, O Lord?" God shall say: "That I have made
all things for love of him, so that all things might praise me by him."
Then every one of them shall answer: "There are with us three
witnesses better
than we are, O Lord." And God shall reply: "Who are these three
witnesses?"
Then Moses shall say: "The book that you gave to me is the first"; and
David
shall say: "The book that you gave to me is the second"; and he who
speaks to
you shall say: "Lord the whole world, deceived by Satan, that I was your
son and your
fellow, but the book that you gave me said truly that I am your servant;
and that book
confesses that which your Messenger affirms." Then shall the Messenger
of God speak,
and shall say: "Thus says the book that you gave me O Lord." And when
the
Messenger
of God has said this, God shall speak, saying: ,All that I have now
done, I have done
in order that every one should know how much I love you." And when he
has thus
spoken, God shall give to his Messenger a book, in which are written all
the names of the
elect of God. Wherefore every creature shall do reverence to God,
saying: "To you
alone O God, be glory and honour, because you have given us to your
Messenger.
Chapter 56
God shall open the book in the hand of his Messenger, and his
Messenger reading therein
shall call all the angels and prophets and all the elect, and on the
forehead of each one
shall be written the mark of the Messenger of God. And in the book shall
be written the
glory of paradise.
Then shall each pass to the right hand of God; next to whom shall sit
the Messenger of
God. and the prophets shall sit near him, and the saints shall sit near
the prophets, and
the blessed near the saints, and the angel shall then sound the trumpet,
and shall call
Satan to judgment.
Chapter 57
Then that miserable one shall come, and with greatest contumely shall
be accused of
every creature. Wherefore God shall call the angel Michael, who shall
strike him one
hundred thousand times with the sword of God. He shall strike Satan, and
every stroke is
heavy as ten hells, and he shall be the first to be cast into the abyss.
The angel shall
call his followers, and they shall in like manner be abused and accused.
Wherefore the
angel Michael, by commission from God, shall strike some a hundred
times, some fifty, some
twenty, some ten, some five. And then shall they descend into the abyss,
because God shall
say to them: "Hell is your dwelling-place, O cursed ones."
After that shall be called to judgment all the unbelievers and
reprobates, against whom
shall first arise all creatures inferior to man, testifying before God
how they have
served these men, and how the same have outraged God and his creatures.
And the prophets
every one shall arise, testifying against them; wherefore they shall be
condemned by God
to infernal flames. Truly I say to you, that no idle lord or thought
shall pass unpunished
in that tremendous day. Truly I say to you, that the hair-shirt shall
shine like the sun,
and every louse a man shall have borne for love of God shall be turned
into pearl. O,
thrice and four times blessed are the poor, who in true poverty shall
have served God from
the heart, for in this world are they destitute of worldly cares, and
shall therefore be
freed from many sins, and in that day they shall not have to render an
account of how they
have spent the riches of the world, but they shall be rewarded for their
patience and
their poverty. Truly I say to you, that if the world knew his it would
choose the
hair-shirt sooner than purple, lice sooner than gold, fasts sooner than
feasts.
When all have been examined, God shall say to his Messenger: "Behold,
O my friend,
their wickedness, how great it has been, for I their creator did employ
all created things
in their service and in all things have they dishonoured me. It is most
just, therefore,
that I have no mercy on them." The Messenger of God shall answer:, "It
is true,
Lord, our glorious God, not one of your friends and servants could ask
you to have mercy
on them; no, I your servant before all ask justice against them."
And he having said these words, all the angels and prophets, with all
the elect of God
no, why say I the elect? truly I say to you, that spiders and flies,
stones and sand shall
cry out against the impious, and shall demand justice. Then shall God
cause to return to
earth every living soul inferior to man, and. he shall send the impious
to hell. Who, in
going, shall see again that earth, to which dogs and horses and other
vile animals shall
be reduced. Wherefore shall they say: "O Lord God, cause us also to
return to that
earth." But that which they ask shall not be granted to them."
Chapter 58
While Jesus was speaking the disciples wept bitterly. And Jesus wept
many tears. Then
after he had wept, John spoke: "O master, we desire to know two things.
The one is,
how it is possible that the Messenger of God, who is full of mercy and
pity, should have
no pity on reprobates that day, seeing that they are of the same clay as
himself? The
other is, how is it to be understood that the sword of Michael is [as]
heavy as ten hells?
Is there more than one hell?"
Jesus replied: "Have you not heard what David the prophet says, how
the just shall
laugh at the destruction of sinners, and shall deride him with these
words, saying: I saw
the man who put his hope in his strength and his riches, and forgot God.
Truly, therefore,
I say to you, that Abraham shall deride his father, and Adam [shall
deride] all reprobate
men: and this shall be because the elect shall rise again so perfect and
united to God
that they shall not conceive in their minds the small[est] thought
against his justice.
Each of them shall demand justice, and above all the Messenger of God.
As God lives, in
whose presence I stand, though now I weep for pity of mankind, on that
day I shall demand
justice without mercy against those who despise my words, and most of
all against those
who defile my gospel.
Chapter 59
Hell is one, O my disciples, and in it the damned shall suffer
punishment eternally.
Yet has it seven rooms or regions, one deeper than the other, and he who
goes to the deep
shall suffer greater punishment. Yet my words [are] true concerning the
sword of the angel
Michael, for he that commits but one sin merits hell, and he that
commits two sins merits
two hells. Therefore in one hell the reprobates shall feel punishment as
though they were
in ten, or in a hundred or in a
thousand; and the omnipotent God, through his power and by reason of
his justice, shall
cause Satan to suffer as though he were in ten hundred thousand hells,
and the rest each
one according to his wickedness."
Then Peter answered: "O master, truly the justice of God is great,
and today this
discourse has made you sad; therefore, we pray you, rest, and tomorrow
tell us what hell
is like." Jesus answered: "O Peter, you tell me to rest; O Peter, you do
not
know what you say, [or] else you would not have spoken thus.
Truly I say to you, that rest in this present life is the poison of
piety and the fire
which consumes every good work. Have you forgotten how Solomon, God's
prophet, with all
the prophets, has reproved sloth? It is true that he says: The idle will
not work the soil
for fear of the cold, therefore in summer shall he beg. [And for this
reason] he said: All
that your hand can do, do it without rest. And what says Job, the most
innocent friend of
God: As the bird is born to fly, man is born to work. Truly I say to
you, I hate rest
above all things."
Chapter 60
Hell is one, and is contrary to paradise, as winter is contrary to
summer, and cold to
heat. Therefore, he who would describe the misery of hell must have seen
the paradise of
God's delights. O place accursed by God's justice for the malediction of
the faithless and
reprobate, of which Job, the friend of God, said: There is no order
there, but everlasting
fear! And Isaiah the prophet, against the reprobate, says: Their flame
shall not be
quenched nor their worm die.
And David our father, weeping said: Then lightning and bolts and
brimstone and great
tempest shall rain upon them." O miserable sinners, how loathsome
delicate meats,
costly raiment, soft couches, and [the] concord of sweet song shall seem
to them! How sick
shall raging hunger, burning flames, scorching cinders, and cruel
torments with bitter
weeping make them!"
And then Jesus uttered a lamentable groan, saying: "Truly, it is
better never to
have been formed than to suffer such cruel torments, for imagine a man
suffering torments
in every part of his body, who has no one to show him compassion, but is
mocked by
everyone; tell me, would not this be great pain?" The disciples
answered: "The
greatest."
Then Jesus said: "This is a delight [in comparison] to hell. For I
tell you in
truth, that if God should place in one balance all the pain which all
men have suffered in
this world and shall suffer till the Day of Judgment, and in the other
[balance] one
single hour of the pain of hell, the reprobates would without doubt
choose the worldly
tribulations, for the worldly [tribulations] come from the hand of man,
but the others
from the hand of devils, who are utterly without compassion.
O what cruel fire they shall give to miserable sinners! O what bitter
cold, which yet
shall not temper their flames! What gnashing of teeth and sobbing and
weeping! For the
Jordan has less water than the tears which shall flow from their eyes
every moment. Their
tongues shall curse all created things, with their. father and mother,
and their Creator,
who is blessed for ever."
Chapter 61
Having said this, Jesus washed himself, with his disciples, according
to the Law of God
written in the Book of Moses; and then they prayed. And the disciples,
seeing [Jesus] sad
did not speak at all to him that day, but each stood terror-struck at
his words. Then
Jesus, opening his mouth after the evening [prayer], said: * "What
father of a
family, if he knew that a thief meant to break into his house, would
sleep? None surely;
for he would watch and stand prepared to slay the thief. Do you not know
then that Satan
is as a roaring lion that goes about seeking whom he may devour. Thus he
seeks to make man
sin. Truly I say to you, that if man would act as the merchant he should
have no fear in
that day, because he would be well prepared.
There was a man who gave money to his neighbours that they might
trade with it, and the
profit should be divided in a just proportion. And some traded well, so
that they doubled
the money. But some used the money in the service of the enemy of him
who gave them the
money, speaking evil of him. Tell me now, when the neighbour shall call
the debtors to
account how shall the matter go? Assuredly he will reward those who
traded well, but
against the others his anger shall vent itself in reproaches. And then
he will punish them
according to the Law.
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, the neighbour is God,
who has given to
man all that he has, with life itself, so that, [man] living well in
this world, God may
have praise, and man the glory of paradise. For those who live well
double their money by
their example, because sinners, seeing their example, are converted to
repentance;
wherefore men who live well shall be rewarded with a great reward. But
wicked sinners, who
by their sins halve what God has given them, by their lives spent in the
service of Satan
the enemy of God, blaspheming God and giving offence to others tell me
what shall be their
punishment?" "It shall be without measure," said the disciples.
Chapter 62
Then Jesus said: "He who would live well should take example from the
merchant who
locks up his shop, and selling guards it day and night with great
diligence. And again the
things which he buys he is fain to make a profit; for if he perceives
that he will lose
thereby he will not sell, no, not to his own brother. Thus then should
you do; for in
truth your soul is a merchant, and the body is the shop: wherefore what
it receives from
outside, through the senses, is bought and sold by it. And the money is
love. See then
that with your love you do not sell nor buy the small thought by which d
work be all for
you cannot profit. But let thought, speech, and love of God; for so
shall you find safety
in that day.
Truly I say to you, that many make ablutions and go to pray, many
fast and give alms,
many study and preach to others, whose end is abominable before God;
because they cleanse
the body and not the heart, they cry with the mouth not with the heart;
they abstain from
meats, and fill themselves with sins; they give to others things not
good for them, in
order that they may be held good; they study that they may know to
speak, not to work;
they preach to others against that which they do themselves, and thus
are condemned by
their own tongue. As God lives, these do not know God with their hearts;
for if they knew
him they would love him; and since whatsoever a man has he has received
it from God,, even
so should he spend all for the love of God."
Chapter 63
After certain days Jesus passed near to a city of the Samaritans; and
they would not
let him enter the city, nor would they sell bread to his disciples.
Wherefore said James
and John: "Master, may it please you that we pray God that he send down
fire from
heaven upon these people?"
Jesus answered: "You know not by what spirit you are led, that you so
speak.
*Remember that God determined to destroy Nineveh because he did not find
one who feared
God in that city; the which was so wicked that God, having called Jonah
;the prophet to
send him to that city, he would fain for fear of the people have fled to
Tarsus;,
wherefore God caused him to be cast into the sea, and received by a fish
and cast up near
to Nineveh. And he preaching there, that people was converted to
repentance, so that God
had mercy on them.
Woe to them that call for vengeance; for on themselves it shall come,
seeing that every
man has in himself cause for the vengeance of God. Now tell me, have you
created this city
with this people? O madmen that you are, assuredly no. For all creatures
united together
could not create a single new fly from nothing, and this it is to
create. If the blessed
God who has created this city now sustains it, why desire you to destroy
it? Why did you
not say: "May it please you, master, that we pray to the Lord our God
that this
people may be converted to penitence?" Assuredly this is the proper act
of a disciple
of mine, to pray to God for those who do evil. Thus did Abel when his
brother Cain,
accursed of God, slew him.
Thus did Abraham ;for Pharaoh;, who took from him his wife, and whom
therefore, the
angel of God did not slay, but only struck with infirmity. Thus did
Zechariah when, by
decree of the impious king, he was slain in the Temple. Thus did
Jeremiah, Isaiah,
Ezekiel, Daniel, and David, with all the friends of God and holy
prophets. Tell me, if a
brother were stricken with frenzy, would you slay him because he spoke
evil and struck
those who came near him? Assuredly you would not do so; but rather would
you endeavour to
restore his health with medicines suitable to his infirmity."
Chapter 64
"As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, a sinner is of
infirm mind when
he persecutes a man. For tell me, is there anyone who would break his
head for the sake of
tearing the cloak of his enemy? Now how can he be of sane mind who
separates himself from
God, the head of his soul, in order that he may injure the body of his
enemy?
"Tell me, O man, who is your enemy? Assuredly your body, and every
one who praises
you. Wherefore if you were of sane mind you would kiss the hand of those
who revile you,
and present gifts to those who persecute you and strike you much;
because, O man because
the more that for your sins you are reviled and persecuted in this life
the less shall you
be in the day of judgment. But tell me, O man, if the saints and
prophets of God have been
persecuted and defamed by the
world even though they were innocent, what shall be da one to you, O
sinner? and if
they endured all with patience, praying for their persecutors, what
shouldst you do, O
man, who are worthy of hell?
Tell me, O my disciples, do you not know that Shimei cursed the
servant of God, David
the prophet, and threw stones at him? Now what said David to those who
would fain have
killed Shimei? "What is it to you, O Joab, that you would kill Shimei?
let him curse
me, for this is the will of God, who will turn this curse into a
blessing." And thus
it was; for God saw the patience of David and delivered him from the
persecution of his
own son, Absalom.
Assuredly not a leaf stirs without the will of God. Wherefore, when
you are in
tribulation do not think of how much you have borne, nor of him who
afflicts you; but
consider how much for your sins you are worthy to receive at the hand of
the devils of
hell. You are angry with this city because it would not receive us, nor
sell bread to us.
Tell me, are these people your slaves? have you given them this city?
have you given them
their corn? or have you helped them to reap it? Assuredly no; for you
are strangers in
this land, and poor men. What thing is this then that you say?" The two
disciples
answered: "Lord, we have sinned; may God have mercy on us." And Jesus
answered:
"So be it."
Chapter 65
The Passover drew near, so Jesus, with his disciples, went up to
Jerusalem. And he went
to the pool called Probatica. And the bath was so called because every
day the angel of
God troubled the water, and whoever first entered the water after its
movement was cured
of every kind of infirmity. For this reason a great number of sick
persons remained beside
the pool, which had five porticoes. And Jesus saw there an impotent man,
who had been
there thirty-eight years sick with a grievous infirmity. So Jesus,
knowing this by divine
inspiration, had compassion on the sick man, and said to him: "Do you
want to be made
whole?"
The impotent man answered: "Sir, when the angel troubles the waters I
do not have
anyone to put me into it, but while I am coming [to the water] another
steps down before
me and enters." Then Jesus lifted up his eyes to heaven and said: "Lord
our God,
God of our fathers, have mercy upon this impotent man." And having said
this, Jesus
said: "In God's name, brother, be whole; rise and take up your bed."
Then the impotent man arose, praising God, and carried his bed upon
his shoulders, and
went to his house praising God. Those who saw him cried: "It is the
Sabbath day; it
is not lawful for you to carry your bed." He answered: "He that made
[me] whole
said to me, 'Pick up your bed, and go your way to your home.'" Then
asked they him:
"Who is he?" He answered: "I do not know his name."
So among themselves they said: "It must have been Jesus the
Nazarene." Others
said: "No, for [Jesus the Nazarene] is a holy one of God, whereas he who
has done
this thing is a wicked man, for he causes the sabbath to be broken." And
Jesus went
into the Temple, and a great multitude drew near to him to hear his
words [for which
reason] the priests were consumed with envy.
Chapter 66
One of them came to him, saying: "Good master, you teach well and
truly; tell me
therefore, what reward shall God give us in paradise?" Jesus answered:
"You call
me good, and do not know that God alone is good, even as Job, the friend
of God, said: A
child of a day old is not clean; yes, even the angels are not faultless
in God's presence.
Moreover he said: The flesh attracts sin, and sucks up iniquity even as a
sponge sucks up
water. The priest was silent, being confounded. And Jesus said: "Truly I
say to you,
nothing is more perilous than speech. For so said Solomon: Life and
death are in the power
of the tongue. "
And he turned to his disciples, and said: "Beware of those who bless
you, because
they deceive you. With the tongue Satan blessed our first parents, but
the outcome of his
words was miserable. So did the sages of Egypt bless Pharaoh. So did
Goliath bless the
Philistines. So did four hundred false prophets bless Ahab; but false
were their praises,
so that the praised one perished with the praisers. Wherefore not
without cause did God
say by Isaiah the prophet: O My people, those that bless you deceive
you. Woe to you,
scribes and Pharisees! Woe to you, priests and Levites! because you have
corrupted the
sacrifice of the Lord, so that those who come to sacrifice believe that
God eats cooked
flesh [in the manner of] a man.
Chapter 67
For you say to them: 'Bring your sheep and bulls and lambs to the
Temple of your God,
and do not eat it all, but give to your God a share of that which he has
given you'; and
you do not tell them of the origin of sacrifice, that it is for a
witness of the life
granted to the son of our father Abraham, so that the faith and
obedience of our father
Abraham, with the promises made to him by God and the blessing given to
him, should never
be forgotten. But God says by Ezekiel the prophet: Remove from me these
your sacrifices,
your victims are abominable to me.
For the time draws near when that shall be done of which our God
spoke by Hosea the
prophet, saying: I will call chosen the people not chosen. And as he
says in Ezekiel the
prophet: God shall make a new covenant with his people, not according to
the covenant
which he gave to your fathers, which they did nott and he shall take
from them a heart of
stone, and give them a new heart" : and all this shall be because you do
not walk now
in his Law. And you have the key and do not open: rather you block the
road for those who
would walk in it." The priest was departing to report everything to the
high priest,
who stood near the sanctuary, but Jesus said: "Stay, for I will answer
your
question."
Chapter 68
You ask me to tell you what God will give us in paradise. Truly I say
to you that those
who think of the wages do not love the master. A shepherd who has a
flock of sheep, when
he sees the wolf coming, prepares to defend them; contrariwise, the
hireling when he sees
the wolf leaves the sheep and flees. As God lives, in whose presence I
stand, if the God
of our fathers were your God you would not have thought of saying: "What
will God
give me?" But you would have said, as did David his prophet: What shall I
give to God
for all that he has given to me?
"I will speak to you by a parable that you may understand. There was a
king who
found by the wayside a man stripped by thieves;, who had wounded him to
death. And he had
compassion on him, and commanded his slaves to bear that man to the city
and tend him, and
this they did with all diligence. And the king conceived a great love
for the sick man, so
that he gave him his own daughter in marriage, and made him his heir.
Now assuredly this
king was most merciful; but the man beat the slaves, despised the
medicines, abused his
wife, spoke evil of the king, and caused his vassals to rebel against
him. And when the
king required any service, he was wont to say: "What will the king give
me as
reward?" Now when the king heard this, what did he do to so impious a
man?" They
all replied: "Woe to him, for the king deprived him of all, and cruelly
punished
him."
Then Jesus said: "O priests, and scribes, and Pharisees, and you
high-priest that
hear my voice, I proclaim to you what God has said to you by his prophet
Isaiah: "I
have nourished slaves and exalted them, but they have despised me." "The
king is
our God, who found Israel in this world full of miseries, and gave him
therefore to his
servants Joseph, Moses and Aaron, who tended him. And our God conceived
such love for him
that for the sake of the people of Israel he smote Egypt, drowned
Pharaoh, and discomfited
an hundred and twenty kings of the Canaanites and Madianites; he gave
him his laws, making
him heir of all that [land] wherein our people dwells.
"But how does Israel bear himself? How many prophets has he slain;
how many
prophecies has he contaminated; how has he violated the Law of God: how
many for that
cause have departed from God and gone to serve idols, through your
offence, O priests! And
how do you dishonour God with your manner of life! And now you ask me:
"What will God
give us in paradise?" You ought to have asked me: What will be the
punishment that
God will give you in hell; and then what you ought to do for true
penitence in order that
God may have mercy on you: for this I can tell you, and to this end am I
sent to
you."
Chapter 69
As God lives, in whose presence I stand, you will not receive
adulation from me, but
truth. Wherefore I say to you, repent and turn to God even as our
fathers did after
sinning, and harden not your heart. The priests were consumed with rage
at this speech,
but for fear of the common people they spoke not a word.
And Jesus continued, saying: "O doctors, O scribes, O Pharisees, O
priests, tell
me. You desire horses like knights, but you desire not to go forth to
war: you desire fair
clothing like women, but you desire not to spin and nurture children;
you desire the
fruits of the field, and you desire not to cultivate the Earth; you
desire the fishes of
the sea, but you desire not to go a fishing; you desire honour as
citizens, but you desire
not the burden of the republic; and you desire tithes and first fruits
as priests, but you
desire not to serve God in truth. What then shall God do with you,
seeing you desire here
every good without any evil? Truly I say to you that God will give you a
place where you
will have every evil without any good."
And when Jesus had said this, there was brought to him a demoniac who
could not speak
nor see, and was deprived of hearing. Whereupon Jesus, seeing their
faith, raised his eyes
to heaven and said: "Lord God of our fathers, have mercy on this sick
man and give
him health, in order that this people may know that you have sent me."
And having said this Jesus commanded the spirit to depart, saying:
"In the power
of the name of God our Lord, depart, evil one, from the man. The spirit
departed and the
dumb man spoke, and saw with his eyes. Whereupon every one was filled
with fear, but the
scribes said: "In the power of Beelzebub, prince of the demons, he casts
out the
demons."
Then Jesus said: "Every kingdom divided against itself destroys
itself, and house
falls upon house. If in the power of Satan, Satan be cast out, how shall
his kingdom
stand? And if your sons cast out Satan with the scripture that Solomon
the prophet gave
them, they testify that I cast out Satan in the power of God. As God
lives, blasphemy
against the Holy Spirit is without remission in this and in the other
world; because the
wicked man of his own will reprobates himself, knowing the reprobation."
And having said this Jesus went out of the Temple. And the common
people magnified him,
for they brought all the sick folk whom they could gather together, and
Jesus having made
prayer gave to all their health: whereupon on that day in Jerusalem the
Roman soldiery, by
the working of Satan, began to stir up the common people, saying that
Jesus was the God of
Israel, who was come to visit his people.
Chapter 70
Jesus departed from Jerusalem after the Passover, and entered into
the borders of
Caesarea Philippi. Whereupon, the angel Gabriel having told him of the
sedition which was
beginning among the common people, he asked his disciples, saying: "What
do men say
of me?" They said: "Some say that you are Elijah, others Jeremiah, and
others
one of the old prophets." Jesus answered: "And you; what say you that I
am?" Peter answered: "You are Christ, son of God."
Then was Jesus angry, and with anger rebuked him, saying: "Begone and
depart from
me, because you are the devil and seek to cause me offences And he
threatened the eleven,
saying: "Woe to you if you believe this, for I have won from God a great
curse
against those who believe this." And he was fain to cast away Peter;
whereupon the
eleven besought Jesus for him, who cast him not away, but again rebuked
him saying:
"Beware that never again you say such words, because God would reprobate
you!"
Peter wept and said: "Lord, I have spoken foolishly; beseech God that he
pardon
me."
Then Jesus said: "If our God willed not to show himself to Moses his
servant, nor
to Elijah whom he so loved, nor to any prophet, will you think that God
should show
himself to this faithless generation? But know you not that God has
created all things of
nothing with one single word, and all men have had their origin out of a
piece of clay?
Now, how shall God have likeness to man? Woe to those who suffer
themselves to be deceived
of Satan!" And having said this, Jesus besought God for Peter, the
eleven and Peter
weeping, and saying: "So be it, so be it, O blessed Lord our God."
Afterwards
Jesus departed and went into Galilee, in order that this vain opinion
which the common
folk began to hold concerning him might be extinguished.
Chapter 71
Jesus having arrived in his own country, it was spread through all
the region of
Galilee how that Jesus the prophet was come to Nazareth. Whereupon with
diligence sought
they the sick and brought them to him, beseeching him that he would
touch them with his
hands. And so great was the multitude that a certain rich man, sick of
the palsy, not
being able to get himself carried through the door, had himself carried
up to the roof of
the house in which Jesus was, and having caused the roof to be
uncovered, had himself let
down by sheets in front of Jesus. Jesus stood for a moment in
hesitation, and then he
said: "Fear not, brother, for your sins are forgiven you." Every one was
offended hearing this, and they said: "And who is this who forgives
sins?"
Then Jesus said: "As God lives, I am not able to forgive sins, nor is
any man, but
God alone forgives. But as servant of God I can beseech him for the sins
of others: and so
I have besought him for this sick man, and I am sure that God has heard
my prayer.
Wherefore, that you may know the truth, I say to this sick man: "In the
name of the
God of our fathers, the God of Abraham and his sons, rise up healed!""
And when
Jesus had said this the sick man rose up healed, and glorified God.
Then the common people besought Jesus that he would beseech God for
the sick who stood
outside. Whereupon Jesus went out to them, and, having lifted up his
hands, said:
"Lord God of hosts, the living God, the true God, the holy God, that
never will die;
having mercy upon them!" Whereupon every one answered: "Amen.". And this
having been said, Jesus laid his hands upon the sick folk, and they all
received their
health. Thereupon they magnified God, saying: "God has visited us by his
prophet, and
a great prophet has God sent to us."
Chapter 72
At night Jesus spoke in secret with his disciples, saying: "Truly I
say to you
that Satan desires to sift you as wheat; but I have besought God for
you, and there shall
not perish of you save he that lays snares for me." And this he said of
Judas,
because the angel Gabriel said to him how that Judas had hand with the
priests, and
reported to them all that Jesus spoke.
With tears drew near to Jesus he who writes this saying: "O master,
tell me, who
is he that should betray you?" Jesus answered, saying: "O Barnabas, this
is not
the hour for you to know him, but soon will be wicked one reveal
himself, because I shall
depart from the world." Then wept the apostles, saying: "O master,
wherefore
will you forsake us? It is much better that we should die than be
forsaken of you!"
Jesus answered: "Let not your heart be troubled, neither be you
fearful: for I
have not created you, but God our creator who has created you will
protect you. As for me,
I am now come to the world to prepare the way for the Messenger of God,
who shall bring
salvation to the world. But beware that you be not deceived, for many
false prophets shall
come, who shall take my words and contaminate my gospel."
Then said Andrew: "Master tell us some sign, that we may know him."
Jesus
answered: "He will not come in your time, but will come some years after
you, when my
gospel shall be annulled, insomuch that there shall be scarcely thirty
faithful. At that
time God will have mercy on the world, and so he will send his
Messenger, over whose head
will rest a white cloud, whereby he shall be known of one elect of God,
and shall be by
him manifested to the world. He shall come with great power against the
ungodly, and shall
destroy idolatry upon the earth. And it rejoices me because that through
him our God shall
be known and glorified, and I shall be known to be true; and he will
execute vengeance
against those who shall say that I am more than man.
Truly I say to you that the moon shall minister sleep to him in his
boyhood, and when
he shall be grown up he shall take her in his hands. Let the world
beware of casting him
out because he shall slay the idolaters, for many more were slain by
Moses, the servant of
God, and Joshua, who spared not the cities which they burnt, and slew
the children; for to
an old wound one applies fire. "He shall come with truth more clear than
that of all
the prophets, and shall reprove him who use the world amiss. The towers
of the city of our
father shall greet one another for joy: and so when idolatry shall be
seen to fall to the
ground and confess me a man like other men, truly I say to you the
Messenger of God shall
be come."
Chapter 73
"Truly I say to you, that if Satan shall try whether you be friends
of God;
because no one assails his own cities if Satan should have his will over
you he would
suffer you to glide at your own pleasure; but because he knows that you
be enemies to him
he will do every violence to make you perish. But fear not you, for he
will be against you
as a dog that is chained, because God has heard my prayer." John
answered: "O
master, not only for us, but for them that shall
believe the gospel, tell us how the ancient tempter lays wait for
man."
Jesus answered: "In four ways tempts that wicked one. The first is
when he tempts
by himself, with thoughts. The second is when he tempts with words and
deeds by means of
his servants; the third is when he tempts with false doctrine; the
fourth is when he
tempts with false visions. Now how cautious ought men to be, and all the
more according as
he has in his favour the flesh of man, which loves sin as he who has
fever loves water.
Truly I say to you, that if a man fear God he shall have victory over
all, as says David
his prophet: "God shall give his angels charge over you, who shall keep
your ways, so
that the devil shall not cause you to stumble. A thousand shall fall on
your left hand,
and ten thousand on your right hand, so that they shall not come near
you."
"Furthermore, our God with great love promised to us by the same
David to keep us,
saying: "I give to you understanding, which shall teach you; and in your
ways wherein
you shall walk I will cause My eye to rest upon you." "But what shall I
say? He
has said by Isaiah: "Can a mother forget the child of her womb? But I
say to you,
that when she forget, I will not forget you." "Tell me, then, who shall
fear
Satan, having for guard the angels and for protection the living God?
Nevertheless, it is
necessary, as says the prophet Solomon, that "You, my son, that are come
to fear the
Lord, prepare your soul for temptations." Truly I say to you, that a man
ought to do
as the banker who examines money, examining his thoughts, that he sin
not against God his
creator."
Chapter 74
There have been and are in the world men who hold not thought for sin
[and] who are in
the greatest error. Tell me, how [did] Satan sin? It is certain that he
sinned in the
thought he was more worthy than man. Solomon sinned in thinking to
invite all the
creatures of God to a feast, [so] a fish corrected him by eating all
that he had prepared.
Not without cause, our father David says, that to ascend in one's heart
sets one in the
valley of tears. And why does God cry by his prophet Isaiah, saying:
Take away your evil
thoughts from my eyes? And to what purpose [does] Solomon say, With all
your keeping, keep
your heart?"
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, all [scripture
speaks] against the evil
thoughts with which sin is committed, for without thinking it is not
possible to sin. Now
tell me, when the husbandman plants the vineyard does he set the plants
deep? Assuredly
yes. Satan does [the same]. In planting sin [he] does not stop at the
eye or the ear, but
passes into the heart, which is God's dwelling, as Moses his servant,
[said]: I will dwell
in them, in order that they may walk in my Law.
Now tell me, if Herod the king gave you a house to keep in which he
desired to dwell,
would you let Pilate, his enemy, enter there or place his goods in it?
Surely not. Then
how much less ought you let Satan enter into your heart, or place his
thoughts [in your
heart]. Our God has given you your heart to keep, which is his dwelling.
Observe, therefore, [how] the banker considers [his] money. [He
considers] whether the
image of Caesar is right, whether the silver is good or false, and
whether it is of due
weight. He turns it over much in his hand. Ah, mad world! How prudent
you are in your
business; in the last day you will reprove and judge the servants of God
of negligence and
carelessness, for without doubt your servants are more prudent than the
servants of God.
Tell me, now, who is he who examines a thought as the banker a silver
coin? No one."
Chapter 75
Then said James: "O master, how is the examination of a thought like
to [that of]
a coin?" Jesus answered: "The good silver in the thought is piety,
because every
impious thought comes of the devil. The right image is the example of
the holy ones and
prophets, which we ought to follow; and the weight of the thought is the
love of God by
which all ought to be done. Whereupon the enemy will bring there impious
thoughts against
your neighbour, [thoughts] conformed to the world, to corrupt the flesh;
[thoughts] of
earthly love to corrupt the love of God."
Bartholomew answered: "O master, what ought we to do to think little,
in order
that we may not !fall into temptation?" Jesus answered: "Two things are
necessary for you. The first is to exercise yourselves much, and the
second is to talk
little: for idleness is a sink wherein is gathered every unclean
thought, and too much
talking is a sponge which picks up iniquities. It is, therefore,
necessary not only your
working should hold the body occupied, but also that the soul be
occupied with prayer. For
it needs never to cease from prayer.
"I tell you for an example: There was a man who paid ill, wherefore
none that knew
him would go to till his fields. Whereupon he, like a wicked man, said:
'I will go to the
market-place to find idle ones who are doing nothing, and will therefore
come to till my
vines.' This man went forth from his house, and found many strangers who
were standing in
idleness, and had no money. To them he spoke, and led them to his
vineyard. But truly none
that knew him and had work for his hands went thither.
He is Satan, that one who pays ill; for he gives labour, and man
receives for it the
eternal fires in his service. Wherefore he has gone forth from paradise,
and goes in
search of labourers. Assuredly he sets to his labours those who stand in
idleness whoever
they be, but much more those who do not know him. It is not in any wise
enough for any one
to know evil in order to escape it, but it behoves to work at good in
order to overcome
it."
Chapter 76
I tell you for an example. There was a man who had three vineyards,
which he let out to
three husbandman. Because the first knew not how to cultivate the
vineyard the vineyard
brought forth only leaves. The second taught the third how the vines
ought to be
cultivated; and he most excellently hearkened to his words; and he
cultivated his, as he
told him, insomuch that the vineyard of the third bore much. But the
second left his
vineyard uncultivated, spending his time solely in talking. When the
time was come for
paying the rent to the lord of the vineyard, the first said: "Lord, I
know not how
your vineyard ought to be cultivated: therefore I have not received any
fruit this
year." The lord answered: "O fool, do you dwell alone in the world, that
you has
not asked counsel of my second vinedresser, who knows well how to
cultivate the land?
Certain it is that you shall pay me."
And having said this he condemned him to work in prison until he
should pay his lord;
who moved with pity at his simplicity liberated him, saying: "Begone,
for I will not
that you work longer at my vineyard; it is enough for you that I give
you your debt."
The second came, to whom the lord said: "Welcome, my vinedresser!
Where are the
fruits that you owe me? Assuredly, since you know well how to prune the
vines, the
vineyard that I let out to you must needs have borne much fruit." The
second
answered: "O lord, your vineyard is backward because I have not pruned
the wood nor
worked up the soil; but the vineyard has not borne fruit, so I cannot
pay you."
Whereupon the lord called the third and with wonder said: "You said to
me that this
man, to whom I let out the second vineyard, taught you perfectly to
cultivate the vineyard
which I let out to you. How then can it be that the vineyard I let out
to him should not
have borne fruit, seeing it is all one soil."
The third answered: "Lord, the vines are not cultivated by talking
only, but he
needs must sweat a shirt every day who wills to make it bring forth its
fruit. And how
shall your vineyard of your vinedresser bear fruit, O lord, if he does
nothing but waste
the time in talking? Sure it is, O lord, that if he had put into
practice his own words,
[while] I who cannot talk so much have given you the rent for two years,
he would have
given you the rent of the vineyard for five years." The lord was wroth,
and said with
scorn to the vinedresser, "And so you have wrought a great work in not
cutting away
the wood and levelling the vineyard, wherefore there is owing to you a
great reward!"
And having called his servants he had him beaten without any mercy. And
then he put him
into prison under the keeping of a cruel servant who beat him every day,
and never was
willing to set him free for prayers of his friends."
Chapter 77
Truly I say to you, that on the day of judgment many shall say to
God: "Lord, we
have preached and taught by your Law." Against them even the stones
shall cry out,
saying: "When you preached to others, with your own tongue you condemned
yourselves,
O workers of iniquity." "As God lives," said Jesus, "he who knows the
truth and works the contrary shall be punished with such grievous
penalty that Satan shall
almost have compassion on him. Tell me, now has our God given us the Law
for knowing or
for working? Truly I say to you, that all knowledge has for end that
wisdom which works
all it knows. "Tell me, if one were sitting at table and with his eyes
beheld
delicate meats, but with his hands should choose unclean things and eat
those, would not
he be mad?" "Yes, assuredly," said the disciples.
Then Jesus said: "O mad beyond all madmen are you, O man, that with
your
understanding know heaven, and with your hands choose earth; with your
understanding know
God, and with your affection desire the world; with your understanding
know the delights
of paradise, and with your works choose the miseries of hell. Brave
soldier, that leaves
the sword and carries the scabbard to fight! Now, know you not that he
who walks by night
desires light, not only to see the light, but rather to see the good
road, in order that
he may pass safely to the inn?
O miserable world, to be a thousand times despised and abhorred!
since our God by his
holy prophets has ever willed to grant it to know the way to go to his
country and his
rest: but you, wicked one, not only wiliest not to go, but, which is
worse, have despised
the light! True is the proverb of the camel, that it likes not clear
water to drink,
because it desires not to see its own ugly face. So does the ungodly who
works ill; for he
hates the light lest his evil works should be known. But he who receives
wisdom, and not
only works not well, but, which is worse, employs it for evil, is like
to him who should
use the gifts as instruments to slay the giver."
Chapter 78
Truly I say to you, that God had not compassion on the fall of Satan,
but yet [had
compassion on the fall of Adam;. And let this suffice you to know the
unhappy condition of
him who knows good and does evil." Then said Andrew: "O master, it is a
good
thing to leave learning aside, so as not to fall into such condition."
Jesus answered: "If the world is good without the sun, man without
eyes, and the
soul without understanding, then is it good not to know. Truly I say to
you, that bread is
not so good for the temporal life as is learning for the eternal life.
Know you not that
it is a precept of God to learn? For thus says God: Ask of your elders,
and they shall
teach you. And of the Law says God: See that my precept be before your
eyes, and when you
sit down, and when you walk, and at all times meditate thereon. Whether,
then, it is good
not to learn, you may now know. Oh, unhappy he who despises wisdom, for
he is sure to lose
eternal life."
James answered: "O master, we know that Job learned not from a
master, nor
Abraham; nevertheless they became holy ones and prophets." Jesus
answered:
"Truly I say to you, that he who is of the bridegroom's house does not
need to be
invited to the marriage, because he dwells in the house where the
marriage is held; but
they that are far from the house. Now know you not that the prophets of
God are in the
house of God's grace and mercy, and so have the Law of God manifest in
them: as David our
father says on this matter: The Law of his God is in his heart;
therefore his path shall
not be digged up.
Truly I say to you that our God in creating man not only created him
righteous, but
inserted in his heart a light that should show to him that it is fitting
to serve God.
Wherefore, even if this light be darkened after sin, yet is it not
extinguished. For every
nation has this desire to serve God, though they have lost God and serve
false and lying
gods. Accordingly it is necessary that a man be taught of the prophets
of God, for they
have clear the light to teach the way to go to paradise, our country, by
serving God well:
just as it is necessary that he who has his eyes diseased should be
guided and
helped."
Chapter 79
James answered: "And how shall the prophets teach us if they are
dead; and how
shall he be taught who has not knowledge of the prophets?" Jesus
answered:
"Their doctrine is written down, so that it ought to be studied, for
[the writing] is
to you for a prophet. Truly, truly, I say to you that he who despises
the prophecy
despises not only the prophet, but despises also God who has sent the
prophet. But
concerning such as know not the prophet, as are the nations, I tell you
that if there
shall live in those regions any man who lives as his heart shall show
him, not doing to
others that which he would not receive from others, and giving to his
neighbour that which
he would receive from others, such a man shall not be forsaken of the
mercy of God.
Wherefore at death, if not sooner, God will show him and give him his
Law with mercy.
Perhaps you think that God has given the Law for love of the Law?
Assuredly this is not
true, but rather has God given his Law in order that man might work good
for love of God.
And so if God shall find a man who for love of him works good, shall he
perhaps despise
him? No, surely, but rather will he love him more than those to whom he
has given the Law.
I tell you for an example: There was a man who had great possessions;
and in his
territory he had desert land that only bore unfruitful things. And so,
as he was walking
out one day through such desert land, he found among such unfruitful
plants a plant that
had delicate fruits. Whereupon this man said: "Now how does this plant
here bear
these so delicate fruits? Assuredly I will not that it be cut down and
put on the fire
with the rest." And having called his servants he made them dig it
up and set it in his garden. Even so, I tell you, that our God shall
preserve from the
flames of hell those who work righteousness;, wheresoever they be."
Chapter 80
"Tell me, where dwelt Job but in Uz among idolaters? And at the time
of the
flood, how writes Moses? Tell me. He says: "Noah truly found grace
before God."
Our father Abraham had a father without faith, for he made and
worshipped false idols. Lot
abode among the most wicked men on earth. Daniel as a child, with
Ananias, Azarias, and
Misael, were taken captive by Nebuchadnezzar in such wise that they were
but two years old
when they were taken; and they
were nurtured among the multitude of idolatrous servants. As God
lives, even as the
fire burns dry things and converts them into fire, making no difference
between olive and
cypress and palm; even so our God has mercy on every one that works
righteously, making no
difference between Jew, Scythian, Greek, or Ishmaelite.
But let not your heart stop there, O James, because where God has
sent the prophet it
is necessary entirely to deny your own judgment and to follow the
prophet, and not to say:
'Why says he thus? Why does he thus forbid and command?' But say: 'Thus
God wills. Thus
God commands.' Now what said God to Moses when Israel despised Moses?
They have not
despised you, but they have despised me. Truly I say to you, that man
ought to spend all
the time of his life not in learning how to speak or to read, but in
learning how to work
well. Now tell me, who is that servant of Herod who would not study to
please him by
serving him with all diligence? Woe to the world that studies only to
please a body that
is clay and dung, and studies not but forgets the service of God who has
made all things,
who is blessed for evermore."
Chapter 81
Tell me, would it have been a great sin of the priests if when they
were carrying the
ark of the testimony of God they had let it fall to the ground? The
disciples trembled
hearing this, for they knew that God slew Uzzah for having wrongly
touched the ark of God.
And they said: "Most grievous would be such a sin." Then Jesus said: "As
God lives, it is a greater sin to forget the word of God, wherewith he
made all things,
whereby he offers you eternal life." And having said this Jesus made
prayer; and
after the prayer he said: "Tomorrow we needs must pass into Samaria;,
for so has said
to me the holy angel of God."
Early on the morning of a certain day, Jesus arrived near the well
which Jacob made and
gave to Joseph his son. Whereupon Jesus being wearied with the journey,
sent his disciples
to the city to buy food. And so he sat himself down by the well, upon
the stone of the
well. And, lo, a woman of Samaria comes to the well to draw water. Jesus
says to the
woman: "Give me to drink." The woman answered: "Now, are you not ashamed
that you, being an Hebrew, ask drink of me which am a Samaritan woman?"
Jesus
answered: "O woman, if you knew who he is that asks you for drink,
perhaps you would
have asked of him for drink." The woman answered: "Now how should you
give me to
drink, seeing you have no vessel to draw the water, nor rope, and the
well is deep?"
Jesus answered: "O woman, whoever drinks of the water of this well,
thirst comes
to him again, but whosoever drinks of the water that I give has thirst
no more; but to
them that have thirst give they to drink, insomuch that they come to
eternal life."
Then said the woman: "O Lord, give me of this your water." Jesus
answered:
"Go call your husband, and to both of you I will give to drink." The
woman said:
"I have no husband." Jesus answered: "Well have you said the truth, for
you
have had five husbands, and he whom you now have is not your husband."
The woman was confounded hearing this, and said: "Lord, hereby
perceive I that you
are a prophet; therefore tell me, I pray: the Hebrews make prayer on
mount Sion in the
Temple built by Solomon in Jerusalem, and say that there and nowhere
else [men] find grace
and mercy of God. And our people worship on these mountains, and say
that only on the
mountains of Samaria ought worship to be made. Who are the true
worshippers?"
Chapter 82
Then Jesus gave a sigh and wept, saying: "Woe to you, Judea, for you
glory,
saying: "The Temple of the Lord, the Temple of the Lord," and live as
though
there were no God; given over wholly to the pleasures and gains of the
world; for this
woman in the day of judgment shall condemn you to hell; for this woman
seeks to know how
to find grace and mercy before God."
And turning to the woman he said: "O woman, you Samaritans worship
that which you
know not, but we Hebrews worship that which we know. Truly, I say to
you, that God is
spirit and truth, and so in spirit and in truth must he be worshipped.
For the promise of
God was made in Jerusalem, in the Temple of Solomon, and not elsewhere.
But believe me, a
time will come that God will give his mercy in another city, and in
every place it will be
possible to worship him in truth. And God in
every place will have accepted true prayer with mercy.
The woman answered: "We look for the Messiah; when he comes he will
teach
us." Jesus answered: "Know you, woman, that the Messiah must come?" *She
answered: "Yes, Lord." Then Jesus rejoiced, and said: "So far as I see, O
woman, you are faithful: know therefore that in the faith of the Messiah
shall be saved
every one that is elect of God; therefore it is necessary that you know
the coming of the
Messiah;." The woman said: "O Lord, perhaps you are the Messiah." Jesus
answered: "I am indeed sent to the House of Israel as a prophet of
salvation; but
after me shall come the Messiah, sent of God to all the world; for whom
God has made the
world.
And then through all the world will God be worshipped, and mercy
received, insomuch
that the year of jubilee, which now comes every hundred years, shall by
the Messiah be
reduced to every year in every place." Then the woman left her waterpot
and ran to
the city to announce all that she had heard from Jesus.
Chapter 83
Whilst the woman was talking with Jesus came his disciples, and
marvelled that
Jesus was speaking so with a woman. Yet no one said to him: "Why speak
you thus with
a Samaritan woman;?" Whereupon, when the woman was departed, they said:
"Master,
come and eat." Jesus answered: "I must eat other food."
Then said the disciples one to another: "Perhaps some wayfarer has
spoken with
Jesus and has gone to find him food." And they questioned him who writes
this ;- ,
saying: "Has there been any one here, O Barnabas, who might have brought
food to the
master?" Then answered he who writes: "There has not been here any other
than
the woman whom you saw, who brought this empty vessel to fill it with
water." Then
the disciples stood amazed, awaiting the issue of the words of Jesus.
Whereupon Jesus
said: "You know not that the true food is to do the will of God; because
it is not
bread that sustains man and gives him life, but rather the word of God,
by his will. And
so for this reason the holy angels eat not, but live nourished only by
the will of God.
And thus we, Moses and Elijah and yet another, have been forty days and
forty nights;
without any food."
And lifting up his eyes, Jesus said: "How far off is the harvest;?"
The
disciples answered: "Three months." Jesus said: "Look now, how the
mountain
is white with corn; truly I say to you, that today there is a great
harvest ;to be
reaped." And then he pointed to the multitude who had come to see him.
For the woman
having entered into the city had moved all the city, saying: "O men,
come and see a
new prophet sent of God to the House of Israel"; and she recounted to
them all that
she had heard from Jesus. When they were come thither they besought
Jesus to abide with
them; and he entered into the city and abode there two days, healing all
the sick, and
teaching concerning the kingdom of God;. *Then said the citizens to the
woman: "We
believe more in his words and miracles than we do in what you said; for
he is indeed a
holy one of God, a prophet sent for the salvation of those that shall
believe on
him."
After the prayer of midnight; the disciples came near to Jesus, and
he said to them:
"This night shall be in the time of the Messiah, Messenger of God, the
jubilee every
year that now comes every hundred years. Therefore I will not that we
sleep, but let us
make prayer, bowing our head a hundred times, doing reverence to our
God, mighty and
merciful, who is blessed for evermore, and therefore each time let us
say: "I confess
you our God alone, that has not had beginning, nor shall ever have end;
for by your mercy
gave you to all things their beginning, and by your justice you shall
give to all an end;
that has no likeness among men, because in your infinite goodness you
are not subject to
motion nor to any accident. Have mercy on us, for you have created us,
and we are the
works of your hand.""
Chapter 84
Having made the prayer, Jesus said: "Let us give thanks to God
because he has
given to us this night great mercy; for that he has made to come back
the time that needs
must pass in the night, in that we have made prayer in union with the
Messenger of God.
And I have heard his voice." The disciples rejoiced greatly at hearing
this, and
said: "Master, teach us some precepts this night." Then Jesus said:
"Have
you ever seen dung mixed with balsam?" They answered: "No, Lord, for no
one is
so mad as to do this thing."
"Now I tell you that there be in the world greater madmen, said
Jesus,
"because with the service of God they mingle the service of the world.
So much so
that many of blameless life have been deceived of Satan, and while
praying have mingled
with their prayer worldly business, whereupon they have become at that
time abominable in
the sight of God. Tell me, when you wash yourselves for prayer, do you
take care that no
unclean thing touch you? Yes, assuredly. But what do you when you are
making prayer? You
wash your soul from sins through the mercy of God. Would you be willing
then, while you
are making prayer, to speak of worldly things? Take care not to do so,
for every worldly
word becomes dung of the devil upon the soul of him that speaks."
Then the disciples trembled, because he spoke with vehemence of
spirit; and they said:
"O master, what shall we do if when we are making prayer a friend shall
come to speak
to us?" Jesus answered: "Suffer him to wait, and finish the prayer."
Bartholomew said;: "But what if he shall be offended and go his way,
when he see that
we speak not with him?" Jesus answered: "If he shall be offended,
believe me he
will not be a friend of yours nor a believer, but rather an unbeliever
and a companion of
Satan. Tell me, if you went to speak with a stable boy of Herod;, and
found him speaking
into Herod's ears, would you be offended if he made you to wait?' No,
assuredly; but you would be comforted at seeing your friend in favour
with the king. Is
this true?" said Jesus.
The disciples answered: "It is most true." Then Jesus said: "Truly I
say
to you, that every one when he prays speaks with God. Is it then right
that you should
leave speaking with God in order to speak with man? Is it right that
your friend should
for this cause be offended, because you have more reverence for God than
for him? Believe
me that if he shall be offended when you make him wait, he is a good
servant of the evil.
For this desires the devil, that God should be forsaken for man. As God
lives, in every
good work he that fears God ought to separate himself from the works of
the world, so as
not to corrupt the good work."
Chapter 85
"When a man works ill or talks ill, if one go to correct him, and
hinder such
work, what does such an one?" said Jesus. The disciples answered: "He
does well,
because he serves God, who always seeks to hinder evil, even as the sun
that always seeks
to chase away the darkness." Jesus said: "And I tell you on the contrary
that
when one works well or, speaks well, whosoever seeks to hinder him,
under pretext of aught
that is not better, he serves the devil, no, he even becomes his
companion. For the devil
attends to nought else but to hinder every good thing. "But what shall I
say to you
now? I will say to you as said Solomon ;the prophet, holy one, and
friend of God: "Of
a thousand whom you know, one be your friend."
Then said Matthew: "Then shall we not be able to love any one." Jesus
answered: "Truly I say to you, that it is not lawful for you to hate
anything save
only sin: insomuch that you cannot hate even Satan as creature of God,
but rather as enemy
of God. Know you wherefore? I will tell you; because he is a creature of
God, and all that
God has created is good and perfect. Accordingly, whoever hates the
creature hates also
the creator. But the friend is a singular thing, that is not easily
found, but is easily
lost. For the friend will not suffer contradiction against him whom he
supremely loves.
Beware, be you cautious, and choose not for friend one who loves not him
whom you love.
Know you what friend means? Friend means nothing but physician of the
soul;.
And so, just as one rarely finds a good physician who knows the
sicknesses and
understands to apply the medicines thereto, so also are friends rare who
know the faults
and understand how to guide to good. But herein is an evil, that there
are many who have
friends that feign not to see the faults of their friend; others excuse
them; others
defend them under earthly pretext; and, what is worse, there are friends
who invite and
aid their friend to err, whose end shall be like to their villainy.
Beware that you
receive not such men for friends, for that in truth they are enemies and
slayers of the
soul.
Chapter 86
"Let your friend be such that, even as he wills to correct you, so he
may receive
correction; and even as he wills that you should leave all things for
love of God, even so
again it may content him that you forsake him for the service of God.
"But tell me,
if a man know not how to love God how shall he know how to love himself;
and how shall he
know how to love others, not knowing how to love himself? Assuredly this
is impossible.
Therefore when you choose you one for friend (for truly he is supremely
poor who has no
friend at all), see that you consider first, not his fine lineage, not
his fine family,
not his fine house, not his fine clothing, not his fine person, nor yet
his fine words,
for you shall be easily deceived.
But look how he fears God, how he despises earthly things, how he
loves good works, and
above all how he hates his own flesh, and so shall you easily find the
true friend: if he
above all things shall fear God, and shall despise the vanities of the
world; if he shall
be always occupied in good works, and shall hate his own body as a cruel
enemy. Nor yet
shall you love such a friend in such wise that your love stay in him,
for [so] shall you
be an idolater. But love him as a gift that God has given you, for so
shall God adorn
[him] with greater favour. Truly I say to you, that he who has found a
true friend has
found one of the delights of paradise; no, such is the key of paradise."
Thaddaeus answered: "But if perhaps a man shall have a friend who is
not such as
you have said, O master? What ought he to do? Ought he to forsake him?"
Jesus
answered: "He ought to do as the mariner does with the ship, who sails
it so long as
he perceives it to be profitable, but when he sees it to be a loss
forsakes it. So shall
you do with your friend that is worse than you: in those things wherein
he is an offence
to you, leave him if you would not be left of the mercy of God."
Chapter 87
"Woe to the world because of offences. It needs must be that the
offence come,
because all the world lies in wickedness. But yet woe to that man
through whom the offence
comes. It were better for the man if he should have a millstone about
his neck and should
be sunk in the depths of the sea than that he should offend his
neighbour. If your eye be
an offence to you, pluck it out. For it is better that you go with one
eye only into
paradise than with both of them into hell. If your hand or your foot
offend you, do
likewise; for it is better that you go into the kingdom of heaven with
one foot or with
one hand, than with two hands and two feet go into hell."
Simon, called Peter: said "Lord, how must I do this? Certain it is
that in a short
time I shall be dismembered." Jesus answered: "O Peter, put off fleshly
prudence
and straightway you shall find the truth. For he that teaches you is
your eye, and he that
helps you to work is your foot, and he that ministers aught to you is
your hand. Wherefore
when such are to you an occasion of sin leave them; for it is better for
you to go into
paradise ignorant, with few works, and poor, than to go into hell wise,
with great works,
and rich. Everything that may hinder you from serving God, cast it from
you as a man casts
away everything that hinders his sight."
And having said this, Jesus called Peter close to him, and said to
him: * "If your
brother shall sin against you, go and correct him. If he amend, rejoice,
for you have
gained your brother; but if he shall not amend go and call afresh two
witnesses and
correct him afresh; and if he shall not amend, go and tell it to the
church; and if he
shall not then amend, count him for an unbeliever, and therefore you
shall not dwell under
the same roof whereunder he dwells, you shall not eat at the same table
whereat he sits,
and you shall not speak with him; insomuch that if you know where he
sets his foot in
walking you shall not set your foot there."
Chapter 88
"But beware that you hold not yourself for better; rather shall you
say thus:
"Peter, Peter, if God helped you not with his grace you would be worse
than he."
Peter answered: "How must I correct him?" Jesus answered: "In the way
that
you yourself would fain be corrected And as you would fain be borne
with, so bear with
others. Believe me, Peter, for truly I say to you that every time you
shall correct your
brother with mercy you shall receive mercy of God, and your words shall
bear some fruit;
but if you shall do it with rigour, you shall be rigorously punished by
the justice of
God, and shall bear no fruit.
Tell me, Peter: Those earthen pots wherein the poor cook their food
they wash them,
perhaps, with stones and iron hammers? No, assuredly; but rather with
hot water. Vessels
are broken in pieces with iron, things of wood are burned with fire; but
man is amended
with mercy. Wherefore, when you shall correct your brother you shall say
to yourself:
"If God help me not, I shall do tomorrow worse than all that he has done
today."
Peter answered: "How many times must I forgive my brother, O master?"
Jesus
answered: "As many times as you would fain be forgiven by him."
Peter said: "Seven times a day?" Jesus answered: "Not only seven, but
seventy times seven you shall forgive him every day; for he that
forgives, to him shall it
be forgiven, and he that condemns shall be condemned." Then said he who
writes this:
"Woe to princes! for they shall go to hell" Jesus reproved him, saying:
"You are become foolish, O Barnabas. in that you have spoken thus. Truly
I say to
you, that the bath is not so necessary for the body, the bit for the
horse, and the tiller
for the ship, as the prince is necessary for the state. And for what
cause did God give
Moses, Joshua, Samuel, David, and Solomon, and so many others who passed
judgment? To such
has God given the sword for the extirpation of iniquity."
Then said he who writes this: "Now, how ought judgment to be given,
condemning and
pardoning?" Jesus answered: "Not every one is a judge: for to the judge
alone it
appertains to condemn others, O Barnabas. And the judge ought to condemn
the guilty, even
as the father commands a putrefied member to be cut off from his son, in
order that the
whole body may not become putrefied."
Chapter 89
Peter said: "How long must I wait for my brother to repent?" Jesus
answered:
"So long as you would be waited for." Peter answered: "Not every one
will
understand this; wherefore speak to us more plainly." Jesus answered:
"Wait for
your brother as long as God waits for him." "Neither will they
understand
this," said Peter. Jesus answered: "Wait for him so long as he has time
to
repent."
Then was Peter sad, and the others also, because they understood not
the meaning.
Whereupon Jesus answered: "If you had sound understanding, and knew that
you
yourselves were sinners, you would not think ever to cut off your heart
from mercy to the
sinner. And so I tell you plainly, that the sinner ought to be waited
for that he may
repent, so long as he has a soul beneath his teeth to breathe. For so
does our God wait
for him, the mighty and merciful. God said not: "In that hour that the
sinner shall
fast, do alms, make prayer, and go on pilgrimage, I will forgive him."
Wherefore this
have many accomplished, and are damned eternally. But he said: "In that
hour that the
sinner shall bewail his sins, I for my part will not remember any more
his
iniquities." Do you understand?" said Jesus.
The disciples answered: "Part we understand, and part not." Jesus
said:
"Which is the part that you understand not?" They answered: "That many
who
have made prayer with fastings are damned." Then Jesus said: "Truly I
say to
you, that the hypocrites and the Gentiles make more prayers, more alms,
and more fasts
than do the friends of God. But because they have not faith, they are
not able to repent
for love of God, and so they are damned." Then said John: "Teach us, for
love of
God, of the faith." Jesus answered: "It is time that we say the prayer
of the
dawn." Whereupon they arose, and having washed themselves made prayer to
our God, who
is blessed for evermore.
Chapter 90
When the prayer was done, his disciples again drew near to Jesus, and
he opened his
mouth and said: Draw near, John, for today will I speak to you of all
that you have asked.
Faith is a seal whereby God seals his elect: which seal he gave to his
Messenger, at whose
hands every one that is elect has received the faith. For even as God is
one, so is the
faith one. Wherefore God, having created before all things his
Messenger, gave to him
before aught else the faith which is as it were a likeness of God and of
all that God has
done and said. And so the faithful by faith sees all things, better than
one sees with his
eyes; because the eyes can err; no they do almost always err; but faith
errs never, for it
has for foundation God and his word. Believe me that by faith are saved
all the elect of
God. And it is certain that without faith it is impossible for any one
to please God.
Wherefore Satan seeks not to bring to nothing fastings and prayer,
alms and
pilgrimages, no rather he incites unbelievers thereto, for he takes
pleasure in seeing man
work without receiving pay. But he takes pains with all diligence to
bring faith to
nought, wherefore faith ought especially to be guarded with diligence,
and the safest
course will be to abandon the "Wherefore," seeing that the "Wherefore"
drove men out of Paradise and changed Satan from a most beautiful angel
into a horrible
devil."
Then said John: "Now, how shall we abandon the "Wherefore," seeing
that
it is the gate of knowledge?" Jesus answered: "No, rather the
"Wherefore" is the gate of hell." Thereupon John kept silence, when
Jesus
added: "When you know that God has said a thing, who are you, O man,
that you should
say, "Wherefore have you so said, O God: wherefore have you so done?"
Shall the
earthen vessel, perhaps, say to its maker: "Wherefore have you made me
to hold water
and not to contain balsam?" Truly I say to you, it is necessary against
every
temptation to strengthen yourself with this word, saying "God has so
said";
"So has God done"; "God so wills"; for so doing you shall live
safely."
Chapter 91
At this time there was a great disturbance throughout Judea because
of Jesus. The Roman
soldiery, through the operation of Satan, [had] stirred up the Hebrews,
saying that Jesus
was God come to visit them. So great [was the] sedition [that] arose,
that near the Forty
Days all Judea was in arms, such that the son was against the father,
and the brother
against the brother. Some said that Jesus was God come to the world;
others said: 'No, but
he is a son of God'; and others said: 'No, for God has no human
similitude, and therefore
does not beget sons; but Jesus of Nazareth is a prophet of God.' This
[sedition] arose
because of the great miracles which Jesus did.
To quiet the people, it was necessary that the high-priest should
ride in procession,
clothed in his priestly robes, with the holy name of God, the teta
gramaton (sic), on his
forehead, and the governor Pilate, and Herod rode in a similar manner.
Then, three armies
assembled in Mizpeh, each one of two hundred thousand men that bare
sword. Herod spoke to
them, but they were not quietened. Then the governor and the high-priest
spoke, saying:
"Brothers, this war [has been] aroused by the work of Satan, for Jesus
is alive, and
we ought to resort to him, and ask him to give testimony of himself, and
then believe him,
according to his word."
So at this everyone was quieted; and having laid down their arms they
all embraced one
another, saying to one another: 'Forgive me, brother!' *On that day,
therefore, every one
laid this in his heart, to believe [whatever] Jesus said. The governor
and the high-priest
offered great rewards to whoever should come [forward and] announce
where Jesus was to be
found.
Chapter 92
At this time, by the word of the holy angel, we, [had] gone to Mount
Sinai with Jesus.
There Jesus [and] his disciples kept the forty days.
When this was past, Jesus drew near to the river Jordan, to go to
Jerusalem. And he was
seen by one of them who believed Jesus to be God. Then, crying with
great gladness [over
and over] "Our God comes!" he reached the city [and] moved the whole
city
saying: Our God comes, O Jerusalem; prepare you to receive him! And he
testified that he
had seen Jesus near to [the] Jordan.
Then everyone, small and great, went out from the city to see Jesus,
so that the city
was left empty, for the women [carried] their children in their arms,
and forgot to take
food to eat. When they [saw] this, the governor and the high-priest rode
forth and sent a
messenger to Herod, who [also] rode forth to find Jesus, in order to
quiten the sedition
of the people. For two days they sought him in the wilderness near to
[the] Jordan, and
the third day they found him, near the hour of midday, when he (with his
disciples) was
purifying himself for prayer, according to the Book of Moses.
Jesus marvelled greatly, seeing the multitude which covered the
ground with people, and
[he] said to his disciples: "Perhaps Satan has raised sedition in Judea.
May it
please God to take away from Satan the dominion which he has over
sinners." And when
he had said this, the crowd drew near, and when they knew him they began
to cry out:
"Welcome to you, O our God!" and they began to do him reverence, as to
God.
Jesus gave a great groan and said: "Get from before me, O madmen, for I
fear [that]
the earth shall open and devour me with you for your abominable words!"
At this the
people were filled with terror and began to weep.
Chapter 93
Then Jesus, having lifted his hand in token of silence, said: "Truly
you have
erred greatly, O Israelites, in calling me, a man, your God. And I fear
that God may for
this give heavy plague upon the holy city, handing it over in servitude
to strangers;. O a
thousand times accursed Satan, that has moved you to this!"
And having said this, Jesus smote his face with both his hands,
whereupon arose such a
noise of weeping that none could hear what Jesus was saying. Whereupon
once more he lifted
up his hand in token of silence;, and the people being quieted from
their weeping, he
spoke once more: "
I confess before heaven, and I call to witness everything that dwells
upon the earth,
that I am a stranger to all that you have said; seeing that I am man,
born of mortal
woman, subject to the judgment of God, suffering the miseries of eating
and sleeping, of
cold and heat, like other men. Whereupon when God shall come to judge,
my words like a
sword shall pierce each one [of them] that believe me to be more than
man." And
having said this, Jesus saw a great multitude of horsemen, whereby he
perceived that there
were coming the governor with Herod and the high-priest. Then Jesus
said: "Perhaps
they also are become mad."
When the governor arrived there, with Herod and the priest, every one
dismounted, and
they made a circle round about Jesus, insomuch that the soldiery could
not keep back the
people that were desirous to hear Jesus speaking with the priest. Jesus
drew near to the
priest with reverence, but he was wishful to bow himself down and
worship Jesus, when
Jesus cried out: "Beware of that which you do, priest of the living God!
Sin not
against our God!"
The priest answered: "Now is Judea so greatly moved over your signs
and your
teaching that they cry out that you are God; wherefore, constrained by
the people, I am
come here with the Roman governor and king Herod. We pray you therefore
from our heart,
that you will be content to remove the sedition which is arisen on your
account. For some
say you are God, some say you are son of God, and some say you are a
prophet."
Jesus answered: "And you, O high priest of God, why have you not
quieted this
sedition? Are you also perhaps, gone out of your mind? Have the
prophecies, with the Law
of God, so passed into oblivion, O wretched Judea, deceived of Satan!"
Chapter 94
And having said this, Jesus said again: "I confess before heaven, and
call to
witness everything that dwells upon the earth, that I am a stranger to
all that men have
said of me, to wit, that I am more than man. For I am a man, born of a
woman, subject to
the judgment of God; that live here like as other men, subject to the
common miseries. As
God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, you have greatly sinned, O
priest, in saying
what you have said. May it please God that there come not upon the holy
city great
vengeance for this sin." Then said the priest: "May God pardon us, and
do you
pray for us. Then said the governor and Herod: "Sir, it is impossible
that man should
do that which you do; wherefore we understand not that which you say.
Jesus answered: "That which you say is true, for God works good in
man, even as
Satan works evil. For man is like a shop, wherein whoever enters with
his consent works
and sells therein. But tell me, O governor, and you O king, you say this
because you are
strangers to our Law: for if you read the testament and covenant of our
God you would see
that Moses with a rod made the water turn into blood, the dust into
fleas, the dew into
tempest, and the light into darkness. He made the frogs and mice to come
into Egypt;,
which covered the ground, he slew the first-born, and opened the sea,
wherein he drowned
Pharaoh;. Of these things I have wrought none.
And of Moses, every one confesses that he is a dead man at this
present. Joshua made
the sun to stand still, and opened the Jordan, which I have not yet
done. And of Joshua
every one confesses that he is a dead man at this present. Elijah made
fire to come
visibly down from heaven, and rain, which I have not done. And of Elijah
every one
confesses that he is a man. And [in like manner] very many other
prophets, holy men,
friends of God, who in the power of God have wrought things which cannot
be grasped by the
minds of those who know not our God, almighty and merciful, who is
blessed for
evermore."
Chapter 95
Accordingly the governor and the priest and the king prayed Jesus
that in order to
quiet the people he should mount up into a lofty place and speak to the
people. Then went
up Jesus on to one of the twelve stones which Joshua made the twelve
tribes take up from
the midst of Jordan;, when all Israel passed over there dry shod; and he
said with a loud
voice: "Let our priest go up into a high place whence he may confirm my
words."
Thereupon the priest went up thither; to whom Jesus said distinctly, so
that everyone
might hear: "It is written in the testament and covenant of the living
God that our
God has no beginning, neither shall he ever have an end." The priest
answered:
"Even so is it written therein."
Jesus said: "It is written there that our God by his word alone has
created all
things." "Even so it is," said the priest. Jesus said: "It is written
there that God is invisible and hidden from the mind of man, seeing he
is incorporeal and
uncomposed, without variableness." "So is it, truly" said the priest.
Jesus
said: "It is written there how that the heaven of heavens cannot contain
him, seeing
that our God is infinite." "So said Solomon the prophet," said the
priest,
"O Jesus." Jesus said: "It is written there that God has no need,
forasmuch
as he eats not, sleeps not,; and suffers not from any deficiency." "So
is
it," said the priest.
Jesus said: "It is written there that our God is everywhere, and that
there is not
any other god but he, who strikes down and makes whole, and does all
that pleases
him." "So is it written," replied the priest. Then Jesus, having lifted
up
his hands, said: "Lord our God, this is my faith wherewith I shall come
to your
judgment: in testimony against every one that shall believe the
contrary."
And turning himself towards the people, he said: "Repent, for from
all that of
which the priest has said that it is written in the Book of Moses, the
covenant of God for
ever, you may perceive your sin; for. that I am a visible man and a
morsel of clay that
walks upon the earth, mortal as are other men. And I have had a
beginning, and shall have
an end, and [am] such that I cannot create a fly over again."
Thereupon the people raised their voices weeping, and said: "We have
sinned, Lord
our God, against you; have mercy upon us. And they prayed Jesus, every
one, that he would
pray for the safety of the holy city, that our God in his anger should
not give it over to
be trodden down of the nations. Thereupon Jesus, having lifted up his
hands, prayed for
the holy city and for the people of God, every one crying: "So be it,"
"Amen."
Chapter 96
When the prayer was ended, the priest said with a loud voice: "Stay,
Jesus, for we
need to know who you are, for the quieting of our nation." Jesus
answered: "I am
Jesus, son of Mary, of the seed of David, a man that is mortal and fears
God, and I seek
that to God be given honour and glory."
The priest answered: "In the Book of Moses it is written that our God
must send us
the Messiah, who shall come to announce to us that which God wills, and
shall bring to the
world the mercy of God. Therefore I pray you tell us the truth, are you
the Messiah of God
whom we expect?"
Jesus answered: "It is true that God has so promised, but indeed I am
not he, for
he is made before me, and shall come after me." The priest answered: "By
your
words and signs at any rate we believe you to be a prophet and an holy
one of God,
wherefore I pray you in the name of all Judea and Israel that you for
love of God should
tell us in what wise the Messiah will come.
Chapter 97
Jesus answered: "As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, I am
not the
Messiah whom all the tribes of the earth expect, even as God promised to
our father
Abraham, saying: "In your seed will I bless all the tribes of the
earth." But
when God shall take me away from the world, Satan will raise again this
accursed sedition,
by making the impious believe that I am God and son of God, whence my
words and my
doctrine shall be contaminated, insomuch that scarcely shall there
remain thirty faithful
ones: whereupon God will have mercy upon the world, and will send his
Messenger for whom
he has made all things who shall come from the south with power, and
shall destroy the
idols with the idolaters who shall take away the dominion from Satan
which he has over
men. He shallbring with him the mercy of God for salvation of them that
shall believe in
him, and blessed is he who shall believe his words.
"Unworthy though I am to untie his hosen, I have received grace and
mercy from God
to see him." Then answered the priest, with the governor and the king,
saying:
"Distress not yourself, O Jesus, holy one of God, because in our time
shall not this
sedition be any more, seeing that we will write to the sacred Roman
senate in such wise
that by imperial decree none shall any more call you God or son of God."
Then Jesus
said: "With your words I am not consoled, because where you hope for
light darkness
shall come; but my consolation is in the coming of the Messenger, who
shall destroy every
false opinion of me, and his faith shall spread and shall take
hold of the whole world, for so has God promised to Abraham our
father. And that which
gives me consolation is that his faith shall have no end, but shall be
kept inviolate by
God."
The priest answered: "After the coming of the Messenger of God shall
other
prophets come?" Jesus answered: "There shall not come after him true
prophets
sent by God, but there shall come a great number of false prophets,
whereat I sorrow. For
Satan shall raise them up by the just judgment of God, and they shall
hide themselves
under the pretext of my gospel." Herod answered: "How is it a just
judgment of
God that such impious men should come?"
Jesus answered: "It is just that he who will not believe in the truth
to his
salvation should believe in a lie to his damnation. Wherefore I say to
you, that the world
has ever despised the true prophets and loved the false, as can be seen
in the time of
Micaiah and Jeremiah. For every like loves his like."
Then said the priest: "How shall the Messiah be called, and what sign
shall reveal
his coming?" Jesus answered: "The name of the Messiah is admirable, for
God
himself gave him the name when he had created his soul, and placed it in
a celestial
splendour. God said: "Wait Muhammad; for your sake I will to create
paradise, the
world, and a great multitude of creatures, whereof I make you a present,
insomuch that
whoever shall bless you shall be blessed, and whoever shall curse you
shall be accursed.
When I shall send you into the world I shall send you as my Messenger of
salvation, and
your word shall be true, insomuch that heaven and earth shall fail, but
your faith shall
never fail." Muhammad is his blessed name." Then the crowd lifted up
their
voices, saying: "O God send us your Messenger: O Muhammad, come quickly
for the
salvation of the world!"
Chapter 98
And having said this, the multitude departed with the priest and the
governor with
Herod, having great disputations concerning Jesus and concerning his
doctrine. Whereupon
the priest prayed the governor to write to Rome to the senate the whole
matter; which
thing the governor did; wherefore the senate had compassion on Israel,
and decreed that on
pain of death none should call Jesus the Nazarene, prophet of the Jews,
either God or son
of God. Which decree was posted up in the Temple, engraved upon copper.
When the greater part of the crowd had departed, there remained about
five thousand
men, without women and children who being wearied by the journey, having
been two days
without bread, for that through longing to see Jesus they had forgotten
to bring any,
whereupon they ate raw herbs therefore they were not able to depart like
the others. Then
Jesus, when he perceived this, had pity on them, and said to Philip:
"Where shall we
find bread for them that they perish not of hunger?" Philip answered:
"Lord, two
hundred pieces of gold could not buy so much bread that each one should
taste a
little." Then said Andrew: "There is here a child which has five loaves
and two
fishes, but what will it be among so many?"
Jesus answered: "Make the multitude sit down" And they sat down upon
the
grass by fifties and by forties. Thereupon said Jesus: "In the name of
God!" And
he took the bread, and prayed to God and then brake the bread, which he
gave to the
disciples, and the disciples gave it to the multitude; and so did they
with the fishes.
Every one ate and every one was satisfied. Then Jesus said: "Gather up
that which is
over." So the disciples gathered those fragments, and filled twelve
baskets.
Thereupon every one put his hand to his eyes, saying: "Am I awake, or
do I
dream?" And they remained, every one, for the space of an hour. as it
were beside
themselves by reason of the great miracle. Afterwards Jesus, when he had
given thanks to
God, dismissed them, but there were seventy-two men that willed not to
leave him;
wherefore Jesus, perceiving their faith, chose them for disciples.
Chapter 99
Jesus, having withdrawn into a hollow part of the desert in Tiro near
to Jordan, called
together the seventy-two with the twelve, and, when he had seated
himself upon a stone,
made them to sit near him. And he opened his mouth with a sigh and said:
"This day
have we seen a great wickedness in Judea and in Israel such that my
heart trembles within
my breast for fear of God. Truly I say to you, that God is jealous for
his honour, and
loves Israel as a lover. You know that when a youth loves a lady, and
she does not love
him, but another, he is moved to indignation and slays his rival. Even
so, I tell you,
does God: for, when Israel has loved anything such that he forgets God,
God has brought
such a thing to nothing.
Now what thing is more dear to God here on earth than the priesthood
and the holy
Temple? Nevertheless, in the time of Jeremiah the prophet, when the
people had forgotten
God, and boasted only of the Temple, for that there was none like it in
all the world, God
raised up his wrath by Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, and with an army
caused him to
take the holy city and burn it with the sacred Temple, such that the
sacred things which
the prophets of God trembled to touch were trodden under foot by
infidels full of
wickedness.
Abraham loved his son Ishmael a little more than was right, so in
order to kill that
evil love out of the heart of Abraham, God commanded that he should slay
his son: which he
would have done had the knife cut. * David loved Absalom vehemently, and
therefore God
brought it to pass that the son rebelled against his father and was
suspended by his hair
and slain by Joab. O fearful judgment of God, that Absalom loved his
hair above all
things, and this was turned into a rope to hang him!
Innocent Job came near to loving his seven sons and three daughters
[too much], when
God gave him into the hand of Satan, who not only deprived him of his
sons and his riches
in one day, but also struck him with grievous sickness, such that worms
came out of his
flesh for the next seven years. Our father Jacob loved Joseph more than
his other sons, so
God caused him to be sold, and caused Jacob to be deceived by these same
sons, such that
he believed that the beasts had devoured his son, and so lived in
mourning for ten years.
Chapter 100
As God lives, brothers, I fear that God will be angered against me.
Therefore you must
go through Judea and Israel, preaching the truth to the twelve tribes,
that they may be
undeceived." The disciples answered with fear, weeping: "We will do
whatever you
bid us [to do]."
Then Jesus said: "Let us make prayer and fast for three days, and
from henceforth
every evening when the first star shall appear, when prayer is made to
God, let us make
prayer three times, asking him for mercy three times: because the sin of
Israel is three
times more grievous than other sins." "So be it," answered the
disciples.
When the third day was ended, on the morning of the fourth day, Jesus
called together
all the disciples and apostles and said to them: "Barnabas and John will
stay with
me: you others are to go through all the region of Samaria and Judea and
Israel, preaching
penitence: because the axe is laid near to the tree, to cut it down. And
make prayer over
the sick, because God has given me authority over every sickness."
Then he who writes said: "O Master, if your disciples be asked how
they ought to
show penitence, what shall they answer?" Jesus answered: "When a man
loses a
purse does he turn back only his eye, to see it? or his hand, to take
it? or his tongue,
to ask? No, but he turns his whole body back and employs every power of
hissoul to find
it. Is this true?" Then he who writes answered : "It is most true."
Chapter 101
Then Jesus said: "Penitence is a reversing of the evil life: for
every sense must
be turned around to the contrary of that which it wrought while sinning.
Instead of
delight must be mourning; for laughter, weeping; for revellings, fasts;
for sleeping,
vigils; for leisure, activity; for lust, chastity; let storytelling be
turned into prayer
and avarice into almsgiving." Then he who writes answered: "But if they
are
asked, how are we to mourn, how are we to weep, how are we to fast, how
are we to show
activity, how are we to remain chaste, how are we to make prayer and do
alms; what answer
shall they give? And how shall they do penance properly if they do not
know how to
repent."
Jesus answered: "You have asked [a good question], O Barnabas, and I
wish to
answer all fully if it is pleasing to God. So today I will speak to you
of penitence
generally, and that which I say to one I say to all. Know then that
penitence more than
anything [else] must be done for pure love of God; otherwise it will be
vain to repent. I
will speak to you by a similitude. Every building, if its foundation be
removed, falls
into ruin: is this true?" "It is true," answered the disciples.
Then Jesus said: "The foundation of our salvation is God, without
whom there is no
salvation. When man has sinned, he has lost the foundation of his
salvation; so it is
necessary to begin from the foundation. Tell me, if your slaves had
offended you, and you
knew that they did not grieve at having offended you, but grieved at
having lost their
reward, would you forgive them? Certainly not. I tell you that this is
what God will do to
those who repent for having lost paradise. Satan, the enemy of all good,
has great remorse
for having lost paradise and gained hell. Yet he will he never find
mercy. Do you know
why? Because he does not love God; no, he hates his Creator.
Chapter 102
Truly I say to you, that every animal according to its own nature, if
it loses that
which it desires, mourns for the lost good. Accordingly, the sinner who
will be truly
penitent must have [a] great desire to punish in himself that which he
has done in
opposition to his Creator: [to the extent that] when he prays he dare
not to crave
paradise from God, or that God [will] free him from hell, but in
confusion of mind,
prostrate before God, he says in his prayer:
'Behold the guilty one, O Lord, who has offended You without any
cause at the very time
when he ought to have been serving You. Here he seeks that what he has
done may be
punished by Your hand, and not by the hand of Satan, Your enemy; in
order that the ungodly
may not rejoice over your creatures. Chastise, punish as it pleases you,
O Lord, for you
will never give me so much torment as this wicked one deserves.'
The sinner, holding to this manner of [penitence], will find mercy
with God in
proportion to [the extent that] he craves justice. Assuredly, [the]
laughter of a sinner
is an abominable sacrilege since this world is rightly called by our
father David a vale
of tears.
There was a king who adopted one of his slaves as [his] son [and] he
made him lord of
all that he possessed. Now it happened that by the deceit of a wicked
man the wretched one
fell under the displeasure of the king, so that he suffered great
miseries, not only in
his substance, but in being despised, and being deprived of all that he
won each day by
working. Do you think that such a man would laugh for any time?" "No,"
answered the disciples, "for if the king should have known it he would
have had him
slain, seeing him laugh at the king's displeasure. But it is probable
that he would weep
day and night."
Then Jesus wept saying: "Woe to the world, for it is sure of eternal
torment. O
wretched mankind, that God has chosen you as a son, granting you
paradise, at which you, O
wretched one, by the operation of Satan, did fall under the displeasure
of God, and was
cast out of paradise and condemned to the unclean world, where you
receive all things with
toil and every good work is taken from you by continual sinning. And the
world simply
laughs, and, what is worse, he that is the greatest sinner laughs more
than the rest! It
will be, therefore, as you have said: that God will give the sentence of
eternal death
upon the sinner who laughs at his sins and does not weep."
Chapter 103
The weeping of the sinner ought to be like that of a father who weeps
over his son [who
is] near to death. O madness of man, that weeps over the body from which
the soul is
departed, and [yet] does not weep over the soul from which the mercy of
God has departed
because of sin! Tell me, if the mariner, when his ship has been wrecked
by a storm, could
recover all that he had lost by weeping, what would he do? It is certain
that he would
weep bitterly. But I say to you truly, that in every thing [for which] a
man weeps, he
sins, except when he weeps for his sin. For every misery that comes to
man comes to him
from God for his salvation, so that he should rejoice [when it befalls
him]. But sin comes
from the devil for the damnation of man, and [yet] man is not sad about
that. Surely here
you can perceive that man seeks loss and not profit."
Bartholomew said: "Lord, what shall he do who cannot weep because his
heart is a
stranger to weeping? " Jesus answered: "Not all those who shed tears
weep, O
Bartholomew. As God lives, there are found men from whose eyes no tear
has ever fallen,
and they have wept more than a thousand of those who [do] shed tears.
The weeping of a
sinner is a consumption of earthly affection by vehemence of sorrow.
Just as the sunshine preserves from putrefaction what is placed
uppermost, even so this
consumption preserves the soul from sin. If God should grant as many
tears to the true
penitent as the sea has waters he would desire far more: and so that
desire consumes that
little drop that he would shed, as a blazing furnace consumes a drop of
water. But they
who readily burst into weeping are like the horse that goes faster the
more lightly he is
laden.
Chapter 104
'Truly there are men who have both the inward affection and the
outward tears. But he
who is thus, will be a Jeremiah. In weeping, God measures more the
sorrow than the tears.'
Then said John: "O master, how does man lose in weeping over things
other than
sin?" Jesus answered: 'If Herod; should give you a mantle to keep for
him, and
afterwards should take it away from you, would you have reason to weep?'
"No," said John. Then Jesus said: 'Now has man less reason to weep
when he
loses aught, or has not that which he would; for all comes from the hand
of God.
Accordingly, shall not God have power to dispose at his pleasure of his
own things, O
foolish man? For you have of your own, sin alone; and for that ought you
to weep, and not
for aught else.'
Matthew said: "O master, you have confessed before all Judea that God
has no
similitude like man, and now you have said that man receives from the
hand of God;
accordingly, since God has hands he has a similitude with man." Jesus
answered: 'You
are in error, O Matthew, and many have so erred, not knowing the sense
of the words. For
man ought to consider not the outward [form] of the words, but the
sense; seeing that
human speech is as it were an interpreter between us and God. Now knew
you not, that when
God willed to speak to our fathers on mount Sinai, our fathers cried
out: "Speak you
to us, O Moses, and let not God speak to us, lest we die"? And what said
God by
Isaiah the prophet, but that, so far as the heaven is distant from the
earth, even so are
the ways of God distant from the ways of men, and the thoughts of God
from the thoughts of
men?
Chapter 105
'God is so immeasurable that I tremble to describe him. But it is
necessary that I make
to you a proposition. I tell you, then, that the heavens are nine and
that they are
distant from one another even as the first heaven is distant from the
earth, which is
distant from the earth five hundred years' journey. Wherefore the earth
is distant from
the highest heaven four thousand and five hundred years' journey. I tell
you, accordingly,
that [the earth] is in proportion to the first heaven as the point of a
needle and the
first heaven in like manner is in proportion to the second as a point,
and similarly all
the heavens are inferior each one to the next. But all the size of the
earth with that of
all the heavens is in proportion to paradise as a point, no, as a grain
of sand. Is this
greatness immeasurable?'
The disciples answered: 'Yes, surely.'
Then Jesus said: 'As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, the
universe before
God is small as a grain of sand, and God is as many times greater [than
it] as it would
take grains of sand to fill all the heavens and paradise, and more. Now
consider you if
God has any proportion with man, who is a little piece of clay that
stands upon the earth.
Beware, then, that you take the sense and not the bare words, if you
wish to have eternal
life.' The disciples answered: 'God alone can know himself, and truly it
is as said Isaiah
the prophet: "He is hidden from human senses."
Jesus answered: 'So is it true; wherefore, when we are in paradise we
shall know God,
as here one knows the sea from a drop of salt water. Returning to my
discourse, I tell you
that for sin alone one ought to weep, because by sinning man forsakes
his Creator. But how
shall he weep who attends at revellings and feasts? He will weep even as
ice will give
fire! You needs must turn revellings into fasts if you will have
lordship over your
senses, because even so has our God lordship. Thaddaeus said: 'So then,
God has sense over
which to have lordship.'
Jesus answered: 'Go you back to saying, "God has this," "God is
such"? Tell me, has man sense?' 'Yes,' answered the disciples. Jesus
said: 'Can a man
be found who has life in him, yet in him sense works not?' 'No,' said
the disciples. 'You
deceive yourselves,' said Jesus, 'for he that is blind, deaf, dumb, and
mutilated-where is
his sense? And when a man is in a swoon?' Then were the disciples
perplexed; when Jesus
said: 'Three things there are that make up man: that is, the soul and
the sense and the
flesh, each one of itself separate. Our God created the soul and the
body as you have
heard, but you have not yet heard how he created the sense. Therefore
to-morrow, if God
please, I will tell you all.' And having said this Jesus gave thanks to
God, and prayed
for the salvation of our people, every one of us saying: 'Amen.'
Chapter 106
When he had finished the prayer of dawn, Jesus sat down under a palm
tree, and thither
his disciples drew near to him. Then Jesus said: 'As God lives, in whose
presence stands
my soul, many are deceived concerning our life. For so closely are the
soul and the sense
joined together, that the more part of men affirm the soul and the sense
to be one and the
same thing, dividing it by operation and not by essence, calling it the
sensitive,
vegetative, and intellectual soul. But truly I say to you, the soul is
one, which thinks
and lives. O foolish ones, where will they find the intellectual soul
without life?
Assuredly, never. But life without senses will readily be found, as is
seen in the
unconscious when the sense leaves him.' Thaddaeus answered: "O master,
when the sense
leaves the life, a man does not have life."
Jesus answered: "This is not true, because man is deprived of life
when the soul
departs; because the soul returns not any more to the body, save by
miracle. But sense
departs by reason of fear that it receives, or by reason of great sorrow
that the soul
has. For the sense has God created for pleasure, and by that alone it
lives, even as the
body lives by food and the soul lives by knowledge and love. This sense
is now rebellious
against the soul, through indignation that it has at being deprived of
the pleasure of
paradise through sin. Wherefore there is the greatest need to nourish it
with spiritual
pleasure for him who wills not that it should live of carnal pleasure.
Understand you?
Truly I say to you, that God having created it condemned it to hell and
to intolerable
snow and ice; because it said that it was God; but when he deprived it
of nourishment,
taking away its food from it, it confessed that it was a slave of God
and the work of his
hands. And now tell me, how does sense work in the ungodly? Assuredly,
it is as God in
them: seeing that they follow sense, forsaking reason and the Law of
God. Whereupon they
become abominable, and work not any good."
Chapter 107
'And so the first thing that follows sorrow for sin is fasting. For
he that sees that a
certain food makes him sick, for that he fears death, after sorrowing
that he has eaten
it, forsaken it, so as not to make himself sick. So ought the sinner to
do. Perceiving
that pleasure has made him to sin against God his creator by following
sense in these good
things of the world, let him sorrow at having done so, because it
deprives him of God, his
life, and gives him the eternal death of hell. But because man while
living has need to
take these good things of the world, fasting is needful here. So let him
proceed to
mortify sense and to know God for his lord. And when he sees the sense
abhor fastings, let
him put before it the condition of hell, where no pleasure at all but
infinite sorrow is
received; let him put before it the delights of paradise, that are so
great that a grain
of one of the delights of paradise is greater than all those of the
world. For so will it
easily be quieted; for that it is better to be content with little in
order to receive
much, than to be unbridled in little and be deprived of all and abide in
torment.
'You ought to remember the rich feaster in order to fast well. For
he, wishing here on
earth to fare deliciously every day, was deprived eternally of a single
drop of water:
while Lazarus, being content with crumbs here on earth, shall live
eternally in full
abundance of the delights of paradise. But let the penitent be cautious;
for that Satan
seeks to annul every good work, and more in the penitent than in others,
for that the
penitent has rebelled against him, and from being his faithful slave has
turned into a
rebellious foe. Whereupon Satan will seek to cause that he shall not
fast in any wise,
under pretext of sickness, and when this shall not avail he will invite
him to an extreme
fast, in order that he may fall sick and afterwards live deliciously.
And if he succeed
not in this, he will seek to make him set his fast simply upon bodily
food, in order that
he may be like to himself, who never eats but always sins.
As God lives, it is abominable to deprive the body of food and fill
the soul with
pride, despising them that fast not, and holding oneself better than
they. Tell me, will
the sick man boast of the diet that is imposed on him by the physician,
and call them mad
who are not put on diet? Assuredly not. But he will sorrow for the
sickness by reason of
which he needs must be put upon diet. Even so I say to you, that the
penitent ought not to
boast in his fast, and despise them that fast not; but he ought to
sorrow for the sin by
reason whereof he fasts. Nor should the penitent that fasts procure
delicate food, but he
should content himself with coarse food. Now will a man give delicate
food to the dog that
bites and to the horse that kicks? No, surely, but rather the contrary.
And let this
suffice you concerning fasting.'
Chapter 108
Hearken, then, to what I shall say to you concerning watching. For
just as there are
two kinds of sleeping, viz. that of the body and that of the soul, even
so must you be
careful in watching that while the body watches the soul sleep not. For
this would be a
most grievous error. Tell me, in parable: there is a man who whilst
walking strikes
himself against a rock, and in order to avoid striking it the more with
his foot, he
strikes with his head what is the state of such a man?' "Miserable,"
answered
the disciples, "for such a man is frenzied."
Then Jesus said: "Well have you answered, for truly I say to you that
he who
watches with the body and sleeps with the soul is frenzied. As the
spiritual infirmity is
more grievous than the corporeal, even so is it more difficult to cure.
Wherefore, shall
such a wretched one boast of not sleeping with the body, which is the
foot of the life,
while he perceives not his misery that he sleeps with the soul, which is
the head of the
life? The sleep of the soul is forgetfulness of God and of his fearful
judgment. The soul,
then, that watches is that which in everything and in every place
perceives God, and in
everything and through everything and above everything gives thanks to
his majesty,
knowing that always at every moment it receives grace and mercy from
God.
Wherefore in fear of his majesty there always resounds in its ear
that angelic
utterance "Creatures, come to judgment, for your Creator wills to judge
you."
For it abides habitually ever in the service of God. * Tell me, whether
do you desire the
more: to see by the light of a star or by the light of the sun?" Andrew
answered:
"By the light of the sun; for by the light of the star we cannot see the
neighbouring
mountains, and by the light of the sun we see the tiniest grain of sand.
Wherefore we walk
with fear by the light of the star, but by the light of the sun we go
securely."
Chapter 109
Jesus answered: "Even so I tell you that you ought to watch with the
soul by the
sun of justice [which is] our God, and not to boast yourselves of the
watchings of the
body. It is most true, therefore, that bodily sleep is to be avoided as
much as is
possible, but [to avoid it] altogether is impossible, the sense and the
flesh being
weighed down with food and the mind with business. Wherefore let him
that will sleep
little avoid too much business and much food. As God lives, in whose
presence stands my
soul, it is lawful to sleep somewhat every night, but it is never lawful
to forget God and
his fearful judgment: and the sleep of the soul is such oblivion."
Then answered he who writes: "O master, how can we always have God in
memory?
Assuredly, it seems to us impossible. Jesus said, with a sigh: "This is
the greatest
misery that man can suffer, O Barnabas. For man cannot here upon earth
have God his
creator always in memory; saving them that are holy, for they always
have God in memory,
because they have in them the light of the grace of God, so that they
cannot forget God.
But tell me, have you seen them that work quarried stones, how by their
constant practice
they have so learned to strike that they speak with others and all the
time are striking
the iron tool that works the stone without looking at the iron, and yet
they do not strike
their hands? Now do you likewise.
Desire to be holy if you wish to overcome entirely this misery of
forgetfulness. Sure
it is that water cleaves the hardest rocks with a single drop striking
there for a long
period. Do you know why you have not overcome this misery? Because you
have not perceived
that it is sin. I tell you then that it is an error, when a prince gives
you a present, O
man, that you shouldst shut your eyes and turn your back upon him. Even
so do they err who
forget God, for at all times man receives from God gifts and mercy."
Chapter 110
Now tell me, does our God at all times grant you [his bounty]? Yes,
assuredly; for
unceasingly he ministers to you the breath whereby you live. Truly,
truly, I say to you,
every time that your body receives breath your heart ought to say: "God
be
thanked!"' Then said John: "it is most true what you say, O master;
teach us
therefore the way to attain to this blessed condition."
Jesus answered: "Truly I say to you, one cannot attain to such
condition by human
powers, but rather by the mercy of God our Lord. It is true indeed that
man ought to
desire the good in order that God may give it him. Tell me, when you are
at table do you
take those meats which you would not so much as look at? No, assuredly.
Even so I say to
you that you shall not receive that which you will not desire. God is
able, if you desire
holiness, to make you holy in less time than the twinkling of an eye,
but in order that
man may be sensible of the gift and the giver our God wills that we
should wait and ask.
Have you seen them that practice shooting at a mark? Assuredly they
shoot many times in
vain. Howbeit, they never wish to shoot in vain, but are always in hope
to hit the mark.
Now do you this, you who ever desire to have our God in remembrance, and
when you forget,
mourn; for God shall give you grace to attain to all that I have said.
Fasting and
spiritual watching are so united one with the other that, if one break
the watch,
straightway the fast is broken. For in sinning a man breaks the fast of
the soul, and
forgets God. So is it that watching and fasting as regards the soul are
always necessary
for us and for all men. For to none is it lawful to sin.
But the fasting of the body and its watchings, believe me, they are
not possible at all
times, nor for all persons. For there are sick and aged folk, women with
child, men that
are put upon diet, children, and others that are of weak complexion. For
indeed everyone,
even as he clothes himself according to his proper measure, so should
choose his [manner
of] fasting. For just as the garments of a child are not suitable for a
man of thirty
years, even so the watchings and fastings of one are not suitable for
another."
Chapter 111
'But beware that Satan will use all his strength [to bring it to
pass] that you [shall]
watch during the night, and afterward be sleeping when by commandment of
God you ought to
be praying and listening to the word of God. Tell me, would it please
you if a friend of
yours should eat the meat and give you the bones?" Peter answered: "No,
master,
for such an one ought not to be called friend, but a mocker."
Jesus answered with a sigh: "You have well said the truth, O Peter,
for truly
every one that watches with the body more than is necessary, sleeping,
or having his head
weighed down with slumber when he should be praying or listening to the
words of God, such
a wretch mocks God his creator, and so is guilty of such a sin.
Moreover, he is a robber,
seeing that he steals the time that he ought to give to God, and spends
it when, and as
much as, pleases him.
In a vessel of the best wine a man gave his enemies to drink so long
as the wine was at
its best, but when the wine came down to the dregs he gave to his lord
to drink. What,
think you, will the master do to his servant when he shall know all, and
the servant be
before him? Assuredly, he will beat him and slay him in righteous
indignation according to
the laws of the world. And now what shall God do to the man that spends
the best of his
time in business, and the worst in prayer and study of the Law? Woe to
the world, because
with this and with greater sin is its heart weighed down! Accordingly,
when I said to you
that laughter should be turned into weeping, feasts into fasting, and
sleep into watching,
I compassed in three words all that you have heard that here on earth
one ought always to
weep, and that weeping should be from the heart, because God our creator
is offended; that
you ought to fast in order to have lordship over the sense, and to watch
in order not to
sin; and that bodily weeping and bodily fasting and watching should be
taken according to
the constitution of each one."
Chapter 112
Having said this, Jesus said: "You needs must seek of the fruits of
the field the
wherewithal to sustain our life, for it is now eight days that we have
eaten no bread.
Wherefore I will pray to our God, and will await you with Barnabas."
So all the disciples and apostles departed by fours and by sixes and
went their way
according to the word of Jesus. There remained with Jesus he who writes;
whereupon Jesus,
weeping, said: "O Barnabas, it is necessary that I should reveal to you
great
secrets, which, after that I shall be departed from the world, you shall
reveal to
it." Then answered he that writes, weeping, and said: "Suffer me to
weep, O
master, and other men also, for that we are sinners. And you, that are
an holy one and
prophet of God, it is not fitting for you to weep so much."
Jesus answered: "Believe me, Barnabas that I cannot weep as much as I
ought. For
if men had not called me God, I should have seen God here as he will be
seen in paradise,
and should have been safe not to fear the day of judgment. But God knows
that I am
innocent, because never have I harboured thought to be held more than a
poor slave. No, I
tell you that if I had not been called God I should have been carried
into paradise when I
shall depart from the world, whereas now I shall not go thither until
the judgment. Now
you see if I have cause to weep.
Know, O Barnabas, that for this I must have great persecution, and
shall be sold by one
of my disciples for thirty pieces of money. Whereupon I am sure that he
who shall sell me
shall be slain in my name, for that God shall take me up from the earth,
and shall change
the appearance of the traitor so that every one shall believe him to be
me; nevertheless,
when he dies an evil death, I shall abide in that dishonour for a long
time in the world.
But when Muhammad shall come, the sacred Messenger of God, that infamy
shall be taken
away. And this shall God do because I have confessed the truth of the
Messiah who shall
give me this reward, that I shall be known to be alive and to be a
stranger to that death
of infamy."
Then answered he that writes: "O master, tell me who is that wretch,
for I fain
would choke him to death." "Hold your peace," answered Jesus, "for so
God wills, and he cannot do otherwise but see you that when my mother is
afflicted at such
an event you tell her the truth, in order that she may be comforted."
Then answered
he who writes: "All this will I do, O master, if God please."
Chapter 113
When the disciples were come they brought pine-cones, and by the will
of God they found
a good quantity of dates. So after the midday prayer they ate with
Jesus. Whereupon the
apostles and disciples, seeing him that writes of sad countenance,
feared that Jesus needs
must quickly depart from the world. Whereupon Jesus consoled them,
saying: "Fear not,
for my hour is not yet come that I should depart from you. I shall abide
with you still
for a little while. Therefore must I teach you now, in order that you
may go, as I have
said, through all Israel to preach penitence; in order that God may have
mercy upon the
sin of Israel. Let every one therefore beware of sloth, and much more he
that does
penance; because every tree that bears not good fruit shall be cut down
and cast into the
fire.
There was a citizen who had a vineyard, and in the midst thereof had a
garden, which
had a fine fig-tree; whereon for three years when the owner came he
found no fruit, and
seeing every other tree bare fruit there he said to his vinedresser:
"Cut down this
bad tree, for it cumbers the ground." The vinedresser answered: "Not so,
my
lord, for it is a beautiful tree." "Hold your peace," said the owner,
"for I care not for useless beauties. You should know that the palm and
the balsam
are nobler than the fig. But I had planted in the courtyard of my house a
plant of palm
and one of balsam, which I had surrounded with costly walls, but when
these bare no fruit,
but leaves which heaped themselves up and putrefied the ground in front
of the house, I
caused them both to be removed. And how shall I pardon a fig-tree far
from the house,
which cumbers my garden and my vineyard where every other tree bears
fruit? Assuredly I
will not suffer it any longer."
Then said the vinedresser: "Lord, the soil is too rich. Wait,
therefore, one year
more, for I will prune the fig-plant's branches, and take away from it
the richness of the
soil, putting in poor soil with stones, and so shall it bear fruit." The
owner
answered: "Now go and do so; for I will wait, and the fig-plant shall
bear
fruit." Understand you this parable?" The disciples answered: "No, Lord,
therefore explain it to us."
Chapter 114
Jesus answered: "Truly I say to you, the owner is God, and the
vinedresser is his
Law. God, then, had in paradise the palm and the balsam; for Satan is
the palm and the
first man the balsam. Then did he cast out because they bare not fruit
of good works, but
uttered ungodly words that were the condemnation of many angels and many
men. Now that God
has man in the world, in the midst of his creatures that serve God, all
of them, according
to his precept: and man, I say, bearing no fruit, God would cut him down
and commit him to
hell, seeing he pardoned not the angel and the first man, punishing the
angel eternally,
and the man for a time.
Whereupon the Law of God says that man has too much good in this
life, and so it is
necessary that he should suffer tribulation and be deprived of earthly
goods, in order
that he may do good works. Therefore our God waits for man to be
penitent. Truly I say to
you, that our God has condemned man to work, so that, as said Job, the
friend and prophet
of God: "As the bird is born to fly and the fish to swim, even so is man
born to
work." So also David our father, a prophet of God, says: Eating the
labours of our
hands we shall be blessed, and it shall be well with us. Wherefore let
every one work,
according to his quality. Now tell me, if David our father and Solomon
his son worked with
their hands, what ought the sinner to do?"
Said John: "Master, to work is a fitting thing, but this ought the
poor to
do." Jesus answered: "Yes, for they cannot do otherwise. But know you
not that
good, to be good, must be free from necessity? Thus the sun and the
other planets are
strengthened by the precepts of God so that they cannot do otherwise,
wherefore they shall
have no merit. Tell me, when God gave the precept to work, he said not:
"A poor man
shall live of the sweat of his face"? And Job did not say that: "As a
bird is
born to fly, so a poor man is born to work"? But God said to man: "In
the sweat
of your countenance shall you eat bread," and Job that "Man is born to
work." Therefore [only] he who is not man is free from this precept.
Assuredly for no
other reason are all things costly, but that there are a great multitude
of idle folk: if
these were to labour, some attending the ground and some at fishing the
water, there would
be the greatest plenty in the world. And of the lack thereof it will be
necessary to
render an account in the dreadful day of judgment.
Chapter 115
Let man say somewhat to me. What has he brought into the world, by
reason of which he
would live in idleness? Certain it is that he was born naked, and
incapable of anything.
Hence, of all that he has found, he is not the owner, but the dispenser.
And he will have
to render an account thereof in that dreadful day.
The abominable lust, that makes man like the brute beasts, ought
greatly to be feared;
for the enemy is of one's own household, so that it is not possible to
go into any place
where your enemy may not come. Ah, how many have perished through lust!
Through lust came
the deluge, insomuch that the world perished before the mercy of God and
so that there
were saved only Noah and eighty-three human persons. For lust God
overwhelmed three wicked
cities whence escaped only Lot and his two children. For lust the tribe
of Benjamin was
all but extinguished. And I tell you truly that if I should narrate to
you how many have
perished through lust, the space of five days would not suffice." James
answered:
"O Master, what signifies lust?"
Jesus answered: "Lust is an unbridled desire of love, which, not
being directed by
reason, bursts the bounds of man's intellect and affections; so that the
man, not knowing
himself, loves that which he ought to hate. Believe me, when a man loves
a thing, not
because God has given him such thing, but as its owner, he is a
fornicator; for that the
soul, which ought to abide in union with God its creator, he has united
with the creature.
And so God laments by Isaiah the prophet, saying: You have committed
fornication with many
lovers; nevertheless, return to me and I will receive you.
As God lives in whose presence my soul stands, if there were not
internal lust within
the heart of man, he would not fall into the external; for if the root
be removed the tree
dies speedily. Let a man content himself therefore with the wife whom
his creator has
given him, and let him forget every other woman." Andrew answered: "How
shall a
man forget the women if he live in the city where there are so many of
them?" Jesus
replied: "O Andrew, certain it is he who lives in the city, it will do
him harm;
seeing that the city is a sponge that draws in every iniquity.
Chapter 116
It behoves a man to live in the city, even as the soldier lives when
he has enemies
around the fortress, defending himself against every assault and always
fearing treachery
on the part of the citizens. Even so, I say, let him repel every outward
enticement of
sin, and fear the sense, because it has a supreme desire for things
impure. But how shall
he defend himself if he bridle not the eye, which is the origin of every
carnal sin? As
God lives in whose presence my soul stands, he who has not bodily eyes
is secure not to
receive punishment save only to the third degree, while he that has eyes
receives it to
the seventh degree.
In the time of the prophet Elijah it came to pass that Elijah seeing a
blind man
weeping, a man of good life, asked him saying: "Why weep you, O
brother?" The
blind man answered: "I weep because I cannot see Elijah the prophet, the
holy one of
God.". Then Elijah rebuked him, saying: "Cease from weeping, O man, for
in
weeping you sin." The blind man answered: "Now tell me, is it a sin to
see a
holy prophet of God, that raises the dead and makes the fire to come
down from
heaven?" Elijah answered: "You speak not the truth, for Elijah is not
able to do
anything of all that you say, because he is a man as you are. For all
the men in the world
cannot make one fly to be born." Said the blind man: "You say this, O
man,
because Elijah must have rebuked you for some sin of your, wherefore you
hate him."
Elijah answered: "May it please God that you be speaking the truth;
because, O
brother, if I should hate Elijah I should love God, and the more I
should hate Elijah the
more I should love God." Hereupon was the blind man greatly angered, and
said:
"As God lives, you are an impious fellow! Can God then be loved while
one hates the
prophets of God? Begone forthwith, for I will not listen to you any
longer!" Elijah
answered: "Brother, now may you see with your intellect how evil is
bodily seeing.
For you desire sight to see Elijah, and hate Elijah with your soul." The
blind man
answered: "Now begone' for you are the devil, that would make me sin
against the holy
one of God."
Then Elijah gave a sigh, and said with tears: "You have spoken the
truth, O
brother, for my flesh, which you desire to see, separates you from God."
Said the
blind man: "I do not wish to see you; no, if I had my eyes, I would
close them so as
not to see you?" Then said Elijah: "Know, brother, that I am Elijah!"
The
blind man answered: "You speak not the truth." Then said the disciples
of
Elijah: "Brother, he truly is the prophet of God, Elijah." " Let him
tell
me," said the blind man, "if he be the prophet. Of what seed I am, and
how I
became blind?"
Chapter 117
Elijah answered: "You are of the tribe of Levi; and because you, in
entering the
Temple of God, looks lewdly upon a woman, you being near the sanctuary,
our God took away
your sight." Then the blind man weeping said: "Pardon me, O holy prophet
of God,
for I have sinned in speaking with you; for if I had seen you I should
not have
sinned."
Elijah answered: "May our God pardon you, O brother, because as
regards me I know
that you have told me the truth, seeing that the more I hate myself the
more I love God,
and if you saw me you would still your desire, which is not pleasing to
God. For Elijah is
not your creator, but God; whence, so far as concerns you, I am the
devil," said
Elijah weeping, "because I turn you aside from your creator. Weep then, O
brother,
because you have not that light which would make you see the true from
the false, for if
you had had that you would not have despised my doctrine. Wherefore I
say to you, that
many desire to see me and come from far to see me, who despise my words.
Wherefore it were
better for them, for their salvation, that they had no eyes, seeing that
everyone that
finds pleasure in the creature, be he who he may, and seeks not to find
pleasure in God,
has made an idol in his heart, and forsaken God." Then Jesus said,
sighing:
"Have you understood all that Elijah said?" The disciples answered: "In
truth, we have understood, and we are beside ourselves at the knowledge
that here on earth
there are very few that are not idolaters."
Chapter 118
Then Jesus said: "You speak the truth, for now was Israel desirous to
establish
the idolatry that they have in their hearts, in holding me for God, many
of whom have now
despised my teaching, saying that I could make myself lord of all Judea,
if I confessed
myself to be God, and that I am mad to wish to live in poverty among
desert places, and
not abide continually among princes in delicate living. Oh hapless man,
that prizes the
light that is common to flies and ants and despises the light that is
common only to
angels and prophets and holy friends of God!
If, then, the eye shall not be guarded, O Andrew, I tell you that it
is impossible not
to fall headlong into lust. Wherefore Jeremiah the prophet, weeping
vehemently, said
truly: "My eye is a thief that robs my soul." For therefore did David
our father
pray with greatest longing to God our Lord that he would turn away his
eyes in order that
he might not behold vanity. For truly everything which has an end is
vain. Tell me, then,
if one had two pence to buy bread, would he spend it to buy smoke?
Assuredly not, seeing
that smoke does hurt to the eyes and gives no sustenance to the body.
Even so then let man
do, for with the outward sight of his eyes and the inward sight of his
mind he should seek
to know God his creator and the good pleasure of his will, and should
not make the
creature his end, which causes him to lose the creator.
Chapter 119
For truly every time that a man beholds a thing and forgets God who
has made it for
man, he has sinned. For if a friend of yours should give you somewhat to
keep in memory of
him, and you should sell it and forget your friend, you have offended
against your friend.
Even so does man; for when he beholds the creature and has not in memory
the creator, who
for love of man has created it, he sins against God his creator by
ingratitude.
He therefore who shall behold women and shall forget God who for the
good of man
created woman, he will love her and desire her. And to such degree will
this lust of his
break forth, that he will love everything like to the thing loved: so
that hence comes
that sin of which it is a shame to have memory. If, then, man shall put a
bridle upon his
eyes, he shall be lord of the sense, which cannot desire that which is
not presented to
it. For so shall the flesh be subject to the spirit. Because as the ship
cannot move
without wind, so the flesh without the sense cannot sin.
That thereafter it would be necessary for the penitent to turn
story-telling into
prayer, reason itself shows, even if it were not also a precept of God.
For in every idle
word man sins, and our God blots out sin by reason of prayer. For that
prayer is the
advocate of the soul; prayer is the medicine of the soul; prayer is the
defence of the
heart; prayer is the weapon of faith, prayer, is the bridle of sense;
prayer is the salt
of the flesh that suffers it not to be corrupted by sin. I tell you that
prayer is the
hands of our life, whereby the man that prays shall defend himself in
the day of judgment:
for he shall keep his soul from sin here on earth, and shall preserve
his heart that it be
not touched by evil desires; offending Satan because he shall keep his
sense within the
Law of God, and his flesh shall walk in righteousness;, receiving from
God all that he
shall ask.
As God lives, in whose presence we are, a man without prayer can no
more be a man of
good works than a dumb man can plead his cause to a blind one; than
fistula can be healed
without unguent; a man defend himself without movement; or attack
another without weapons,
sail without rudder, or preserve dead flesh without salt;. For truly he
who has no hand
cannot receive. If man could change dung into gold and clay into sugar;,
what would he do?
Then, Jesus being silent, the disciples answered: "No one would
exercise himself
in any way other than in making gold and sugar." Then Jesus said: "Now
why does
not man change foolish story-telling into prayer? Is time, perhaps,
given him by God that
he may offend God? For what prince would give a city to his subject in
order that the
latter might make war upon him? As God lives, if man knew after what
manner the soul is
transformed by vain talking he would sooner bite off his tongue with his
teeth than talk.
O wretched world! for today men do not assemble together for prayer, but
in the porches of
the Temple and in the very Temple ;itself Satan ;has there the sacrifice
of vain talk, and
that which is worse of things which I cannot talk of without shame.
Chapter 120
The fruit of vain talking is this, that it weakens the intellect in
such wise that it
is not ready to receive the truth; even as a horse accustomed to carry
but one ounce of
cottonflock cannot carry an hundred pounds of stone. But what is worse
is the man who
spends his time in jests. When he is fain to pray, Satan will put into
his memory those
same jests, insomuch that when he ought to weep over his sins to provoke
God to mercy and
to win forgiveness for his sins, by laughing he provokes God to anger;
who will chastise
him, and cast him out.
Woe, therefore, to them that jest and talk vainly! But if our God has
in abomination
them that jest and talk vainly, how will he hold them that murmur and
slander their
neighbour, and in what plight will they be who deal with sinning as with
a business
supremely necessary? Oh impure world, I cannot conceive how grievously
you will be
punished by God! He, then, who would do penance, he, I say, must give
out his words at the
price of gold.
His disciples answered: "Now who will buy a man's words at the price
of gold?
Assuredly no one. And how shall he do penance? It is certain that he
will become
covetous!" Jesus answered: "You have your heart so heavy that I am not
able to
lift it up. Hence in every word it is necessary that I should tell you
the meaning. But
give thanks to God, who has given you grace to know the mysteries of
God. I do not say
that the penitent should sell his talking, but I say that when he talks
he should think
that he is casting forth gold. For indeed, so doing, even as gold is
spent on necessary
things, so he will talk [only] when it is necessary to talk. And just as
no one spends
gold on a thing which shall cause hurt to his body, so let him not talk
of a thing that
may cause hurt to his soul.
Chapter 121
When the governor has arrested a prisoner whom he examines while the
notary writes down
[the case], tell me, how does such a man talk?" The disciples answered:
"He
talks with fear and to the point, so as not to give suspicion of
himself, and he is
careful not to say anything that may displease the governor, but seeks
to speak somewhat
whereby he may be set free." Then answered Jesus: "This ought the
penitent to
do, then, in order not to lose his soul. For that God has given two
angels to every man
for notaries, the one writing the good, the other the evil that the man
does. If then a
man would receive mercy let him measure his talking more than gold is
measured.
Chapter 122
As for avarice, that must be changed into almsgiving. truly I say to
you, that even as
the plummet has for its end the centre, so the avaricious has hell for
his end, for it is
impossible for the avaricious to possess any good in paradise. Know you
wherefore? for I
will tell you. As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, the
avaricious, even though
he be silent with his tongue, by his works says: "There is no other God
than I."
Inasmuch as all that he has he is fain to spend at his own pleasure, not
regarding his
beginning or his end, that he is born naked, and dying leaves all.
Now tell me; if Herod; should give you a garden to keep, and you were
fain to bear
yourselves as owners, not sending any fruit to Herod, and when Herod
sent for fruit you
drove away his messengers, tell me, would you be making yourselves kings
over that garden?
Assuredly you. Now I tell you that even so the avaricious man makes
himself god over his
riches which God has given him.
Avarice is a thirst of the sense, which having lost God through sin
because it lives by
pleasure, and being unable to delight itself in God, who is hidden from
it, surrounds
itself with temporal things which it holds as its good; and it grows the
stronger the more
it sees itself deprived of God. And so the conversion of the sinner is
from God, who gives
the grace to repent. As said our father David: This change comes from
the right hand of
God." It is necessary that I should tell you of what sort man is, if you
would know
how penitence ought to be done. And so today let us render thanks to
God, who has given us
the grace to communicate his will by my word."
Whereupon he lifted up his hands and prayed, saying: "Lord God
almighty and
merciful, who in mercy has created us, giving us the rank of men, your
servants, with the
faith of your true Messenger, we thank you for all your benefits and
would fain adore you
only all the days of our life, bewailing our sins praying and giving
alms, fasting and
studying your word, instructing those that are ignorant of your will,
suffering from the
world for love of you, and giving up our life to the death to serve you.
Do you, O Lord,
save us from Satan, from the flesh and from the world, even as you save
your elect for
love of your own self and for love of your Messenger for whom you did
create us, and for
love of all your holy ones and prophets." The disciples ever answered:
"So be
it, so be it, Lord, so be it, O our merciful God."
Chapter 123
When it was day, Friday morning, early, Jesus, after the prayer,
assembled his
disciples and said to them: "Let us sit down; for even as on this day
God created man
of the clay of the earth;; even so will I tell you what a thing is man,
if God
please." When all were seated, Jesus said again: "Our God, to show to
his
creatures his goodness and mercy and his omnipotence, with his
liberality and justice,
made a composition of four things contrary the one to the other, and
united them in one
final object, which is man and this is earth, air, water, and fire in
order that each one
might temper its opposite.
And he made of these four things a vessel, which is man's body, of
flesh, bones, blood,
marrow, and skin, with nerves and veins, and with all his inward parts;
wherein God placed
the soul and the sense, as two hands of this life: giving for lodgement
to the sense every
part of the body, for it diffused itself there like oil. And to the soul
gave he for
lodgement the heart, where, united with the sense, it should rule the
whole life.
God, having thus created man, put into him a light which is called
reason;, which was
to unite the flesh, the sense, and the soul in a single end to work for
the service of
God. Whereupon, he placing this work in paradise, and the reason being
seduced of the
sense by the operation of Satan, the flesh lost its rest, the sense lost
the delight
whereby it lives, and the soul lost its beauty. Man having come to such a
plight, the
sense, which finds not repose in labour, but seeks delight, not being
curbed by reason,
follows the light which the eyes show it; whence, the eyes not being
able to see aught but
vanity, it deceives itself, and so, choosing earthly things, sins.
Thus it is necessary that by the mercy of God man's reason be
enlightened afresh, to
know good from evil and [to distinguish] the true delight: knowing
which, the sinner is
converted to penitence. Wherefore I say to you truly, that if God our
Lord enlighten not
the heart of man, the reasonings of men are of no avail." John answered:
"Then
to what end serves the speech of men?"
Jesus replied "Man as man avails nothing to convert man to penitence;
but man as a
means which God uses converts man; so that seeing God works by a secret
fashion in man for
man's salvation, one ought to listen to every man, in order that among
all may be received
him in whom God speaks to us." James answered: "O Master, if perhaps
there shall
come a false prophet and lying teacher pretending to instruct us, what
ought we to do?
Chapter 124
Jesus answered in parable: "A man goes to fish with a net, and
therein he catches
many fishes, but those that are bad he throws away.' A man went forth to
sow, but only the
grain that falls on good ground bears seed.' Even so ought you to do,
listening to all and
receiving only the truth, seeing that the truth alone bears fruit to
eternal life."
Then answered Andrew: "Now how shall the truth be known?" Jesus
answered:
"Everything that conforms to the Book of Moses, that receive you for
true; seeing
that God is one, the truth is one; whence it follows that the doctrine
is one and the
meaning of the doctrine is one; and therefore the faith is one. Truly I
say to you that if
the truth had not been erased from the Book of Moses, God would not have
given to David
our father the second. And if the book of David had not been
contaminated, God would not
have committed the Gospel to me; seeing that the Lord our God is
unchangeable, and has
spoken but one message to all men. Wherefore, when the Messenger of God
shall come, he
shall come to cleanse away all wherewith the ungodly have contaminated
my book."
Then answered he who writes: "O Master, what shall a man do when the
Law shall be
found contaminated and the false prophet shall speak?" Jesus answered:
"Great is
your question, O Barnabas; wherefore I tell you that in such a time few
are saved, seeing
that men do not consider their end, which is God. As God lives, in whose
presence my soul
stands, every doctrine that shall turn man aside from his end, which is
God, is most evil
doctrine. Wherefore there are three things that you shall consider in
doctrine namely,
love towards God, pity towards one's neighbour, and hatred towards
yourself, who had
offended God, and offends him every day. Wherefore
every doctrine that is contrary to these three heads do you avoid,
because it is most
evil.
Chapter 125
I will return now to avarice: and I tell you that when the sense
would fain acquire a
thing or tenaciously keep it, reason must say: "Such a thing will have
its end."
It is certain that if it will have an end it is madness to love it.
Wherefore it behoves
one to love and to keep that which will not have an end. Let avarice
then be changed into
alms, distributing rightly what [a man] has acquired wrongly.
And let him see to it that what the right hand shall give the left
hand shall not
know'. Because the hypocrites when they do alms desire to be seen and
praised of the
world. But truly they are vain, seeing that for whom a man works from
him does he receive
his wages. If, then, a man would receive anything of God, it behoves him
to serve God.
And see that when you do alms, you consider that you are giving to
God all that [you
give] for love of God. Wherefore be not slow to give, and give of the
best of that which
you have, for love of God. Tell me, desire you to receive of God
anything that is bad?
Certainly not, O dust and ashes! Then how have you faith in you if you
shall give anything
bad for love of God?
It were better to give nothing than to give a bad thing; for in not
giving you shall
have some excuse according to the world: but in giving a worthless
thing, and keeping the
best for yourselves, what shall be the excuse? And this is all that I
have to say to you
concerning penitence." Barnabas answered: "How long ought penitence to
last?" Jesus replied: "As long as a man is in a state of sin he ought
always to
repent and do penance for it. Wherefore as human life always sins, so
ought it always to
do penance; unless you would make more account of your shoes than of
your soul, since
every time that your shoes are burst you mend them."
Chapter 126
Jesus having called together his disciples, sent them forth by two
and two through the
region of Israel, saying: "Go and preach even as you have heard." Then
they
bowed themselves and he laid his hand upon their heads, saying: "In the
name of God,
give health to the sick, cast out the demons, and undeceive Israel
concerning me, telling
them that which I said before the high priest."
They departed therefore, all of them save him who writes, with James
;and John;; and
they went through all Judea, preaching penitence even as Jesus had told
them, healing
every sort of sickness, insomuch that in Israel were confirmed the words
of Jesus that God
is one and Jesus is prophet of God, when they saw such a multitude do
that which Jesus did
concerning the healing of the sick.
But the sons of the devil found another way to persecute Jesus, and
these were the
priests and the scribes. Whereupon they began to say that Jesus aspired
to the monarchy
over Israel. But they feared the common people, wherefore they plotted
against Jesus
secretly.
Having passed throughout Judea the disciples returned to Jesus, who
received them as a
father receives his sons, saying: "Tell me, how has wrought the Lord our
God? Surely
I have seen Satan fall under your feet and you trample upon him even as
the vinedresser
treads the grapes!" The disciples answered: "O Master, we have healed
numberless
sick persons, and cast out many demons which tormented men."
Jesus said: "God forgive you, O brethren, because you have sinned in
saying
"We have healed,' seeing it is God that has done all." Then said they:
"We
have talked foolishly; wherefore, teach us how to speak." Jesus
answered: "In
every good work say 'God has wrought' and in every bad one say 'I have
sinned."
"So will we do," said the disciples to him.
Then Jesus said: "Now what says Israel, having seen God do by the
hands of so many
men that which God has done by my hands?" The disciples answered: "They
say that
there is one God alone and that you are God's prophet." Jesus answered
with joyful
countenance: "Blessed be the holy name of God, who has not despised the
desire of me
his servant!" And when he had said this they retired to rest.
Chapter 127
Jesus departed from the desert and entered into Jerusalem; whereupon
all the people ran
to the Temple to see him. So after the reading of the psalms Jesus
mounted up on the
pinnacle where the scribe used to mount, and, having beckoned for
silence with his hand,
he said : "Blessed be the holy name of God, O brethren, who has created
us of the
clay of the earth, and not of flaming spirit. For when we sin we find
mercy before God,
which Satan will never find, because through his pride he is
incorrigible, saying that he
is always noble, for that he is flaming spirit.
Have you heard, brethren, that which our father David says of our
God, that he
remembers that we are dust and that our spirit goes and returns not
again, wherefore he
has had mercy upon us? Blessed are they that know these words, for they
will not sin
against their Lord eternally, seeing that after the sin they repent,
wherefore their sin
abides not. Woe to them that extol themselves, for they shall be humbled
to the burning
coals of hell. Tell me, brethren, what is the cause for self-exaltation?
Is there,
perhaps, any good here upon earth? No, assuredly, for as says Solomon,
the prophet of God:
"Everything that is under the sun is vanity." But if the things of the
world do
not give us cause to extol ourselves in our heart, much less does our
life give us cause;
for it is burdened with many miseries, since all the creatures inferior
to man fight
against us. O, how many have been slain by the burning heat of summer;
how many have been
slain by the frost and cold of winter; how many have been slain by
lightning and by hail;
how many have been drowned in the sea by the fury of winds; how many
have died of
pestilence, of famine, or because they have been devoured of wild
beasts, bitten of
serpents, choked by food!
O hapless man, who extols himself having so much to weigh him down,
being laid wait for
by all the creatures in every place! But what shall I say of the flesh
and the sense that
desire only iniquity; of the world, that offers nought but sin; of the
wicked, who,
serving Satan, persecute whosoever would live according to the Law of
God? Certain it is,
brethren, that if man, as says our father David, with his eyes should
consider eternity,
he would not sin.
To extol oneself in one's heart is but to lock up the pity and mercy
of God, that he
pardon not. For our father David says that our God remembers that we are
but dust and that
our spirit goes and returns not again. Whoever extols himself, then,
denies that he is
dust, and hence, not knowing his need, he asks not help, and so angers
God his helper. As
God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, God would pardon Satan if
Satan should know
his own misery, and ask mercy of his Creator, who is blessed for
evermore.
Chapter 128
Accordingly, brethren, I, a man, dust and clay, that walk upon the
earth, say to you:
Do penance and know your sins. I say, brethren, that Satan, by means of
the Roman
soldiery, deceived you when you said that I was God. Wherefore, beware
that you believe
them not, seeing they are fallen under the curse of God, serving the
false and lying gods;
even as our father David invokes a curse upon them, saying: The gods of
the nations are
silver and gold, the work of their
hands; that have eyes and see not, have ears and hear not, have noses
and smell not,
have a mouth and eat not, have a tongue and speak not, have hands and
touch not, have feet
and walk not. Wherefore said David our father, praying our living God,
Like to them be
they that make them and they that trust in them.
O pride unheard of, this pride of man, who being created by God out
of earth forgets
his condition and would fain make God at his own pleasure! Wherein he
silently mocks God,
as though he should say: There is no use in serving God. For so do their
works show. To
this did Satan desire to reduce you, O brethren, in making you believe
me to be God;
because, I not being able to create a fly, and being passable and
mortal, I can give you
nothing of use, seeing that I myself have need of everything. How, then,
could I help you
in all things, as it is proper to God to do? Shall we, then, who have
for our God the
great God who has created the universe with his word, mock at the
Gentiles and their gods?
There were two men who came up here into the Temple to pray: the one
was a Pharisee and
the other a publican. The Pharisee drew near to the sanctuary, and
praying with his face
uplifted said: "I give you thanks, O Lord my God, because I am not as
other men,
sinners, who do every wickedness, and particularly as this publican; for
I fast twice in
the week and give tithes of all I possess.' The publican remained afar
off, bowed down to
the earth, and beating his breast he said with bent head: 'Lord, I am
not worthy to look
upon the heaven nor upon your sanctuary, for I have sinned much; have
mercy upon me!'
Truly I say to you, the publican went down from the Temple in better
case than the
Pharisee, for that our God justified him, forgiving him his sin. But the
Pharisee went
down in worse case than the publican, because our God rejected him,
having his works in
abomination.
Chapter 129
Shall the axe, perhaps, boast itself at having cut down the forest
where a man has made
a garden? No, assuredly, for the man has done all, yes and [made] the
axe, with his hands.
And you, O man, shall you boast yourself of having done anything that is
good, seeing our
God created you of clay and works in you all good that is wrought? And
why do you despise
your neighbour? Do you not know that if God had not preserved you from
Satan you would be
worse than Satan?
Do you not know that one single sin changed the fair angel into the
most repulsive
demon? And that the most perfect man that has come into the world, which
was Adam, it
changed into a wretched being, subjecting him to what we suffer,
together with all his
offspring? What decree, then, have you, in virtue whereof you may live
at your own
pleasure without any fear? Woe to you, O clay, for because you have
exalted yourself above
God who created you you shall be abased beneath the feet of Satan who
lays wait for
you."
And having said this, Jesus prayed, lifting up his hands to the Lord,
and the people
said: "So be it! So be it!" When he had finished his prayer he descended
from
the pinnacle. Whereupon there were brought to him many sick folk whom he
made whole, and
he departed from the Temple. Thereupon Simon, a leper whom Jesus had
cleansed, invited him
to eat bread. The priests and scribes, who hated Jesus, reported to the
Roman soldiers
that which Jesus had said against their gods. For indeed they were
seeking how to kill
him, but found it not, because they feared the people.
Jesus, having entered the house of Simon, sat down to the table. And
while he was
eating, behold a woman named Mary, a public sinner, entered into the
house, and flung
herself upon the ground behind Jesus' feet, and washed them with her
tears, anointed them
with precious ointment, and wiped them with the hairs of her head. Simon
was scandalized,
with all that sat at meat, and they said in their hearts: "If this man
were a prophet
he would know who and of what sort is this woman, and would not suffer
her to touch
him." Then Jesus said: "Simon, I have a thing to say to you." Simon
answered: "Speak, O Master, for I desire your word."
Chapter 130
Jesus said: "There was a man who had two debtors. The one owed to his
creditor
fifty pence, the other five hundred. Whereupon, when neither of them had
wherewithal to
pay, the owner, moved with compassion, forgave the debt to each. Which
of them would love
his creditor most?" Simon answered: "He to whom was forgiven the greater
debt." Jesus said: "You have well said; I say to you, therefore, behold
this
woman and yourself; for you were both debtors to God, the one for
leprosy of the body, the
other for leprosy of the soul, which is sin. God our Lord, moved with
compassion through
my prayers, has willed to heal your body and her soul.
You, therefore, love me little, because you have received little as a
gift. And so,
when I entered your house you did not kiss me nor anoint my head. But
this woman, lo!
straightway on entering your house she placed herself at my feet, which
she has washed
with her tears and anointed with precious ointment. Wherefore truly I
say to you, many
sins are forgiven her, because she has loved much." And turning to the
woman he said:
"Go your way in peace, for the Lord our God has pardoned your sins; but
see you sin
no more. Your faith has saved you."
Chapter 131
His disciples drew near to Jesus after the nightly prayer, and said:
"O Master,
how must we do to escape pride?" Jesus answered: "Have you seen a poor
man
invited to a prince's house to eat bread?" John answered: "I have eaten
bread in
Herod's house. For before I knew you I went to fish, and used to sell
the fish to the
family of Herod. Whereupon, one day when he was feasting, I having
brought thither a fine
fish, he made me stay and eat there." Then Jesus said: "Now how did you
eat
bread with infidels? God pardon you, O John! But tell me, how did you
bear yourself at the
table? Did you seek to have the most honourable place? Did you ask for
the most delicate
food? Did you speak when you were not questioned at the table? Did you
account yourself
more worthy than the others to sit at table?"
John answered: "As God lives, I did not dare to lift up my eyes,
seeing myself, a
poor fisherman, ill-clad, sitting among the king's barons. Whereupon,
when the king gave
me a little piece of flesh, I thought that the world had fallen upon my
head, for the
greatness of the favour that the king did to me. And truly I say that,
if the king had
been of our Law, I should have been fain to serve him all the days of my
life." Jesus
cried out: "Hold your peace, John, for I fear lest God should cast us
into the abyss,
even like Abiram, for our pride!"
The disciples trembled with fear at the words of Jesus; when he said
again: "Let
us fear God, that He cast us not into the abyss for our pride. O
brethren, have you heard
of John what is done in the house of a prince? Woe to the men that come
into the world,
for as they live in pride they shall die in contempt and shall go into
confusion. For this
world is a house where God feasts men, wherein have eaten all the holy
ones and prophets
of God. And truly I say to you, everything that a man receives, he
receives it from God.
Wherefore man ought to bear himself with deepest humility; knowing his
own vileness and
the greatness of God, with the great bounty by which he nourishes us.
Therefore it is not
lawful for man to say: 'Ah, why is this done and this said in the
world?' but rather to
account himself, as in truth he is, unworthy to stand in the world at
God's board. As God
lives, in whose presence my soul stands, there is nothing so small
received here in the
world from [the hand of] God, but that in return man ought to spend his
life for love of
God.
As God lives, you sinned not, O John, in eating with Herod, for it
was of God's
disposition you did so, in order that you might be our teacher and [the
teacher] of every
one that fears God. So do," said Jesus to his disciples, "that you may
live in
the world as John lived in the house of Herod when he ate bread with
him, for so shall you
be in truth free from all pride."
Chapter 132
Jesus walking along the sea of Galilee was surrounded by a great
multitude of folk,
wherefore he went into a little boat which lay a little off from the
shore by itself, and
anchored so near the land that the voice of Jesus might be heard.
Whereupon they all drew
near to the sea, and sitting down awaited his word. He then opened his
mouth and said:
"Behold, the sower went out to sow, whereupon as he sowed some of the
seed fell
upon the road, and this was trodden under foot of men and eaten up of
birds; some fell
upon the stones, whereupon when it sprang up, because it had no
moisture, it was burnt up
by the sun; some fell in the hedges, whereupon when it grew up the
thorns chocked the
seed; and some fell on good ground, whereupon it. bare fruit, even to
thirty, sixty, and
an one hundredfold."
Again Jesus said: "Behold, the father of a family sowed good seed in
his field:
whereupon, as the servants of the good man slept, the enemy of the man
their master came
and sowed tares over the good seed. Whereupon, when the corn sprang up,
there was seen
sprung up among the corn a great quantity of tares. The servants came to
their master and
said: "O Sir, did you not sow good seed in your field? Wherefore then is
there sprung
up therein a great quantity of tares?" The master answered: 'Good seed
did I sow, but
while men slept the enemy of man came and sowed tares over the corn.'
Said the servants: "Will you that we go and pull up the tares from
among the
corn?" The master answered: "Do not so, for you would pull up the corn
therewith; but wait till the time of harvest comes. For then shall you
go and pull up the
tares from among the corn and cast them into the fire to be burned, but
the corn you shall
put into my granary.' "
Again Jesus said: "There went forth many men to sell figs. But when
they arrived
at the market-place, behold, men sought not good figs but fair leaves.
Therefore the men
were not able to sell their figs. And seeing this, an evil citizen said:
'Surely I may
become rich.' Whereupon he called together his two sons and [said]: 'Go
you and gather a
great quantity of leaves with bad figs.' And these they sold for their
weight in gold, for
the men were mightily pleased with leaves. Whereupon the men, eating the
figs, became sick
with a grievous sickness."
Again Jesus said: "Behold a citizen has a fountain, from which all
the
neighbouring citizens take water to wash off their uncleanness; but the
citizen suffers
his own clothes to putrefy."
Again Jesus said: "There went forth two men to sell apples. The one
chose to sell
the peel of the apple for its weight in gold, not caring for the
substance of the apples.
The other desired to give the apples away, receiving only a little bread
for his journey.
But men bought the peel of the apples for its weight in gold, not caring
for him who was
fain to give them, no even despising him."
And thus on that day Jesus spoke to the crowd in parables. Then
having dismissed them,
he went with his disciples to Nain, where he had raised to life the
widow's son; who, with
his mother, received him into his house and ministered to him.
Chapter 133
His disciples drew near to Jesus and asked him, saying: "O Master,
tell us the
meaning of the parables which you spoke to the people." Jesus answered:
"The
hour of prayer draws near; wherefore when the evening prayer is ended I
will tell you the
meaning of the parables." When the prayer was ended, the disciples came
near to Jesus
and he said to them: 'The man who sows seed upon the road, upon the
stones, upon the
thorns, upon the good ground, is he who teaches the word of God, which
falls upon a great
number of men.
It falls upon the road when it comes to the ears of sailors and
merchants, who by
reason of the long journeys which they make, and the variety of nations
with whom they
have dealings, have the word of God removed from their memory by Satan.
It falls upon the
stones when it comes to the ears of courtiers, for by reason of the
great anxiety these
have to serve the body of a prince the word of God to does not sink into
them. Wherefore,
albeit they have some memory thereof, as soon as they have any
tribulation the word of God
goes out of their memory: for, seeing they serve not God, they cannot
hope for help from
God.
It falls among the thorns when it comes to the ears of them that love
their own life,
whereupon, though the word of God grow upon them, when carnal desires
grow up they choke
the good seed of the word of God, for carnal comforts cause [men] to
forsake the word of
God. That which falls on good ground is when the word of God comes to
the ears of him who
fears God, whereupon it brings forth fruit of eternal life. Truly I say
to you, that in
every condition when man fears God the word of God will bear fruit in
him.
'Of that father of a family, I tell you truly that he is God our
Lord; father of all
things, for that he has created all things. But he is not a father after
the manner of
nature, for that he is incapable of motion, without which generation is
impossible. It is,
then, our God, whose is this world; and the field where he sows is
mankind, and the seed
is the word of God. So when the teachers are negligent in preaching the
word of God,
through being occupied in the business of the world, Satan sows error in
the heart of men,
whence are come countless sects of wicked doctrine.
'The holy ones and prophets cry: "O Sir, gave you not, then, good
doctrine to men?
Wherefore, then, be there so many errors?" God answers: 'I have given
good doctrine
to men, but while men have been given up to vanity Satan has sowed
errors to bring to
nothing my Law.' The holy ones say: 'O Sir, we will disperse these
errors by destroying
men."
God answers: 'Do not so, for the faithful are so closely joined to
the infidels by
kinship that the faithful will be lost with the infidel. But wait until
the Judgment, for
at that time shall the infidels be gathered by my angels and shall be
cast out with Satan
into hell, while the good faithful ones shall come to my kingdom.'
Surely, many infidel
fathers shall beget faithful sons, for whose sake God waits for the
world to repent.
Chapter 134
They that bear good figs are the true teachers who preach good
doctrine, but the world,
which takes pleasure in lies, seeks from the teachers leaves of fine
words and flattery.
The which seeing, Satan joins himself with the flesh and the sense, and
brings a large
supply of leaves; that is, a quantity of earthly things, in which he
covers up sin; the
which receiving, man becomes sick and ready for eternal death. The
citizen who has the
water and gives his water to others to wash off their uncleanness, but
suffers his own
garments to become putrefied, is the teacher who to others preaches
penitence and himself
abides still in sin. O wretched man, because not the angels but his own
tongue writes upon
the air the punishment that is fitting for him!
If one had the tongue of an elephant, and the rest of his body were
as small as an ant,
would not this thing be monstrous? Yes, surely. Now I say to you, truly,
that he is more
monstrous who preaches penitence to others, but himself repents not of
his sins. Those two
men that sell apples are the one, he who preaches for love of God,
wherefore he flatters
none, but' preaches in truth, seeking only a poor man's livelihood. As
God lives, in whose
presence my soul stands, such a man is not received by the world, but
rather despised. But
he who sells the peel for its weight in gold, and gives the apple away,
he it is who
preaches to please men: and, so flattering the world, he ruins the soul
that follows his
flattery. Ah! how many have perished for this cause!' Then answered he
who writes and
said: "How should one listen to the word of God; and how should one know
him that
preaches for love of God?"
Jesus answered: "He that preaches should be listened to as though God
were
speaking when he preaches good doctrine; because God is speaking through
his mouth. But he
that reproves not sins, having respect of persons, flattering particular
men, should be
avoided as an horrible serpent, for in truth he poisons the human ear."
Understand
you? Truly I say to you, even as a wounded man has no need of fine
bandages to bind up his
wounds, but rather of a good ointment, so also has a sinner no need of
fine words, but
rather of good reproofs, in order that he may cease to sin.'
Chapter 135
Then said Peter: "O Master, tell us how the lost shall be tormented,
and how long
they shall be in hell, in order that man may flee from sin." Jesus
answered: 'O
Peter, it is a great thing that you have asked, nevertheless, if God
please, I will answer
you. Know you, therefore, that hell is one, yet has seven centres one
below another;.
Hence, even as sin is of seven kinds, for as seven gates of hell has
Satan generated it:
so are there seven punishments therein.
For the proud, that is the loftiest in heart, shall be plunged into
the lowest centre,
passing through all the centres above it, and suffering in them all the
pains that are
therein. And as here he seeks to be higher than God, in wishing to do
after his own
manner, contrary to that which God commands, and not wishing to
recognize anyone above
him: even so there shall he be put under the feet of Satan and his
devils, who shall
trample him down as the grapes are trampled when wine is made, and he
shall be ever
derided and scorned of devils.
'The envious, who here chaffs at the good of his neighbour and
rejoices at his
misfortune, shall go down to the sixth Centre, and there shall be chafed
by the fangs of a
great number of infernal serpents. And it shall seem to him that all
things in hell
rejoice at his torment, and mourn that he be not gone down to the
seventh centre. For
although the damned are incapable of any joy, yet the justice of God
shall cause that it
shall so seem to the wretched envious man, as when one seems in a dream
to be spurned by
some one and feels torment thereby even so shall be the object set
before the wretched
envious man. For where there is no gladness at all it shall seem to him
that every one
rejoices at his misfortune, and mourns that he has no worse.
The covetous shall go down to the fifth Centre, where he shall suffer
extreme poverty,
as the rich feast suffered. And the demons, for greater torment, shall
offer him that
which he desires, and when he shall have it in his hands other devils
with violence shall
snatch it from his hands with these words: "Remember that you would not
give for love
of God; so God wills not that you now receive. Oh unhappy man! Now shall
he find himself
in that condition when he shall remember past abundance and behold the
penury of the
present; and that with the goods that then he may not have he could have
acquired eternal
delights!
To the fourth centre shall go the lustful, where they that have
transformed the way
given them by God shall be as corn that is cooked in the burning dung of
the devil. And
there shall they be embraced by horrible infernal serpents. And they
that shall have
sinned with harlots, all these acts of impurity shall be transformed for
them into union
with the infernal furies; which are demons like women, whose hair is
serpents, whose eyes
are flaming sulphur, whose mouth is poisonous, whose tongue is gull
whose body is all girt
with barbed hooks like those wherewith they catch the silly fish, whose
claws are like
those of gryphons, whose nails are razors, the nature of whose
generative organs is fire.
Now with these shall all the lustful enjoy the infernal embers which
shall be their bed.
To the third centre shall go down the slothful who will not work now.
Here are built
cities and immense palaces, which as soon as they are finished must
needs be pulled down
straightway, because a single stone is not placed aright. And these
enormous stones are
laid upon the shoulders of the slothful, who has not his hands free to
cool his body as he
walks and to ease the burden, seeing that sloth has taken away the power
of his arms. and
his legs are fettered with infernal serpents. And, what is worse, behind
him are the
demons, who push him, and make him fall to earth many times beneath the
weight; nor does
any help him to lift it up: no, it being too much to lift, a double
amount is laid upon
him.
To the second centre shall go down the gluttonous. Now here there is
dearth of food, to
such a degree that there shall be nought to eat but live scorpions and
live serpents,
which give such torment that it would be better never to have been born
than to eat such
food. There are offered to them indeed by the demons, in appearance,
delicate meats; but
for that they have their hands and feet bound with fetters of fire, they
cannot put out a
hand on the occasion when the meat appears to them. But what is worse,
those very
scorpions which he eats that they may devour his belly, not being able
to come forth
speedily, rend the secret parts of the glutton. And when they are come
forth foul and
unclean, filthy as they are, they are eaten over again.
The wrathful goes down to the first centre, where he is insulted by
all the devils and
by as many of the damned as go down lower than he. They spurn him and
smite him, making
him lie down upon the road where they pass, planting their feet upon his
throat. Yet is he
not able to defend himself, for that he has his hands and feet bound.
And what is worse,
he is not able to give vent to his wrath by insulting others, seeing
that his tongue is
fastened by a hook, like that which he uses who sells flesh. In this
accursed place shall
there be a general punishment, common to all the centres, like the
mixture of various
grains make a loaf. For fire, ice, thunderstorms, lightning,
sulphur, heat, cold, wind, frenzy, terror, shall all be united by the
justice of God,
and in such wise that the cold shall not temper, the heat nor the fire
the ice, but each
shall give torment to the wretched sinner.
Chapter 136
In this accursed spot shall abide the infidels for evermore: insomuch
that if the world
were filled with grains of millet, and a single bird once in a hundred
years should take
away a single grain to empty the world if when it should be empty the
infidels were to go
into paradise, they would rest delighted. But there is not this hope,
because their
torment cannot have an end, seeing that they were not willing for the
love of God to put
an end to their sin. But the faithful shall have comfort, because their
torment shall have
an end.' The disciples were affrighted, hearing this, and said: 'So then
the faithful must
go into hell?'
Jesus answered: 'Every one, be he who he may, must go into hell. It
is true, however,
that the holy ones and prophets of God shall go there to behold, not
suffering any
punishment and the righteous, only suffering fear. And what shall I say?
I tell you that
thither shall come [even] the Messenger of God, to behold the justice of
God. Thereupon
hell shall tremble at his presence. And because he has human flesh, all
those that have
human flesh and shall be under punishment, so long as the Messenger of
God shall abide to
behold hell, so long shall they abide without punishment. But he shall
abide there [only]
so long as it takes to shut and open the eyes. And this shall God do in
order that every
creature may know that he has received benefit from the Messenger of
God.
When he shall go there all the devils shall shriek, and seek to hide
themselves beneath
the burning embers, saying one to another: "Fly, fly, for here comes
Muhammad ;our
enemy!" Hearing which, Satan shall smite himself upon the face with both
his hands,
and screaming shall say: "You are more noble than I, in my despite, and
this is
unjustly done!" As for the faithful, who are in seventy-two grades,
those of the two
last grades, who shall have had the faith without good works, the one
being sad at good
works, and the other delighting in evil, they shall abide in hell
seventy thousand years.
After those years shall the angel Gabriel ;come into hell, and shall
hear them say:
"O Muhammad, where are your promises made to us, saying that those who
have your
faith shall not abide in hell for evermore?" Then the angel of God shall
return to
paradise, and having approached with reverence the Messenger of God
shall narrate to him
what he has heard. Then shall his Messenger speak to God and say: "Lord,
my God,
remember the promise made to me your servant, concerning them that have
received my faith,
that they shall not abide for evermore in hell." God shall answer: "Ask
what you
will, O my friend, for I will give you all that you ask."
Chapter 137
Then shall the Messenger of God say: "O Lord, there are of the
faithful who have
been in hell seventy thousand years. Where, O Lord, is your mercy? I
pray you, Lord, to
free them from those bitter punishments."
Then shall God command the four favourite angels of God; that they go
to hell and take
out every one that has the faith of his Messenger, and lead him into
paradise. And this
they shall do.
And such shall be the advantage of the faith of God's Messenger;,
that those that shall
have believed in him, even though they have not done any good works,
seeing they died in
this faith, shall go into paradise after the punishment of which I have
spoken.'
Chapter 138
When morning was come, early, all the men of the city, with the women
and children,
came to the house where Jesus was with his disciples, and sought him
saying: "Sir,
have mercy upon us, because this year the worms have eaten the corn, and
we shall not
receive any bread this year in our land." 2. Jesus answered: "O what
fear is
yours! Do you not know that Elijah, the servant of God, while the
persecution of Ahab
continued for three years, did not see bread, nourishing himself only
with herbs and wild
fruits? David our father, the prophet of God, ate wild fruits and herbs
for two years,
[while] being persecuted [by] Saul, [and] twice only did he eat bread."
3. The men
answered: "Sir, they were prophets of God, nourished with spiritual
delight, and
therefore they endured well; but how shall these little ones fare?" and
they showed
him the multitude of their children. Then Jesus had compassion on their
misery, and said:
"How long is it until harvest?" They answered: "Twenty days." 4. Then
Jesus said: "See that for these twenty days we give ourselves to fasting
and prayer;
for God will have mercy upon you. Truly I say to you, God has caused
this dearth because
here began the madness of men and the sin of Israel when they said that I
was God, or Son
of God." 5. When they had fasted for nineteen days, on the morning of
the twentieth
day, they beheld the fields and hills covered with ripe corn. They ran
to Jesus, and
recounted everything to him. And when he had heard it Jesus gave thanks
to God, and said:
"Go, brethren, gather the bread which God has given." They gathered so
much corn
that they did not know where to store it; and this thing was cause of
plenty in Israel.
The citizens took council to set up Jesus as their king knowing which
he fled from them
and the disciples strove fifteen days to find him.
Chapter 139
Jesus was found by him who writes, and by James with John. And they,
weeping, said:
"O Master, why did you flee from us? We have sought you mourning; yes,
all the
disciples seek you weeping." Jesus answered: "I fled because I knew that
a host
of devils is preparing for me that which in a short time you shall see.
For, the chief
priests with the elders of the people shall rise against me and [they]
shall wrest
authority to kill me from the Roman governor, because they shall fear
that I wish to usurp
kingship over Israel. Moreover, I shall be sold and betrayed by one of
my disciples, as
Joseph was sold into Egypt. 2. But the just God shall make him fall, as
says the prophet
David: He shall make him fall into the pit who spreads a snare for his
neighbour. For God
shall save me from their hands, and shall take me out of the world." The
three
disciples were afraid; but Jesus comforted them saying: "Do not be
afraid, for none
of you shall betray me." [And the three disciples] received some
consolation [from
this].
The day following there came, two by two, thirty-six of Jesus'
disciples; and he abode
in Damascus awaiting the others. And they mourned every one, for they
knew that Jesus must
depart from the world. Wherefore he opened his mouth and said: "He who
walks without
knowing where he goes is surely unhappy; but more unhappy is he who is
able and knows how
to reach a good hostelry, yet desires and wills to abide on the miry
road, in the rain,
and in peril of robbers.
Tell me, brethren, is this world our native country? Surely not,
seeing that the first
man was cast out into the world into exile and there he suffers the
punishment of his
error. [Is there] an exile who does not aspire to return to his own rich
country when he
finds himself in poverty? Assuredly reason denies it, but experience
proves it, because
the lovers of the world will not think upon death. No, when one speaks
to them [of death]
they will not [heed] his speech.
Chapter 140
Believe, O men, that I [have] come into the world with a privilege
which no man has
had, nor will even the Messenger of God have it; seeing that our God did
not create man to
set him in the world, but rather to place him in paradise. It is certain
that he who has
no hope of receiving anything from the Romans, because they are of a law
that is foreign
to him, is not willing to leave his own country with all that he has,
never to return, and
go to live in Rome. And much less would he do so when he found himself
to have offended
Caesar. Even so I tell you truly, and Solomon, God's prophet, cries with
me: O death, how
bitter is the remembrance of you to them that have rest in their riches!
2. I do not say
this because I have to die now, for I am sure that I shall live even
near to the end of
the world. But I will speak to you of this [matter] in order that you
may learn to die. As
God lives, everything that is done amiss, even once, shows that to work a
thing well it is
necessary to exercise oneself in that [thing]. Have you seen the
soldiers, how in time of
peace they exercise themselves with one another as if they were at war?
How shall a man
who has not learned to die well die a good death? 3. The death of the
holy is precious in
the sight of the Lord, said the prophet David. Do you know why [such a
death is precious]?
I will tell you. It is because, even as all rare things are precious, so
the death of them
that die well, being rare, is precious in the sight of God our creator.
Whenever a man
begins anything, not only is he [aiming] to finish [it], but he takes
pains that his
design may have a good conclusion. 4. O miserable man, that prizes his
[clothes] more than
himself; for when he cuts the cloth he measures it carefully before he
cuts it; and when
it is cut he sews it with care. But his life - which is born to die,
since [only he] who
is not born does not die - [why] will men not measure their life by
death? 5. Have you
seen them that build [and] how they lay every stone with the foundation
in view, measuring
if it is straight [so] that the wall will not fall down? O wretched man!
for the building
of his life will fall with great ruin because he does not look not to
the foundation of
death!
Chapter 141
Tell me: when a man is born, how is he born? Surely, he is born
naked. And when he is
laid dead beneath the ground, what advantage has he? A mean linen cloth
in which he is
wound: and this is the reward which the world gives him. If the means in
every work must
be proportionate to the beginning and the end in order that the work is
brought to a good
end, what end shall the man have who desires earthly riches? He shall
die, as says David,
prophet of God: "The sinner shall die a most evil death."
If a man sewing cloth should thread beams instead of thread in the
needle, how would
the work attain [its end]? Surely he would work in vain, and be despised
of his
neighbours. Now man sees not that he is doing this continually when he
gathered earthly
goods. For death is the needle, wherein the beams of earthly goods
cannot be threaded.
Nevertheless in his madness he strives continually to make the work
succeed, but in vain.
And whoever believes not this at my word, let him gaze upon the
tombs, for there shall
he find the truth. He who would fain become wise beyond all others in
the fear of God, let
him study the book of the tomb, for there shall he find the true
doctrine for his
salvation. For he will know to beware of the world, the flesh, and the
sense, when he sees
that man's flesh is reserved to be food of worms. Tell me, if there were
a road which was
of such condition that walking in the midst thereof a man should go
safely, but walking on
the edges he would break his head; what would you say if you saw men
opposing one another,
and striving in emulation to get nearest to the edge and kill
themselves? What amazement
would be yours! Assuredly you would say: "They are mad and frenzied, and
if they are
not frenzied they are desperate." 'Even so is it true,' answered the
disciples.
Then Jesus wept and said: 'Even so, truly, are the lovers of the
world. For if they
lived according to reason, which holds a middle place in man, they would
follow the Law of
God, and would be saved from eternal death. But because they follow the
flesh and the
world they are frenzied, and cruel enemies of their own selves, striving
to live more
arrogantly and more lasciviously than one another.'
Chapter 142
Judas, the traitor, when he saw that Jesus was fled, lost the hope of
becoming powerful
in the world, for he carried Jesus' purse, wherein was kept all that was
given him for
love of God. He hoped that Jesus would become king of Israel, and so he
himself would be a
powerful man. Wherefore, having lost this hope, he said within himself:
'If this man were
a prophet, he would know that I steal his money; and so he would lose
patience and cast me
out of his service, knowing that I believe not in him. And if he were a
wise man he would
not flee from the honour that God wills to give him. Wherefore it will
be better that I
make arrangement with the chief priests and with the scribes and
Pharisees, and see how to
give him up into their hands, for so shall I be able to obtain something
good.'
Whereupon, having made his resolution, he gave notice to the scribes
and Pharisees how
the matter had passed in Nain. And they took counsel with the high
priest, saying: 'What
shall we do if this man become king? Surely we shall fare badly; because
he is fain to
reform the worship of God after the ancient custom, for he cannot away
with our
traditions. Now how shall we fare under the sovereignty of such a man?
Surely we shall all
perish with our children: for being cast out of our office we shall have
to beg our bread.
We now, praised be God, have a king and a governor that are alien to
our Law, who care
not for our Law, even as we care not for theirs. And so we are able to
do whatsoever we
list; for, even though we sin, our God is so merciful that he is
appeased with sacrifice
and fasting. But if this man become king he will not be appeased unless
he shall see the
worship of God according as Moses wrote; and what is worse, he says that
the Messiah shall
not come of the seed of David (as one of his chief disciples has told
us), but says that
he shall come of the seed of Ishmael, and that the promise was made in
Ishmael and not in
Isaac.
What then shall the fruit be if this man be suffered to live?
Assuredly the Ishmaelites
shall come into repute with the Romans, and they shall give them our
country in
possession; and so shall Israel again be subjected to slavery as it was
aforetime.'
Wherefore, having heard the proposal, the high priest gave answer that
he must needs treat
with Herod and with the governor, 'because the people are so inclined
towards him that
without the soldiery we shall not be able to do anything; and may it
please God that with
the soldiery we may accomplish this business.' Wherefore, having taken
counsel among
themselves, they plotted to seize him by night, when the governor and
Herod should agree
thereto.
Chapter 143
Then all the disciples came to Damascus, by the will of God. And on
that day Judas the
traitor, more than any other, made show of having suffered grief at
Jesus' absence, at
which Jesus said: "Let every one beware of him who without occasion
labours to give
you tokens of love." And God took away our understanding, that we might
not know to
what end he said this. After the coming of all the disciples, Jesus
said: "Let us
return into Galilee, for the angel of God has said to me that I must go
there."
So one sabbath morning, Jesus came to Nazareth. When the citizens
recognized Jesus,
everyone desired to see him. A publican named Zacchaeus, who was of
small stature, not
being able to see Jesus because of the great multitude, climbed to the
top of a sycamore,
and there waited for Jesus to pass that place when he went to the
synagogue. Jesus then,
having come to that place, lifted up his eyes and said: "Come down,
Zacchaeus, for
today I will abide in your house." The man came down and received him
with gladness,
making a splendid feast.
The Pharisees murmured, saying to Jesus' disciples: "Why [has] your
master gone in
to eat with publicans and sinners?" Jesus answered: "Why does the
physician
[enter] into a house? Tell me, and I will tell you why I am come in
here." They
answered: "To heal the sick." "You say the truth," said Jesus,
"for [those who are] whole have no need of medicine, only the sick.
Chapter 144
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, God sends his
prophets and servants
into the world in order that sinners may repent; and he sends [them] not
for the sake of
the righteous, because they had no need of repentance, even as he that
is clean has no
need of the bath. But truly I say to you, if you were true Pharisees you
would be glad
that I should have gone in to sinners for their salvation. Tell me, do
you know your
origin and how the world began to receive
Pharisees? I will tell you, seeing that you do not know it, so
hearken to my words.
Enoch, a friend of God, who walked with God in truth, making no
account of the world,
was translated into paradise; and there he abides until the Judgment
(for when the end of
the world draws near he shall return to help the world with Elijah and
one other). And so
men, having knowledge of this, through desire of paradise, began to seek
God their
creator. For 'Pharisee' strictly means 'seeks God' in the language of
Canaan, for there
did this name begin [as a] way of deriding good men, since the
Canaanites were given up to
idolatry, which is the worship of human hands.
Whereupon the Canaanites, beholding those of our people that were
separated from the
world to serve God, when they saw such an one, said in derision
'Pharisee!' that is, 'He
seeks God'; as much as to say: 'O madman, you have no statues of idols
and adore the wind;
look to your fate and come and serve our gods.' Truly I say to you,"
said Jesus,
"all the saints and prophets of God have been Pharisees not in name, as
you are, but
in very deed. For in all their acts they sought God their creator, and
for love of God
they forsook cities and their own goods, selling [their goods] and
giving to the poor for
love of God."
Chapter 145
As God lives, in the time of Elijah, friend and prophet of God, there
were twelve
mountains inhabited by seventeen thousand Pharisees; and so it was that
[even] in so great
a number there was not found a single reprobate, but all were elect of
God. But now, when
Israel has more than a hundred thousand Pharisees, may it please God
that out of every
thousand there be one elect!"
The Pharisees answered in indignation: "So then we are all reprobate,
and you hold
our religion in reprobation!" Jesus answered: "I do not hold the
religion of the
true Pharisees in reprobation but in approbation and for that I am ready
to die. But come,
let us see if you are [true] Pharisees. Elijah, the friend of God, at
the prayer of his
disciple Elisha, wrote a little book in which he included all human
wisdom with the Law of
God our Lord."
The Pharisees were confounded when they heard the name of the book of
Elijah, because
they knew that, through their traditions, no one observed such doctrine.
They [claimed
they had] to depart under pretext of business to be done. Then Jesus
said: "If you
were [true] Pharisees you would forsake all other business to attend to
this; for the
Pharisee seeks God alone." So they tarried in confusion to listen to
Jesus, who said
again.:
"Elijah, servant of God" (for so begins the little Book), "to all
them
that desire to walk with God their creator, writes this:
Whoever desires to learn much, they (sic) fear God little, because he
who fears God is
content to know only that which God wills. They that seek fair words do
not seek God, who
does nothing but reprove our sins.
They that desire to seek God, let them shut fast the doors and
windows of their house,
for the master does not suffer himself to be found outside his house [in
a place] where he
is not loved.
Therefore guard your senses and guard your heart, because God is not
found outside of
us, in this world in which he is hated.
They that wish to do good works, let them attend to their own selves,
for [there is no
profit] in gaining the whole world and losing one's own soul.
They that wish to teach others, let them live better than others,
because nothing can
be learned from him who knows less than ourselves. How shall the sinner
amend his life
when he hears one worse than he teaching him?
They that seek God, let him (sic) flee the conversation of men;
because Moses being
alone upon Mount Sinai found him and spoke with God, as does a friend
who speaks with a
friend.
They that seek God, shall come forth [to where] there are men of the
world only once in
[every] thirty days for in respect of the business of him that seeks God
works for two
years can be done in one day.
When he walks, let him not look save at his own feet.
When he speaks, let him not speak save that which is necessary.
When they eat, let them rise from the table still hungry; thinking
every day not to
attain to the next; spending their time as one draws his breath.
Let one garment, of the skin of beasts, suffice.
Let the lump of earth sleep on the naked earth [and] for every night
let two hours of
sleep suffice.
Let him hate no one save himself; condemn no one save himself.
In prayer, let them stand in such fear as if they were at the
Judgment to come.
Now do this in the service of God, with the Law that God has given
you through Moses,
for in this way you shall find God [so] that in every time and place you
shall feel that
you are in God and God [is] in you."
This is the little book of Elijah, O Pharisees. Again I say to you
that if you were
[true] Pharisees you would have had joy that I [have] entered in here,
because God has
mercy upon sinners."
Chapter 146
Then Zacchaeus said: "Sir, behold I will give, for love of God,
fourfold all that
I have received by usury." Then Jesus said: "This day has salvation come
to this
house. Truly, truly, many publicans, harlots, and sinners shall go into
the kingdom of
God, and they that account themselves righteous shall go into eternal
flames."
Hearing this, the Pharisees departed in indignation.
Then Jesus said to them that were converted to repentance, and to his
disciples:
"* There was a father who had two sons, and the younger said: 'Father,
give me my
portion of goods'; and his father gave it [to] him. And he, having
received his portion,
departed and went into a far country, where he wasted all his substance
with harlots,
living luxuriously. After this there arose a mighty famine in that
country, such that the
wretched man went to serve a citizen, who set him to feed swine in his
property. And while
feeding them he assuaged his hunger in company with the swine, eating
acorns.
But when he came to himself he said: 'Oh, how many in my father's
house [are] feasting
in abundance, and I perish here with hunger! I will arise, therefore,
and will go to my
father, and will say to him: 'Father, I have sinned in heaven against
you; do with me as
you do to one of your servants.' The poor man went, and it came to pass
that his father
saw him coming from afar off, and was moved to compassion over him. So
he went forth to
meet him, and having come up to him he embraced him and kissed him.
The son bowed himself down, saying: 'Father, I have sinned in heaven
against you, do to
me as to one of your servants, for I am not worthy to be called your
son.' The father
answered: 'Son,do not say so, for you are my son, and I will not suffer
you to be in the
condition of my slave.' And he called his servants and said: 'Bring new
robes here and
clothe my son, and give him new [garments]; give him the ring on his
finger, and kill the
fatted calf and we will make merry. For [this] son [of mine] was dead
but has now come to
life again; he was lost and now is found.'
Chapter 147
While they were making merry in the house, the elder son came home,
and hearing that
they were making merry within, he marvelled and called one of the
servants, asking him why
they were making merry in this way. The servant answered him: 'Your
brother [has] come
[home] and your father has killed the fatted calf, and they are
feasting.' The elder son
was greatly angered when he heard this, and would not go into the house.
Therefore his
father came out to him and
said to him: 'Son, your brother [has] come. Come therefore and
rejoice with him.'
The [elder] son answered with indignation: 'I have always served you
with good service,
and you never gave me a lamb to eat with my friends. But as for this
worthless fellow that
departed from you, wasting all his portion with harlots, now that he is
come you have
killed the fatted calf!" The father answered: 'Son, you are always with
me and
everything is yours; but this one was dead and is alive again, was lost
and now is found;
[that is why] we must rejoice.' The elder son was more angry, and said:
'You can go and
triumph [but] I will not eat at the table of fornicators." And he
departed from his
father without receiving even a piece of money. As God lives," said
Jesus, "even
so is there rejoicing among the angels of God over one sinner that
repents."
And when they had eaten he departed for he [was going] to Judea. The
disciples said:
"Master, do not go to Judea, for we know that the Pharisees have taken
counsel with
the high priest against you." Jesus answered: "I knew it before they did
it, but
I do not fear, for they cannot do anything contrary to the will of God.
Let them do all
that they desire, for I do not fear them but [rather] fear God.
Chapter 148
'Tell me now: the Pharisees of today, are they [really] Pharisees?
are they servants of
God? Surely not! Yes, and I say to you truly, that there is nothing
worse here upon earth
than [when] a man covers himself with [the] profession and garb of
religion [in order] to
cover his wickedness. I will tell you one single example of the
Pharisees of old time, in
order that you may know the present ones. After the departure of Elijah,
because of the
great persecution by idolaters, that holy congregation of Pharisees was
dispersed. For in
that same time of Elijah more than ten thousand prophets who were true
Pharisees were
slain in one year.
Two Pharisees went into the mountains to dwell there, and one [of
them] abode fifteen
years knowing nothing of his neighbour, although they were but one
hour's journey apart.
See then if they were inquisitive! It came to pass that there arose a
drought on those
mountains, and so both set themselves to search for water, and so they
found each other.
The more aged [one] said - for it was their custom that the eldest
should speak before
every other, and they held it a great sin for a young man to speak
before an old one - the
elder, therefore, said: 'Where do you dwell, brother?' He answered,
pointing out the
dwelling with his finger: 'I dwell here' (for they were near to the
dwelling of the
younger.)
The elder said: 'How long [have] you dwelt here, brother?' The
younger answered:
'Fifteen years.' The elder said: 'Perhaps you came [here] when Ahab slew
the servants of
God?' 'Even so,' replied the younger. The elder said: 'O brother, do you
know who is now
king of Israel?' The younger answered: 'It is God that is King of
Israel, for the
idolaters are not kings but persecutors of Israel.' 'It is true,' said
the elder,
"but I meant to say, who is it that now persecutes Israel?'
The younger answered: 'The sins of Israel persecute Israel, because,
if they had not
sinned, [God] would not have raised the idolatrous princes up against
Israel.' Then the
elder said: 'Who is that infidel prince whom God has sent for the
chastisement of Israel?'
The younger answered: 'How should I know, seeing [that for] these
fifteen years I have not
seen any man except you, and I do not know how to read so no letters are
sent to me?' The
elder said: '[But] how new are your sheepskins! Who has given them to
you, if you have not
seen any man?'
Chapter 149
The younger answered: 'He who kept the raiment of the people of
Israel good for forty
years in the wilderness has kept my skins even as you see [them].' Then
the elder
perceived that the younger was more perfect than he, for every year he
had had dealings
with men. So, in order that he might have [the benefit of] his
conversation, he said:
'Brother, you do not know how to read, [but] I know how to read, and I
have in my house
the psalms of David. Come, then, that I may give you a reading each day
and make plain to
you what David says.' The younger answered: 'Let us go now.'
The elder said: 'O brother, it is now two days since I have drunk
water; therefore let
us seek a little water.' The younger replied: 'O brother, it is now two
months since I
have drunk water. Let us go, therefore, and see what God says by his
prophet David: the
Lord is able to give us water.' [And so] they returned to the dwellings
of the elder, at
the door of which they found a spring of fresh water. The elder said: 'O
brother, you are
a holy one of God; God has given this spring for your sake.'
The younger answered: 'O brother, you say this in humility; but it is
certain that if
God had done this for my sake he would have made a spring close to my
dwelling [so] that I
should not [have to] depart [in search of it]. For I confess to you that
I sinned against
you. When you said that for two days you did not drink [and that] you
sought water, and I
had been for two months without drinking, I felt an exaltation within
me, as though I were
better than you.' Then the elder said: 'O brother, you said the truth,
therefore you did
not sin.'
The younger said: 'O brother, you have forgotten what our father
Elijah said, that he
who seeks God ought to condemn himself alone. Surely he did not write it
that we might
[only] know it, but rather that we might observe it.' The more aged [of
the two],
perceiving the truth and righteousness of his companion, said: 'It is
true; and our God
has pardoned you.' And having said this he took the Psalms, and read
that which our father
David says: I will set a watch over my mouth that my tongue decline not
to words of
iniquity, excusing with excuse my sin. And here the aged man made a
discourse upon the
tongue, and the younger departed. [After this] there were fifteen more
years before they
found one another, because the younger changed his dwelling.
Accordingly, when he had found him again, the elder [Pharisee] said:
'O brother, why
have you not returned to any dwelling?' The younger answered: 'Because I
have not yet
learned well what you said to me.' Then the elder said: 'How can this
be, seeing [that]
fifteen years have past?' The younger replied: 'As for the words, I
learned them in a
single hour and have never forgotten them; but I have not yet observed
them. To what
purpose is it, then, to learn too much, and not to observe it? Our God
does not seek that
our intellect should be good, but rather our heart. So, on the Day of
Judgment, he will
not ask us what we have learned, but what we have done.'
Chapter 150
'The elder answered: "O brother, say not so, for you despise
knowledge, which our
God wills to be prized." The younger replied: "Now, how shall I speak
now so as
not to fall into sin: for your word is true, and mine also. I say, then,
that they who
know the commandments of God written in the Law ought to observe those
[first] if they
would afterwards learn more. And all that a man learns, let it be
observe it, and not
[merely] to know it." Said the elder: "O brother, tell me, with whom
have you
spoken, that you know you have not learned all that I said?"
'The younger answered: "O brother, I speak with myself. Every day I
place myself
before the judgment of God, to give account of myself. And ever do I
feel within myself
one that excuses my faults." 'Said the elder: "O brother, what faults
have you,
who are perfect ? The younger answered: "O brother, say not so, for that
I stand
between two great faults: the one is that I do not know myself to be the
greatest of
sinners, the other that I do not desire to do penance for it more than
other men."
'The elder answered: "Now, how shouldst you know yourself to be the
greatest of
sinners, if you are the most perfect [of men]?"
'The younger replied: "The first word that my master said to me when I
took the
habit of a Pharisee was this: that I ought to consider the goodness of
others and my own
iniquity for if I should do so I should perceive myself to be the
greatest of sinners.
'Said the elder: "O brother, whose goodness or whose faults consider you
on these
mountains, seeing there are no men here?" The younger answered: "I ought
to
consider the obedience of the sun and the planets, for they serve their
Creator better
than I. But them I condemn, either because they give not light as I
desire, or because
their heat is too great, or there is too much or too little rain upon
the ground."
'Whereupon, hearing this, the elder said: "Brother, where have you
learned this
doctrine, for I am now ninety years old, for seventy-five years whereof I
have been a
Pharisee?" The younger answered: "O brother, you say this in humility,
for you
are a holy one of God. Yet I answer you that God our creator looks not
on time, but looks
on the heart: wherefore David, being fifteen years; old, younger than
six other his
brethren, was chosen king of Israel, and became a prophet of God our
Lord."
Chapter 151
'This man was a true Pharisee,' said Jesus to his disciples; and may
it please God that
we be able on the day of judgment to have him for our friend.'
Jesus then embarked on a ship, and the disciples were sorry that they
had forgotten to
bring bread. Jesus rebuked them, saying: "Beware of the leaven of the
Pharisees of
our day, for a little leaven mars a mass of meal." Then said the
disciples one to
another: 'Now what leaven have we, if we have not even any bread?' *
Then Jesus said: 'O
men of little faith, have you then forgotten what God wrought in Nain,
where there was no
sign of corn? And how many ate and were satisfied with five loaves and
two fishes? The
leaven of the Pharisee is want of faith in God, and thought of self,
which has corrupted
not only the Pharisees of this day, but has corrupted Israel.
For the simple folk, not knowing how to read, do that which they see
the Pharisees do,
because they hold them for holy ones.
Know you what is the true Pharisee? He is the oil of human nature.
For even as oil
rests at the top of every liquor, so the goodness of the true Pharisee
rests at the top of
all human goodness. He is a living book, which God gives to the world;
for everything that
he says and does is according to the Law of God. Wherefore, who does as
he does observes
the Law of God. The true Pharisee is salt that suffers not human flesh
to be putrefied by
sin; for every one who sees him is brought to repentance. He is a light
that lightens the
pilgrims' way, for every one that considers his poverty with his
penitence perceives that
in this world we ought not to shut up our heart. But he that makes the
oil rancid,
corrupts the book, putrefies the salt, extinguishes the light - this man
is a false
Pharisee. If, therefore, you would not perish, beware that you do not as
does the Pharisee
today.?
Chapter 152
Jesus having come to Jerusalem, and having entered one sabbath day
into the Temple, the
soldiers drew near to tempt him and take him, and they said: "Master, is
it lawful to
wage war?" Jesus answered: "Our faith tells us that our life is a
continual
warfare upon the earth." Said the soldiers: "So would you convert us to
your
faith, and wish that we should forsake the multitude of gods (for Rome
alone has
twenty-eight thousand gods that are seen) and should follow your God who
is one only and
for that he cannot be seen, it is not known where he is, and perhaps he
is but
vanity."
Jesus answered: "If I had created you, as our God has created you, I
would seek to
convert you." They answered: "Now how has your God created us, seeing it
is not
known where he is? Show us your God, and we will become Jews." Then
Jesus said:
"If you had eyes to see him I would show him to you, but since you are
blind, I
cannot show you him." The soldiers answered: "Surely, the honour which
this
people pays you must have taken away your understanding. For every one
of us has two eyes
in his head, and you say we are blind."
Jesus answered: "The carnal eyes can only see things gross and
external: you
therefore will only be able to see your gods of wood and silver and gold
that cannot do
anything. But we of Judah have spiritual eyesight which are the fear and
the faith of our
God, wherefore we can see our God in every place." The soldiers
answered:
"Beware how you speak, for if you pour contempt on our gods we will give
you into the
hand of Herod, who will take vengeance for our gods, who are
omnipotent."
Jesus answered: "If they are omnipotent as you say, pardon me, for I
will worship
them." The soldiers rejoiced at hearing this, and began to extol their
idols. Then
Jesus said: "[In this matter] we need not words but deeds; cause
therefore that your
gods create one fly, and I will worship them." The soldiers were
dismayed at hearing
this, and knew not what to say, wherefore Jesus said: "Assuredly, seeing
they make
not a single fly afresh, I will not for them forsake that God who has
created everything
with a single word; whose name alone affrights armies." The soldiers
answered:
"Now let us see this; for we are fain to take you," and they were fain
to
stretch forth their hands against Jesus.
Then Jesus said: "Adonai Sabaoth!" Whereupon straightway the soldiers
were
rolled out of the Temple as one rolls casks of wood when they are washed
to refill them
with wine; insomuch that now their head and now their feet struck the
ground, and that
without any one touching them. And they were so affrighted and fled in
such wise that they
were never more seen in Judea.
Chapter 153
The priests and Pharisees murmured among themselves and said: "He has
the wisdom
of Baal and Ashtaroth, and so in the power of Satan has he done this."
Jesus opened
his mouth and said: "Our God commanded that we should not steal our
neighbour's
goods. But this single precept has been so violated and abused that it
has filled the
world with sin, and such [ sin] as shall never be remitted as other sins
are remitted:
seeing that for every other sin, if a man bewail it and commit it no
more, and fast with
prayer and almsgiving, our God, mighty and merciful, forgives. But this
sin is of such a
kind that it shall never be remitted,, except that which is wrongly
taken be restored.
Then said a scribe: 'O master, how has robbery filled all the world
with sin? Assuredly
now, by the grace of God, there are but few robbers, and they cannot
show themselves but
they are immediately hanged by the soldiery.' Jesus answered: 'Whoso
knows not the goods,
they (sic) cannot know the robbers;. No, I say to you truly that many
rob who know not
what they do, and therefore their sin is greater than that of the
others, for the disease
that is not known is not healed.' Then the Pharisees drew near to Jesus
and said: 'O
master, since you alone in Israel know the truth, teach you us.'
Jesus answered: 'I say not that I alone in Israel know the truth, for
this word
"alone" appertains to God alone and not to others. For he is the truth,
who
alone knows the truth. Wherefore, I should say so I should be a greater
robber, for I
should be stealing the honour of God. And in saying that I alone knew
God I should be
falling into greater ignorance than all. You, therefore, committed a
grievous sin in
saying that I alone know the truth. And I tell you that, if you said
this to tempt me,
your sin is greater still.'
Then Jesus, seeing that all held their peace, said again: 'Though I
be not alone in
Israel knowing the truth, I alone will speak; wherefore hearken to me,
since you have
asked me. All things created belong to the Creator, in such wise that
nothing can lay
claim to anything. Thus soul, sense, flesh, time, goods, and honour, all
are God's
possessions, so that if a man receive them not as God wills he becomes a
robber. And in
like manner, if he spend them contrary to that which God wills, he is
likewise a robber. I
say, therefore, to you that, as God lives, in whose presence my soul
stands, when you take
time, saying: "Tomorrow I will do thus, I will say such a thing, I will
go to such a
place," and not saying: "If God will," you are robbers: And you are
greater
robbers when you spend the better part of your time in pleasing
yourselves and not in
pleasing God, and spend the worse part in God's service: then are you
robbers indeed.
Whoever commits sin, be he of what fashion he will, is a robber; for he
steals time and
the soul and his own life, which ought to serve God, and gives it to
Satan, the enemy of
God.'
Chapter 154
'The man, therefore, who has honour, and life, and goods - when his
possessions are
stolen, the robber shall be hanged; when his life is taken, the murderer
shall be
beheaded. And this is just, for God has so commanded. But when a
neighbour's honour is
taken away, why is not the robber crucified? Are goods, forsooth, better
than honour? Has
God, perhaps, commanded that he who takes goods shall be punished and he
that takes life
with goods shall be punished, but he that takes away honour shall go
free? Surely not; for
by reason of their murmuring our fathers entered not into the land of
promise, but only
their children. And for this sin the serpents slew about seventy
thousand of our people.
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, he that steals honour
is worthy of
greater punishment than he that robs a man of goods and of life. And he
that hearkens to
the murmurer is likewise guilty, for the one receives Satan on his
tongue and the other in
his ears." The Pharisees were consumed [with rage] at hearing this,
because they were
not able to condemn his speech. Then there drew near to Jesus a doctor,
and said to him:
'Good master, tell me, wherefore God did not grant corn and fruit to our
fathers? Knowing
that they must needs fall, surely he should have allowed them corn, or
not have suffered
men to see it.'
Jesus answered: 'Man, you call me good, but you err, for God alone is
good. And much
more do you err in asking why God has not done according to your brain.
Yet I will answer
you all. I tell you, then, that God our creator in his working conforms
not himself to us,
wherefore it is not lawful for the creature to seek his own way and
convenience, but
rather the honour of God his creator, in order that the creature may
depend on the Creator
and not the Creator on the creature. As God lives, in whose presence my
soul stands, if
God had granted everything to man, man would not have known himself to
be God's servant;
and so he would have accounted himself lord of paradise. Wherefore the
Creator, who is
blessed for evermore, forbade him the food, in order that man might
remain subject to him.
And truly I say to you, that whoever has the light of his eyes clear
sees everything
clear, and draws light even out of darkness itself; but the blind does
not so. Wherefore I
say that, if man had not sinned, neither I nor you would have known the
mercy of God and
his righteousness. And if God had made man incapable of sin he would
have been equal to
God in that matter; wherefore the blessed God created man good and
righteous, but free to
do that which he pleases in regard to his own life and salvation or
damnation.' The doctor
was astounded when he heard this, and departed in confusion.
Chapter 155
Then the high-priest called two old priests secretly and sent them to
Jesus, who was
gone out of the Temple, and was sitting in Solomon's porch, waiting to
pray the midday
prayer. And near him he had his disciples with a great multitude of
people. The priests
drew near to Jesus and said: 'Master, wherefore did man eat corn and
fruit? Did God will
that he should eat it, or no?' And this they said tempting him; for if
he said: 'God
willed it,' they would answer: 'Why did he forbid it?' and if he said:
'God willed it
not,' they would say: 'Then man has more power than God, since he works
contrary to the
will of God.'
Jesus answered: 'Your question is like a road over a mountain, which
has a precipice on
the right hand and on the left: but I will walk in the middle.' When
they heard this the
priests were confounded, perceiving that he knew their heart. Then Jesus
said: 'Every man,
for that he has need, works everything for his own use. But God, who has
no need of
anything, wrought according to his good pleasure. Wherefore in creating
man he created him
free in order that he might know that God had no need of him; Verbi
gratia, as does a
King, who to display his riches, and in order that his slaves may love
him more, gives
freedom to his slaves.
God, then, created man free in order that he might love his Creator
much the more and
might know his bounty. For although God is omnipotent, not having need
of man, having
created him by his omnipotence, he left him free by his bounty, in such
wise that he could
resist evil and do good. For although God had power to hinder sin, he
would not contradict
his own bounty (for God has no contradiction) in order that, his
omnipotence and bounty
having wrought in man, he should not contradict sin in man, I say, in
order that in man
might work the mercy of God and his righteousness. And in token that I
speak the truth, I
tell you that the high-priest has sent you to tempt me, and this is the
fruit of his
priesthood.' The old men departed and recounted all to the high-priest,
who said: 'This
fellow has the devil at his back, who recounts everything to him; for he
aspires to the
kingship over Israel; but God will see to that.'
Chapter 156
When he had made the midday prayer, Jesus, as he went out of the
Temple, found one
blind from his mother's womb. His disciples asked him saying: "Master,
who sinned in
this man, his father or his mother, that he was born blind?' Jesus
answered: "Neither
his father nor his mother sinned in him, but God created him so, for a
testimony of the
Gospel. And having called the blind man up to him he spat on the ground
and made clay and
placed it upon the eyes of the blind man and said to him: 'Go to the
pool of Siloam and
wash you!'
The blind man went, and having washed received light; whereupon, as
he returned home,
many who met him said: 'If this man were blind I should say for certain
that it was he who
was wont to sit at the beautiful gate of the Temple;.' Others said: 'It
is he, but how has
he received light?' And they accosted him saying: 'Are you the blind man
that was wont to
sit at the beautiful gate of the Temple;?' He answered: 'I am he and
wherefore?' They
said: 'Now how did you receive your sight?'
He answered:, 'A man made clay, spitting on the ground, and this clay
he placed upon my
eyes and said to me: "Go and wash you in the pool of Siloam;." I went
and
washed, and now I see: blessed be the God of Israel!' When the man born
blind was come
again to the beautiful gate of the Temple, all Jerusalem was filled with
the matter.
Wherefore he was brought to the chief of the priests, who was conferring
with the priests
and the Pharisees against Jesus. The high priest asked him, saying:
'Man, wast you born
blind?' 'Yes,' he replied. 'Now give glory of God,' said the
high-priest, 'and tell us
what prophet has appeared to you in a dream and given you light. Was it
our father
Abraham;, or Moses ;the servant of God, or some other prophet? For
others could not do
such a thing.
The man born blind replied: 'Neither Abraham nor Moses, nor any
prophet have I seen in
a dream and been healed by him, but as I sat at the gate of the Temple a
man made me come
near to him and, having made clay of earth with his spittle, put some of
that clay upon my
eyes and sent me to the pool of Siloam to wash; whereupon I went, and
washed me, and
returned with the light of my eyes.' The high-priest asked him the name
of that man. The
man born blind answered: 'He told me not his name, but a man who saw him
called me and
said: "Go and wash you as that man has said, for he is Jesus the
Nazarene;, a prophet
and an holy one of the God of Israel."' Then said the high-priest: 'Did
he heal you
perhaps today, that is, the Sabbath;?' The blind man answered: 'Today he
healed me.' Said
the high-priest: 'Behold now, how that this fellow is a sinner, seeing
he keeps not the
Sabbath!'
Chapter 157
The blind man answered: 'Whether he is a sinner I know not; but this I
know, that
whereas I was blind, he has enlightened me.' The Pharisees did not
believe this; so they
said to the high priest: 'Send for his father and mother, for they will
tell us the
truth.' They sent, therefore, for the father and mother of the blind
man, and when they
were come the high-priest questioned them saying: 'Is this man your
son?' They answered:
'He is truly our son.' Then said the high-priest: 'He says that he was
born blind, and now
he sees; how has this thing befallen?'
The father and mother of the man born blind replied: 'Truly he was
born blind, but how
he may have received the light, we know not; he is of age, ask him and
he will tell you
the truth.' Thereupon they were dismissed, and the high-priest said
again to the man born
blind: 'Give glory to God, and speak the truth.' (Now the father and
mother of the blind
man were afraid to speak, because a decree had gone forth from the Roman
senate that no
man might contend for Jesus, the prophet of the Jews, under pain of
death: this decree had
the governor obtained wherefore they said: 'He is of age, ask him.')
The high-priest, then, said to the man born blind: 'Give glory to God
and speak the
truth, for we know this man, whom you say to have healed you, that he is
a sinner.' The
man born blind answered: 'Whether he be a sinner, I know not; but this I
know, that I saw
not and he has enlightened me. Surely, from the beginning of the world
to this hour, there
has never yet been enlightened one who was born blind; and God would not
hearken to
sinners.' Said the Pharisees: 'Now what did he when he enlightened you?'
Then the man born
blind marvelled at their unbelief, and said: 'I have told you, and
wherefore ask you me
again? Would you also become his disciples?'
The high-priest then reviled him saying: 'You were altogether born in
sin, and would
you teach us? Begone, and become you disciple of such a man! for we are
disciples of
Moses;, and we know that God has spoken to Moses, but as for this man,
we know not whence
he is.' And they cast him out of the synagogue ;and Temple;, forbidding
him to make prayer
with the clean among Israel.
Chapter 158
The man born blind went to find Jesus, who comforted him saying: 'At
no time have you
been so blessed as you are now, for you are blest of our God who spoke
through David, our
father and his prophet, against the friends of the world, saying: "They
curse and I
bless"; and by Micah the prophet he said: "I curse your blessing." For
earth is not so contrary to air, water to fire, light to darkness, cold
to heat, or love
to hate, as is the will that God has contrary to the will of the world.'
The disciples accordingly asked him, saying: 'Lord, great are your
words; tell us,
therefore, the meaning, for as yet we understand not." Jesus answered:
"When you
shall know the world, you shall see that I have spoken the truth, and so
shall you know
the truth in every prophet. Know you, then, that there be three kinds of
worlds
comprehended in a single name;: the one stands for the heavens and the
earth, with water,
air and fire, and all the things that are inferior to man. Now this
world in all things
follows the will of God, for, as says David;, prophet of God: "God has
given them a
precept which they transgress not."
The second stands for all men, even as the "house of such an one"
stands not
for the walls, but for the family. Now this world, again, loves God;
because by nature
they long after God, forasmuch as according to nature every one longs
after God, even
though they err in seeking God. And know you wherefore all long after
God? Because they
long every one after an infinite good without any evil, and this is God
alone. Therefore
the merciful God has sent his prophets to this world for its salvation.
'The third world is men's fallen condition of sinning, which has
transformed itself
into a law contrary to God, the creator of the world. This makes man
become like to the
demons, God's enemies. And this world our God hates so sore that if the
prophets had loved
this world what think you? - assuredly God would have taken from them
their prophecy. And
what shall I say As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, when
the Messenger of God
shall come to the world, if he should conceive love towards this evil
world, assuredly God
would take away from him all that he gave him when he created him, and
would make him
reprobate: so greatly is God contrary to this world."
Chapter 159
The disciples answered: "O master, exceeding great are your words,
therefore have
mercy upon us, for we understand them not." Jesus said: "Think you
perhaps that
God has created his Messenger to be a rival, who should be fain to make
himself equal with
God? Assuredly not, but rather as his good slave, who should not will
that which his Lord
wills not. You are not able to understand this because you know not what
a thing is sin.
Wherefore hearken to my words. Truly, truly, I say to you, sin cannot
arise in man save as
a contradiction of God, seeing that only is sin which God wills not:
insomuch that all
that God wills is most alien from sin.
Accordingly, if our high-priests and priests, with the Pharisees,
persecuted me because
the people of Israel has called me God, they would be doing a thing
pleasing to God, and
God would reward them; but because they persecute me for a contrary
reason, since they
will not have me say the truth, how they have contaminated the Book of
Moses; and that of
David;, prophets and friends of God, by their traditions, and therefore
hate me and desire
my death therefore God has them in abomination. Tell me, Moses slew men
and Ahab slew men,
is this in each case murder? Assuredly not; for Moses slew the men to
destroy idolatry and
to preserve the worship of the true God, but Ahab slew the men to
destroy the worship of
the true God and to preserve idolatry. Wherefore to Moses the slaying of
men was converted
into sacrifice, while to Ahab it was converted into sacrilege: insomuch
that one and the
same work produced these two contrary effects.
"As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, if Satan had spoken
to the angels
in order to see how they loved God, he would not have been rejected of
God, but because he
sought to turn them away from God, therefore is he reprobate." Then
answered he who
writes : "How, then, is to be understood that which was said in Micaiah
the prophet,
concerning the lie which God ordained to be spoken by the mouth of false
prophets, as is
written in the book of the kings of Israel?" Jesus answered: "O
Barnabas, recite
briefly all that befell, that we may see the truth clearly."
Chapter 160
Then said he who writes: "Daniel the prophet, describing the history
of the kings
of Israel and their tyrants, writes thus: "The king of Israel joined
himself with the
king of Judah to fight against the sons of Belial (that is, reprobates)
who were the
Ammonites. Now Jehoshaphat, king of Judah, and Ahab, king of Israel,
being seated both on
a throne in Samaria, there stood before them four hundred false
prophets, who said to the
king of Israel: "Go up against the Ammonites, for God will give them
into your hands,
and you shall scatter Ammon."
Then said Jehoshaphat: "Is there here any prophet of the God of our
fathers?"
Ahab answered: "There is one only, and he is evil, for he always
predicts evil
concerning me; and him I hold in prison." And this he said, to wit,
"there is
only one," because as many as were found had been slain by decree of
Ahab;, so that
the prophets, even as you have said, O Master, were fled to the mountain
tops where men
dwelt not. Then said Jehoshaphat: "Send for him here, and let us see
what he
says." Ahab therefore commanded that Micaiah be sent for hither, who
came with
fetters on his feet, and his face bewildered like a man that lives
between life and death.
Ahab asked him, saying: "Speak, Micaiah;, in the name of God. Shall we
go up against
the Ammonites? Will God give their cities into our hands?"
Micaiah answered: "Go up, go up, for prosperously shall you go up,
and still more
prosperously come down!" Then the false prophets praised Micaiah as a
true prophet of
God, and broke off the fetters from his feet. Jehoshaphat, who feared
our God, and had
never bowed his knees before the idols, asked Micaiah, saying: "For the
love of the
God of our fathers, speak the truth, as you have seen the issue of this
war." Micaiah
;answered: "O Jehoshaphat, I fear your face where. fore I tell you that I
have seen
the people of Israel as sheep without a shepherd." Then Ahab, smiling,
said to
Jehoshaphat;: "I told you that this fellow predicts only evil, but you
did not
believe it..
Then said they both: "Now how know you this, O Micaiah?"
"Micaiah answered: "Methought there assembled a council of the angels
in the
presence of God, and I heard God say thus: "Who will deceive Ahab that
he may go up
against Ammon and be slain?" Whereupon one said one thing and another
said another.
Then came an angel and said: "Lord, I will fight against Ahab, and will
go to his
false prophets and will put the lie into their mouth, and so shall he go
up and be
slain." And hearing this, God said: "Now go and do so, for you shall
prevail". Then were the false prophets enraged, and their chief smote
Micaiah's
cheek, saying: "O reprobate of God, when did the angel of truth depart
from us and
come to you? Tell us, when came to us the angel that brought the lie?"
'Micaiah answered: "You shall know when you shall flee from house to
house for
fear of being slain, having deceived your king." Then Ahab was wroth,
and said:
"Seize Micaiah, and the fetters which he had upon his feet place on his
neck, and
keep him on barley bread and water until my return, for now I know not
what death I would
inflict on him"., They went up, then, and according to the word of
Micaiah the matter
befell. For the king of the Ammonites ;said to his servants: "See that
you fight not
against the king of Judah, nor against the princes of Israel, but slay
the king of Israel,
Ahab, my enemy."' Then Jesus said: "Stop there, Barnabas; for it is
enough for
our purpose."
Chapter 161
"Have you heard all?" said Jesus. The disciples answered: "Yes,
Lord." Whereupon Jesus said: "Lying is indeed a sin, but murder is a
greater,
because the lie is a sin that appertains to him that speaks, but the
murder, while it
appertains to him that commits it, is such that it destroys also the
dearest thing that
God has here upon earth, that is, man. And lying can be remedied by
saying the contrary of
that which has been said; whereas murder has no remedy, seeing it is not
possible to give
life again to the dead. Tell me, then, did Moses the servant of God sin
in slaying all
whom he slew?"
The disciples answered: "God forbid; God forbid that Moses should
have sinned in
obeying God who commanded him!" Then Jesus said: "And I say, God forbid
that
that angel should have sinned who deceived Ahab's false prophets with
the lie; for even as
God receives the slaughter of men as sacrifice, so received he the lie
for praise. Truly,
truly, I say to you, that even as the child errs which causes its shoes
to be made by the
measure of a giant, even so errs he who would subject God to the law, as
he himself as man
is subject to the law. When, therefore, you shall believe that only to
be sin which God
wills not, you will find the truth, even as I have told you. Wherefore,
because God is not
composite nor changeable, so also is he unable to will and not will a
single thing; for so
would he have contradiction in himself, and consequently pain, and would
not be infinitely
blessed."
Philip answered: 'But how is that saying of the prophet Amos to be
understood, that
"there is not evil in the city that God has not done?" Jesus answered:
'Now here
see, Philip, how great is the danger of resting in the letter, as do the
Pharisees, who
have invented for themselves the "predestination of God in the elect,"
in such
wise that they come to say in fact that God is unrighteous, a deceiver
and a liar and a
hater of judgment (which shall fall upon them).
Wherefore I say that here Amos the prophet of God speaks of the evil
which the world
calls evil: for if he had used the language of the righteous he would
not have been
understood by the world. For all tribulations are good, either for that
they purge the
evil that we have done, or are good because they restrain us from doing
evil, or are good
because they make man to know the condition of this life, in order that
we may love and
long for life eternal. Accordingly, had the prophet Amos said: "There is
no good in
the city but what God has wrought it," he had given occasion for despair
to the
afflicted, as they beheld themselves in tribulation and sinners living
in prosperity. And,
what is worse, many, believing Satan to have such sovereignty over man,
would have feared
Satan and done him service, so as not to suffer tribulation. Amos
therefore did as does
the Roman interpreter, who considers not his words [as one] speaking in
the presence of
the high-priest, but consider the will and the business of the Jew that
knows not to speak
the Hebrew tongue.
Chapter 162
If Amos had said: "There is no good in the city but what God has done
it," as
God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, he would have made a
grievous error, for the
world holdsnothing good save the iniquities and sins that are done in
the way of vanity.
Whereupon men would have wrought much more iniquitously, believing that
there is not any
sin or wickedness which God has not done, at hearing whereof the earth
trembles." And
when Jesus had said this, straightway there arose a great earthquake, in
so much that
every one fell as dead. Jesus raised them up, saying: 'Now see if I have
told you the
truth. Let this, then, suffice you, that Amos, when he said that "God
has done evil
in the city talking with the world," spoke of tribulations, which
sinners alone call
evil. Let us come now to predestination, of which you desire to know,
and whereof I will
speak to you near Jordan on the other side, tomorrow, if God will.'
Chapter 163
Jesus went into the wilderness beyond Jordan with his disciples, and
when the midday
prayer was done he sat down near to a palm-tree, and under the shadow of
the palm-tree his
disciples sat down. Then Jesus said: 'So secret is predestination, O
brethren, that I say
to you, truly, only to one man shall it be clearly known. He it is whom
the nations look
for, to whom the secrets of God are so clear that, when he comes into
the world, blessed
shall they be that shall listen to his words, because God shall
overshadow them with his
mercy even as this palm-tree overshadows us. Yes, even as this tree
protects us from the
burning heat of the sun, even so the mercy of God will protect from
Satan them that
believe in that man.'
The disciples answered, "O Master, who shall that man be of whom you
speak, who
shall come into the world?" Jesus answered with joy of heart: 'He is
Muhammad;,
Messenger of God, and when he comes into the world, even as the rain
makes the earth to
bear fruit when for a long time it has not rained, even so shall he be
occasion of good
works among men, through the abundant mercy which he shall bring. For he
is a white cloud
full of the mercy of God, which mercy God shall sprinkle upon the
faithful like rain.'
Chapter 164
I will accordingly tell you now [what] little God has granted me to
know concerning
this same predestination. The Pharisees say that everything has been so
predestined that
he who is elect cannot become reprobate, and he who is reprobate cannot
by any means
become elect; and that, even as God has predestined well-doing as the
road by which the
elect shall walk to salvation, even so has he predestined sin as the
road by which the
reprobate shall walk into damnation. Cursed be the tongue that said
this, with the hand
that wrote it, for this is the faith of Satan. Wherefore one may know of
what manner are
the Pharisees of the present day, for they are faithful servants of
Satan.
What can predestination mean but an absolute will to give an end to a
thing [of which]
one has the means in hand? for without the means one cannot destine an
end. How, then,
shall he who not only lacks stone and money to spend, but has not even
so much land as to
place one foot upon, destine to build a house? Surely, none [could do
so]. No more, then,
I tell you, is predestination, taking away the free will that God has
given to man of his
pure bounty, the Law of God. Surely it is not predestination but
abomination we shall be
establishing.
That man is free the Book of Moses shows, where, when our God gave
the Law upon Mount
Sinai, he spoke thus: My commandment is not in the heaven that you
should excuse yourself,
saying: Now, who shall go to bring us the commandment of God? and who
perhaps shall give
us strength to observe it? Neither is it beyond the sea, that in like
manner you should
excuse yourself. But my commandment is near to your heart, that when you
will you may
observe it..
Tell me, if King Herod should command an old man to become young and a
sick man that he
should become whole, and when they did not [do] iti should cause them to
be killed, would
this be just? The disciples answered: "If Herod gave this command, he
would be most
unjust and impious."
Then Jesus, sighing, said: "These are the fruits of human traditions,
O brethren;
for in saying that God has predestinated the reprobate such that he
cannot become elect
they blaspheme God as impious and unjust. For he commands the sinner not
to sin, and when
he sins to repent; while such predestination takes away from the sinner
the power not to
sin, and entirely deprives him of repentance."
Chapter 165
But hear what says God by Joel the prophet: "As I live, [says] your
God, I will
not the death of a sinner, but I seek that he should be converted to
penitence." Will
God then predestinate that which he [does] not will? Consider that which
God says, and
that which the Pharisees of this present time say. Further, God says by
the prophet
Isaiah: "I have called, and you would not hearken to me." And how much
God has
called, hear how he says by the same prophet: All the day have I spread
out my hands to a
people that believe me not, but contradict me."
And our Pharisees, when they say that the reprobate cannot become
elect, what [do] they
say, then, but that God mocks men even as he would mock a blind man who
should show him
something white, and as he would mock a deaf man who should speak into
his ears? And that
the elect can be reprobated, consider what our God says by Ezekiel the
prophet: "As I
live, says God, if the righteous shall forsake his righteousness and
shall do
abominations, he shall perish, and I will not remember any more any of
his righteousness;
for trusting therein it shall forsake him before me and it shall not
save him." And
of the calling of the reprobate, what says God by the prophet Hosea but
this: I will call
a people not elect, I will call them elect." God is true, and cannot
tell a lie: for
God being truth speaks truth. But the Pharisees of this present time
with their doctrine
contradict God altogether.
Chapter 166
Andrew replied: "But how is that to be understood which God said to
Moses, that he
will have mercy on whom he wills to have mercy and will harden whom he
wills to
harden." Jesus answered: "God says this in order that man may not
believe that
he is saved by his own virtue, but may perceive that life and the mercy
of God have been
granted him by God of his bounty. And he says it in order that men may
shun the opinion
that there be other gods than he.
If, therefore, he hardened Pharaoh he did it because he had afflicted
our people and
essayed to bring it to nought by destroying all the male children in
Israel: whereby Moses
was near to losing his life. Accordingly, I say to you truly, that
predestination has for
its foundation the Law of God and human free will. Yes, and even if God
could save the
whole world so that none should perish he would not will to do so lest
thus he should
deprive man of freedom, which he preserves to him in order to do despite
to Satan, in
order that this [lump of ] clay, scorned of the spirit, even though it
shall sin as the
spirit did, may have power to repent and go to dwell in that place
whence the spirit was
cast out. Our God wills, I say, to pursue with his mercy man's free
will, and wills not to
forsake the creature with his omnipotence. And so on the day of judgment
none will be able
to make any excuse for their sins, seeing that it will then be manifest
to them how much
God has done for their conversion, and how often he has called them to
repentance.
Chapter 167
Accordingly, if your mind will not rest content in this, and you be
fain to say again:
"Why so?" I will disclose to you a wherefore." It is this. Tell me,
wherefore cannot a [single] stone rest on the top of the water, yet the
whole earth rests
on the top of the water? Tell me, why is it that, while water
extinguishes fire, and earth
flees from air, so that none can unite earth, air, water, and fire in
harmony,
nevertheless they are united in man and are preserved harmoniously?
If, then, you know not this no, all men, as men, cannot know it how
shall they
understand that God created the universe out of nothing with a single
word? How shall they
understand the eternity of God? Assuredly they shall by no means be able
to understand
this, because, man being finite and composite with the body, which, as
says the prophet
Solomon, being corruptible, presses down the soul, and the works of God
being
proportionate to God, how shall they be able to comprehend them?
Isaiah, prophet of God, seeing [it to be] thus, exclaimed, saying:
Truly you are a
hidden God! And of the Messenger of God, how God has created him, he
says: His generation,
who shall narrate? And of the working of God he says: Who has been his
counsellor?
Wherefore God says to human nature: Even as the heaven is exalted above
the earth, so are
my ways exalted above your ways and my thoughts above your thoughts.
Therefore I say to
you, the manner of predestination is not manifest to men, albeit the
fact is true, as I
have told you. Ought man then, because he cannot find out the mode, to
deny the fact?
Assuredly, I have never yet seen any one refuse health, though the
manner of it be not
understood. For I know not even now how God by my touch heals the sick."
Chapter 168
Then said the disciples: "Truly God speaks in you, for never has man
spoken as you
speak." Jesus answered: "Believe me when God chose me to send me to the
House of
Israel, he gave me a book like to a clear mirror; which came down into
my heart in such
wise that all that I speak comes forth from that book. And when that
book shall have
finished coming forth from my mouth, I shall be taken up from the
world." Peter
answered: "O master, is that which you now speak written in that book?"
Jesus
replied: "All that I say for the knowledge of God and the service of
God, for the
knowledge of man and for the salvation of mankind all this comes forth
from that book,
which is my gospel;." Said Peter: "Is there written therein the glory of
paradise?"
Chapter 169
Jesus answered: ."Hearken, and I will tell you of what manner is
paradise, and how
the holy and the faithful shall abide there without end, for this is one
of the greatest
blessings of paradise seeing that everything, however great, if it have
an end, becomes
small, yes nought. 'Paradise is the home where God stores his delights,
which are so great
that the ground which is trodden by the feet of the holy and blessed
ones is so precious
that one drachma of it is more precious than a thousand worlds.
These delights were seen by our, father, David, prophet of God, for
God showed them to
him, seeing he caused him to behold the glories of paradise: whereupon,
when he returned
to himself, he closed his eyes with both his hands, and weeping said:
"Look not any
more upon this world, O my eyes, for all is vain, and there is no
good!". Of these
delights said Isaiah ;the prophet: "The eyes of man have not seen, his
ears have not
heard, nor has the human heart conceived, that which God has prepared
for them that love
him." Know you wherefore they have not seen, heard, conceived such
delights? It is
because while they live here below they are not worthy to behold
such things. Wherefore, albeit our father David ;truly saw them, I
tell you that he saw
them not with human eyes, for God took his soul to himself, and thus,
united with God, he
saw them with light divine. As God lives, in whose presence my soul
stands, seeing that
the delights of paradise are infinite and man is finite, man cannot
contain them; even as
a little earthen jar cannot contain the sea.
Behold, then, how beautiful is the world in summer-time, when all
things bear fruit!
The very peasant, intoxicated with gladness by reason of the harvest
that is come, makes
the valleys and mountains resound with his singing, for that he loves
his labours
supremely. Now lift up even so your heart to paradise, where all things
are fruitful with
fruits proportionate to him who has cultivated it. As God lives, this is
sufficient for
the knowledge of paradise, forasmuch as God has created paradise for the
home of his own
delights. Now think you that immeasurable goodness would not have things
immeasurably
good? Or that immeasurable beauty would not have things immeasurably
beautiful? Beware,
for you err greatly if you think he have them not.
Chapter 170
God says thus to the man who shall faithfully serve him: "I know your
works, that
you work for me. As I live eternally, your love shall not exceed my
bounty. Because you
serve me as God your creator, knowing yourself to be my work, and ask
nought of me save
grace and mercy to serve me faithfully; because you set no end to my
service, seeing you
desire to serve me eternally: even so will I do, for I will reward you
as if you were God,
my equal. For not only will I place in your hands the abundance of
paradise, but I will
give you myself as a gift, so that, even as you are fain to be my
servant for ever, even
so will I make your wages forever."'
Chapter 171
What think you," said Jesus to his disciples, "of paradise? Is there a
mind
that could comprehend such riches and delights? Man must needs have a
knowledge as great
as God's if he would know what God wills to give to his servants. Have
you seen, when
Herod; makes a present to one of his favourite barons, in what sort he
presents it?"
John answered: "I have seen it twice; and assuredly the tenth part of
that which he
gives would be sufficient for a poor man." Jesus said: "But if a poor
man shall
be presented to Herod what will he give to him" John answered: "One or
two
mites." Now let this be your book wherein to study the knowledge of
paradise,"
[said Jesus]: "because all that God has given to man in this present
world for his
body is as though Herod should give a mite to a poor man;; but what God
will give to the
body and soul in paradise is as though Herod should give all that he
has, yes and his own
life, to one of his servants."
Chapter 172
God says thus to him that loves him, and serves him faithfully: "Go
and consider
the sands of the sea, O my servant, how many they are. Wherefore, if the
sea should give
you one single grain of sand, would it appear small to you? Assuredly,
yes. As I, your
creator, live, all that I have given in this world to all the princes
and kings of the
earth is less than a grain of sand that the sea would give you, in
comparison of that
which I will give you in my paradise."
Chapter 173
'Consider, then," said Jesus, "the abundance of paradise. For if God
has
given to man in this world an ounce of welling, in paradise he will give
him ten hundred
thousand loads. Consider the quantity of fruits that are in this world,
the quantity of
food, the quantity of flowers, and the quantity of things that minister
to man. As God
lives, in whose presence my soul stands, as the sea has still sand over
and above when one
receives a grain thereof, even so will the quality and
quantity of figs [in paradise] excel the sort of figs we eat here.
And in like manner
every other thing in paradise. But furthermore, I say to you that truly,
as a mountain of
gold and pearls is more precious than the shadow of an ant, even so are
the delights of
paradise more precious than all the delights of the princes of the world
which they have
had and shall have even to the judgment of God when the world shall have
an end."
Peter answered: "Shall, then, our body which we now have go into
paradise?"
Jesus answered: "Beware, Peter; lest you become a Sadducee; for the
Sadducees say
that the flesh shall not rise again, and that there be no angels.
'Wherefore their body
and soul are deprived of entrance into paradise, and they are deprived
of all ministry of
angels in this world. Have you perhaps forgotten Job, prophet and friend
of God, how he
says: "I know that my God lives; and in the last day I shall rise again
in my flesh,
and with my eyes I shall see God my Saviour"?
But believe me, this flesh of ours shall be so purified that it shall
not possess a
single property of those which now it has; seeing that it shall be
purged of every evil
desire, and God shall reduce it to such a condition as was Adam's before
he sinned. Two
men serve one master in one and the same work. The one alone sees the
work, and gives
orders to the second, and the second performs all that the first
commands. Seems it just
to you, I say, that the master should reward only him who sees and
commands, and should
cast out of his house him who wearied himself in the work? Surely not.
How then shall the justice of God bear this? The soul and the body
with sense of man
serve God: the soul only sees and commands the service, because the
soul, eating no bread,
fasts not, [the soul] walks not, feels not cold and heat, falls not
sick, and is not
slain, because the soul is immortal: it suffers not any of those
corporal pains which the
body suffers at the instance of the elements. Is it, then, just, I say,
that the soul
alone should go into paradise, and not the body, which has wearied
itself so much in
serving God?" Peter answered: "O master, the body, having caused the
soul to
sin, ought not to be placed in paradise. Jesus answered: "Now how shall
the body sin
without the soul? Assuredly it is impossible. Therefore, in taking away
God's mercy from
the body, you condemns the soul to hell."
Chapter 174
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, our God promises his
mercy to the
sinner, saying: "In that hour that the sinner shall lament his sin, by
myself, I will
not remember his iniquities for ever." Now what should eat the meats of
paradise, if
the body go not thither? The soul? Surely not, seeing it is spirit."
Peter ;answered:
"So then, the blessed shall eat in paradise;; but how shall the meat be
voided
without uncleanness?"
Jesus answered: "Now what blessedness shall the body have if it eat
not nor drink?
Assuredly it is fitting to give glory in proportion to the thing
glorified. But you err,
Peter, in thinking that such meat should be voided in uncleanness,
because this body at
the present time eats corruptible meats, and thus it is that
putrefaction comes forth: but
in paradise the body shall be incorruptible, impassible, and immortal,
and free from every
misery; and the meats, which are without any defect, shall not generate
any putrefaction.
Chapter 175
God says this in Isaiah the prophet, pouring contempt on the
reprobate: My servants
shall sit at my table in my house and shall feast joyfully, with
gladness and with the
sound of harps and organs, and I will not suffer them to have need of
anything. But you
that are my enemies shall be cast away from me, where you shall die in
misery, while every
servant of mine despises you..
Chapter 176
To what does it serve to say, "They shall feast"?' said Jesus to his
disciples. 'Surely God speaks plain. But to what purpose are the four
rivers of precious
liquor in paradise, with so many fruits? Assuredly, God eats not;, the
angels eat not, the
soul eats not, the sense eats not, but rather the flesh, which is our
body. Wherefore the
glory of paradise is for the body the meats, and for the soul and the
sense God and the
conversation of angels and blessed spirits. That glory shall be better
revealed by the
Messenger; of God, who (seeing God has created all things for love of
him) knows all
things better than any other creature.'
Said Bartholomew;: 'O master, shall the glory of paradise be equal
for every man? If it
be equal, it shall not be just, and if it be not equal the lesser will
envy the greater.'
Jesus answered: 'It will not be equal, for that God is just; and
everyone shall be
content, because there is no envy there. Tell me, Bartholomew;: there is
a master who has
many servants, and he clothes all of those his servants in the same
cloth. Do then the
boys, who are clothed in the garments of boys, mourn because they have
not the apparel of
grown men? Surely, on the contrary, if the elders desired to put on them
their larger
garments they would be wroth, because, the garments not being of their
size, they would
think themselves mocked. Now, Bartholomew, lift your heart to God in
paradise, and you
shall see that all one glory, although it shall be more to one and less
to another, shall
not produce ought of envy.'
Chapter 177
Then said he who writes : 'O master, has paradise light from the sun
as this world
has?' Jesus answered: 'Thus has God said to me, O Barnabas: 'The world
wherein you men
that are sinners dwell has the sun and the moon and the stars that adorn
it, for your
benefit and your gladness; for this have I created. " Think you, then,
that the house
where my faithful dwell shall not be better? Assuredly, you err, so
thinking: for I, your
God, am the sun of paradise;, and my Messenger ;is the moon ;who from me
receives all; and
the stars are my prophets which have preached to you my will. Wherefore
my faithful, even
as they received my word from my prophets [here] , shall in like manner
obtain delight and
gladness through them in the paradise of my delights."
Chapter 178
And let this suffice you,' said Jesus, 'for the knowledge of
paradise.' Whereupon
Bartholomew ;said again: 'O master, have patience with me if I ask you
one word.' Jesus
answered: 'Say that which you desire.' Said Bartholomew: 'Paradise is
surely great: for,
seeing there be in it such great goods, it needs must be great.' Jesus
answered: 'Paradise
is so great that no man can measure it. Truly I say to you that the
heavens are nine,
among which are set the planets;, that are distant one from another five
hundred years'
journey for a man: and the earth in like manner is distant from the
first heaven five
hundred years' journey.
But stop you at the measuring of the first heaven, which is by so
much greater than the
whole earth as the whole earth is greater than a grain of sand. So also
the second heaven
is greater than the first, and the third than the second, and so on, up
to the last
heaven, each one is likewise greater than the next. And truly I say to
you that paradise
is greater than all the earth and all the heavens [together], even as
all the earth is
greater than a grain of sand.' Then said Peter: 'O master, paradise must
needs be greater
than God, because God is seen within it.' Jesus answered: 'Hold your
peace, Peter, for you
unwittingly blaspheme.'
Chapter 179
Then the angel Gabriel came to Jesus and showed him a mirror shining
like the sun, in
which he beheld these words written:
'As I live eternally, even as paradise is greater than all the
heavens and the earth,
and as the whole earth is greater than a grain of sand, even so am I
greater than
paradise; and as many times more as the sea has grains of sand, as there
are drops of
water upon the sea, as there are [blades of] grass upon the ground, as
there are leaves
upon the trees, as there are skins upon the beasts; and as many times
more as the grains
of sand that would go to fill the heavens and paradise and more.'
Then Jesus said: "Let us do reverence to our God, who is blessed for
evermore." They bowed their heads a hundred times and prostrated
themselves to earth
upon their face in prayer. When the prayer was done, Jesus called Peter
and told him and
all the disciples what he had seen. And to Peter he said: "Your soul,
which is
greater than all the earth, sees through one eye the sun which is a
thousand times greater
than all the earth." "It is true," said Peter. Then Jesus said: "Even
so, through [the eye of] paradise, shall you see God our Creator." And
having said
this, Jesus gave thanks to God our Lord, praying for the House of Israel
and for the holy
city. And everyone answered: "So be it, Lord."
Chapter 180
One day, Jesus being in Solomon's porch, a scribe, one of them that
made discourse to
the people, drew near to him and said to him: "O master, I have many
times made
discourse to this people; in my mind there is a passage of scripture
which I am not. able
to understand." Jesus answered: "And what is it?" The scribe said:
"That which God said to Abraham your father, I will be your great
reward. Now how
could man merit [such reward]?"
Then Jesus rejoiced in spirit, and said: "Assuredly you are not far
from the
kingdom of God! Listen to me, for I will tell you the meaning of such
teaching. God being
infinite, and man finite, man cannot merit God and is this [the reason
for] your doubt,
brother?" The scribe answered, weeping: "Lord, you know my heart. Speak,
therefore, for my soul desires to hear your voice." Then Jesus said: "As
God
lives, man cannot merit [even] a little breath which he receives every
moment."
The scribe was beside himself, hearing this, and the disciples
marvelled as well,
because they remembered that which Jesus said, that whatever they gave
for love of God,
they should receive a hundredfold [in return]. Then he said: "If someone
should lend
you a hundred pieces of gold, and you should spend those pieces, could
you say to that
man: 'I give you a decayed vine-leaf; therefore give me your house, for I
merit it'?"
The scribe answered: "No, Lord, for he should first pay that which he
owed, and then,
if he wished for anything, he should give him good things, but what good
is a corrupted
leaf ?"
Chapter 181
Jesus answered: "You have spoken well, O brother; so tell me, Who
created man out
of nothing? Surely it was God, who also gave [man] the whole world for
his benefit. But
man by sinning has spent it all, for because of sin the world is turned
against man, and
man in his misery has nothing to give to God but works corrupted by sin.
For, sinning
every day, he makes his own work corrupt, as Isaiah the prophet says:
Our righteousnesses
are as a menstruous cloth.
How, then, shall man have merit, seeing he is unable to give
satisfaction? Is it,
perhaps, that man does not sin? It is certain that our God says by his
prophet David:
Seven times a day falls the righteous. How then falls the unrighteous?
And if our
righteousnesses are corrupt, how abominable are our unrighteousnesses!
As God lives, there
is nothing that a man should shun more than this saying: 'I merit.'
Brother, let a man
know the works of his hands, and he will straightway see his merit.
Every good thing that
comes out of a man, truly, man does not do it, but God works it in him;
for his being is
of God who created him. That which man does is to contradict God his
creator and to commit
sin, [and so] he merits not reward, but torment.
Chapter 182
'Not only has God created man, as I say, but he created him perfect.
He has given him
the whole world; after the departure from paradise he has given him two
angels to guard
him, he has sent him the prophets, he has granted him the Law, he has
granted him the
faith, every moment he delivers him from Satan, he is fain to give him
paradise; no more,
God wills to give himself to man. Consider, then, the debt, if it is
great! [a debt] to
cancel which you would need to have created man of yourselves out of
nothing, to have
created as many prophets as God has sent, with a world and a paradise,
no, more, with a
God great and good as is our God, and to give it ne all to God. So would
the debt be
cancelled and there would remain to you only the obligation to give
thanks to God. But
since you are not able to create a single fly, and seeing there is but
one God who is lord
of all things, how shall you be able to cancel your debt? Assuredly, if a
man should lend
you an hundred pieces of gold, you would be obliged to restore an
hundred pieces of gold.
Accordingly, the sense of this, O brother, is that God, being lord of
paradise and of
everything, can say that which pleases him, and give whatsoever pleases
him. Wherefore,
when he said to Abraham: "I will be your great reward," Abraham ;could
not say:
"God is my reward," but "God is my gift and my debt." So when you
discourse to the people, O brother, you ought thus to explain this
passage: that God will
give to man such and such things if man works well. When God shall speak
to you, O man,
and shall say: "O my servant, you have wrought well for love of me; what
reward seek
you from me, your God?" answer you: "Lord, seeing I am the work of your
hands,
it is not fitting that there should be in me sin, which Satan ;loves.
Therefore, Lord, for
your own glory, have mercy upon' the works of your hands.
And if God say: "I have pardoned you, and now I would fain reward
you";
answer you: "Lord, I merit punishment for what I have done, and for what
you have
done you merit to be glorified. Punish, Lord, in me what I have done,
and save that which
you have wrought." And if God say: "What punishment seems to you fitting
for
your sin?" do you answer; "As much, O Lord, as all the reprobate shall
suffer." And if God say: "Wherefore seek you so great punish. men, O my
faithful
servant?" answer you: "Because every one of them, if they had received
from you
as much as I have received, would have served you more faithfully than I
[have
done]." And if God say: "When will you receive this punishment, and for
how long
a time?" answer you: "Now, and without end." As God lives, in whose
presence my soul stands, such a man would be more pleasing to God than
all his holy
angels. For God loves true humility, and hates pride.'
Then the scribe gave thanks to Jesus, and said to him, 'Lord, let us
go to the house of
your servant, for your servant will give meat to you and to your
disciples.' Jesus
answered: 'I will come thither when you will promise to call me
"Brother" and
not "Lord,"; and shall say you are my brother, and not my servant.' The
man
promised, and Jesus went to his house.
Chapter 183
While they sat at meat the scribe said: 'O master, you said that God
loves true
humility. Tell us therefore what is humility, and how it can be true and
false.' [Jesus
replied: ] "Truly I say to you that he who becomes not as a little child
shall not
enter into the kingdom of heaven." Every one was amazed at hearing this,
and they
said one to another: 'Now how shall he become a little child who is
thirty or forty years
old? Surely, this is a hard saying.'
Jesus answered: 'As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, my
words are true. I
said to you that [a man] has need to become as a little child: for this
is true humility.
For if you ask a little child: "Who has made your garments?" he will
answer:
"My father." If you ask him whose is the house where he lives, he will
say:
"My father's." If you shall say: "Who gives you to eat?" he will
reply: "My father." If you shall say: "Who has taught you to walk and to
speak?" he will answer; "My father." But if you shall say: "Who has
broken your forehead, for that you have your forehead so bound up?" he
will answer:
"I fell down, and so did I break my head."
If you shall say: "Now why did you fall down?" he will answer: "See
you
not that I am little, so that I have not the strength to walk and run
like a grown man? so
my father must needs take me by the hand if I would walk firmly. But in
order that I might
learn to walk well, my father left me for a little space, and I, wishing
to run, fell
down." If you shall say: "And what said your father?" he will answer:
"Now why did you not walk quite slowly? See that in future you leave not
my
side."
Chapter 184
Tell me, is this true?' said Jesus. The disciples and the scribe
answered: 'It is most
true.' Then Jesus said: 'He who in truth of heart recognizes God as the
author of all
good, and himself as the author of sin, shall be truly humble. But
whoever shall speak
with the tongue as the child speaks, and shall contradict [the same] in
act, assuredly he
has false humility and true pride. For pride is then at its height when
it makes use of
humble things, that it be not reprehended and spurned of men.
True humility is a lowliness of the soul whereby man knows himself in
truth; but false
humility is a mist from hell which so darkens the understanding of the
soul that what a
man ought to ascribe to himself, he ascribes to God, and what he ought
to ascribe to God,
he ascribes to himself. Thus, the man of false humility will say that he
is a grievous
sinner, but when one tells him that he is a sinner he will wax wroth
against him, and will
persecute him. The man of false humility will say that God has given him
all that he has,
but that he on his part has not slumbered, but done good works. And
these Pharisees of
this present time, brethren, tell me how they walk.'
The scribe answered, weeping: "O master, the Pharisees of the present
time have
the garments and the name of Pharisees, but in their heart and their
works they are
Canaanites. And would to God they usurped not such a name, for then
would they not deceive
the simple! O ancient time, how cruelly have you dealt with us, that
have taken away from
us the true Pharisees and left us the false!'
Chapter 185
Jesus answered: 'Brother, it is not time that has done this, but
rather the wicked
world. For in every time it is possible to serve God in truth, but by
companying with the
world, that is with the evil manners in each time, men become bad. Now
know you not that
Gehazi, servant of Elisha the prophet, lying, and shaming his master,
took the money and
the raiment of Naaman the Syrian? And yet Elisha had a great number of
Pharisees to whom
God made him to prophesy.
Truly I say to you that men are so inclined to evil working, and so
much does the world
excite them thereto, and work Satan entice them to evil, that the
Pharisees of the present
day avoid every good work and every holy example: and the example of
Gehazi is sufficient
for them to be reprobated of God. 'The scribe answered: "It is most
true";
whereupon Jesus said: "I would that you would narrate to me the example
of Haggai and
Hosea, both prophets of God, in order that we may behold the true
Pharisee." The
scribe answered: "O master, what shall I say? Surely many believe it
not, although it
is written by Daniel the prophet; but in obedience to you I will narrate
the truth.
Haggai was fifteen years old when, having sold his patrimony and
given it to the poor,
he went forth from Anathoth to serve Obadiah the prophet. Now the aged
Obadiah, who knew
the humility of Haggai, used him as a book wherewith to teach his
disciples. Wherefore he
oftentimes presented him raiment and delicate food, but Haggai ever sent
back the
messenger, saying: "Go, return to the house, for you have made a
mistake. Shall
Obadiah send me such things? Surely not: for he knows that I am good for
nothing, and only
commit sins.
And Obadiah, when he had anything bad, used to give it to the one
next to Haggai, in
order that he might see it. Thereupon Haggai. when he saw it, would say
to himself:
"Now, behold, Obadiah has certainly forgotten you, for this thing is
suited to me
alone, because I am worse than all. And there is nothing so vile but
that, receiving it
from Obadiah, by whose hands God grants it to me, it were a treasure."
Chapter 186
When Obadiah desired to teach any one how to pray, he would call
Haggai and say:
"Recite here your prayer so that every one may hear your words." Then
Haggai
would say: "Lord God of Israel, with mercy look upon your servant, who
calls upon
you, for that you have created him. Righteous Lord God, remember your
righteousness and
punish the sins of your servant, in order that I may not pollute your
work. Lord my God, I
cannot ask you for the delights that you grant to your faithful
servants, because I do
nought but sins. Wherefore, Lord, when you would give an infirmity to
one of your
servants, remember me your servant, for your own glory." And when Haggai
did so,'
said the scribe, 'God so loved him that to every one who in his time
stood by him God
gave, [the gift of] prophecy. And nothing did Haggai ask in prayer that
God withheld.'
Chapter 187
The good scribe wept as he said this, as the sailor weeps when he
sees his ship broken
up. And he said: "Hosea, when he went to serve God, was prince over the
tribe of
Naphtali, and aged fourteen years. And so, having sold his patrimony and
given it to the
poor, he went to be disciple of Haggai. Hosea was so inflamed with
charity that concerning
all that was asked of him he would say: 'This has God given me for you, O
brother; accept
it, therefore!' For which cause he was soon left with two garments only
namely, a tunic of
sackcloth and a mantle of skins. He sold, I say, his patrimony and gave
it to the poor,
because otherwise no one would be suffered to be called a Pharisee.
Hosea had the Book of Moses, which he read with greatest earnestness.
Now one day
Haggai said to him: "Hosea, who has taken away from you all that you
had?" He
answered: "The Book of Moses." It happened that a disciple of a
neighbouring
prophet wanted to go to Jerusalem, but did not have a mantle. Wherefore,
having heard of
the charity of Hosea, he went to find him, and said to him: 'Brother, I
would want to go
to Jerusalem to perform a sacrifice to our God, but I have not a mantle,
wherefore I know
not what to do.'
When he heard this, Hosea said: 'Pardon me, brother, for I have
committed a great sin
against you: because God has given me a mantle in order that I might
give it to you, and I
had forgotten. Now therefore accept it, and pray to God for me.' The
man, believing this,
accepted Hosea's mantle and departed. And when Hosea went to the house
of Haggai, Haggai
said: 'Who has taken away your mantle?' Hosea replied: 'The Book of
Moses.' Haggai was
much pleased at hearing this, because he perceived the goodness of
Hosea.
It happened that a poor man was stripped by robbers and left naked.
Whereupon Hosea,
seeing him, stripped off his own tunic and gave it to him that was
naked; himself being
left with a little piece of goat-skin over the privy parts. Wherefore,
as he came not to
see Haggai, the good Haggai thought that Hosea was sick. So he went with
two disciples to
find him: and they found him wrapped in palm-leaves. Then said Haggai:
'Tell me now, why
have you not been to visit me?' Hosea answered: "The Book of Moses has
taken away my
tunic, and I feared to come thither without a tunic." Whereupon Haggai
gave him
another tunic.
It happened that a young man, seeing Hosea read the Book of Moses,
wept, and said: 'I
also would learn to read if I had a book.' Hearing which, Hosea gave him
the book, saying:
'Brother, this book is yours; for God gave it me in order that I should
give it to one
who, weeping, should desire a book.' The man believed him, and accepted
the book.
Chapter 188
There was a disciple of Haggai near to Hosea; and he, wishing to see
if his own book
was well written, went to visit Hosea, and said to him: "Brother, take
your book and
let us see if it is even as mine. " Hosea answered: "It has been taken
away from
me." " Who has taken it from you?" said the disciple. Hosea answered:
"The Book of Moses," Hearing which, the other went to Haggai ;and said
to him:
"Hosea has gone mad, for he says that the Book of Moses has taken away
from him the
Book of Moses." Haggai answered: "Would to God, O brother, that I were
mad in
like manner, and that all mad folk were like to Hosea!"
Now the Syrian robbers, having raided the land of Judea, seized the
son of a poor
widow, who dwelt hard by Mount Carmel, where the prophets and Pharisees
abode. It chanced,
accordingly, that Hosea having gone to cut wood met the woman, who was
weeping. Thereupon
he straightway began to weep; for whenever he saw any one laugh he
laughed, and whenever
he saw any one weep he wept. Hosea then asked the woman touching the
reason of her
weeping, and she told him all.
Then said Hosea: 'Come, sister, for God wills to give you your son."
And they went
both of them to Hebron;, where Hosea ;sold himself, and gave the money
to the widow;, who,
not knowing how he had gotten that money, accepted it, and redeemed her
son. He who had
bought Hosea took him to Jerusalem, where he had an abode, not knowing
Hosea. Haggai;,
seeing that Hosea was not to be found, remained afflicted thereat.
Whereupon the angel of
God told him how he had been taken as a slave to Jerusalem. The good
Haggai, when he heard
this, wept for the absence of Hosea as a mother weeps for the absence of
her son. And
having called two disciples he went to Jerusalem. And by the will of
God, in the entrance
of the city he met Hosea, who was laden with bread to carry it to the
labourers in his
master's vineyard.
Having recognized him, Haggai said: "Son, how is it that you have
forsaken your
old father, who seeks you mourning?" Hosea answered: "Father, I have
been
sold." Then said Haggai in wrath: "Who is that bad fellow who has sold
you?" Hosea answered: "God forgive you, O my father; for he who has sold
me is
so good that if he were not in the world no one would become holy."
'Who, then, is
he?" said Haggai;. 'Hosea answered: "O my father, it was the Book of
Moses;."Then the good Haggai remained as it were beside himself, and
said:
"Would to God, my son, that the Book of Moses; would sell me also with
all my
children, even as it has sold you!"
And Haggai went with Hosea to the house of his master, who when he
saw Haggai said:
"Blessed be our God, who has sent his prophet to my house"; and he ran
to kiss
his hand. Then said Haggai: "Brother, kiss the hand of your slave whom
you have
bought, for he is better than I." And he narrated to him all that had
passed;
whereupon the master gave Hosea his freedom. 'And that is all that you
desired, O Master,'
[said the scribe].
Chapter 189
Then Jesus said: "This is true, because I am assured of it by God.
Therefore, that
every one may know that this is the truth, in the name of God let the
sun stand still, and
not move for twelve hours!" And so it came to pass, to the great terror
of all
Jerusalem and Judea.
And Jesus said to the scribe: "O brother, what seek you to learn from
me, seeing
you have such knowledge? As God lives, this is sufficient for man's
salvation, inasmuch as
the humility of Haggai, with the charity of Hosea, fulfils all the Law
and all the
prophets. Tell me, brother, when you came to question me in the Temple,
did you think,
perhaps. that God had sent me to destroy the Law and the prophets? It is
certain that God
will not do this, seeing he is unchangeable, and therefore that which
God ordained as
man's way of salvation, this has he caused all the prophets to say.
As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, if the Book of Moses
with the book of
our father David had not been corrupted by the human traditions of false
Pharisees and
doctors, God would not have given his word to me. And why speak I of the
Book of Moses and
the book of David? Every prophecy have they corrupted, in so much that
today a thing is
not sought because God has commanded it, but men look whether the
doctors say it, and the
Pharisees observe it, as though God were in error, and men could not
err.
Woe, therefore, to his faithless generation, for upon them shall come
the blood of
every prophet and righteous man, with the blood of Zechariah son of
Berachiah, whom they
slew between the Temple and the altar! What prophet have they not
persecuted? What
righteous man have they suffered to die a natural death? Scarcely one!
And they seek now
to slay me. They boast themselves to be children of Abraham, and to
possess the beautiful
Temple. As God lives, they are children of Satan, and therefore they do
his will:
therefore the Temple, with the holy city, shall go to ruin, in so much
that there shall
not remain of the Temple one stone upon another.'
Chapter 190
'Tell me, brother, you that are a doctor learned in the Law in whom
was the promise of
the Messiah made to our father Abraham? In Isaac or in Ishmael." The
scribe answered:
'O master, I fear to tell you this, because of the penalty of death.'
Then Jesus said:
'Brother, I am grieved that I came to eat bread in your house, since you
love this present
life more than God your creator; and for this cause you fear to lose
your life, but fear
not to lose the faith and the life eternal,
which is lost when the tongue speaks contrary to that which the heart
knows of the Law
of God. Then the good scribe wept, and said: "O master, if I had known
how to bear
fruit, I should have preached many things which I have left unsaid lest
sedition should be
roused among the people."
Jesus answered: "You should respect neither the people, nor all the
world, nor all
the holy ones, nor all the angels, when it should cause offence to God.
Wherefore let the
whole [world] perish rather than offend God your creator, and preserve
it not with sin.
For sin destroys and preserves not, and God is mighty to create as many
worlds as there
are sands in the sea, and more."
Chapter 191
The scribe then said: "Pardon me, O master, for I have sinned." Jesus
said:
"God pardon you. for against him have you sinned."
Whereupon said the scribe: I have seen an old book; written by the
hand of Moses and
Joshua ;(he who made the sun stand still; as you have done), servants
and prophets of God,
which book is the true Book of Moses. Therein is written that Ishmael is
the father of
Messiah, and Isaac the father of the messenger of the Messiah. And thus
says the book,
that Moses said: "Lord God of Israel, mighty and merciful, manifest to
your servant
the splendour of your glory."
Whereupon God showed him his Messenger in the arms of Ishmael, and
Ishmael in the arms
of Abraham. Near to Ishmael stood Isaac, in whose arms was a child, who
with his finger
pointed to the Messenger of God, saying: "This is he for whom God has
created all
things." Whereupon Moses cried out with joy: "O Ishmael, you have in
your arms
all the world, and paradise! Be mindful of me, God's servant, that I may
find grace in
God's sight by means of your son, for whom God has made all."
Chapter 192
In that Book it is not found that God eats the flesh of cattle or
sheep; in that Book
it is not found that God has locked up his mercy in Israel alone, but
rather that God has
mercy on every man that seeks God his creator in truth. All of this book
I was not able to
read, because the high priest, in whose library I was, forbade me,
saying that an
Ishmaelite had written it.'
Then Jesus said: "See that you never again keep back the truth,
because in the
faith of the Messiah God shall give salvation to men, and without it
shall none be
saved." And there did Jesus end his discourse. Whereupon, as they sat at
meat, lo!
Mary, who wept at the feet of Jesus, entered into the house of Nicodemus
(for that was the
name of the scribe), and weeping placed herself at the feet of Jesus,
saying: 'Lord, your
servant, who through you has found mercy with God, has a sister, and a
brother who now
lies sick in peril of death.'
Jesus answered: 'Where is your house? Tell me, for I will come to
pray God for his
health.' Mary answered: 'Bethany is [the home] of my brother and my
sister, for my own
house is Magdala: my brother, therefore, is in Bethany;.' Jesus said to
the woman: 'Go you
straightway to your brother's house, and there await me, for I will come
to heal him. And
fear you not, for he shall not die.' The woman departed, and having gone
to Bethany found
that her brother had died that day, wherefore they laid him in the
sepulchre of their
fathers.
Chapter 193
Jesus abode two days in the house of Nicodemus, and the third day he
departed for
Bethany; and when he was near to the town he sent two of his disciples
before him, to
announce to Mary his coming. She ran out of the town, and when she had
found Jesus. said,
weeping: 'Lord, you said that my brother would not die; and now he has
been buried four
days. Would to God you had come before I called you, for then he had not
died!'
Jesus answered: 'Thy brother is not dead, but sleeps, therefore I
come to awake him.'
Mary answered, weeping: 'Lord, from such a sleep he shall be awakened on
the day of
judgment by the angel of God sounding his trumpet.' Jesus answered:
'Mary, believe me that
he shall rise before [that day], because God has given me power over his
sleep; and truly
I say to you he is not dead, for he alone is dead who dies without
finding mercy with
God.' Mary returned quickly to announce to her sister Martha the coming
of Jesus.
Now there were assembled at the death of Lazarus ;a great number of
Jews from
Jerusalem, and many scribes and Pharisees. Martha;, having heard from
her sister Mary of
the coming of Jesus, arose in haste and ran outside, whereupon the
multitude of Jews,
scribes, and Pharisees followed her to comfort her, because they
supposed she was going to
the sepulchre to weep over her brother. When therefore she arrived at
the place where
Jesus had spoken to Mary, Martha weeping said: 'Lord, would to God you
had been here, for
then my brother had not died!' Mary then came up weeping; whereupon
Jesus shed tears, and
sighing said: 'Where have you laid him?' They answered: 'Come and see.'
The Pharisees said among themselves: 'Now this man, who raised the
son of the widow ;at
Nain;, why did he suffer this man to die, having said that he should not
die?' Jesus
having come to the sepulchre, where every one was weeping, said: 'Weep
not, for Lazarus
sleeps, and I am come to awake him.' The Pharisees said among
themselves: 'Would to God
that you did so sleep!' Then Jesus said: 'My hour is not yet come; but
when it shall come
I shall sleep in like manner, and shall be speedily awakened.' Then
Jesus said again:
'Take away the stone from the sepulchre.' Said Martha: 'Lord, he stinks,
for he has been
dead four days.'Jesus said: 'Why then am I come hither, Martha? Believe
you not in me that
I shall awaken him?' Martha answered: 'I know that you are the holy one
of God, who has
sent you into this world.'
Then Jesus lifted up his hands to heaven, and said: ' God of our
fathers, God of
Abraham;, God of Ishmael ;and Lord of Isaac;, have mercy upon the
affliction of these
women, and give glory to your holy name.' And when every one had
answered 'Amen,' Jesus
said with a loud voice: 'Lazarus, come forth!' Whereupon he that was
dead arose; and Jesus
said to his disciples: 'Loose him.' For he was bound in the
grave-clothes with the napkin
over his face, even as our fathers were accustomed to bury [their dead].
A great multitude of the Jews and some of the Pharisees believed in
Jesus, because the
miracle was great. Those that remained in their unbelief departed and
went to Jerusalem
and announced to the chief of the priests the resurrection of Lazarus;,
and how that many
were become Nazarenes;; for so they called them who were brought to
penitence through the
word of God which Jesus preached.
Chapter 194
The scribes and Pharisees took counsel with the high priest to slay
Lazarus; for many
renounced their traditions and believed in the word of Jesus, because
the miracle of
Lazarus was a great one, seeing that Lazarus had conversation with men,
and ate and drank.
But because he was powerful, having a following in Jerusalem, and
possessing with his
sister Magdala and Bethany, they knew not what to do.
Jesus entered into Bethany, into the house of Lazarus, and Martha,
with Mary,
ministered to him. *Mary, sitting one day at the feet of Jesus, was
listening to his
words, whereupon Martha said to Jesus: 'Lord, see you not that my sister
takes no care for
you, and provides not that which you must eat and your disciples?' Jesus
answered:
'Martha, Martha, do you take thought for that which you should do; for
Mary has chosen a
part which shall not be taken away from her for ever.
Jesus, sitting at table with a great multitude that believed in him,
spoke, saying:
'Brethren, I have but little time to remain with you, for the time is at
hand that I must
depart from the world. Wherefore I bring to your mind the words of God
spoken to Ezekiel
;the prophet, saying: "As I, your God, live eternally, the soul that
sins, it shall
die, but if the sinner shall repent he shall not die but live."
Wherefore the present
death is not death, but rather the end of a long death: even as the body
when separated
from the sense in a swoon, though it have the soul within it, has no
other advantage over
the dead and buried save this, that the buried [body] awaits God to
raise it again, but
the unconscious waits for the sense to return. Behold, then, the present
life that it is
death, through having no perception of God.
Chapter 195
'They that shall believe in me shall not die eternally, for through
my word they shall
perceive God within them, and therefore shall work out their salvation.
What is death but
an act which nature does by commandment of God? As it would be if one
held a bird tied,
and held the cord in his hand; when the head wills the bird to fly away,
what does it?
Assuredly it commands naturally the hand to open; and so straightway the
bird flies away.
"Our soul," as says the prophet David,
"is as a sparrow freed from the snare of the fowler," when man abides
under
the protection of God. And our life is like a cord whereby nature holds
the soul bound to
the body and the sense of man. When therefore God wills, and commands
nature to open, the
life is broken and the soul escapes in the hands of the angels whom God
has ordained to
receive souls.
Let not, then, friends weep when their friend is dead; for our God
has so willed. But
let him weep without ceasing when he sins, for [so] the soul dies,
seeing it separates
itself from God, the true Life. If the body is horrible without its
union with the soul,
much more frightful is the soul without union with God, who with his
grace and mercy
beautifies and quickens it.' And having said this Jesus gave thanks to
God; whereupon
Lazarus said: 'Lord, this house belongs to God my creator, with all that
he has given into
my keeping, for the service of the poor. Wherefore, since you are poor,
and have a great
number of disciples, come you to dwell here when you please, and as much
as you please,
for the servant of God will minister to you as much as shall be needful,
for love of God.'
Chapter 196
Jesus rejoiced when he heard this, and said: 'See now how good a
thing it is to die!
Lazarus has died once only, and has learned such doctrine as is not
known to the wise men
in the world that have grown old among books! Would to God that every
man might die once
only and return to the world, like Lazarus;, in order that men might
learn to live.' John
answered: 'O master, is it permitted to me to speak a word?'
'Speak a thousand,' answered Jesus, 'for just as a man is bound to
dispense his goods
in the service of God, so also is he bound to dispense doctrine: and so
much the more is
he bound [so to do) inasmuch as the world has power to raise up a soul
to penitence,
whereas goods cannot bring back life to the dead. Wherefore he is a
murderer who has power
to help a poor man and when he helps him not the poor man dies of
hunger; but a more
grievous murderer is he who could by the word of God convert the sinner
to penitence, and
converts him not, but stands, as says God, "like a dumb dog." Against
such says
God: "The soul of the sinner that shall perish because you have hidden
my word, I
will require it at your hands, O unfaithful servant."
In what condition, then, are now the scribes and Pharisees who have
the key and will
not enter, no hinder them who would fain enter, into eternal life? 'You
ask me, O John;,
permission to speak one word, having listened to an hundred thousand
words of mine. Truly
I say to you, I am bound to listen to you ten times for every one that
you have listened
to me. And he who will not listen to another, every time that he shall
speak he shall sin;
seeing that we ought to do to others that which we desire for ourselves,
and not do to
others that which we do not desire to receive.' Then said John: 'O
master, why has not God
granted this to men, that they should die once and return as Lazarus has
done, in order
that they might learn to know themselves and their creator?'
Chapter 197
Jesus answered: 'Tell me, John; there was an householder who gave a
perfect axe ;to one
of his servants in order that he might cut down the wood which
obstructed the view of his
house. But the labourer forgot the axe, and said: "If the master would
give me an old
axe I should easily cut down the wood." Tell me, John, what said the
master?
Assuredly he was wroth, and took the old axe and struck him on the head,
saying: Fool and
knave! I gave you an axe wherewith you might cut down the wood without
toil, and seek you
this axe, wherewith one must work with great toil, and all that is cut
is wasted and good
for nought? I desire you to cut down the wood in such wise that your
work shall be
good." Is this true?'
John answered: 'It is most true.' [Then Jesus said: ] 'As I live
eternally,' said God,
'I have given a good axe to every man, which is the sight of the burial
of one dead. Whoso
wield well this axe remove the wood of sin from their heart without
pain; wherefore they
receive my grace and mercy; giving them merit of eternal life for their
good works. But he
who forgets that he is mortal, though time after time he see others die,
and says.
"If I should see the other life, I would do good works," my fury shall
be upon
him, and I will so smite him with death that he shall never more receive
any good.' 'O
John;,' said Jesus, 'how great is the advantage of him who from the fall
of others learns
to stand on his feet!'
Chapter 198
Then said Lazarus: 'Master, truly I say to you, I cannot conceive the
penalty of which
he is worthy who time after time sees the dead borne to the tomb and
fears not God our
creator. Such an one for the things of this world, which he ought
entirely to forsake,
offends his creator who has given him all.'
Then Jesus said to his disciples: 'You call me Master, and you do
well, seeing that God
teaches you by my mouth. But how will you call Lazarus? Truly he is here
master of all the
masters that teach doctrine in this world. I indeed have taught you how
you ought to live
well, but Lazarus will teach you how to die well. As God lives, he has
received the gift
of prophecy; listen therefore to his words, which are truth. And so much
the more ought
you to listen to him, as good living is vain if one die badly.'
Said Lazarus: 'O master, I thank you that you make the truth to be
prized; therefore
will God give the great merit.' Then said he who writes this: 'O master
how speaks Lazarus
the truth in saying to you "You shall have merit," whereas you said to
Nicodemus
that man merits nought but punishment? Shall you accordingly be punished
of God?' Jesus
answered: 'May it please God that I receive punish. men of God in this
World, because I
have not served him so faithfully as I was bound to do.
But God has so loved me, by his mercy, that every punishment is
withdrawn from me, in
so much that I shall only be tormented in another person. For punishment
was fitting for
me, for that men have called me God; but since I have confessed, not
only that I am not
God, as is the truth, but have confessed also that I am not the Messiah,
therefore God has
taken away the punishment from me, and will cause a wicked one to suffer
it in my name, so
that the shame alone shall be mine. wherefore I say to you, my Barnabas,
that when a man
speaks of what God shall give to his neighbour let him say that his
neighbour merits it:
but let him look to it that, when he speaks of
what God shall give to himself , he say: God will give me." And let
him look to it
that he say not, I have merit, because God is pleased to grant his mercy
to his servants
when they confess that they merit hell for their sins.
Chapter 199
God is so rich in mercy that the water of a thousand seas, if so many
were to be found,
could not quench a spark of the flames of hell, yet a single tear of one
who mourns at
having offended God quenches the whole of hell, by the great mercy
wherewith God succours
him. God, therefore, to confound Satan and to display his own bounty,
wills to call merit
in the presence of his mercy every good work of his faithful servant,
and wills him so to
speak of his neighbour. But of himself a man must beware of saying: "I
have
merit"; for he would be condemned.'
Chapter 200
Jesus then turned to Lazarus, and said: 'Brother, I must needs for a
short time abide
in the world, wherefore when I shall be near to your house I will not
ever go elsewhere,
because you will minister to me, not for love of me, but for love of
God.' It was near to
the Passover of the Jews, [so] Jesus said to his disciples: "Let us go
to Jerusalem
to eat the paschal lamb." And he sent Peter and John to the city,
saying: "You
shall find an ass near the gate of the city with a colt: loose her and
bring her here; for
I must ride [on her] into Jerusalem. And if any one ask you saying, "Why
[do] you
loose her?" say to them: "The Master has need [of her]," and they will
permit you to bring her."
The disciples went, and found all that Jesus had told them, and
accordingly they
brought the ass and the colt. The disciples [then] placed their mantles
upon the colt, and
Jesus rode [on her]. And it came to pass that, when the men of Jerusalem
heard that Jesus
of Nazareth was coming, the men went forth with their children eager to
see Jesus, bearing
in their hands branches of palm and olive, singing: 'Blessed be he that
comes to us in the
name of God; hosanna son of David!'
Jesus having come into the city, the men spread out their garments
under the feet of
the ass, singing: "Blessed be he that comes to us in the name of the
Lord God;
hosanna, son of David!" The Pharisees rebuked Jesus, saying: 'See you
not what these
say? Cause them to hold their peace!' Then Jesus said: 'As God lives, in
whose presence my
soul stands, if men should hold their peace, the stones would cry out
against the unbelief
of malignant sinners.' And when Jesus had said this all the stones of
Jerusalem cried out
with a great noise: 'Blessed be he who comes to us in the name of the
Lord God!'
Nevertheless the Pharisees remained still in their unbelief, and, having
assembled
themselves together, took counsel to catch him in his talk.
Chapter 201
Jesus having entered into the Temple, the scribes and Pharisees
brought to him a woman
taken in adultery. They said among themselves: 'If he save her, it is
contrary to the Law
of Moses, and so we have him as guilty, and if he condemn her it is
contrary to his own
doctrine, for he preaches mercy.' Wherefore they came to Jesus and said:
'Master, we have
found this woman in adultery. Moses commanded that [such] should be
stoned: what then say
you?'
Thereupon Jesus stooped down and with his finger made a mirror on the
ground wherein
every one saw his own iniquities. They still pressed for the answer,
Jesus lifted up
himself As and, pointing to the mirror with his finger, said: 'He that
is without sin
among you, let him be first to stone her.' And again he stooped down,
shaping the mirror.
The men, seeing this, went out one by one, beginning from the eldest,
for they were
ashamed to see their abominations.
Jesus having lifted up himself, and seeing no one but the woman,
said: 'Woman, where
are they that condemned you?' The woman answered, weeping: 'Lord, they
are departed; and
if you will pardon me as God lives, I will sin no more.' Then Jesus
said: 'Blessed be God!
Go your way in peace and sin no more, for God has not sent me to condemn
you.'
Then, the scribes and Pharisees being assembled, Jesus said to them:
'Tell me: if one
of you had an hundred sheep, and should lose one of them, would you not
go to seek it,
leaving the ninety and nine? And when you found it, would you not lay it
upon your
shoulders and, having called together your neighbours, say to them:
"Rejoice with me,
for I have found the sheep which I had lost"? Assuredly you would do so.
Now tell me,
shall our God love less man, for whom he has made the world? As God
lives, even so there
is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that
repents; because sinners
make known God's mercy.'
Chapter 202
'Tell me, by whom is the physician more loved: by them that have
never had any
sickness, or by them whom the physician has healed of grievous
sickness?' Said the
Pharisees to him: 'And how shall he that is whole love the physician?
assuredly he will
love him only for that he is not sick; and not having knowledge of
sickness he will love
the physician but little.'
Then with vehemence of spirit Jesus spoke, saying: 'As God lives,
your own tongues
condemn your pride, inasmuch as our God is loved more by the sinner that
repents, knowing
the great mercy of God upon him, than by the righteous. For the
righteous has not
knowledge of the mercy of God. Wherefore there is more rejoicing in the
presence of the
angels of God over one sinner that repents than over ninety and nine
righteous persons.
Where are the righteous in our time? As God lives, in whose presence my
soul stands, great
is the number of the righteous unrighteous; their condition being like
to that of Satan.'
The scribes and Pharisees answered: 'We are sinners, wherefore God
will have mercy on
us.' And this they said tempting him; for the scribes and Pharisees
count it the greatest
insult to be called sinners. Then Jesus said: 'I fear that you be
righteous unrighteous.
For if you have sinned and deny your sin, calling yourselves righteous,
you are
unrighteous; and if in your heart you hold yourselves righteous, and
with your tongue you
say that you are sinners, then are you doubly righteous unrighteous.'
Accordingly the scribes and Pharisees hearing this were confounded
and departed,
leaving Jesus with his disciples in peace, and they went into the house
of Simon the
leper, whose leprosy he [had] cleansed. The citizens had gathered
together the sick to the
house of Simon and prayed Jesus for the healing of the sick. Then Jesus,
knowing that his
hour was near, said: 'Call the sick, as many as there be, because God is
mighty and
merciful to heal them.' They answered: 'We know not that there be any
other sick folk here
in Jerusalem.'
Jesus weeping answered: 'O Jerusalem, O Israel, I weep over you, for
you know not your
visitation; because I would fain have gathered you to the love of God
your creator, as a
hen gathers her chickens under her wings, and you would not! Wherefore
God says thus to
you
Chapter 203
O city, hard-hearted and perverse of mind, I have sent to you my
servant, to the end
that he may convert you to your heart, and you may repent; but you, O
city of confusion,
have forgotten all that I did upon Egypt and upon Pharaoh for love of
you, O Israel. Many
times weep you that my servant may heal your body of sickness; and you
seek to slay my
servant because he seeks to heal your soul of sin.
Shall you, then, alone remain unpunished by me? Shall you, then, live
eternally? And
shall your pride deliver you from my hands? Assuredly not. For I will
bring princes with
they shall surround you with might, an army against you, and in such
wise will I give you
over into their hands that your pride shall fall down into hell.
I will not pardon the old men or the widows, I will not pardon the
children, but I will
give you all to famine, the sword, and derision and the Temple, whereon I
have looked with
mercy, I will make desolate with the city, insomuch that you shall be
for a fable, a
derision, and a proverb among the nations. So is my wrath abiding upon
you, and my
indignation sleeps not."
Chapter 204
Having said this, Jesus said again: 'Know you not that there be other
sick folk? As God
lives, they be fewer in Jerusalem that have their soul sound than they
that be sick in
body. And in order that you may know the truth, I say to you, O sick
folk, in the name of
God, let your sickness depart from you! And when he had said this,
immediately they were
healed.
The men wept when they heard of the wrath of God upon Jerusalem, and
prayed for mercy;
when Jesus said: "'If Jerusalem shall weep for her sins and do penance,
walking in my
ways, said God, "I will not remember her iniquities any more, and I will
not do to
her any of the evil which I have said. But Jerusalem weeps for her ruin
and not for her
dishonouring of me, wherewith she has blasphemed my name among the
nations. Therefore is
my fury kindled much more. As I live eternally, if Job, Abraham, Samuel,
David, and Daniel
my servants, with Moses, should pray for this people, my wrath upon
Jerusalem will not be
appeased."' And having said this, Jesus retired into the house, while
every one
remained in fear.
Chapter 205
While Jesus was supping with his disciples in the house of Simon the
leper, behold Mary
the sister of Lazarus entered into the house, and having broken a
vessel, poured ointment
over the head and garment of Jesus. Seeing this, Judas the traitor was
fain to hinder Mary
from doing such a work, saying: "Go and sell the ointment and bring the
money that I
may give it to the poor.' Jesus said: 'Why hinder you her? Let her be,
for the poor you
shall have always with you, but me you shall not have always.'
Judas answered: 'O master, this ointment might be sold for three
hundred pieces of
money now see how many poor folk would be helped.' Jesus answered: 'O
Judas, I know your
heart: have patience, therefore, and I will give you all.' Every one ate
with fear, and
the disciples were sorrowful, because they knew that Jesus must soon
depart from them. But
Judas was indignant, because he knew that he was losing thirty pieces of
money for the
ointment not sold, seeing he stole the tenth part of all that was given
to Jesus.
He went to find the high priest, who assembled in a council of
priests, scribes, and
Pharisees; to whom Judas spoke, saying: 'What will you give me, and I
will betray into
your hands Jesus, who would fain make himself king of Israel?' *They
answered: 'Now how
will you give him into our hand?' Judas said: 'When I shall know that he
goes outside the
city to pray I will tell you, and will conduct you to the place where he
shall be found;
for to seize him in the city will be impossible without a sedition.' The
high priest
answered: 'If you will give him into our hand we will give the thirty
pieces of gold and
you shall see how well I will treat you.'
Chapter 206
When day was come, Jesus went up to the Temple with a great multitude
of people.
Whereupon the high priest drew near, saying: 'Tell me, O Jesus, have you
forgotten all
that you did confess, that you are not God, nor son of God, nor even the
Messiah?' Jesus
answered: 'No, surely, I have not forgotten; for this is my confession
which I shall bear
before the judgment seat of God on the day of judgment. For all that is
written in the
Book of Moses is most true, inasmuch as God our creator is [God] alone,
and I am God's
servant and desire to serve God's Messenger whom you call Messiah.'
Said the high priest: 'Then what boots it to come to the Temple with
so great a
multitude of people? Seek you, perhaps, to make yourself king of Israel?
Beware lest some
danger befall you!' Jesus answered: 'If I sought my own glory and
desired my portion in
this world, I had not fled when the people of Nain would fain have made
me king. Believe
me, truly, that I seek not anything in this world.' Then said the high
priest: 'We want to
know a thing concerning the Messiah.' And then the priests, scribes, and
Pharisees made a
circle round about Jesus.
Jesus answered: 'What is that thing which you seek to know about the
Messiah? Perhaps
it is the lie? Assuredly I will not tell you the lie. For if I had said
the lie I had been
adored by you, and by the scribes [and] Pharisees with all Israel: but
because I tell you
the truth you hate me and seek to kill me.' Said the high priest: 'Now
we know that you
have the devil at your back; for you are a Samaritan;, and have not
respect to the priest
of God.'
Chapter 207
Jesus answered: 'As God lives, I have not the devil at my back, but I
seek to cast out
the devil. Wherefore, for this cause the devil stirs up the world
against me, because I am
not of this world, but I seek that God may be glorified, who has sent me
into the world.
Hearken therefore to me, and I will tell you who has the devil at his
back. As God lives,
in whose presence my soul stands, he who works after the will of the
devil, he has the
devil at his back, who has put on him the bridle of his will and rules
him at his
pleasure, making him to run into every iniquity.
Even as a garment changes its name when it changes its owner,
although it is all the
same cloth: so also men, albeit they are all of one material, are
different by reason of
the works of him who works in the man. 'If I (as I know) have sinned,
wherefore do you not
rebuke me as a brother, instead of hating me as an enemy? Truly the
members of a body
succour one another when they are united with the head, and they that
are cut off from the
head give it no succour. For the hands of one body do not feel the pain
of another body's
feet, but that of the body in which they are united. As God lives, in
whose presence my
soul stands, he who fears and loves God his Creator has the feeling of
mercy over them
[over] whom God his head has mercy: and seeing that God wills not the
death of the sinner,
but waits for each one to repent, if you were of that body wherein I am
incorporate, as
God lives, you would help me to work according to my head.
Chapter 208
If I work iniquity, reprove me, and God will love you, because you
shall be doing his
will, but if none can reprove me of sin it is a sign that you are not
sons of Abraham as
you call yourselves, nor are you incorporate with that head wherein
Abraham was
incorporate. As God lives, so greatly did Abraham love God, that he not
only brake in
pieces the false idols and forsook his father and mother, but was
willing to slay his own
son in obedience to God.
The high priest answered: "This I ask of you, and I do not seek to
slay you,
wherefore tell us: Who was this son of Abraham?" Jesus answered: "The
zeal of
your honour, O God, inflames me, and I cannot hold my peace. Truly I
say, the son of
Abraham was Ishmael, from whom must be descended the Messiah promised to
Abraham, that in
him should all the tribes of the earth be blessed." Then was the high
priest wroth,
hearing this, and cried out: "Let us stone this impious fellow, for he
is an
Ishmaelite, and has spoken blasphemy against Moses and against the Law
of God."
Whereupon every scribe and Pharisee, with the elders of the people,
took up stones to
stone Jesus, who vanished from their eyes and went out of the Temple.
And then, through
the great desire that they had to slay Jesus, blinded with fury and
hatred, they struck
one another in such wise that there died a thousand men; and they
polluted the holy
Temple. The disciples and believers, who saw Jesus go out of the Temple
(for from them he
was not hidden), followed him to the house of Simon.
Thereupon Nicodemus came thither and counselled Jesus to go out of
Jerusalem beyond the
brook Cedron, saying: 'Lord, I have a garden with a house beyond the
brook Cedron, I pray
you, therefore, go thither with some of your disciples, to tarry there
until this hatred
of our priests be past; for I will minister to you what is necessary.
And the multitude of
disciples leave you here in the house of Simon and in my house, for God
will provide for
all.' And this Jesus did, desiring only to have with him the twelve
first called apostles.
Chapter 209
At this time, while the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus, was standing in
prayer, the angel
Gabriel visited her and narrated to her the persecution of her son,
saying: "Fear
not, Mary, for God will protect him from the world." Mary, weeping,
departed from
Nazareth, and came to Jerusalem to the house of Mary Salome, her sister,
seeking her son.
But since he had secretly retired beyond the brook Cedron she was not
able to see him
any more in this world; except after the deed of shame, for [then] the
angel Gabriel, with
the angels Michael, Rafael, and Uriel, by [the] command of God, brought
him to her.
Chapter 210
When the confusion in the Temple ceased by the departure of Jesus,
the high priest
ascended on high, and having beckoned for silence with his hands he
said:, 'Brethren, what
do we? See you not that he has deceived the whole world with his
diabolical art? Now, how
did he vanish, if he be not a magician? Assuredly, if he were an holy
one and a prophet,
he would not blaspheme against God and against Moses [his] servant, and
against the
Messiah, who is the hope of Israel. And what shall I say? He has
blasphemed all our
priesthood, wherefore truly I say to you, if he be not removed from the
world Israel will
be polluted, and our God will give us to the nations. Behold now, how by
reason of him
this holy Temple has been polluted.'
And in such wise did the high priest speak at many forsook Jesus,
wherefore the secret
persecution was converted into an open one, insomuch that the high
priest went in person
to Herod, and to the Roman governor, accusing Jesus that he desired to
make himself king
of Israel, and of this they had false witnesses.
Thereupon was held a general council against Jesus, forasmuch as the
decree of the
Romans made them afraid. For so it was that twice the Roman Senate had
sent a decree
concerning Jesus: in one decree it was forbidden, on pain of death, that
any one should
call Jesus of Nazareth;, the prophet of the Jews, either God or Son of
God; in the other
it forbade, under capital sentence, that any one should contend
concerning Jesus of
Nazareth, prophet of the Jews. Wherefore, for this cause, there was a
great division among
them. Some desired that they should write again to Rome against Jesus;
others said that
they should leave Jesus alone, regardless of what he said, as of a fool;
others adduced
the great miracles that he wrought.
The high priest therefore spoke that under pain of anathema none
should speak a word in
defence of Jesus; and he spoke to Herod, and to the governor, saying 'In
any case we have
an ill venture in our hands, for if we slay this sinner we have acted
contrary to the
decree of Caesar, and, if we suffer him to live and he make himself
king, how will the
matter go?' Then Herod arose and threatened the governor, saying:
'Beware lest through
your favouring of that man this country be rebellious: for I will accuse
you before Caesar
;as a rebel.'
Then the governor feared the Senate and made friends with Herod (for
before this they
had hated one another to death), and they joined together for the death
of Jesus, and said
to the high priest: 'Whenever you shall know where the malefactor is,
send to us, for we
will give you soldiers.' This was done to fulfil the prophecy of David
who had foretold of
Jesus, prophet of Israel, saying: The princes and kings of the earth are
united against
the holy one of Israel, because he announces the salvation of the world.
Thereupon, on
that day, there was a general search for Jesus throughout Jerusalem.
Chapter 211
Jesus, being in the house of Nicodemus ;beyond the brook Cedron,
comforted his
disciples, saying: 'The hour is near that I must depart from the world;
console yourselves
and be not sad, seeing that where I go I shall not feel any tribulation.
'Now, shall you
be my friends if you be sad at my welfare? No, assuredly, but rather
enemies. When the
world shall rejoice, be you sad, because the rejoicing of the world is
turned into
weeping; but your sadness shall be turned into joy and your joy shall no
one take from
you: for the rejoicing that the heart feels in God its creator not the
whole world can
take away. See that you forget not the words which God has spoken to you
by my mouth. Be
you my witnesses against every one that shall corrupt the witness that I
have witnessed
with my gospel; against the world, and against the lovers of the world.
Chapter 212
Then lifting up his hands to the Lord, he prayed, saying: 'Lord our
God, God of
Abraham;, God of Ishmael ;and Isaac;, God of our fathers, have mercy
upon them that you
have given me, and save them from the world. I say not, take them from
the world, because
it is necessary that they shall bear witness against them that shall
corrupt my gospel;.
But I pray you to keep them from evil, that on the day of your judgment
they may come with
me to bear witness against the world and against the House of Israel
that has corrupted
your testament.
Lord God, mighty and jealous, that take vengeance upon idolatry
against the sons of
idolatrous fathers even to the fourth generation, do you curse eternally
every one that
shall corrupt my gospel that you gave me, when they write that I am your
son. For I, clay
and dust, am servant of your servants, and never have I thought myself
to be your good
servant; for I cannot give you aught in return for that which you have
given me, for all
things are yours.
Lord God, the merciful, that shows mercy to a thousand generations
upon them that fear
you, have mercy upon them which believe my words that you have given me.
For even as you
are true God, so your word which I have spoken is true; for it is yours,
seeing I have
ever spoken as one that reads, who cannot read save that which is
written in the book that
he reads: even so have I spoken that which you have given me.
'Lord God the Saviour, save them whom you have given me, in order
that Satan may not be
able to do aught against them, and save not only them, but every one
that shall believe in
them. Lord, bountiful and rich in mercy, grant to your servant to be in
the congregation
of your Messenger; on the Day of Judgment: and not me only, but every
one whom you have
given me, with all them that shall believe on me through their
preaching. And this do,
Lord, for your own sake, that Satan boast not himself against you, Lord.
'Lord God, who by your providence provides all things necessary for
your people Israel,
be mindful of all the tribes of the earth, which you have promised to
bless by your
Messenger, for whom you did create the world. Have mercy on the world
and send speedily
your Messenger, that Satan your enemy may lose his empire.' And having
said this, Jesus
said three times: 'So be it, Lord, great and merciful!' And they
answered, weeping: 'So be
it," all save Judas, for he believed nothing.
Chapter 213
The day having come for eating the lamb, Nicodemus ;sent the lamb
secretly to the
garden for Jesus and his disciples, announcing all that had been decreed
by Herod ;with
the governor and the high priest. Whereupon Jesus rejoiced in spirit,
saying: 'Blessed be
your holy name, O Lord, because you have not separated me from the
number of your servants
that have been persecuted by the world and slain. I thank you, my God,
because I have
fulfilled your work.' And turning to Judas, he said to him: 'Friend,
wherefore do you
tarry? My time is near, wherefore go and do that which you must do."
The disciples thought that Jesus was sending Judas ;to buy something
for the day of the
Passover;: but Jesus knew that Judas was betraying him, wherefore,
desiring to depart from
the world, he so spoke. Judas answered: 'Lord, suffer me to eat, and I
will go.' 'Let us
eat,' said Jesus, 'for I have greatly desired to eat this lamb before I
am parted from
you.'
And having arisen, he took a towel and girded his loins, and having
put water in a
basin, he set himself to wash his disciples' feet. Beginning from
Judas;, Jesus came to
Peter. Said Peter;: 'Lord, would you wash my feet?' Jesus answered:
'That which I do you
know not now, but you shall know hereafter.' Peter answered: 'You shall
never wash my
feet. Then Jesus rose up, and said: 'Neither shall you come in my
company on the day of
judgment.' Peter answered: 'Wash not only my feet, Lord, but my hands
and my head.'
When the disciples were washed and were seated at table to eat, Jesus
said: 'I have
washed you, yet are you not all clean, for as much as all the water of
the sea will not
wash him that believes me not.' This said Jesus, because he knew who was
betraying him.
The disciples were sad at these words, when Jesus said again: 'Truly I
say to you, that
one of you shall betray me, insomuch that I shall be sold like a sheep;
but woe to him,
for he shall fulfil all that our father David said of such an one, that
"he shall
fall into the pit which he had prepared for others." '
Whereupon the disciples looked one upon another, saying with sorrow:
'Who shall be the
traitor?' Judas then said: 'Shall it be I, O Master?' Jesus answered:
'You have told me
who it shall be that shall betray me.' And the eleven apostles heard it
not. When the lamb
was eaten, the devil came upon the back of Judas;, and he went forth
from the house, Jesus
saying to him again: 'Do quickly that which you must do.'
Chapter 214
Having gone forth from the house, Jesus retired into the garden to
pray, according as
his custom was to pray, bowing his knees an hundred times and
prostrating himself upon his
face. Judas, accordingly, knowing the place where Jesus was with his
disciples, went to
the high priest, and said: "If you will give me what was promised, this
night will I
give into your hand Jesus whom you seek; for he is alone with eleven
companions." The
high priest answered: "How much do you seek?" Judas said, "Thirty pieces
of
gold."
Then straightway the high priest counted to him the money, and sent a
Pharisee to the
governor to fetch soldiers, and to Herod, and they gave a legion of
them, because they
feared the people; wherefore they took their arms, and with torches and
lanterns upon
staves went out of Jerusalem.
Chapter 215
When the soldiers with Judas drew near to the place where Jesus was,
Jesus heard the
approach of many people, wherefore in fear he withdrew into the house.
And the eleven were
sleeping. Then God, seeing the danger of his servant, commanded
Gabriel;, Michael;,
Rafael;, and Uriel;, his ministers, to take Jesus out of the world. The
holy angels came
and took Jesus out by the window that looks toward the South;. They bare
him and placed
him in the third heaven in the company of angels blessing God for
evermore.
Chapter 216
Judas entered impetuously before all into the chamber whence Jesus
had been taken up.
And the disciples were sleeping. Whereupon the wonderful God acted
wonderfully, insomuch
that Judas was so changed in speech and in face to be like Jesus that we
believed him to
be Jesus. And he, having awakened us, was seeking where the Master was.
Whereupon we
marvelled, and answered: 'You, Lord, are our master; have you now
forgotten us?'
And he, smiling, said: 'Now are you foolish, that know not me to be
Judas Iscariot!'
And as he was saying this the soldiery entered, and laid their hands
upon Judas, because
he was in every way like to Jesus. We having heard Judas' saying, and
seeing the multitude
of soldiers, fled as beside ourselves. And John, who was wrapped in a
linen cloth, awoke
and fled, and when a soldier seized him by the linen cloth he left the
linen cloth and
fled naked. For God heard the prayer of Jesus, and saved the eleven from
evil.
Chapter 217
The soldiers took Judas ;and bound him, not without derision. For he
truthfully denied
that he was Jesus; and the soldiers, mocking him, said: 'Sir, fear not,
for we are come to
make you king of Israel, and we have bound you because we know that you
do refuse the
kingdom.' Judas answered: 'Now have you lost your senses! You are come
to take Jesus of
Nazareth;, with arms and lanterns as [against] a robber; and you have
bound me that have
guided you, to make me king!'
Then the soldiers lost their patience, and with blows and kicks they
began to flout
Judas, and they led him with fury into Jerusalem. John ;and Peter
;followed the soldiers
afar off; and they affirmed to him who writes that they saw all the
examination that was
made of Judas by the high priest, and by the council of the Pharisees,
who were assembled
to put Jesus to death. Whereupon Judas spoke many words of madness,
insomuch that every
one was filled with laughter, believing that he was really Jesus, and
that for fear of
death he was feigning madness. Whereupon the scribes bound his eyes with
a bandage, and
mocking him said: 'Jesus, prophet of the Nazarenes ;(for so they called
them who believed
in Jesus), 'tell us, who was it that smote you?' And they buffeted him
and spat in his
face.
When it was morning there assembled the great council of scribes and
elders of the
people; and the high priest with the Pharisees sought false witness
against Judas,
believing him to be Jesus: and they found not that which they sought.
And why say I that
the chief priests believed Judas to be Jesus? No all the disciples, with
him who writes,
believed it; and more, the poor Virgin mother of Jesus, with his
kinsfolk and friends,
believed it, insomuch that the sorrow of every one was incredible.
As God lives, he who writes forgot all that Jesus had said: how that
he should be taken
up from the world, and that he should suffer in a third person, and that
he should not die
until near the end of the world. Wherefore he went with the mother of
Jesus and with John
to the cross. The high priest caused Judas ;to be brought before him
bound, and asked him
of his disciples and his doctrine. Whereupon Judas, as though beside
himself, answered
nothing to the point. The high priest then adjured him by the living God
of Israel that he
would tell him the truth.
Judas answered: 'I have told you that I am Judas Iscariot, who
promised to give into
your hands Jesus the Nazarene; and you, by what are I know not, are
beside yourselves, for
you will have it by every means that I am Jesus.' The high priest
answered: 'O perverse
seducer, you have deceived all Israel, beginning from Galilee; even to
Jerusalem here,
with your doctrine and false miracles: and now think you to flee the
merited punishment
that befits you by feigning to be mad?
As God lives,' you shall not escape it!' And having said this he
commanded his servants
to smite him with buffetings and kicks, so that his understanding might
come back into his
head. The derision which he then suffered at the hands of the high
priest's servants is
past belief. For they zealously devised new inventions to give pleasure
to the council. So
they attired him as a juggler, and so treated him with hands and feet
that it would have
moved the very Canaanites to compassion if they had beheld that sight.
But the chief
priests and Pharisees and elders of the people had their hearts so
exasperated against
Jesus that, believing Judas to be really Jesus, they took delight in
seeing him so
treated.
Afterwards they led him bound to the governor, who secretly loved
Jesus. Whereupon he,
thinking that Judas was Jesus, made him enter into his chamber, and
spoke to him, asking
him for what cause the chief priests and the people had given him into
his hands. Judas
answered: 'If I tell you the truth, you will not believe me; for perhaps
you are deceived
as the (chief) priests and the Pharisees are deceived.'
The governor answered (thinking that he wished to speak concerning
the Law): 'Now know
you not that I am not a Jew? but the (chief) priests and the elders of
your people have
given you into my hand; wherefore tell us the truth, wherefore I may do
what is just. For
I have power to set you free and to put you to death.' Judas answered:
'Sir, believe me,
if you put me to death, you shall do a great wrong, for you shall slay
an innocent person;
seeing that I am Judas ;Iscariot, and not Jesus, who is a magician, and
by his are has so
transformed me.'
When he heard this the governor marvelled greatly, so that he sought
to set him at
liberty. The governor therefore went out, and smiling said: 'In the one
case, at least,
this man is not worthy of death, but rather of compassion.' 'This man
says,' said the
governor, 'that he is not Jesus, but a certain Judas who guided the
soldiery to take
Jesus, and he says that Jesus the Galilean has by his are magic so
transformed him.
Wherefore, if this be true, it were a great wrong to kill him, seeing
that he were
innocent. But if he is Jesus and denies that he is, assuredly he has
lost his
understanding, and it were impious to slay a madman.'
Then the chief priests and elders of the people, with the scribes and
Pharisees, cried
out with shouts, saying: 'He is Jesus of Nazareth;, for we know him; for
if he were not
the malefactor we would not have given him into your hands. Nor is he
mad; but rather
malignant, for with this device he seeks to escape from our hands, and
the sedition that
he would stir up if he should escape would be worse than the former.'
Pilate (of such was
the governor's name), in order to rid himself of such a case, said: 'He
is a Galilean, and
Herod is king of Galilee: wherefore it pertains not to me to judge such a
case, so take
you him to Herod.' Accordingly they led Judas to Herod, who of a long
time had desired
that Jesus should go to his house. But Jesus had never been willing to
go to his house,
because Herod was a Gentile, and adored the false and lying gods, living
after the manner
of the unclean Gentiles. Now when Judas had been led thither, Herod
asked him of many
things, to which Judas gave answers not to the purpose, denying that he
was Jesus. Then
Herod mocked him, with all his court, and caused him to be clad in white
as the fools are
clad;, and sent him back to Pilate, saying to him, 'Do not fail in
justice to the people
of Israel!' * And this Herod wrote, because the chief priests and
scribes and the
Pharisees had given him a good quantity of money. The governor having
heard that this was
so from a servant of Herod, in order that he also might gain some money,
feigned that he
desired to set Judas at liberty.
Whereupon he caused him to be scourged by his slaves, who were paid
by the scribes to
slay him under the scourges. But God, who had decreed the issue,
reserved Judas for the
cross, in order that he might suffer that horrible death to which he had
sold another. He
did not suffer Judas to die under the scourges, notwithstanding that the
soldiers scourged
him so grievously that his body rained blood. Thereupon, in mockery they
clad him in an
old purple garment;, saying: 'It is fitting to our new king to clothe
him and crown him':
so they gathered thorns and made a crown, like those of gold and
precious stones which
kings wear on their heads. And this crown of thorns they placed upon
Judas' head, putting
in his hand a reed for sceptre;, and they made him sit in a high place.
And the soldiers came before him, bowing down in mockery, saluting
him as King of the
Jews. And they held out their hands to receive gifts, such as new kings
are accustomed to
give; and receiving nothing they smote Judas, saying: 'Now, how are you
crowned, foolish
king, if you will not pay your soldiers and servants?' *The chief
priests with the scribes
and Pharisees, seeing that Judas died not by the scourges, and fearing
lest Pilate should
set him at liberty, made a gift of money to the governor, who having
received it gave
Judas to the scribes and Pharisees as guilty to death. Whereupon they
condemned two
robbers with him to the death of the cross.
So they led him to Mount Calvary, where they used to hang
malefactors, and there they
crucified him naked;, for the greater ignominy. *Judas truly did nothing
else but cry out:
'God, why have you forsaken me, seeing the malefactor has escaped and I
die unjustly?'
*Truly I say that the voice, the face, and the person of Judas were so
like to Jesus, that
his disciples and believers entirely believed that he was Jesus;
wherefore some departed
from the doctrine of Jesus, believing that Jesus had been a false
prophet, and that by art
magic he had done the miracles which he did: for Jesus had said that he
should not die
till near the end of the world; for that at that time he should be taken
away from the
world.
But they that stood firm in the doctrine of Jesus were so encompassed
with sorrow,
seeing him die who was entirely like to Jesus, that they remembered not
what Jesus had
said. And so in company with the mother of Jesus they went to Mount
Calvary, and were not
only present at the death of Judas, weeping continually, but by means of
Nicodemus and
Joseph of Abarimathia; they obtained from the governor the body of Judas
to bury it.
Whereupon, they took him down from the cross with such weeping as
assuredly no one would
believe, and buried him in the new sepulchre of Joseph; having wrapped
him up in an
hundred pounds of precious ointments.
Chapter 218
Then returned each man to his house. He who writes, with John and
James his brother,
went with the mother of Jesus; to Nazareth;.
Those disciples who did not fear God went by night [and] stole the
body of Judas and
hid it, spreading a report that Jesus was risen again; whence great
confusion arose. The
high priest then commanded, under pain of anathema;, that no one should
talk of Jesus of
Nazareth;. And so there arose a great persecution, and many were stoned
and many beaten,
and many banished from the land, because they could not hold their peace
on such a matter.
The news reached Nazareth how that Jesus, their fellow citizen,
having died on the
cross was risen again. Whereupon, he that writes; prayed the mother of
Jesus; that she
would be pleased to leave off weeping, because her son was risen again.
Hearing this, the
Virgin Mary, weeping, said: 'Let us go to Jerusalem to find my son. I
shall die content
when I have seen him.'
Chapter 219
The Virgin returned to Jerusalem with him who writes, and James and
John, on that day
on which the decree of the high priest went forth. Whereupon, the
Virgin, who feared God,
albeit she knew the decree of the high priest to be unjust, commanded
those who dwelt with
her to forget her son. Then how each one was affected! God who discerns
the heart of men
knows that between grief at the death of Judas whom we believed to be
Jesus our master,
and the desire to see him risen again, we, with the mother of Jesus,
were consumed.
So the angels that were guardians of Mary ascended to the third
heaven;, where Jesus
was in the company of angels, and recounted all to him. Wherefore Jesus
prayed God that he
would give him power to see his mother and his disciples. Then the
merciful God commanded
his four favourite angels, who are Michael, Gabriel, Rafael;, and Uriel,
to bear Jesus
into his mother's house, and there keep watch over him for three days
continually,
suffering him only to be seen by them that believed in his doctrine.
Jesus came, surrounded with splendour, to the room where abode Mary
the Virgin with her
two sisters, and Martha and Mary Magdalen, and Lazarus, and him who
writes, and John and
James and Peter. Whereupon, through fear they fell as dead. And Jesus
lifted up his mother
and the others from the ground, saying: 'Fear not, for I am Jesus; and
weep not, for I am
alive and not dead.' They remained every one for a long time beside
himself at the
presence of Jesus, for they altogether believed that Jesus was dead.
Then the Virgin,
weeping, said: 'Tell me, my son, wherefore God, having given you power
to raise the dead.
suffered you to die, to the shame of your kinsfolk and friends, and to
the shame of your
doctrine? For every one that loves you has been as dead.'
Chapter 220
Jesus replied, embracing his mother: 'Believe me, mother, for truly I
say to you that I
have not been dead at all; for God has reserved me till near the end of
the world.' And
having said this he prayed the four angels that they would manifest
themselves, and give
testimony how the matter had passed.
Thereupon the angels manifested themselves like four shining suns,
insomuch that
through fear every one again fell down as dead. Then Jesus gave four
linen cloths to the
angels that they might cover themselves, in order that they might be
seen and heard to
speak by his mother and her companions. And having lifted up each one,
he comforted them,
saying: 'These are the ministers of God: Gabriel, who announces God's
secrets; Michael,
who fights against God's enemies; Rafael, who receives the souls of them
that die; and
Uriel, who will call every one to the judgment of God at the last day.
Then the four
angels narrated to the Virgin how God had sent for Jesus, and had
transformed Judas, that
he might suffer the punishment to which he had sold another.
Then said he who writes: 'O Master, is it lawful for me to question
you now, as it was
lawful for me when you dwelt with us?' Jesus answered: 'Ask what you
please, Barnabas, and
I will answer you.' Then said he who writes: 'O Master, seeing that God
is merciful,
wherefore has he so tormented us, making us to believe that you were
dead? and your mother
has so wept for you that she has been near to death; and you, who are an
holy one of God,
on you has God suffered to fall the calumny that you were slain amongst
robbers ;on the
Mount Calvary?'
Jesus answered: 'Believe me, Barnabas, that every sin, however small
it be, God
punishes with great punishment, seeing that God is offended at sin.
Wherefore, since my
mother and my faithful disciples that were with me loved me a little
with earthly love,
the righteous God has willed to punish this love with the present grief,
in order that it
may not be punished in the flames of hell. And though I have been
innocent in the world,
since men have called me "God," and "Son of God," God, in order that I
be not mocked of the demons on the day of judgment, has willed that I be
mocked of men in
this world by the death of Judas;, making all men to believe that I died
upon the cross.
And this mocking shall continue until the advent of Muhammad;, the
Messenger ;of God, who,
when he shall come, shall reveal this deception to those who believe in
God's Law. Having
thus spoken, Jesus said: 'You are just, O Lord our God, because to you
only belongs honour
and glory without end.'
Chapter 221
Jesus turned himself to him who writes, and said: "Barnabas, see that
by all means
you write my gospel concerning all that has happened through my dwelling
in the world. And
write in a similar manner that which has befallen Judas, in order that
the faithful may be
undeceived, and every one may believe the truth." Then answered he who
writes:
"I will do so, if God wills, O Master; but I do not know what happened
to Judas, for
I did not see it."
Jesus answered: "Here are John and Peter who saw everything, and they
will tell
you all that has passed." And then Jesus commanded us to call his
faithful disciples
[so] that they might see him. So James and John called together the
seven disciples with
Nicodemus and Joseph, and many others of the seventy-two, and they ate
with Jesus.
The third day Jesus said: "Go to the Mount of Olives with my mother,
for there I
will ascend again to heaven, and you will see who shall bear me up." So
they all went
there except twenty-five of the seventy-two disciples, who for fear had
fled to Damascus.
And as they all stood in prayer, at midday Jesus came with a great
multitude of angels who
were praising God: and the splendour of his face made them greatly
afraid and they fell
with their faces to the ground. But Jesus lifted them up, comforting
them, and saying:
"Do not be afraid, I am your master."
And he reproved many who believed that he had died and risen again,
saying: "Do
you hold me and God for liars? I said to you that God has granted to me
to live almost to
the end of the world. Truly I say to you, I did not die; it was Judas
the traitor. Beware,
for Satan will make every effort to deceive you. Be my witnesses in
Israel, and throughout
the world, of all things that you have heard and seen."
And having said this, he prayed God for the salvation of the
faithful, and the
conversion of sinners and [then], his prayer ended, he embraced his
mother, saying:
"Peace be to you, my mother. Rest in God who created you and me." And
having
said this, he turned to his disciples, saying: "May God's grace and
mercy be with
you." Then before their eyes the four angels carried him up into heaven.
Chapter 222
After Jesus had departed, the disciples scattered through the
different parts of Israel
and of the world, and the truth, hated of Satan, was persecuted, as it
always is, by
falsehood. For certain evil men, pretending to be disciples, preached
that Jesus died and
rose not again. Others preached that he really died, but rose again.
Others preached, and
yet preach, that Jesus is the Son of God, among whom is Paul deceived.
But we - as much as
I have written - we preach to those that fear God, that they may be
saved in the last day
of God's Judgment. Amen.
END OF THE GOSPEL