What are the Apocrypha? |
|
The Pseudo Gospels: Acts of : |
Apocalypses Other Apocrypha |
This large text collection contains several sets of late Jewish and early Christian writings that are classified as "Apocryphal", that is, falsely claiming to be written by some Biblical figure, whose authority was revered at the time the work was written. It was presumably to lend greater importance to their own ideas that the actual authors – now anonymous to us – signed their work with the names of important prophetic or apostolic figures, like Enoch, Moses, Clement, James, Peter, Paul and even the twelve sons of Jacob (Testaments of the Patriarchs).
Many of the Apocryphal Writings are nowadays to be found online, and the Gnostic texts are well presented on the Gnostic Society website www.gnosis.org. See in particular the documents from Nag Hammadi at www.gnosis.org/naghamm/nhl.html
These works of apocryphal literature were intended by their authors either to supplement or to supplant existing canonical literature. In general, the apocryphal gospels provide a devotional, imaginative version of otherwise unreported aspects of Jesus' life – during his early years or after his resurrection. Sometimes they attempt to support early Christian theological convictions – both orthodox and heretical. Whether the information in the apocryphal literature is factually correct or not cannot be determined a-priori, although much of it seems to emerge from devotional imagination rather than from distinct memories. At any rate, these documents give us some fascinating insights into what some religious people in the early Christian centuries believed about Jesus' background and his powers, even from his infancy. Some of them, such as the Protevangelium of James or the Gospel of Mary's Nativity have influenced the Marian devotion and festal calendar of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. Then too, some of these texts are written in the apocalyptic style - i.e., they purport to be special revelations to a major biblical character, about what is to come at the end of time.
Apocryphal writings are especially difficult to date, since their actual authors were at such pains to remain anonymous, and sought to gain acceptance by simulating the tone and circumstances of the purported authors. Therefore these works are not credited to their actual authors even by people like Eusebius, Jerome and Sozomenos, who otherwise furnish such useful information about who wrote what, in the early centuries of the church. The earliest of the Apocrypha probably come from the second century, but many of them may have originated around the turn between 3rd and 4th centuries.
If their authorship is anonymous and their content is a mixture of naive piety and inventive propaganda, what value do these writings have for us today? Well, while they prove that literary fancy and pious invention were factors within early Christian culture, they also show that the leaders of mainstream Christianity resisted their inclusion in the Church's official canon of Holy Scripture. At the same time, the Apocryphal writings provide many valuable insights into the spiritual outlook and ideals of various groups in the post-apostolic age. Detailed observations about the outlook and provenance of many of these apocryphal works can be found in Walter Bauer's learned study of Orthodoxy and Heresy In Earliest Christianity.
A number of Apocryphal Gospels were written in the second century AD. or later. There are 22, of which 10 are written in Greek and 12 in Latin. These can be divided into three categories: those relating to the history of Mary and Joseph, the infancy of Christ, and the history of Pilate. Most of these appear to have been based on three fairly early texts: the Protevangelium of James, the Gospel of Thomas, and the Acts of Pilate. For a well-edited collection of Apocryphal Gospels see http://wesley.nnc.edu/ noncanon.htm See also The Complete Gospels ed. by Miller/Funk published by Harper Collins, 1992.
The book Mary: Glimpses of the Mother of Jesus. Fortress, 1995. (by Beverly Gaventa, professor of New Testament at Princeton Theological Seminary) is one of the few written from a Protestant perspective. It focuses on the biblical Mary, as described in the Gospels of Matthew, Luke and John, noting how briefly she is treated by the three evangelists, and yet with what subtle differences - in sharp contrast to the central role Mary occupies in the Protevangelium of James, a non-canonical 2nd century text that tells of her life from before her conception to her becoming the mother of Jesus. Out of the four texts, Gaventa extracts three qualities they all assign to Mary: vulnerability, reflectivity, and witness to Christ.