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St. Matthias
Apostle.
The Greek Matthias (or, in some manuscripts, Maththias), is a name derived
from Mattathias, Heb. Mattithiah, signifying gift of Yahweh.
Matthias was one
of the seventy disciples of Jesus, and had been with Him from His baptism by
John to the Ascension (Acts i, 21, 22). It is related (Acts, i, 15-26) that in
the days following the Ascension, Peter proposed to the assembled brethren, who
numbered one hundred and twenty, that they choose one to fill the place of the
traitor Judas in the Apostolate. Two disciples, Joseph, called Barsabas, and
Matthias were selected, and lots were drawn, with the result in favour of
Matthias, who thus became associated with the eleven Apostles. Zeller has
declared this narrative unhistoric, on the plea that the Apostles were in
Galilee after the death of Jesus. As a matter of fact they did return to Galilee,
but the Acts of the Apostles clearly state that about the feast of Pentecost
they went back to Jerusalem.
All further information concerning the life and death of Matthias is vague
and contradictory. According to Nicephorus (Hist. eccl., 2, 40), he first
preached the Gospel in Judea, then in Ethiopia (that is to say, Colchis) and was
crucified. The Synopsis of Dorotheus contains this tradition: Matthias in
interiore AEthiopia, ubi Hyssus maris portus et Phasis fluvius est, hominibus
barbaris et carnivoris praedicavit Evangelium. Mortuus est autem in Sebastopoli,
ibique prope templum Solis sepultus (Matthias preached the Gospel to barbarians
and cannibals in the interior of Ethiopia, at the harbour of the sea of Hyssus,
at the mouth of the river Phasis. He died at Sebastopolis, and was buried there,
near the Temple of the Sun). Still another tradition maintains that Matthias was
stoned at Jerusalem by the Jews, and then beheaded (cf. Tillemont, Mémoires
pour servir à l'histoire eccl. des six premiers siècles
, I, 406-7). It is said
that St. Helena brought the relics of St. Matthias to Rome, and that a portion
of them was at Trier. Bollandus (Acta SS., May, III) doubts if the relics that
are in Rome are not rather those of the St. Matthias who was Bishop of Jerusalem
about the year 120, and whose history would seem to have been confounded with
that of the Apostle. The Latin Church celebrates the feast of St. Matthias on 24
February and the Greek Church on 9 August.
Clement of Alexandria (Strom., III, 4) records a sentence that the
Nicolaitans ascribe to Matthias: we must combat our flesh, set no value upon it,
and concede to it nothing that can flatter it, but rather increase the growth of
our soul by faith and knowledge
. This teaching was probably found in the Gospel
of Matthias which was mentioned by Origen (Hom. i in Lucam); by Eusebius (Hist.
eccl., III, 25), who attributes it to heretics; by St. Jerome (Praef. in Matth.),
and in the Decree of Gelasius (VI, 8) which declares it apocryphal. It is at the
end of the list of the Codex Barrocciamus (206). This Gospel is probably the
document whence Clement of Alexandria quoted several passages, saying that they
were borrowed from the traditions of Matthias, Paradoseis, the testimony of
which he claimed to have been invoked by the heretics Valentinus, Marcion, and
Basilides (Strom., VII, 17). According to the Philosophoumena, VII, 20,
Basilides quoted apocryphal discourses, which he attributed to Matthias. These
three writings: the gospel, the Traditions, and the Apocryphal Discourses were
identified by Zahn (Gesch. des N. T. Kanon, II, 751), but Harnack (Chron. der
altchrist. Litteratur, 597) denies this identification. Tischendorf (Acta
apostolorum apocrypha
, Leipzig, l85I) published after Thilo, 1846, Acta
Andreae et Matthiae in urbe anthropophagarum
, which, according to Lipsius,
belonged to the middle of the second century. This apocrypha relates that
Matthias went among the cannibals and, being cast into prison, was delivered by
Andrew. Needless to say, the entire narrative is without historical value.
Moreover, it should be remembered that, in the apocryphal writings, Matthew and
Matthias have sometimes been confounded.
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