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St. Papias
Bishop of Hierapolis (close to Laodicea and Colossae in the valley of the
Lycus in Phrygia) and Apostolic Father, called by St. Irenaeus a hearer of John,
and companion of Polycarp, a man of old time
. He wrote a work in five books,
logion kyriakon exegesis, of which all but some fragments is lost. We learn
something of the contents from the preface, part of which has been preserved by
Eusebius (III, xxix):
I will not hesitate to add also for you to my interpretations what I formerly learned with care from the Presbyters and have carefully stored in memory, giving assurance of its truth. For I did not take pleasure as the many do in those who speak much, but in those who teach what is true, nor in those who relate foreign precepts, but in those who relate the precepts which were given by the Lord to the faith and came down from the Truth itself. And also if any follower of the Presbyters happened to come, I would inquire for the sayings of the Presbyters, what Andrew said, or what Peter said, or what Philip or what Thomas or James or what John or Matthew or any other of the Lord's disciples, and for the things which other of the Lord's disciples, and for the things which Aristion and the Presbyter John, the disciples of the Lord, were saying. For I considered that I should not get so much advantage from matter in books as from the voice which yet lives and remains.
From this we learn that Papias's book consisted mainly of interpretations
-
it was a kind of commentary on the Logia of the Lord
. The word logia, meaning
oracles
, is frequently at the present day taken to refer to sayings, as
opposed to narratives of Our Lord's actions (so Zahn and many others). But
Lightfoot showed long ago (Essays on Supernatural Religion, 171-7) that this
view is untenable. Philo used the word for any part of the inspired writings of
the Old Testament, whether speech or narrative. St. Paul, Irenaeus, Clement,
Origen, even Photius, have no other usage. St. Irenaeus speaks of corrupting the
oracles of the Lord just as Dionysius of Corinth speaks of corrupting the
Scriptures of the Lord. Logia kyriaka in Papias, in Irenaeus, in Photius, means
the divine oracles
of the Old or New Testament or both. Besides these
interpretations
, Papias added oral traditions of two kinds: some he had
himself heard from the Presbyters, para ton presbyteron; others he had at second
hand from disciples of the Presbyters who happened to visit him at Hierapolis.
The Presbyters related what the disciples of the Lord
- Peter, Andrew etc., -
used to say in old days. Other informants of Papias's visitors were still living,
Aristion and John the Presbyter, the disciples of the Lord
, as is shown by the
present tense, legousin. We naturally assume that Papias counted them also among
the direct informants whom he had mentioned before, for as they lived at Ephesus
and Smyrna, not far off, he would surely know them personally. However, many
eminent critics-Zahn and Lightfoot, and among Catholics, Funk, Bardenhewer,
Michiels, Gutjahr, Batiffol, Lepin-identify the Presbyters with Andrew, Peter
etc., thus making them Apostles, for they understand what Andrew and Peter and
the rest said
as epexegetic of the words of the Presbyters
. This is
impossible, for Papias had just spoken of what he learned directly from the
Presbyters, ora pote para ton presbyteron kalos emathon, yet it is admitted that
he could not have known many apostles. Again, he seems to distinguish the
sayings of the disciples of the Lord, Aristion and John, from those of the
Presbyters, as though the latter were not disciples of the Lord. Lastly,
Irenaeus and Eusebius, who had the work of Papias before them, understand the
Presbyters to be not Apostles, but disciples of disciples of the Lord, or even
disciples of disciples of Apostles. The same meaning is given to the word by
Clement of Alexandria. We are therefore obliged to make what Andrew and Peter
and the rest said
not co-ordinate with but subordinate to the sayings of the
Presbyters
, thus: I would inquire for the sayings of the Presbyters, what
(they related that) Andrew and Peter and the rest said, and for the things
Aristion and John were saying
. Eusebius has caused a further difficulty by
pointing out that two Johns are mentioned, one being distinguished by the
epithet presbyter from the other who is obviously the Apostle. The historian
adds that Dionysius of Alexandria said he heard there were two tombs of John at
Ephesus. This view has been adopted by practically all liberal critics and by
such conservatives as Lightfoot and Westcott. But Zahn and most Catholic writers
agree that Dionysius was mistaken about the tomb, and that Eusebius's
interpretation of Papias's words is incorrect. For he says that Papias
frequently cited John the Presbyter; yet it is certain that Irenaeus, who had a
great veneration for the work of Papias, took him to mean John the Apostle; and
Irenaeus had personal knowledge of Asiatic tradition and could not have been
ignorant of the existence of John the presbyter, if there ever was such a person
in Asia. Again, Irenaeus tells us that the Apostle lived at Ephesus until the
time of Trajan, that he wrote the Apocalypse in the last days of Domitian.
Irenaeus had heard Polycarp relate his reminiscences of the Apostle. Justin, who
was at Ephesus about 130-5, asserts that the Apostle was the author of the
Apocalypse (and therefore the head of the Asiatic Churches). But if the Apostle
lived at Ephesus at so late a date, (and it cannot be doubted with any show of
reason), he would naturally be the most important of Papias's witnesses. Yet if
Eusebius is right, it would seem that John the Presbyter was his chief informant,
and that the had no sayings of the Apostle to relate. Again, The Presbyter
who
wrote I and II John has the name of John in all MSS., and is identified with the
Apostle by Irenaeus and Clement, and is certainly (by internal evidence) the
writer of the fourth Gospel, which is attributed to the Apostle by Irenaeus and
all tradition. Again, Polycrates of Ephesus, in recounting the men who were the
glories of Asia, has no mention of John the presbyter, but of John, who lay
upon the Lord's breast
, undoubtedly meaning the Apostle. The second John at
Ephesus is an unlucky conjecture of Eusebius.
A fragment is, however, attributed to Papias which states that John the
theologian and James his brother were killed by the Jews
. It is not possible
that Papias should really have said this, otherwise Eusebius must have quoted it
and Irenaeus could not have been ignorant of it. There is certainly some error
in the quotation. Either something has been omitted, or St. John Baptist was
meant. That St. John is mentioned twice in the list of Papias's authorities is
explained by the distinction between his earlier sayings which the Presbyters
could repeat and the last utterances of his old age which were reported by
visitors from Ephesus. The most important fragment of Papias is that in which he
gives an account of St. Mark from the words of the Presbyter, obviously St. John.
It is a defense of St. Mark, attesting the perfect accuracy with which he wrote
down the teachings of St. Peter, but admitting that he did not give a correct
order. It is interesting to note that (as Dr. Abbott has shown) the fourth
Gospel inserts or refers to every incident given in St. Mark which St. Luke has
passed over. The prologue of St. Luke is manifestly cited in the fragment, so
that Papias and the Presbyter knew that Gospel, which was presumable preferred
to that of Mark in the Pauline Church of Ephesus; hence the need of the
rehabilitation of Mark by the Presbyter
, who speaks with authority as one who
knew the facts of the life of Christ as well as Peter himself. The famous
statement of Papias that St. Matthew wrote his logia (that is, his canonical
work) in Hebrew, and each interpreted (translated) it as he was able, seems to
imply that when Papias wrote an accepted version was current-our present St.
Matthew. His knowledge of St. John's Gospel is proved not merely by his mention
of aloes, but by a citation of John xiv, 2, which occurs in the curious prophecy
of a miraculous vintage in the millennium which he attributed to Our Lord
(Irenaeus, V, xxxvi). The reference in his preface to our Lord as the Truth
also implies a knowledge of the fourth Gospel. He cited I John and I Peter
according to Eusebius, and he evidently built largely upon the Apocalypse, from
which he drew his chiliastic views. It was formerly customary among liberal
critics to assume (for no proof was possible) that Papias ignored St. Paul. It
is now recognized that a bishop who lived a few miles from Colossae cannot be
suspected of opposition to St. Paul merely on the ground that the few lines of
his writings which remain do not contain any quotation from the Apostle. It is
highly probable that Papias had a New Testament containing the Four Gospels, the
Acts, the chief Epistles of St. Paul, the Apocalypse and Epistles of St. John,
and I Peter.
Eusebius says that Papias frequently cited traditions of John and narrations
of Aristion. He had also received information from the daughters of Philip, one
of whom was buried like her father at Hierapolis, and had apparently been known
to Papias. He related the raising to life of the mother of Manaimos (probably
not the same as Manaen the foster-brother of Herod); also the drinking of poison
without harm by Justus Barsabas: he may have related this in connection with
Mark, svi, 18, as it is the only one of the miracles promised in that passage by
our Lord which is not exemplified in Acts. It would be interesting if we could
be sure that Papias mentioned this last section of Mark, since an Armenian MS.
attributes it to Aristion. Eusebius says Papias published a story of a woman
accused of many sins before the Lord, which is contained in the Gospel according
to the Hebrews
. This appears to refer to the pericope adulterae (John 8).
The cause of the loss of this precious work of an Apostolic Father was the
chiliastic view which he taught, like St. Justin and St. Irenaeus. He supported
this by strange parables of the Saviour and teachings of His, and other
mythical matters
, says Eusebius. We can judge of these by the account of the
wonderful vine above referred to. His method of exegesis may perhaps be
estimated to some extent by a fifth book with the original ending of
Victorinus's commentary on the Apocalypse, as published by Haussleiter
(Theologisches Litteraturblatt, 26 April, 1895); for both passages are evidently
based on Papias, and contain the same quotations from the Old Testament.
Eusebius was an opponent of chiliastic speculations, and he remarks: Papias was
a man of very small mind, if we may judge by his own words
. It would seem that
the fragment of Victorinus of Pettau De fabrica mundi
is partly based on
Papias. In it we have perhaps the very words to which Eusebius is referring:
Nunc igitur de inenarrabili gloria Dei in providentia videas memorari; tamen ut
mens parva poterit, conabor ostendere
. This passage probably preserved the
substance of what Papias said, according to the testimony of Anastasius of Mount
Sinai, at to the mystical application to Christ and the Church of the seven days
of creation. A wild and extraordinary legend about Judas Iscariot is attributed
to Papias by a catena. It is probable that whenever St. Irenaeus quotes the
Presbyters
or the Presbyters who had seen John
, he is citing the work of
Papias. Where he attributes to these followers of John the assertion that Our
Lord sanctified all the ages of man, that Papias had inferred that Our Lord
reached the age of fifty, as Irenaeus concludes, nor need we be too certain that
Papias explicitly cited the Presbyters in the passage in question. His real
statement is possibly preserved in a sentence of De fabrica mundi
, which
implies only that our Lord reached the perfect age (between 30 and 40) after
which decline begins.
Of Papias's life nothing is known. If Polycarp was born in 69, his comrade
may have been born a few years earlier. The fragment which makes him state that
those who were raised to life by Christ lived on until the age of Hadrian cannot
be used to determine his date, for it is clearly made up from the quite credible
statement of Quadratus (Eusebius, iv, 3) that some of those cured by our Lord
lived until his own time and the fact that Quandratus wrote under Hadrian; the
name of Papias has been substituted by the egregious excerptor. The work of
Papias was evidently written in his old age, say between the years 115 and 140.
The literature on Papias is of overwhelming quantity. Every introduction to the New Testament, every book on the Fourth Gospel mentions him. The best discussion in English is LIGHTFOOT'S Essays on Supernatural Religion, reprinted from the Contemporary Review (London, 1889); on the preface see especially ZAHN, Forschungen, VI (1900); on the two Johns, DRUMMOND, EZRA ABBOTT, CAMERLUNCH, and others on the Gospel of St. John; for the view that the Apostle was not at Ephesus but only the presbyter, HARNACK, Gesch. der altchr. Litt., II (1897), and (making the presbyter the beloved disciple) DELFF, Gesch. d. Rabbi Jesus (Leipzig, 1889); IDEM, Das vierte Evang. wienderhergestellt; IDEM, Neue Beiträge zur Kritik und Erklärung des vierten Ev. (both at Husum, 1890); SANDAY, The Criticism of the Fourth Gospel (Oxford, 1905); BOUSSET, Offenbarung d. Joh. (Leipzig, 1896); also ZAHN, loc. cit.; STANTON, The Gospels as Hist. Documents, I (1903); CHAPMAN, John the Presbyter (Oxford, 1911); on the supposed martyrdom of St. John, DE BOOR, Neue Fragmente des Papias in Texten. Unters., V, II (1888); DELEF, loc. cit; CHAPMAN, loc. cit; SCHWARTZ, Ueber den Tod der Söhne Zebedaei (infavour of the martyrdom, Berlin 1904); against are ARMITAGE ROBINSON, The Historical Character of St. John's Gospel (London, 1908); EDWIN ABBOTT, Notes on New Testament Criticism (London, 1906); for a general account of Papias, see BARDENHEWER, Gesch. der altkirchl. Litt., I (Freiburg, 1902), who gives sufficient references to older books and articles; more in RICHARDSON'S Synopisis (Buffalo, 1887). On St. John in Irenaeus, CHAPMAN, Papias on the Age of our Lord in Journal of Theol. Studies, IX (Oct., 1907), 33; GUTJAHR, Die Glaubwürdigkeit des irenaischen Zeugnisses (Graz, 1904); LEWIS, The irenaeus testimony to the Fourth Gospel (Chicago, 1908); on the Chiliasm of Papias, ATZBERGER, Gesch. der christl. Eschatologie (Freiburg, 1896); GRY, Le millenarisme (Paris, 1904; New York, 1899).
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