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Philochristus: Memoirs of a Disciple of the Lord

Chapter 36: I
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About This Book

The narrator, an elderly follower who once lived in Galilee, records a lifetime of religious seeking and personal experience with Jesus, tracing early devotion to the Law, encounters with prophetic and philosophical figures, and gradual adoption of a New Law centered on forgiveness and the Kingdom of God. He recounts healings, parables, tensions with religious authorities, the death of John the Baptist, predictions of suffering, the last meals and crucifixion, post‑resurrection appearances, and the formation of a faith community guided by the Holy Spirit. Themes include faith, conscience, the contrast between old and new religious order, and the costs of discipleship.


[pg 435]

SCHOLIA

[pg 437]

SCHOLIA

I

These words of the Lord Jesus are not indeed found in our Gospels; but they have been handed down by tradition.14 Nor have I been able to find in the history of Philochristus any sayings of the Lord Jesus, save such as have been either handed down by tradition or else recorded in our Gospels.

Moreover, the writer (as it seemeth to me, having diligently compared this history with the Gospels of the holy Evangelists Matthew and Mark and Luke) maketh mention of all such miracles as are found in all the three Gospels (though the raising of Jairus’ daughter and the healing of the woman with the issue be but briefly mentioned): but if any miracle is found in one or in two Gospels only, concerning that he is silent. And this he seemeth to do not by chance, but of set purpose, as if he were minded to speak of those miracles only which are common to the first three Gospels. But Anchinous the son of Alethes maketh conjecture that Philochristus had in his mind a certain Original Gospel (whether it were a book or tradition) of exceeding antiquity; whence also the holy Evangelists drew that part of their several relations which is common to the first three Gospels.

III

Whereas Philochristus reporteth that a certain Scribe in his days spake of eating the Messiah, I find no such saying current in those days. But true it is that, many years afterwards, Rabbi Hillel (but this is not the same as Hillel the Great, who lived in the generation before Philochristus) said these words: There is no Messiah for Israel, since they have already eaten him in the days of Hezekiah.16Moreover the saying of Moses, how that the nobles of Israel saw God and did eat and drink, is, without doubt, explained by some of the Teachers among the Jews to mean that the Shekinah was as meat and drink to the nobles. But whether this saying was current in those days, or whether Philochristus erreth here also (as elsewhere), certain it is that many of the sayings of the Scribes reported by Philochristus were not made known nor published till very long after; and meseemeth he hath perverted the doctrine of the Scribes with intent to cause the reader to have them in derision.

[pg 439]

But Anchinous the son of Alethes saith that, howsoever the sayings of the Scribes (whereof Philochristus maketh mention) have not been handed down to us as spoken in those times; yet the cause is, saith Anchinous, that few sayings of those times have been preserved. But if they had been preserved, then, saith he, we should have found that Philochristus described the teaching of the Scribes with exactness; even as the Gospels also bear witness that the Scribes in those days strained at gnats but swallowed camels; and overmuch esteemed the tithing of mint and anise and cummin, and the purification of pots and platters; and counted an oath that was sworn by the gold of the Temple, as being weightier than an oath that was sworn by the Temple itself.

IV

Herein it is marvellous to see with what a persistence Philochristus cleaveth only unto that part of the first three Gospels which is common to all the three; so that one might go near to suppose that Anchinous was right, in that he conjectured that Philochristus doth this not by chance, but of set purpose; having before him, perchance, some book or tradition which contained no more than this. For whereas Philochristus saith that the women heard some mention made of Galilee, but what it was, they agreed not exactly among themselves: I will here set down, in order, the three relations:—

1 (Saint Matthew, xxviii. 7) And behold he goeth before you into Galilee; there shall ye see him: lo I have told you.

2 (Saint Mark, xvi. 7) He goeth before you into Galilee: there shall ye see him, as he said unto you.

3 (Saint Luke, xxiv. 6) Remember how he spake unto you while he was yet in Galilee.

But as to the Gospel of the holy Apostle John, I have not been able to find out whether any part of it were known to Philochristus. Howbeit Anchinous saith that Philochristus, although he make no mention [pg 440]of any of the acts, nor of the long discourses, nor set dialogues of that Gospel, nevertheless useth the doctrine of that Gospel as the foundation of the whole of his history. Notwithstanding, saith Anchinous, Philochristus seemeth not to attribute this doctrine to John the son of Zebedee (who ever speaketh after a different manner, and rather as one of the Sons of Thunder, or as the writer of the book of Revelation, than as the writer of the Fourth Gospel), but to Nathanael and Quartus.


Footnotes

1.
See Note II.
2.
See Note I.
3.
See Note I.
4.
See Note I.
5.
See Note I.
6.
See Note I.
7.
See Note I.
8.
See Note III.
9.
See Note I.
10.
See Note I.
11.
See Note IV.
12.
See Note IV.
13.
See Note V.
14.
They belong to the twenty traditional sayings which seem to contain, in a more or less altered form, traces of words of our Lord.—(Westcott’s Introduction to the Study of the Gospels, p. 453).
15.
Sayings of the Jewish Fathers, by C. Taylor, M.A., published by the Cambridge University Press.
16.
Ibid. p. 74.