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The suppressed Gospels and Epistles of the original New Testament of Jesus the Christ, Volume 5, St. Paul cover

The suppressed Gospels and Epistles of the original New Testament of Jesus the Christ, Volume 5, St. Paul

Chapter 22: REFERENCES TO THE ACTS OF ST. PAUL AND THECLA.
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About This Book

A curated collection of translations and historical notes presenting noncanonical Christian writings and disputed early Christian documents attributed to apostles, disciples, and other contemporary figures. Included are letters long associated with eastern communities, an epistle purportedly from an apostle to a regional church, and a series of interlocutory letters claimed between an apostle and a classical philosopher. Each text is presented with accompanying commentary that summarizes manuscript evidence, provenance, and scholarly debate over authenticity. The volume brings together variant traditions and uncommon texts to illustrate different strands of early Christian correspondence and devotional literature while documenting the sources and arguments that surrounded their transmission.

REFERENCES TO THE ACTS OF ST. PAUL AND THECLA.

[Tertullian says that this piece was forged by a Presbyter of Asia, who being convicted, "confessed that he did it out of respect to Paul," and Pope Gelasius, in his Decree against apocryphal books, inserted it among them. Notwithstanding this, a large part of the history was credited and looked upon as genuine among the primitive Christians. Cyprian, Eusebius, Epiphanius, Austin, Gregory, Nagianzen. Chrysostom, and Severus Sulpitius, who all lived within the fourth century mention Thecla or refer to her history. Basil of Seleucia wrote her acts, sufferings and victories, in verse; and Euagrius Scholasticus an ecclesiastical historian, about 590, relates that "after the Emperor Zeno, had abdicated his empire, and Basilik had taken possession of it, he had a vision of the holy and excellent martyr Thecla, who promised him the restoration of his empire; for which, when it was brought about, he erected and dedicated a most noble and sumptuous temple to this famous martyr, Thecla, at Seleucia, a city of Isauria, and bestowed upon it very noble endowments, which (says the author) are preserved even till this day." Hist. Ecel. lib. 3 cap. 8.—Cardinal Barenius, Locrinus, Archbishop Wake, and others; and also the learned Grabe, who edited the Septuagint, and revived the Acts of Paul and Thecla, consider them as having been written in the Apostolic age; as containing nothing superstitious, or disagreeing from the opinions and belief of those times; and, in short, as a genuine and authentic history. Again, it is said, that this is not the original book of the early Christians; but however that may be, it is published from the Greek MS. in the Bodlian Library at Oxford, which Dr. Mills copied and transmitted to Dr, Grabe.]