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Apocalypse of Paul

The Apocalypse of Paul (Apocalypsis Pauli, more commonly known in the Latin tradition as the Visio Pauli or Visio sancti Pauli) is a fourth-century non-canonical apocalypse and part of the New Testament apocrypha. The full original Greek version of the Apocalypse is lost, although fragmentary versions still exist. Using later versions and translations, the text has been reconstructed, notably from Latin and Syriac translations, the earliest being a seventh-century Iranian Syriac codex known as Fonds Issayi 18.[1]

The text, which is pseudepigraphal, purports to present a detailed account of a vision of Heaven and Hell experienced by Paul the Apostle. While the work was not accepted among Church leaders, it was quite commonly read in the Middle Ages and helped to shape the beliefs of many Christians concerning the nature of the afterlife. At the end of the text, Paul or the Virgin Mary (depending on the manuscript) manages to persuade God to give everyone in Hell a day off every Sunday.

Authorship and date edit

The author of the work is unknown. The book opens with a discovery narrative that explains that while the Apostle Paul wrote it, the book was then buried beneath the foundations of a house in Tarsus (Paul's hometown) for centuries until an angel ordered the compiler to dig it up. The book claims this discovery happened during the reign of Emperor Theodosius I (reigned 379–395), giving a good estimate of roughly when the narrative appeared. (The Christian author Sozomen wrote that he investigated this claim, and an elderly priest of Tarsus had no recollection of such a bizarre event occurring; rather, it was transparently an attempt to explain how a "new" work of Paul could be published.) The author may have been familiar with 2 Corinthians Chapter 12, where Paul discusses how he knew of a person who visited the third heaven; the work implies that person was Paul himself.[2][3]

The author of the Apocalypse of Paul was probably Egyptian.[a] Kirsti Copeland argues that it was more specifically composed at a communal Pachomian monastery in Egypt between 388 and 400 CE.[5] Constantin von Tischendorf, M. R. James, and Bart Ehrman all date it to the late 4th century.[6] The text had to exist by 415, as Augustine makes a disparaging comment about it in his Tractates on the Gospel of John.[7][4] A few scholars date the book earlier, to the middle of the 3rd century, and suggest that only the introduction was written in the late 4th century in a "second edition" of the work.[8]

Content edit

The text is primarily focused on a detailed account of Heaven and Hell. The author seems to be familiar with the "Book of the Watchers" in the Book of Enoch, the Apocalypse of Zephaniah, and the Apocalypse of Peter as influences on the work. Nevertheless, the accounts of Heaven and Hell in the Apocalypse of Paul differ from its predecessors in some major ways. The Apocalypse of Peter was written during a period when Christians were a minority struggling to gain adherents, and tensions with pagans and Jews were a major issue. The Apocalypse of Paul was written much later when Christianity had become the accepted and majority religion of the Roman Empire. As such, much of its focus is not on external issues, but rather issues internal to Christianity. More devout and ascetic Christians will be rewarded additionally in heaven beyond what is given to more passive Christians; Christians who err in some manner, whether by heresy, or a failure to uphold ascetic vows, will be condemned to hell. The text gives little to no discussion to non-Christians, seemingly considering them irrelevant; its Hell is one of punishment for faulty Christians.[7]

The text is heavily moralistic, and considers pride the root of all evil and the worst sin. It also describes and names various fallen angels in hell, including Temeluchus and the tartaruchi.

Structure edit

The chapters of the text are roughly organized as:

  • 1, 2. Discovery of the revelation.
  • 3–6. Prologue: Appeal of creation to God against the sin of man.
  • 7–10. The report of the angels to God about men.
  • 11–18. Deaths and judgements of the righteous and the wicked.
  • 19–30. First vision of Paradise, including lake Acherusa.
  • 31–44. Hell. Paul obtains rest on Sunday for the lost.
  • 45–51. Second vision of Paradise.

Introduction: The sinfulness of man edit

After a discovery narrative that explains the work was found under a house in Tarsus, Paul visits the third heaven. There, the sun, moon, stars, sea and land complain to God of mankind's sinfulness. God has shown forbearance only to allow humanity to convert and repent. Guardian angels monitor men and describe to God these human activities every morning and every night. Paul watches as both a righteous man and a sinner die, and the reports of the dead sinner's watcher angel are used against him. Paul then turns to the gates and is led by the angel into the third heaven, where he meets Elijah and Enoch, and is given a tour.[2]

Heaven and hell edit

The Apocalypse of Paul goes into considerably more detail than the Apocalypse of Peter on the nature of heaven. In chapters 20–30, heaven has three divisions. "Paradise" is the third heaven and where Paul arrives first, but it is not closely described. Paul then descends into the second heaven afterward, the "Land of Promise", a reinterpretation of the "land of milk and honey" (in heaven, rather than the land of Israel) which is seemingly a holding area for deceased saints who are waiting on the Second Coming of Jesus and the millennial kingdom of God. The first heaven, across the Acherusian Lake, is the "City of Christ" where the blessed will reside for eternity, presumably after the millennial age. Paul does find some dwelling in the City already, such as the Biblical prophets of Judaism and the patriarchs of the twelve tribes. Outside the city are ascetics who were too proud of their asceticism, and are forced to wait for entry until Christ returns and their pride is appropriately chastened. The city itself is subdivided into twelve layers, with things becoming continually better and better the closer to the center inhabitants get. Those who deny themselves physical pleasure in the mortal world are rewarded wildly in the afterlife with better places in the City of Christ, closer to the center. Finally, after the tour of hell, Paul returns to "Paradise" in chapters 45–51, but it is unclear if this means the third layer again, heaven in general, or a new fourth layer. There Paul meets other Biblical figures, some of which were described as already being in other layers in the earlier passages. It is possible that this account was originally from a separate story that was combined into the Apocalypse of Paul, as it does not entirely cohere with the earlier vision of Heaven.[7]

In hell, those punished are Christians who have erred. While some "usual" sins such as usury, adultery, and women having sex before marriage are condemned, the Apocalypse of Paul goes beyond this. Various "bad" Christians are made to stand in a river of fire, including Christians who left the church and argued; Christians who took the Eucharist but then fornicated; and Christians who "slandered" other Christians while in church. Christians who failed to pay attention as the word of God was read in Church are forced to gnaw on their tongues eternally. Christians who commit infanticide are torn to shreds by beasts eternally while also on fire. Church leaders and theologians who preached incorrect doctrine or were simply incompetent in their positions are punished with torture. For example, a church reader who failed to implement the word of God he read during church services in his own life is thrown into a river of fire while an angel slashes his lips and tongue with a razor. Unholy nuns are thrown into a furnace of fire along with a bishop as punishment (in one Latin manuscript, likely a later addition). Failed ascetics are also punished; those who ended their fasts before their appointed time are taunted by abundant food and water just out of reach as they lie parched and starving in hell. Those who wore the habit of a monk or nun while failing to show charity are given new habits of pitch and sulphur, serpents are wrapped around their necks, and fiery angels physically beat them. The worst punishments ("seven times worse" than those described so far) are reserved for theologically deviant Christians, such as those who believe that Jesus's Second Coming will be a "spiritual" resurrection rather than a "physical" resurrection, or who deny that Jesus came in the flesh (docetism). The exact nature of their punishment is left to the imagination; an awful stench rises from a sealed well that hints of their torment below.[7]

One theological oddity is that the text portrays Christians, the angels, and Paul as more merciful than God. Paul expresses pity for those suffering in Hell, but Jesus rebukes him and says that everyone in Hell truly deserves their punishment. The Archangel Michael says he prays continuously for Christians while they are alive, and weeps for the torments the failed Christians endure after it is too late. The twenty-four elders on thrones (presumably the 12 apostles and the 12 patriarchs) as well as the four beasts described in God's throne room in the Book of Revelation also make intercession for the inhabitants of hell. The Christian friends and family of those in Hell also make prayers for the dead that their suffering might be lessened. In responses to the pleas of Paul (or the Virgin Mary in the Apocalypse of the Virgin), Michael, the elders, and the living Christians on Earth, Jesus agrees to release those in hell from their suffering on the day of his resurrection—presumably every Sunday. Manuscripts include variants of the ending: A Coptic manuscript instead describes it as specifically Easter, albeit with a 50-day period afterward, possibly in addition to the Sunday off; the Greek Apocalypse of the Virgin specifically excludes damned Jews from this mercy; and an Armenian manuscript has all sinners released from hell unconditionally.[7][9]

Sozomen wrote that the text was popular with monks, which makes sense given the work's sharp focus on them and how their fates differ from ordinary Christians.[2] Those who successfully live an ascetic lifestyle are rewarded far beyond ordinary Christians; those who live an ascetic lifestyle but are too proud are forced to wait for their reward; and those who attempt but fail at an ascetic lifestyle are punished with eternal torture.[7]

Versions edit

 
An 8th or 9th century French codex containing a Latin version. The title reads INCIPT VISIO SANCTI PAVLI APOSTOLI. This Paris manuscript was used as the basis for M. R. James's translation and analysis.
 
A 7th century Iranian codex containing a Syriac version, from St. Joseph's Cathedral, Tehran.

Compared to many apocryphal works, the Apocalypse of Paul has an unusually large number of manuscripts to draw from, evincing its popularity. Greek copies of the text are rare, however; those that exist contain many omissions. Of the Eastern versions – Syriac, Coptic, Amharic, Georgian, and Karshuni (Arabic) – the Syriac are considered to be the most reliable. There is an Ethiopic version of the work which features the Virgin Mary in the place of Paul the Apostle, as the receiver of the vision, known as the "Apocalypse of the Virgin".[2]

The lost Greek original was translated into Latin as the Visio Pauli, and was widely copied, with extensive variation coming into the tradition as the text was adapted to suit different historical and cultural contexts; by the eleventh century, there were perhaps three main independent editions of the text. From these diverse Latin texts, many subsequent vernacular versions were translated, into most European languages, prominently including German and Czech.[10]

Reception and influence edit

Ancient writers are generally hostile to the Apocalypse. Augustine called it a fraud that the true church does not accept; Sozomen wrote he investigated it personally and also found it inauthentic; and the 6th century Gelasian Decree lists it as an apocryphal writing to be rejected. Samuel Anetsi denounces the Armenian version as the work of heretics. Despite this, the Visio Pauli maintained its popularity (hence the large numbers of copies, especially Latin ones), and its importance was great from the 8th–15th centuries. It was one of the most influential sources of medieval thought on the nature of the afterlife.[2][4]

The Visio Pauli also influenced a range of other texts. It is particularly noted for its influence in The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, who seems to have been familiar with the work.[4] In Inferno (ii. 28[3]), Dante mentions the visit of the "Chosen Vessel" to Hell, presumably a reference to Paul's earlier trip.[10] The Visio is also considered to have influenced the description of Grendel's home in the Old English poem Beowulf (whether directly or indirectly, possibly via the Old English Blickling Homily XVI).[11] The Legend of the Purgatory of St. Patrick seems to draw from the Apocalypse of Paul, which itself then influenced the works of Geoffrey Chaucer.[4]

Further reading edit

  • Bremmer, Jan N.; Czachesz, István, eds. (2007). The Visio Pauli and the Gnostic Apocalypse of Paul. Studies on Early Christian Apocrypha 9. Leuven: Peeters.
  • Gardiner, Eileen (1989). Visions of Heaven and Hell Before Dante. New York: Italica Press. pp. 13–46. ISBN 9780934977142. An English translation of the Latin text based on the M. R. James version, but removing the archaic phrasings.
  • Silverstein, Theodore; Hilhorst, Anthony (1997). Cramer, Patrick (ed.). Apocalypse of Paul: A New Critical Edition of Three Long Latin Versions. Cahiers d'orientalisme 21. Geneva.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Constantin von Tischendorf argued that it might originate from Jerusalem or Palestine; Carl Hermann Kraeling suggested Syria as a possibility. Theodore Silverstein dismisses both of these possibilities as unlikely.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Desreumaux, Alain (1994). "Un manuscrit syriaque de Téhéran contenant des apocryphes". Apocrypha. 5: 137–164. doi:10.1484/J.APOCRA.2.301175. ISSN 1155-3316.
  2. ^ a b c d e Duensing, Hugo (1965) [1964]. Schneemelcher, Wilhelm (ed.). New Testament Apocrypha: Volume Two: Writings Relating to the Apostles; Apocalypses and Related Subjects. Translated by Wilson, Robert McLachlan. Philadelphia: Westminster Press. p. 755–759.
  3. ^ a b 2 Corinthians 12:1–5. It is possible that Dante was also inspired by this verse directly rather than the Apocalypse of Paul (e.g. Pietro Alighieri); see versions of Inferno, Canto II, 28 of the Divine Comedy.
  4. ^ a b c d e Silverstein, Theodore (1935). Visio Sancti Pauli: The history of the Apocalypse in Latin, together with nine texts. London: Christophers. pp. 3–5, 91.
  5. ^ Copeland, Kirsti (2006). "The Wise, the Simple, the Pachomian Koinonia and the Apocalypse of Paul" (PDF). Retrieved 6 August 2020.
  6. ^ Ehrman, D. (2003). Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. Oxford University Press. p. xiv. ISBN 978-0-19-518249-1.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Ehrman, Bart (2022). Journeys to Heaven and Hell: Tours of the Afterlife in the Early Christian Tradition. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 95–110. ISBN 978-0-300-25700-7.
  8. ^ Casey, Robert P. (1933). "The Apocalypse of Paul". The Journal of Theological Studies. 34 (133): 1–32. doi:10.1093/jts/os-XXXIV.133.1. JSTOR 23955004.
  9. ^ Bauckham, Richard B. (1998). The Fate of the Dead: Studies on the Jewish and Christian Apocalypses. Brill Publishing. pp. 141–142, 337. ISBN 90-04-11203-0.
  10. ^ a b Maier, Harry O. (2007). "Review of Die Visio Pauli: Wege und Wandlungen einer orientalischen Apokryphe im lateinischen Mittelalter, unter Einschluß der alttschechischen und deutschsprachigen Textzeugen". Speculum. 82 (4): 1000–1002. doi:10.1017/S0038713400011647. JSTOR 20466112.
  11. ^ Andy Orchard, Pride and Prodigies: Studies in the Monsters of the Beowulf-Manuscript, rev. edn (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003), pp. 38-41.

External links edit

  •   The full text of Apocalypse of Paul at Wikisource, translation by M. R. James in the 1924 book The Apocryphal New Testament
  • Bibliography on the Apocalypse of Paul, by Eileen Gardiner

apocalypse, paul, gnostic, text, coptic, apocalypsis, pauli, more, commonly, known, latin, tradition, visio, pauli, visio, sancti, pauli, fourth, century, canonical, apocalypse, part, testament, apocrypha, full, original, greek, version, apocalypse, lost, alth. For the Gnostic text see Coptic Apocalypse of Paul The Apocalypse of Paul Apocalypsis Pauli more commonly known in the Latin tradition as the Visio Pauli or Visio sancti Pauli is a fourth century non canonical apocalypse and part of the New Testament apocrypha The full original Greek version of the Apocalypse is lost although fragmentary versions still exist Using later versions and translations the text has been reconstructed notably from Latin and Syriac translations the earliest being a seventh century Iranian Syriac codex known as Fonds Issayi 18 1 The text which is pseudepigraphal purports to present a detailed account of a vision of Heaven and Hell experienced by Paul the Apostle While the work was not accepted among Church leaders it was quite commonly read in the Middle Ages and helped to shape the beliefs of many Christians concerning the nature of the afterlife At the end of the text Paul or the Virgin Mary depending on the manuscript manages to persuade God to give everyone in Hell a day off every Sunday Contents 1 Authorship and date 2 Content 2 1 Structure 2 2 Introduction The sinfulness of man 2 3 Heaven and hell 3 Versions 4 Reception and influence 5 Further reading 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksAuthorship and date editThe author of the work is unknown The book opens with a discovery narrative that explains that while the Apostle Paul wrote it the book was then buried beneath the foundations of a house in Tarsus Paul s hometown for centuries until an angel ordered the compiler to dig it up The book claims this discovery happened during the reign of Emperor Theodosius I reigned 379 395 giving a good estimate of roughly when the narrative appeared The Christian author Sozomen wrote that he investigated this claim and an elderly priest of Tarsus had no recollection of such a bizarre event occurring rather it was transparently an attempt to explain how a new work of Paul could be published The author may have been familiar with 2 Corinthians Chapter 12 where Paul discusses how he knew of a person who visited the third heaven the work implies that person was Paul himself 2 3 The author of the Apocalypse of Paul was probably Egyptian a Kirsti Copeland argues that it was more specifically composed at a communal Pachomian monastery in Egypt between 388 and 400 CE 5 Constantin von Tischendorf M R James and Bart Ehrman all date it to the late 4th century 6 The text had to exist by 415 as Augustine makes a disparaging comment about it in his Tractates on the Gospel of John 7 4 A few scholars date the book earlier to the middle of the 3rd century and suggest that only the introduction was written in the late 4th century in a second edition of the work 8 Content editThe text is primarily focused on a detailed account of Heaven and Hell The author seems to be familiar with the Book of the Watchers in the Book of Enoch the Apocalypse of Zephaniah and the Apocalypse of Peter as influences on the work Nevertheless the accounts of Heaven and Hell in the Apocalypse of Paul differ from its predecessors in some major ways The Apocalypse of Peter was written during a period when Christians were a minority struggling to gain adherents and tensions with pagans and Jews were a major issue The Apocalypse of Paul was written much later when Christianity had become the accepted and majority religion of the Roman Empire As such much of its focus is not on external issues but rather issues internal to Christianity More devout and ascetic Christians will be rewarded additionally in heaven beyond what is given to more passive Christians Christians who err in some manner whether by heresy or a failure to uphold ascetic vows will be condemned to hell The text gives little to no discussion to non Christians seemingly considering them irrelevant its Hell is one of punishment for faulty Christians 7 The text is heavily moralistic and considers pride the root of all evil and the worst sin It also describes and names various fallen angels in hell including Temeluchus and the tartaruchi Structure edit The chapters of the text are roughly organized as 1 2 Discovery of the revelation 3 6 Prologue Appeal of creation to God against the sin of man 7 10 The report of the angels to God about men 11 18 Deaths and judgements of the righteous and the wicked 19 30 First vision of Paradise including lake Acherusa 31 44 Hell Paul obtains rest on Sunday for the lost 45 51 Second vision of Paradise Introduction The sinfulness of man edit After a discovery narrative that explains the work was found under a house in Tarsus Paul visits the third heaven There the sun moon stars sea and land complain to God of mankind s sinfulness God has shown forbearance only to allow humanity to convert and repent Guardian angels monitor men and describe to God these human activities every morning and every night Paul watches as both a righteous man and a sinner die and the reports of the dead sinner s watcher angel are used against him Paul then turns to the gates and is led by the angel into the third heaven where he meets Elijah and Enoch and is given a tour 2 Heaven and hell edit The Apocalypse of Paul goes into considerably more detail than the Apocalypse of Peter on the nature of heaven In chapters 20 30 heaven has three divisions Paradise is the third heaven and where Paul arrives first but it is not closely described Paul then descends into the second heaven afterward the Land of Promise a reinterpretation of the land of milk and honey in heaven rather than the land of Israel which is seemingly a holding area for deceased saints who are waiting on the Second Coming of Jesus and the millennial kingdom of God The first heaven across the Acherusian Lake is the City of Christ where the blessed will reside for eternity presumably after the millennial age Paul does find some dwelling in the City already such as the Biblical prophets of Judaism and the patriarchs of the twelve tribes Outside the city are ascetics who were too proud of their asceticism and are forced to wait for entry until Christ returns and their pride is appropriately chastened The city itself is subdivided into twelve layers with things becoming continually better and better the closer to the center inhabitants get Those who deny themselves physical pleasure in the mortal world are rewarded wildly in the afterlife with better places in the City of Christ closer to the center Finally after the tour of hell Paul returns to Paradise in chapters 45 51 but it is unclear if this means the third layer again heaven in general or a new fourth layer There Paul meets other Biblical figures some of which were described as already being in other layers in the earlier passages It is possible that this account was originally from a separate story that was combined into the Apocalypse of Paul as it does not entirely cohere with the earlier vision of Heaven 7 In hell those punished are Christians who have erred While some usual sins such as usury adultery and women having sex before marriage are condemned the Apocalypse of Paul goes beyond this Various bad Christians are made to stand in a river of fire including Christians who left the church and argued Christians who took the Eucharist but then fornicated and Christians who slandered other Christians while in church Christians who failed to pay attention as the word of God was read in Church are forced to gnaw on their tongues eternally Christians who commit infanticide are torn to shreds by beasts eternally while also on fire Church leaders and theologians who preached incorrect doctrine or were simply incompetent in their positions are punished with torture For example a church reader who failed to implement the word of God he read during church services in his own life is thrown into a river of fire while an angel slashes his lips and tongue with a razor Unholy nuns are thrown into a furnace of fire along with a bishop as punishment in one Latin manuscript likely a later addition Failed ascetics are also punished those who ended their fasts before their appointed time are taunted by abundant food and water just out of reach as they lie parched and starving in hell Those who wore the habit of a monk or nun while failing to show charity are given new habits of pitch and sulphur serpents are wrapped around their necks and fiery angels physically beat them The worst punishments seven times worse than those described so far are reserved for theologically deviant Christians such as those who believe that Jesus s Second Coming will be a spiritual resurrection rather than a physical resurrection or who deny that Jesus came in the flesh docetism The exact nature of their punishment is left to the imagination an awful stench rises from a sealed well that hints of their torment below 7 One theological oddity is that the text portrays Christians the angels and Paul as more merciful than God Paul expresses pity for those suffering in Hell but Jesus rebukes him and says that everyone in Hell truly deserves their punishment The Archangel Michael says he prays continuously for Christians while they are alive and weeps for the torments the failed Christians endure after it is too late The twenty four elders on thrones presumably the 12 apostles and the 12 patriarchs as well as the four beasts described in God s throne room in the Book of Revelation also make intercession for the inhabitants of hell The Christian friends and family of those in Hell also make prayers for the dead that their suffering might be lessened In responses to the pleas of Paul or the Virgin Mary in the Apocalypse of the Virgin Michael the elders and the living Christians on Earth Jesus agrees to release those in hell from their suffering on the day of his resurrection presumably every Sunday Manuscripts include variants of the ending A Coptic manuscript instead describes it as specifically Easter albeit with a 50 day period afterward possibly in addition to the Sunday off the Greek Apocalypse of the Virgin specifically excludes damned Jews from this mercy and an Armenian manuscript has all sinners released from hell unconditionally 7 9 Sozomen wrote that the text was popular with monks which makes sense given the work s sharp focus on them and how their fates differ from ordinary Christians 2 Those who successfully live an ascetic lifestyle are rewarded far beyond ordinary Christians those who live an ascetic lifestyle but are too proud are forced to wait for their reward and those who attempt but fail at an ascetic lifestyle are punished with eternal torture 7 Versions edit nbsp An 8th or 9th century French codex containing a Latin version The title reads INCIPT VISIO SANCTI PAVLI APOSTOLI This Paris manuscript was used as the basis for M R James s translation and analysis nbsp A 7th century Iranian codex containing a Syriac version from St Joseph s Cathedral Tehran Compared to many apocryphal works the Apocalypse of Paul has an unusually large number of manuscripts to draw from evincing its popularity Greek copies of the text are rare however those that exist contain many omissions Of the Eastern versions Syriac Coptic Amharic Georgian and Karshuni Arabic the Syriac are considered to be the most reliable There is an Ethiopic version of the work which features the Virgin Mary in the place of Paul the Apostle as the receiver of the vision known as the Apocalypse of the Virgin 2 The lost Greek original was translated into Latin as the Visio Pauli and was widely copied with extensive variation coming into the tradition as the text was adapted to suit different historical and cultural contexts by the eleventh century there were perhaps three main independent editions of the text From these diverse Latin texts many subsequent vernacular versions were translated into most European languages prominently including German and Czech 10 Reception and influence editAncient writers are generally hostile to the Apocalypse Augustine called it a fraud that the true church does not accept Sozomen wrote he investigated it personally and also found it inauthentic and the 6th century Gelasian Decree lists it as an apocryphal writing to be rejected Samuel Anetsi denounces the Armenian version as the work of heretics Despite this the Visio Pauli maintained its popularity hence the large numbers of copies especially Latin ones and its importance was great from the 8th 15th centuries It was one of the most influential sources of medieval thought on the nature of the afterlife 2 4 The Visio Pauli also influenced a range of other texts It is particularly noted for its influence in The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri who seems to have been familiar with the work 4 In Inferno ii 28 3 Dante mentions the visit of the Chosen Vessel to Hell presumably a reference to Paul s earlier trip 10 The Visio is also considered to have influenced the description of Grendel s home in the Old English poem Beowulf whether directly or indirectly possibly via the Old English Blickling Homily XVI 11 The Legend of the Purgatory of St Patrick seems to draw from the Apocalypse of Paul which itself then influenced the works of Geoffrey Chaucer 4 Further reading editBremmer Jan N Czachesz Istvan eds 2007 The Visio Pauli and the Gnostic Apocalypse of Paul Studies on Early Christian Apocrypha 9 Leuven Peeters Gardiner Eileen 1989 Visions of Heaven and Hell Before Dante New York Italica Press pp 13 46 ISBN 9780934977142 An English translation of the Latin text based on the M R James version but removing the archaic phrasings Silverstein Theodore Hilhorst Anthony 1997 Cramer Patrick ed Apocalypse of Paul A New Critical Edition of Three Long Latin Versions Cahiers d orientalisme 21 Geneva a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Notes edit Constantin von Tischendorf argued that it might originate from Jerusalem or Palestine Carl Hermann Kraeling suggested Syria as a possibility Theodore Silverstein dismisses both of these possibilities as unlikely 4 References edit Desreumaux Alain 1994 Un manuscrit syriaque de Teheran contenant des apocryphes Apocrypha 5 137 164 doi 10 1484 J APOCRA 2 301175 ISSN 1155 3316 a b c d e Duensing Hugo 1965 1964 Schneemelcher Wilhelm ed New Testament Apocrypha Volume Two Writings Relating to the Apostles Apocalypses and Related Subjects Translated by Wilson Robert McLachlan Philadelphia Westminster Press p 755 759 a b 2 Corinthians 12 1 5 It is possible that Dante was also inspired by this verse directly rather than the Apocalypse of Paul e g Pietro Alighieri see versions of Inferno Canto II 28 of the Divine Comedy a b c d e Silverstein Theodore 1935 Visio Sancti Pauli The history of the Apocalypse in Latin together with nine texts London Christophers pp 3 5 91 Copeland Kirsti 2006 The Wise the Simple the Pachomian Koinonia and the Apocalypse of Paul PDF Retrieved 6 August 2020 Ehrman D 2003 Lost Christianities The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew Oxford University Press p xiv ISBN 978 0 19 518249 1 a b c d e f Ehrman Bart 2022 Journeys to Heaven and Hell Tours of the Afterlife in the Early Christian Tradition New Haven and London Yale University Press p 95 110 ISBN 978 0 300 25700 7 Casey Robert P 1933 The Apocalypse of Paul The Journal of Theological Studies 34 133 1 32 doi 10 1093 jts os XXXIV 133 1 JSTOR 23955004 Bauckham Richard B 1998 The Fate of the Dead Studies on the Jewish and Christian Apocalypses Brill Publishing pp 141 142 337 ISBN 90 04 11203 0 a b Maier Harry O 2007 Review of Die Visio Pauli Wege und Wandlungen einer orientalischen Apokryphe im lateinischen Mittelalter unter Einschluss der alttschechischen und deutschsprachigen Textzeugen Speculum 82 4 1000 1002 doi 10 1017 S0038713400011647 JSTOR 20466112 Andy Orchard Pride and Prodigies Studies in the Monsters of the Beowulf Manuscript rev edn Toronto University of Toronto Press 2003 pp 38 41 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Apocalypse of Paul nbsp The full text of Apocalypse of Paul at Wikisource translation by M R James in the 1924 book The Apocryphal New Testament Bibliography on the Apocalypse of Paul by Eileen Gardiner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apocalypse of Paul amp oldid 1223953336, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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