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http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/2000/02.03/apocrypha.html

By Ken Gewertz
Gazette Staff

François Bovon has spent many years peering into the mists that shroud
the early history of Christianity. His investigations have shown him
something that might surprise nonscholars ­ that even in the religion¹s
infancy, when the first generation of Christians were spreading the
faith, diversity of belief was already the norm rather than the exception.

"The usual view is that in the beginning was unity and then schisms
developed. Now we have to say that in the beginning there were several
communities that differed significantly from one another," Bovon said.

Bovon, the Frothingham Professor of the History of Religion at the
Divinity School, has made a major contribution toward clarifying our
picture of the early Christian world with his publication of a
4th-century text describing the acts of the apostle Philip. The
manuscript describes a community of celibate vegetarians in which both
women and men functioned as priests.

Bovon and his colleague Bertrand Bouvier of the University of Geneva
discovered the manuscript in a monastery library on Mt. Athos in Greece.

That they found the manuscript at all is a testimony to Bovon¹s finely
honed detective skills. While examining a catalog of the monastery¹s
holdings, the Swiss-born scholar noticed that a Greek word in the title
of a manuscript was plural rather than singular.

"Only one letter, and yet it makes a great difference."

The word was praxeis, meaning "acts. The word jumped out at Bovon because
most of the other known manuscripts chronicling the career of the apostle
Philip record only one praxis or "act," that of Philip¹s martyrdom

"It was an invitation to me, to find out what was behind that plural."

Philip is mentioned several times in the New Testament, but little is
known about him from canonical sources. But there is more information
about Philip and other first-generation Christian missionaries in a body
of literature known as The Aprocryphal Acts of the Apostles, comprising
stories that were eliminated from the New Testament by 4th-century
editors.

Both the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches have tended to
preserve these accounts, even though they do not have the status of
sacred scripture. This is because the apostles (except for Judas
Iscariot) are also saints, and in order to celebrate their feast days,
the churches needed information about their lives on which to base
ceremonial and iconographic traditions.

But these apocryphal texts have themselves been subject to editing by
Church authorities in order to bring the liturgical and theological
elements in line with orthodox doctrine. The revisions tend to leave out
passages that reveal the diversity of practice and belief that
characterized early Christianity.

"As scholars, we would like to go back before these revisions were made,"
Bovon said.

Recovering this earlier narrative of Philip¹s ministry involved something
very much like a journey through time. The monastic community of Mt.
Athos is a world unto itself, residing on a narrow, rocky peninsula that
reaches into the Aegean like a bony finger. At its tip is Mt. Athos, a
peak of white marble 6,670 feet in elevation.

Along the coast are some 20 Orthodox monasteries that govern the
peninsula as an autonomous theocracy. There are no automobiles, little
electricity, and by a 1060 edict of the Emperor Constantine Manomachos,
which is still in force, neither women nor female domestic animals are
permitted to set foot on the monasteries¹ territory.

There is evidence that the first Christian hermits arrived at Mt. Athos
in the 7th century, driven out of Constantinople by the Muslims.
According to legend, however, the place became a sacred sanctuary in 49
A.D. when a boat bearing the Virgin Mary was blown off course and landed
on its shores. At the time, the peninsula contained many pagan shrines,
but upon Mary¹s arrival, these spontaneously crumbled, and a stone statue
of Apollo spoke out, declaring itself to be a false idol.

Bovon found the manuscript describing Philip¹s exploits in the
Xenophontos monastery, founded in the 10th century. The manuscript was
copied in the 14th century, but the original text dates from the fourth
century and itself reflects earlier traditions.

These traditions are different in many ways from later Church practices.
For example, instead of the Eucharist with its ceremonial consumption of
bread and wine, Philip¹s fellow Christians simply sat down to a common
meal of vegetables and water. Church leadership was democratic rather
than hierarchic, and men and women served equally as priests. In fact,
the manuscript describes Philip and the apostle Bartholomew traveling
from town to town with Philip¹s sister, a woman named Mariamne. Bovon
believes this woman to be Mary Magdalene.

The community described in The Acts of Philip also seemed to follow
ascetic practices more extreme than those reflected in New Testament
sources. The group insisted on strict vegetarianism and sexual abstinence
among its members.

"The asceticism was not just a moral issue," Bovon said. "They believed
that living a pure life was a way to better communicate with God."

According to Bovon, the historical Philip along with Stephen and other
disciples represented a distinct group of early Christians composed of
Greek-speaking Jews centered in Antioch, whose mission was directed
largely toward the pagan world. These are the so-called Hellenists of the
canonical New Testament book of Acts. Scholars have identified two more
groups active in Jerusalem, one led by Peter and another by James, the
brother of Jesus. A fourth group, based in Edessa in ancient Syria (now
part of Turkey), was led by Thomas, who, according to legend, later
traveled to India. Other more radical groups have left traces of their
doctrines as well.

For Bovon The Acts of Philip is one of many noncanonical early Christian
writings that exhibit a fascinating diversity of practice and belief. The
author of The Apocryphal Acts of John, for example, describes Christ
dancing with his disciples. The Gospel of Nicodemus and the fragmentary
Gospel of Peter assert that during the three days between his crucifixion
and resurrection, Christ was in the next world preaching to the dead.

Another rich source of information on early Christianity is the
collection of Coptic writings known as the Nag Hammadi manuscripts, found
in Egypt in 1945. Believed to represent a branch of Christianity called
Gnosticism, which stressed salvation through knowledge, the Nag Hammadi
manuscripts comprise gospels, prayers, sermons, and theological treatises
which, like The Acts of Philip, represent a viewpoint "very distant from
mainstream Christianity." These apocryphal writings not only throw light
on the origins of Christianity, they can be valuable for understanding
early Christian art as well. Bovon regularly takes his students on field
trips to the Museum of Fine Arts, where he identifies and interprets art
works based on noncanonical Christian sources.

A French translation of The Acts of Philip by Bovon, Bouvier, and
Frédéric Amsler, a former research assistant and doctoral student of
Bovon at Geneva, was published in 1996. In 1999 Bovon published with
Bouvier and Amsler a critical edition of the Greek text in the series
Corpus Christianorum. It was followed by the publication of Amsler¹s
dissertation, a commentary on The Acts of Philip, in the same collection.
A general study, The Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles, co-edited with Ann
Graham Brock and Christopher R. Matthews, was published in 1999 by the
Harvard Center for the Study of World Religions.

Copyright 2000 President and Fellows of Harvard College

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