ACTS OF ANDREW AND MATTHIAS
(MATTHEW)
From "The Apocryphal New Testament"
M.R. James-Translation and Notes
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924
Text
1 At that time all the apostles were gathered together and divided
the countries among themselves, casting lots. And it fell to Matthias
to go to the land of the anthropophagi. Now the men of that city
ate no bread nor drank wine, but ate the flesh and drank the blood
of men; and every stranger who landed there they took, and put
out his eyes, and gave him a magic drink which took away his understanding.
2 So when Matthias arrived he was so treated; but the drink had
no effect on him, and he remained praying for help in the prison.
3 And a light came and a voice: Matthias, my beloved, receive sight.
And he saw. And the voice continued: I will not forsake thee: abide
twenty-seven days, and I will send Andrew to deliver thee and all
the rest. And the Saviour went up into heaven. Matthias remained
singing praises; when the executioners came to take victims, he
kept his eyes closed. They came and looked at the ticket on his
hand and said: Three days more and we will slay him. For every
victim had a ticket tied on his hand to show the date when his
thirty days would be fulfilled.
4 When twenty-seven days had elapsed, the Lord appeared to Andrew
in the country where he was teaching and said: In three days Matthias
is to be slain by the man-eaters; go and deliver him. 'How i s
it possible for me to get there in time?' Early to-morrow go to
the shore and you will find a ship.' And he left him. 5 They went,
Andrew and his disciples, and found a little boat and three men.
The pilot was the Lord, and the other two were angels. Andrew asked
whither they were going. 'To the land of the man-eaters.' 'I would
go there too.' 'Every man avoids that place; why will you go?'
'I have an errand to do; and if you can, take us.' He said: 'Come
on board.' 6 Andrew said: 'I must tell you we have neither money
nor victuals.' 'How then do you travel?' 'Our master forbade us
to take money and provisions. If you will do us this kindness,
tell us: if not, we will look for another ship.' 'If these are
your orders, come on board and welcome, I desire truly to have
disciples of Jesus on my ship.' So they embarked. 7 Jesus ordered
three loaves to be brought and Andrew summoned his disciples to
partake; but they could not answer him, for they were disturbed
with the sea. So Andrew explained to the pilot, and he offered
to set them ashore: but they refused to leave Andrew. 8 Jesus said:
Tell your disciples some of the wonders your master did, to encourage
them, for we are going to set sail: so they did, and Jesus steered.
And Andrew told the disciples about the stilling of the storm,
and prayed in himself that they might sleep: and they fell asleep.
9 Andrew said to Jesus: Tell me your art, sixteen years did I sail
the sea, and this is the seventeenth, and I never saw such steering:
the ship is as if on land. Jesus said: I, too, have often sailed
the sea and been in danger; but because you are a disciple of Jesus,
the sea knows you and is still. Andrew praised God that he had
met such a man. 10 Jesus said: Tell me why the Jews did not believe
on your master. Andrew enumerated the miracles: yet, he said, the
Jews did not believe. 'Perhaps he did not do these signs before
the high priests?' 11 'Yes, he did, both openly and privately,
and they would not believe.' 'What were the signs he did in secret?'
' O man with the spirit of questioning, why do you tempt me thus?'
'I do not tempt you but my soul rejoices to hear his wonderful
works.' ' I will tell you, then. 12 Once when we the twelve went
with our Lord to a heathen temple that he might show us the ignorance
of the devil, the high priests saw us and said: Why do you follow
this man who says he is the Son of God? has God a son? Is not this
Joseph and Mary's son, and his brothers are James and Simon? and
our hearts were weakened. And Jesus perceived it, and took us apart
into the wilderness and did mighty signs and strengthened our faith.
And we said to the priests: Come and see; for he has convinced
us.
13 'And the priests came to the heathen temple, and Jesus showed
us the form of the heavens, "that we might learn whether it
were true or no." Thirty men of the people and four priests
were with us. On the right and left of the temple Jesus saw two
sphinxes carved, and turned to us and said: Behold the form of
the heaven: these are like the cherubim and seraphim in heaven.
And he said to the sphinx on the right: You semblance of that which
is in heaven, made by craftsmen, come down and convince these priests
whether I be God or man. 14 It came down and spoke and said: O
foolish sons of Israel. This is God who made man . . . . Tell me
not that I am a stone image: better are the temples than your synagogue.
Our priests purify themselves seven days from women, and approach
not the temple but you come straight from defilement. The temples
will abolish your synagogues, and become churches of the only-begotten
Son of God. 15 The priests said: It speaks by magic, ye heard it
say that this man spake with Abraham. How is that possible? . .
. Jesus said to the sphinx: Go to the cave of Mambre and call Abraham;
bid him rise with Isaac and Jacob and come to the temples of the
Jebusaeans to convict the priests. It went and called, and the
twelve patriarchs rose and came out. "To which of us wast
thou sent? " "Not to you, but to the three patriarchs:
go back and rest." They went back, and the three patriarchs
came and convicted the priests. Jesus bade them return, and sent
the sphinx back to its place. But the priests did not believe.
And many other wonders he did.'
16 Jesus seeing that they were near land, leaned his head on one
of the angels and ceased speaking to Andrew: and Andrew went to
sleep. Then Jesus bade the angels take the men and lay them outside
the city of the man-eaters and return: and then all departed to
heaven.
17 Andrew awoke and looked about him and realized what had happened,
and roused his disciples. They told him their dream: eagles came
and bore therm into paradise, and they saw the Lord on his throne,
and angels, and the three patriarchs and David singing, "and
you the twelve apostles and twelve angels by you, whom the Lord
bade to obey you in everything."
18 Andrew rejoiced and prayed the Lord to show himself: and Jesus
appeared in the form of a beautiful young child. Andrew asked pardon
for his boldness on the ship. Jesus reassured him and told him
what trials awaited him in the city, and encouraged him to endure
them, and departed. 19 They entered the city, unseen, and went
to the prison. The seven guards fell dead at his prayer: at the
sign of the cross the doors opened. He found Matthias and they
greeted each other. 20 Andrew looked at the victims, who were naked
and eating grass, and smote his breast and reproached the devil:
How long warrest thou with men? thou didst cause Adam to be cast
out of paradise: thou didst cause his bread that was on the table
to be turned to stones. Again, thou didst enter into the mind of
the angels and cause them to be defiled with women and madest their
savage sons the giants to devour men on the earth, so that God
sent the flood . . . . 21 Then they both prayed, and they laid
their hands on the prisoners and restored first their sight and
then their sense, and Andrew bade them go out of the city and remain
under a fig-tree and await him: there were 270 men and 49 women.
And Andrew commanded a cloud, and it took Matthias and the disciples
and brethren to the mount where Peter was teaching and there they
remained.
22 Andrew went out and walked in the city, and sat down by a brazen
pillar with a statue on it, to see what would happen. The executioners
came and found the prison empty and the guards dead, and reported
to the rulers. They said: Go and fetch the seven dead men for us
to eat to-day, and assemble to-morrow, the old men, and we will
cast lots for seven a day and eat them, till we can fit out ships
and send and collect people to eat. So they fetched the seven corpses;
there was a furnace in the midst of the city and a great vat for
the blood: they put the men on the vat. A voice came: Andrew, look
at this. Andrew prayed, and the men's swords fell and their hands
turned to stone. The rulers cried: There are wizards in the city:
go and gather the old men, for we are hungry. 23 They found 215,
and lots were cast for 7. One of these said: Take my young son
and kill him instead of me. They asked leave of the rulers, and
it was granted, and the old man said: I have a daughter, take her
too, and spare me. So the children were brought to the vat begging
for their lives, but there was no pity. Andrew prayed, and again
the swords fell from the men's hands, and there was much alarm.
24 Then came the devil in the guise of an old man, and said: Woe
to you, you will all die of hunger; but search now and look for
a stranger named Andrew: he is the cause of your trouble. Andrew
was looking at the devil, but the devil could not see him. And
Andrew said: O Beliar, my lord will humble thee to the abyss. The
devil said: I hear your voice and know it; but where you stand
I see not. Andrew said: Art thou not called Amael because thou
art blind? The devil said: Look for the man who spake to me, for
it is he. And they shut the gates and looked everywhere, but could
not find him. The Lord appeared and said to Andrew: Show thyself
to them. 25 He rose and said I am Andrew whom ye seek. And they
ran and took him, and debated how to kill him: If we cut off his
head, it will not pain him enough; Let us put a rope round his
neck and drag him through the streets every day till he dies, and
divide his body and eat it. They did so, and his flesh was torn
and his blood flowed, and they cast him into prison with his hands
bound behind him. 26 And so they did next day, and he wept and
cried to the Lord: and the devil told the people to smite his mouth
that he might not speak; and they bound his hands behind him and
left him in the prison. The devil took seven other devils, whom
Andrew had driven out from places in the neighbourhood (this seems
like a reference to the older Acts), and they came to Andrew, and
the devil said: Now we will kill you like your master whom Herod
slew. 27 And he said: Now my children, kill him. But they saw the
seal on his forehead and were afraid, and said: Do you kill him,
for we cannot. And one of them said: If we cannot kill him, let
us mock him; and they stood before him and taunted him with his
helplessness, and he wept. And a voice -the devil's voice disguised-said:
Why weep? Andrew said: Because of our Lord's word: Have patience
with them; otherwise I would have shown you! . . . But if the Lord
grant me a visitation in this city, I will chastise you as you
deserve. And they fled. 28 Next day the people dragged him again,
and he cried out to the Lord: here are thy words: A hair of your
heads shall not perish? lo, my flesh is torn from me. And a voice
said in Hebrew: My words shall not pass away: look behind thee.
And he saw great fruit-bearing trees growing up where his flesh
and blood had fallen. And they took him back to prison, and said:
Perhaps he will die to-morrow. 29 And the Lord came and took his
hand and he rose up whole. And in the prison was a pillar, and
on it a statue. Andrew went to it and spread out his hands seven
times and said: Fear thou the sign of the cross, and let this statue
pour forth water as a flood. And say not, I am but a stone for
God made us of earth, but ye are clean, and therefore God gave
his people the law on tables of stone. And the statue poured water
out of its mouth as from a canal, and it was bitter and corroded
men's flesh. 30 In the morning all the people began to flee. The
water killed their cattle and their children. Andrew said: Let
Michael wall the city about with fire. A cloud of fire came and
surrounded it, and they could not escape. The water came up to
their necks and consumed their flesh. They cried and lamented till
he saw their spirit was crushed, and told the alabaster statue
to cease. And Andrew went out of the prison, the water parting
before him, and the people prayed for mercy. 31 The old man who
had given up his children came and besought. But Andrew said: I
wonder at you; you and the fourteen executioners shall be swallowed
up and see the places of torment and of peace. And he went as far
as the great vat, and prayed, and the earth opened and swallowed
the water and the old man and the executioners. And all feared
greatly, but he consoled them. 32 Then he bade them bring all who
had been killed by the water, but there were too many, so he prayed
and revived them. Then he drew out the plan of a church and baptized
them and gave them the Lord's precepts. And they begged him to
stay with them a little; but he refused, saying I must first go
to my disciples; and he set forth, and they lamented grievously.
33 And Jesus appeared in the form of a beautiful child and reproved
him for leaving them, and told him to stay seven days; and then
he should go with his disciples to the country of the barbarians,
and then return and bring the men out of the abyss. And he returned
and they all rejoiced greatly.
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