the
epistles
of
pontius
pilate
CONNECTING
ROMAN
HISTORY
with THE
Death OF
CHRIST
AT
JERUSALEM.
[ These
letters
occur in
a Syriac
MS., of
the
sixth or
seventh
century,
in the
British
Maseum.
Dr.
Tischendorf
states
in his
Apoca1ypses
Apocryphae
(Prolegg.
p. 56)
that he
has a
copy of
the same
in Greek
from a
Paris
MS., of
which he
says
"scriptura
satis
differt,
non item
argumentum."
The
letters
are
followed
by a few
extracts
which
seem to
have
been
added by
some
copyist,
although
they are
followed
by the
subscription
to
Pilate's
letter.
We
suppose
that by
Justinus,
we are
to
understand
Justus
of
Tiberias
of whom
Josephus
speaks
as a
historian
of his
time. We
cannot
venture
an
opinion
favorable
to the
genuineness
of this
extract,
because
Photius
says
Justus
did not
mention
Christ.
By
Theodorus,
we
understand
the
Emperor
Tiberius.
The
question
and
answer
agree in
sense
with
what is
read in
the
"Anaphora,"
or
response
of
Pilate.
]
LETTER
OF HEROD
TO
PILATE
THE
GOVERNOR.
HEROD TO
PONTIUS
PILATE
THE
GOVERNOR
OF
JERUSALEM:
PEACE.
I
AM in
great
anxiety.
I write
these
things
unto
thee, I
AM in
great
anxiety.
I write
these
things
unto
thee,
that
when
thou
hast
heard
them
thou
mayest
be
grieved
for me.
For as
my
daughter
Herodias,
who is
dear to
me, was
playing
upon a
pool of
water
which
had ice
upon it,
it broke
under
her, and
all her
body
went
down,
and her
head was
cut off
and
remained
on the
surface
of the
ice.
And
behold,
her
mother
is
holding
her head
upon her
knees in
her lap,
and my
whole
house is
in great
sorrow.
For I,
when I
heard of
the man
Jesus,
wished
to come
to thee,
that I
might
see him
alone,
and hear
his
word,
whether
it was
like
that of
the sons
of men.
And it
is
certain
that
because
of the
many
evil
things
which
were
done by
me to
John the
Baptist,
and
because
I mocked
the
Christ,
behold I
receive
the
reward
of
righteousness,
for I
have
shed
much
blood of
others'
children
upon the
earth.
Therefore
the
judgments
of God
are
righteous;
for
every
man
receives
according
to his
thought.
But
since
thou
wast
worthy
to see
that
God-man,
therefore
it
becometh
you to
pray for
me. My
son
Azbonius
also is
in the
agony of
the hour
of
death.
And I
too am
in
affliction
and
great
trial,
because
I have
the
dropsy;
and am
in great
distress,
because
I
persecuted
the
introducer
of
baptism
by
water,
which
was
John.
Therefore,
my
brother,
the
judgments
of God
are
righteous.
And my
wife,
again,
through
all her
grief
for her
daughter,
is
become
blind in
her left
eye,
because
we
desired
to blind
the Eye
of
righteousness.
There is
no peace
to the
doers of
evil,
saith
the
Lord.
For
already
great
affliction
cometh
upon the
priests
and upon
the
writers
of the
law;
because
they
delivered
unto
thee the
Just
One. For
this is
the
consummation
of the
world,
that
they
consented
that the
Gentiles
should
become
heirs.
For the
children
of light
shall be
cast
out, for
they
have not
observed
the
things
which
were
preached
concerning
the
Lord,
and
concerning
his Son.
Therefore
gird up
thy
loins,
and
receive
righteousness,
thou
with thy
wife
remembering
Jesus
night
and day;
and the
kingdom
shall
belong
to you
Gentiles,
for we
the
(chosen)
people
have
mocked
the
Righteous
One.
Now if
there is
place
for our
request,
0
Pilate,
because
we were
at one
time in
power,
bury my
household
carefully;
for it
is right
that we
should
be
buried
by thee,
rather
than by
the
priests,
whom,
after a
little
time, as
the
Scriptures
say, at
the
coming
of Jesus
Christ,
vengeance
shall
overtake.
Fare
thee
well,
with
Procla
thy
wife.
I send
thee the
earrings
of my
daughter
and my
own
ring,
that
they may
be unto
thee a
memorial
of my
decease.
For
already
do worms
begin to
issue
from my
body,
and lo,
I am
receiving
temporal
judgment,
and I am
afraid
of the
judgment
to come.
For in
both we
stand
before
the
works of
the
living
God; but
this
judgment,
which is
tempora1,
is for a
time,
while
that to
come is
judgment
for
ever.
End of
the
Letter
to
Pilate
the
Governor.
LETTER
OF
PILATE
TO HEROD.
PILATE
TO HEROD
THE
TETRARCH:
PEACE.
KNOW and
see,
that in
the day
when
thou
didst
deliver
Jesus
unto me,
I took
pity on
myself,
and
testified
by
washing
my hands
(that I
was
innocent),
concerning
him who
rose
from the
grave
after
three
days,
and had
performed
thy
pleasure
in him,
for thou
didst
desire
me to be
associated
with
thee in
his
crucifixion.
But I
now
learn
from the
executioners
and from
the
soldiers
who
watched
his
sepulchre
that he
rose
from the
dead.
And I
have
especially
confirmed
what was
told me,
that he
appeared
bodily
in
Galilee,
in the
same
form,
and with
the same
voice,
and with
the same
doctrine,
and with
the same
disciples,
not
having
changed
in
anything,
but
preaching
with
boldness
his
resurrection,
and an
everlasting
kingdom.
And
behold,
heaven
and
earth
rejoice;
and
behold,
Procla
my wife
is
believing
in the
visions
which
appeared
unto
her,
when
thou
sentest
that I
should
deliver
Jesus to
the
people
of
Israel,
because
of the
ill-will
they
had.
Now when
Procla,
my wife,
heard
that
Jesus
was
risen,
and had
appeared
in
Galilee,
she took
with her
Longinus
the
centurion
and
twelve
soldiers,
the same
that had
watched
at the
sepulchre,
and went
to greet
the face
of
Christ,
as if to
a great
spectacle,
and saw
him with
his
disciples.
Now
while
they
were
standing,
and
wondering,
and
gazing
at him,
he
looked
at them,
and said
to them,
What is
it? Do
ye
believe
in me?
Procla,
know
that in
the
covenant
which
God gave
to the
fathers,
it is
said
that
every
body
which
had
perished
should
live by
means of
my
death,
which ye
have
seen.
And now,
ye see
that I
live,
whom ye
crucified.
And I
suffered
many
things,
till
that I
was laid
in the
sepulchre.
But now,
hear me,
and
believe
in my
Father -
God who
is in
me. For
I loosed
the
cords of
death,
and
brake
the
gates of
Sheol;
and my
coming
shall be
hereafter.
And when
Procla
my wife
and the
Romans
heard
these
things,
they
came and
told me,
weeping;
for they
also
were
against
him,
when
they
devised
the
evils
which
they had
done
unto
him. So
that, I
also was
on the
couch of
my bed
in
affliction,
and put
on a
garment
of
mourning,
and took
unto me
fifty
Romans
with my
wife and
went
into
Galilee.
And when
I was
going in
the way
I
testified
these
things;
that
Herod
did
these
things
by me,
that he
took
counsel
with me,
and
constrained
me to
arm my
hands
against
him, and
to judge
him that
judgeth
all, and
to
scourge
the Just
One,
Lord of
the
just.
And when
we drew
nigh to
him, 0
Herod, a
great
voice
was
heard
from
heaven,
and
dreadful
thunder,
and the
earth
trembled,
and gave
forth a
sweet
smell,
like
unto
which
was
never
perceived
even in
the
temple
of
Jerusalem.
Now
while I
stood in
the way,
our Lord
saw me
as he
stood
and
talked
with his
disciples.
But I
prayed
in my
heart,
for I
knew
that it
was he
whom ye
delivered
unto me,
that he
was Lord
of
created
things
and
Creator
of all.
But we,
when we
saw him,
all of
us fell
upon our
faces
before
his
feet.
And I
said
with a
loud
voice, I
have
sinned,
0 Lord,
in that
I sat
and
judged
thee,
who
avengest
all in
truth.
And lo,
I know
that
thou art
God, the
Son of
God, and
I beheld
thy
humanity
and not
thy
divinity.
But
Herod,
with the
children
of
Israel,
constrained
me to do
evil
unto
thee.
Have
pity,
therefore,
upon me,
0 God of
Israel !
And my
wife, in
great
anguish,
said,
God of
heaven
and of
earth,
God of
Israel,
reward
me not
according
to the
deeds of
Pontius
Pilate,
nor
according
to the
will of
the
children
of
Israel,
nor
according
to the
thought
of the
sons of
the
priests;
but
remember
my
husband
in thy
glory!
Now our
Lord
drew
near and
raised
up me
and my
wife,
and the
Romans;
and I
looked
at him
and saw
there
were on
him the
scars of
his
cross.
And be
said,
That
which
all the
righteous
fathers
hoped to
receive,
and saw
not - in
thy time
the Lord
of Time,
the Son
of Man,
the Son
of the
Most
High,
who is
for
ever,
arose
from the
dead,
and is
glorified
on high
by all
that he
created,
and
established
for ever
and
ever.
1.
Justinus,
one of
the
writers
that
were in
the days
of
Augustus
and
Tiberius
and
Gaius,
wrote in
his
third
discourse:
Now Mary
the
Gali1aean,
who bare
the
Christ
that was
crucified
in
Jerusalem,
had not
been
with a
husband.
And
Joseph
did not
abandon
her; but
Joseph
continued
in
sanctity
without
a wife,
he and
his five
sons by
a former
wife;
and Mary
continued
without
a
husband.
2.
Theodorus
wrote to
Pilate
the
Governor:
Who was
the man,
against
whom
there
was a
complaint
before
thee,
that he
was
crucified
by the
men of
Palestine?
If the
many
demanded
this
righteously,
why
didst
thou not
consent
to their
righteousness?
And if
they
demanded
this
unrighteously,
how
didst
thou
transgress
the law
and
command
what was
far from
righteousness?
Pilate
sent to
him: -
Because
he
wrought
signs I
did not
wish to
crucify
him: and
since
his
accusers
said, He
calleth
himself
a king,
I
crucified
him.
3.
Josephus
saith:
Agrippa,
the
king,
was
clothed
in a
robe
woven
with
silver,
and saw
the
spectacle
in the
theatre
of
Caesarea.
When the
people
saw that
his
raiment
flashed,
they
said to
him,
Hitherto
we
feared
thee as
a man:
henceforth
thou art
exalted
above
the
nature
of
mortals.
And he
saw an
angel
standing
over
him, and
he smote
him as
unto
death.
End of
the
Letter
of
Pilate
to
Herod.
THE
EPISTLE
OF
PONTIUS
PILATE
WHICH HE
WROTE TO
THE
ROMAN
EMPEROR
CONCERNING
OUR LORD
JESUS
CHRIST.
Pontius
Pilate
to
Tiberius
Caesar
the
Emperor
-
Greeting:
UPON
Jesus
Christ,
whom I
fully
made
known to
thee in
my last,
a bitter
punishment
hath at
length
been
inflicted
by the
will of
the
people
although
I was
unwilling
and
apprehensive.
In good
truth,
no age
ever had
or will
have a
man so
good and
strict.
But the
people
made a
wonderful
effort,
and all
their
scribes,
chiefs
and
elders
agreed
to
crucify
this
ambassador
of
truth,
their
own
prophets,
like the
Sibyls
with us,
advising
the
contrary;
and when
he was
hanged
super-
natural
signs
appeared,
and in
the
judgment
of
philosophers
menaced
the
whole
world
with
ruin.
His
disciples
flourish,
not
belying
their
master
by their
behavior
and
continence
of life;
nay, in
his name
they are
most
beneficent.
Had I
not
feared a
sedition
might
arise
among
the
people,
who were
almost
furious,
perhaps
this man
would
have yet
been
living
with us.
Although,
being
rather
compelled
by
fidelity
to thy
dignity,
than led
by my
own
inclination,
I did
not
strive
with all
my might
to
prevent
the sale
and
suffering
of
righteous
blood,
guiltless
of every
accusation,
unjustly,
indeed,
through
the
maliciouness
of men,
and yet,
as the
Scriptures
interpret,
to their
own
destruction.
Farewell.
The 5th
of the
Calends
of
April.
THE
REPORT
OF
PILATE
THE
GOVERNOR
CONCERNING
OUR LORD
JESUS
CHRIST;
WHICH
WAS SENT
To
AUGUSTUS
CAESAR,
IN ROME.
IN those
days,
when our
Lord
Jesus
Christ
was
crucified
under
Pontius
Pilate,
the
governor
of
Palestine
and
Phoenicia,
the
things
here
recorded
came to
pass in
Jerusalem,
and were
done by
the Jews
against
the
Lord.
Pilate
therefore
sent the
same to
Caesar
in Rome,
along
with his
private
report,
writing
thus:
To the
most
potent,
august,
divine
and
awful
Augustus
Caesar,
Pilate,
the
administrator
of the
Eastern
Province:
I have
received
information,
most
excellent
one, in
consequence
of which
I am
seized
with
fear and
trembling.
For in
this
province
which I
administer,
one of
whose
cities
is
called
Jerusalem,
the
whole
multitude
of Jews
delivered
unto me
a
certain
man
called
Jesus,
and
brought
many
accusations
against
him,
which
they
were
unable
to
establish
by
consistent
evidence.
But they
charged
him with
one
heresy
in
particular,
namely,
That
Jesus
said the
Sabbath
was not
a rest,
nor to
be
observed
by them.
For he
performed
many
cures on
that
day, and
made the
blind
see, and
the lame
walk,
raised
the
dead,
cleansed
lepers,
healed
the
paralytic
who were
wholly
unable
to move
their
body or
brace
their
nerves,
but
could
only
speak
and
discourse,
and he
gave
them
power to
walk and
run,
removing
their
infirmity
by his
word
alone.
There is
another
very
mighty
deed
which is
strange
to the
gods we
have: he
raised
up a man
who had
been
four
days
dead,
summoning
him by
his word
alone,
when the
dead man
had
begun to
decay,
and his
body was
corrupted
by the
worms
which
had been
bred,
and had
the
stench
of a
dog;
but,
seeing
him
lying in
the tomb
be
commanded
him to
run, nor
did the
dead man
at all
delay,
but as a
bridegroom
out of
his
chamber,
so did
he go
forth
from his
tomb,
filled
with
abundant
perfume.
Moreover,
even
such as
were
strangers,
and
clearly
demoniacs,
who had
their
dwelling
in
deserts,
and
devoured
their
own
flesh,
and
wandered
about
like
cattle
and
creeping
things,
he
turned
into
inhabiters
of
cities
and by a
word
rendered
them
rational,
and
prepared
them to
become
wise and
powerful,
and
illustrious,
taking
their
food
with all
the
enemies
of the
unclean
spirits
which
were
destructive
in them,
and
which he
cast
into the
depth of
the sea.
And,
again,
there
was
another
who had
a
withered
hand,
and not
only the
hand but
rather
the half
of the
body of
the man
was like
a stone,
and be
had
neither
the
shape of
a man
nor the
symmetry
of a
body:
even him
He
healed
with a
word and
rendered
whole.
And a
woman
also,
who had
an issue
of blood
for a
long
time,
and
whose
veins
and
arteries
were
exhausted,
and who
did not
bear a
human
body,
being
like one
dead,
and
daily
speechless,
so that
all the
physicians
of the
district
were
unable
to cure
her, for
there
remained
unto her
not a
hope of
life;
but as
Jesus
passed
by she
mysteriously
received
strength
by his
shadow
falling
on her,
from
behind
she
touched
the hem
of his
garment,
and
immediately,
in that
very
hour,
strength
filled
her
exhausted
limbs,
and as
if she
had
never
suffered
anything,
she
began to
run
along
towards
Capernaum,
her own
city, so
that she
reached
it in a
six
days'
journey.
And I
have
made
known
these
things
which I
have
recently
been
informed
of, and
which
Jesus
did on
the
Sabbath.
And he
did
other
miracles
greater
than
these,
so that
I have
observed
greater
works of
wonder
done by
him than
by the
gods
whom we
worship.
But
Herod
and
Archelaus
and
Philip,
Annas
and
Caiaphas,
with all
the
people,
deivered
him to
me,
making a
great
tumult
against
me in
order
that I
might
try him.
Therefore,
I
commanded
him to
be
crucified,
when I
had
first
scourged
him,
though I
found no
cause in
him for
evil
accusations
or
dealings.
Now when
he was
crucified,
there
was
darkness
over all
the
world
and the
sun was
obscured
for half
a day,
and the
stars
appeared,
but no
lustre
was seen
in them;
and the
moon
lost its
brightness,
as
though
tinged
with
blood;
and the
world of
the
departed
was
swallowed
up;so
that the
very
sanctuary
of the
temple,
as they
call it,
did not
appear
to the
Jews
themselves
at their
fall,
but they
perceived
a chasm
in the
earth,
and the
rolling
of
successive
thunders.
And amid
this
terror
the dead
appeared
rising
again,
as the
Jews
themselves
bore
witness,
and said
that it
was
Abraham,
and
Isaac,
and
Jacob,
and the
twelve
patriarchs,
and
Moses,
and Job,
who had
died
before,
as they
say,
some
three
thousand
five
hundred
years.
And
there
were
very
many
whom I
myself
saw
appearing
in the
body,
and they
made
lamentation
over the
Jews,
because
of the
transgression
which
was
committed
by them,
and
because
of the
destruction
of the
Jews and
of their
law.
And the
terror
of the
earthquake
continued
from the
sixth
hour of
the
preparation
until
the
ninth
hour;
and when
it was
evening
on the
first
day of
the
week,
there
came a
sound
from
heaven,
and the
heaven
became
seven
times
more
luminous
than on
all
other
days.
And at
the
third
hour of
the
night
the sun
appeared
more
luminous
than it
had ever
shone,
lighting
up the
whole
hemisphere.
And as
lightning
-
flashes
suddenly
come
forth in
a storm,
so there
were
seen
men,
lofty in
stature,
and
surpassing
in
glory, a
countless
host,
crying
out, and
their
voice
was
heard as
that of
exceedingly
loud
thunder,
Jesus
that was
crucified
is risen
again:
come up
from
Hades ye
that
were
enslaved
in the
subterraneous
recesses
of
Hades.
And the
chasm in
the
earth
was as
if it
had no
bottom;
but it
was so
that the
very
foundations
of the
eaith
appeared,
with
those
that
shouted
in
heaven,
and
walked
in the
body
among
the dead
that
were
raised.
And He
that
raised
up all
the dead
and
bound
Hades
said,
Say to
my
disciples,
He goeth
before
you into
Galilee,
there
shall ye
see Him.
And all
that
night
the
light
ceased
not
shining.
And many
of the
Jews
died in
the
chasm of
the
earth,
being
swallowed
up, so
that on
the
morrow
most of
those
who had
been
against
Jesus
were not
to be
found.
Others
saw the
apparition
of men
rising
again
whom
none of
us had
ever
seen.
One
synagogue
of the
Jews was
alone
left in
Jerusalem
itself,
for they
all
disappeared
in that
ruin.
Therefore
being
astounded
by that
terror,
and
being
possessed
with the
most
dreadful
trembling,
I have
written
what I
saw at
that
time and
sent it
to thine
excellency;
and I
have
inserted
what was
done
against
Jesus by
the
Jews,
and sent
it to
thy
divinity,
my lord.
The
REPORT
OF
PONTIUS
PILATE.
GOVERNOR
OF JUDEA
Which
was sent
to
Tiberius
Caesar
in Rome.
To the
most
potent,
august,
dreadful,
and
divine
Augustus,
Pontius
Pilate,
administrator
of the
Eastern
Province.
I
HAVE
undertaken
to
communicate
to thy
goodness
by this
my
writing,
though
possessed
with
much
fear and
trembling,
most
excellent
king,
the
present
state of
affairs,
as the
result
hath
shown.
For as I
administered
this
province,
my lord,
according
to the
command
of thy
serenity,
which is
one of
the
eastern
cities
called
Jerusalem,
wherein
the
temple
of the
nation
of the
Jews is
erected,
all the
multitude
of the
Jews,
being
assembled,
delivered
up to me
a
certain
man
called
Jesus,
bringing
many and
endless
accusations
against
him; but
they
could
not
convict
him in
anything.
But they
had one
heresy
against
him,
that he
said the
sabbath
was not
their
proper
rest.
Now that
man
wrought
many
cures
and good
works:
he
caused
the
blind to
see, he
cleansed
lepers,
he
raised
the
dead, he
healed
paralytics,
who
could
not move
at all,
but had
only
voice,
and all
their
bones in
their
places;
and he
gave
them
strength
to walk
and run,
enjoining
it by
his word
alone.
And he
did
another
yet more
mighty
work,
which
had been
strange
even
among
our
gods, he
raised
from the
dead one
Lazarus,
who had
been
dead
four
days,commanding
by a
word
alone
that the
dead man
should
be
raised,
when his
body was
already
corrupted
by worms
which
bred in
his
wounds.
And he
commanded
the
fetid
body,
which
lay in
the
grave,
to run,
and as
bridegroom
from his
chamber
so he
went
forth
from his
grave,
full of
sweet
perfume.
And some
that
were
grievously
afflicted
by
demons,
and had
their
dwellings
in
desert
places,
and
devoured
the
flesh of
their
own
limbs,
and went
up and
down
among
creeping
things
and wild
beasts,
he
caused
to dwell
in
cities
in their
own
houses,
and by a
word
made
them
reasonable,
and
caused
to
become
wise and
honorable
those
that
were
vexed by
unclean
spirits,
and the
demons
that
were in
them he
sent out
into a
herd of
swine
into the
sea and
drowned
them.
Again,
another
who had
a
withered
hand,
and
lived in
suffering,
and had
not even
the half
of his
body
sound,
he made
whole by
a word
alone.
And a
woman
who had
an issue
of blood
for a
long
time, so
that
because
of the
discharge
all the
joints
of her
bones
were
seen and
shone
through
like
glass,
for all
the
physicians
had
dismissed
her
without
hope,
and had
not
cleansed
her, for
there
was in
her no
hope of
health
at all;
but
once, as
Jesus
was
passing
by she
touched
from
behind
the hem
of his
garments,
and in
that
very
hour the
strength
of her
body was
restored,
and she
was made
whole,
as if
she had
no
affliction,
and
began to
run fast
towards
her own
city of
Paneas.
And
these
things
happened
thus:
but the
Jews
reported
that
Jesus
did
these
things
on the
sabbath.
And I
saw that
greater
marvels
had been
wrought
by him
than by
the gods
whom we
worship.
Him then
Herod
and
Archelaus
and
Philip,
and
Annas
and
Caiaphas,
with all
the
people,
delivered
up to
me, to
put him
on his
trial.
And
because
many
raised a
tumult
against
me, I
commanded
that he
should
be
crucified.
Now when
he was
crucified
darkness
came
over all
the
world;
the sun
was
altogether
hidden,
and the
sky
appeared
dark
while it
was yet
day, so
that the
stars
were
seen,
though
still
they had
their
lustre
obscured,
wherefore,
I
suppose
your
excellency
is not
unaware
that in
all the
world
they
lighted
their
lamps
from the
sixth
hour
until
evening.
And the
moon,
which
was like
blood,
did not
shine
all
night
long,
although
it was
at the
full,
and the
stars
and
Orion
made
lamentation
over the
Jews,
because
of the
transgression
committed
by them.
And on
the
first
day of
the
week,
about
the
third
hour of
the
night,
the sun
appeared
as it
never
shone
before,
and the
whole
heaven
became
bright.
And as
lightnings
come in
a storm,
so
certain
men of
lofty
stature,
in
beautiful
array,
and of
indescribable
glory,
appeared
in the
air, and
a
countless
host of
angels,
crying
out and
saying,
Glory to
God in
the
highest,
and on
earth
peace,
good
will
among
men:
Come up
from
Hades,
ye who
are in
bondage
in the
depths
of
Hades.
And at
their
voice
all the
mountains
and
hills
were
moved,
and the
rocks
were
rent,
and
great
chasms
were
made in
the
earth,
so that
the very
places
of the
abyss
were
visible.
And amid
the
terror
dead men
were
seen
rising
again,
so that
the Jews
who saw
it said,
We
beheld
Abraham
and
Isaac,
and
Jacob,
and the
twelve
patriarchs,
who died
some two
thousand
five
hundred
years
before,
and we
beheld
Noah
clearly
in the
body.
And all
the
multitude
walked
about
and sang
hymns to
God with
a loud
voice,
saying,
The Lord
our God,
who hath
risen
from the
dead,
hath
made
alive
all the
dead,
and
Hades he
hath
spoiled
and
slain.
Therefore,
my lord
king,
all that
night
the
light
ceased
not. But
many of
the Jews
died,
and were
sunk and
swallowed
up in
the
chasms
that
night,
so that
not even
their
bodies
were to
be seen.
Now I
mean,
that
those of
the Jews
suffered
who
spake
against
Jesus.
And but
one
synagogue
remained
in
Jerusalem,
for all
the
synagogues
which
had been
against
Jesus
were
overwhelmed.
Through
that
terror,
therefore,
being
amazed
and
being
seized
with
great
trembling,
in that
very
hour, I
ordered
what had
been
done by
them all
to be
written,
and I
have
sent it
to thy
mightiness.
THE
TRIAL
AND
CONDEMNATION
OF
PILATE.
NOW
when the
letters
came to
the city
of the
Romans,
and were
read to
Caesar
with no
few
standing
there,
they
were all
terrified,
because,
through
the
transgression
of
Pilate,
the
darkness
and the
earthquake
had
happened
to all
the
world.
And
Caesar,
being
filled
with
anger,
sent
soldiers
and
commanded
that
Pilate
should
be
brought
as a
prisoner.
And when
he was
brought
to the
city of
the
Romans,
and
Caesar
heard
that he
was
come, he
sat in
the
temple
of the
gods,
above
all the
senate,
and with
all the
army,
and with
all the
multitude
of his
power,
and
commanded
that
Pilate
should
stand in
the
entrance.
And
Caesar
said to
him,
Most
impious
one,
when
thou
sawest
so great
signs
done by
that
man, why
didst
thou
dare to
do thus?
By
daring
to do an
evil
deed
thou
hast
ruined
all the
world.
And
Pilate
said,
King and
Autocrat,
I am not
guilty
of these
things,
but it
is the
multitude
of the
Jews who
are
precipitate
and
guilty.
And
Caesar
said,
And who
are
they?
Pilate
saith,
Herod,
Archelaus,
Philip,
Annas
and
Caiaphas,
and all
the
multitude
of the
Jews.
Caesar
saith,
For what
cause
didst
thou
execute
their
purpose?
And
Pilate
said,
Their
nation
is
seditious
and
insubordinate,
and not
submissive
to thy
power.
And
Caesar
said,
When
they
delivered
him to
thee
thou
oughtest
to have
made him
secure
and sent
him to
me, and
not
consented
to them
to
crucify
such a
man, who
was just
and
wrought
such
great
and good
miracles,
as thou
saidst
in thy
report.
For by
such
miracles
Jesus
was
manifested
to be
the
Christ,
the King
of the
Jews.
And when
Caesar
said
this and
himself
named
the name
of
Christ,
all the
multitude
of the
gods
fell
down
together,
and
became
like
dust
where
Caesar
sat with
the
senate.
And all
the
people
that
stood
near
Caesar
were
filled
with
trembling
because
of the
utterance
of the
word and
the fall
of their
gods,
and
being
seized
with
fear
they all
went
away,
every
man to
his
house,
wondering
at what
had
happened.
And
Caesar
commanded
Pilate
to be
safely
kept,
that he
might
know the
truth
about
Jesus.
And on
the
morrow
when
Caesar
sat in
the
capitol
with all
the
senate,
he
undertook
to
question
Pilate
again.
And
Caesar
said,
Say the
truth,
most
impious
one, for
through
thy
impious
deed
which
thou
didst
commit
against
Jesus,
even
here the
doing of
thy evil
works
were
manifested,
in that
the gods
were
brought
to ruin.
Say
then,
who is
he that
was
crucified,
for his
name
hath
destroyed
all the
gods?
Pilate
said,
And
verily
his
records
are
true;
for even
I myself
was
convinced
by his
works
that he
was
greater
than all
the gods
whom we
venerate.
And
Caesar
said,
For what
cause
then
didst
thou
perpetrate
against
him such
daring
and
doing,
not
being
ignorant
of him,
or
assuredly
designing
some
mischief
to my
government?
And
Pilate
said, I
did it
because
of the
transgression
and
sedition
of the
lawless
and
ungodly
Jews.
And
Caesar
was
filled
with
anger,
and held
a
council
with all
his
senate
and
officers,
and
ordered
a decree
to be
written
against
the Jews
thus:-
To
Licianus
who
holdeth
the
first
place in
the East
Country.
Greeting:
I have
been
informed
of the
audacity
perpetrated
very
recently
by the
Jews
inhabiting
Jerusalem
and the
cities
round
about,
and
their
lawless
doing,
how they
compelled
Pilate
to
crucify
a
certain
god
called
Jesus,
through
which
great
transgression
of
theirs
the
world
was
darkened
and
drawn
into
ruin.
Determine
therefore,
with a
body of
soldiers,
to go to
them
there at
once and
proclaim
their
subjection
to
bondage
by this
decree.
By
obeying
and
proceeding
against
them,
and
scattering
them
abroad
in all
nations,
enslave
them,
and by
driving
their
nation
from all
Judea as
soon as
possible
show,
wherever
this
hath not
yet
appeared,
that
they are
full of
evil.
And when
this
decree
came
into the
East
Country,
Licianus
obeyed,
through
fear of
the
decree,
and laid
waste
all the
nation
of the
Jews,
and
caused
those
that
were
left in
Judea to
go into
slavery
with
them
that
were
scattered
among
the
Gentiles,
that it
might be
known by
Caesar
that
these
things
had been
done by
Licianus
against
the Jews
in the
East
Country,
and to
please
him.
And
again
Caesar
resolved
to have
Pilate
questioned,
and
commanded
a
captain,
Albius
by name,
to cut
off
Pilate's
head,
saying,
As he
laid
hands
upon the
just
man,
that is
called
Christ,
he also
shall
fall in
like
manner,
and find
no
deliverance.
And when
Pilate
came to
the
place he
prayed
in
silence
saying,
0 Lord,
destroy
not me
with the
wicked
Hebrews,
for I
should
not have
laid
hands
upon
thee,
but for
the
nation
of
lawless
Jews,
because
they
provoked
sedition
gainst
me: but
thou
knowest
that I
did it
in
ignorance.
Destroy
me not,
therefore,
for this
my sin,
nor be
mindful
of the
evil
that is
in me, 0
Lord,
and in
thy
servant
Procla
who
standeth
with me
in this
the hour
of my
death,
whom
thou
taughtest
to
prophecy
that
thou
must be
nailed
to the
cross.
Do not
punish
her too
in my
sin, but
forgive
us, and
number
us in
the
portion
of thy
just
ones.
And
behold,
when
Pilate
had
finished
his
prayer,
there
came a
voice
from
heaven,
saying,
All
generations
and the
families
of the
Gentiles
shall
call
thee
blessed,
because
under
thee
were
fulfilled
all
these
things
that
were
spoken
by the
prophets
concerning
me;
and thou
thyself
must
appear
as my
witness
at my
second
coming,
when I
shall
judge
the
twelve
tribes
of
Israel,
and them
that
have not
confessed
my name.
And the
Prefect
cut off
the head
of
Pilate,
and
behold
an angel
of the
Lord
received
it. And
when his
wife
Procla
saw the
angel
coming
and
receiving
his
head,
she
also,
being
filled
with
joy,
forthwith
gave up
the
ghost,
and was
buried
with her
husband.
[ The
Synaxaria
of the
Greeks,
under
Oct.
28th,
intimate
the
commemoration
of
Procla,
the wife
of
Pilate.
The
AEthiopic
calendar
inserts
'Pilate
and his
wife
Procla'
under
June
25th.
The
reason
for
putting
these
names
among
the
saints
is, that
Pilate
by
washing
his
hands
attested
the
innocence
of
Jesus,
while
Procla
sought
to
dissuade
her
hushand
from
complying
with the
Jews.
The
above
story
makes of
Pilate
almost a
martyr;
and
Tertullian
makes
him
almost a
saint in
Apol. c.
Gentes,
cap. 21]
THE
DEATH OF
PILATE
WHO
CONDEMNED
JESUS.
NOW
whereas
Tiberius
Caesar
emperor
of the
Romans
was
suffering
from a
grievous
sickness,
and
hearing
that
there
was at
Jerusalem
a
certain
physician,
Jesus by
name,
who
healed
all
diseases
by his
word
alone;
not
knowing
that the
Jews and
Pilate
had put
him to
death,
he thus
bade one
of his
attendants,
Volusianus
by name,
saying,
Go as
quickly
as thou
canst
across
the sea,
and tell
Pilate,
my
servant
and
friend,
to send
me this
physician
to
restore
me to my
original
health.
And
Volusianus,
having
heard
the
order of
the
emperor,
immediately
departed,
and came
to
Pilate,
as it
was
commanded
him.
And he
told the
same
Pilate
what had
been
committed
to him
by
Tiberius
Caesar,
saying,
Tiberius
Caesar,
emperor
of the
Romans,
thy
Lord,
having
heard
that in
this
city
there is
a
physician
who
healeth
diseases
by his
word
alone,
earnestly
entreateth
thee to
send him
to him
to heal
his
disease.
And
Pilate
was
greatly
terrified
on
hearing
this,
knowing
that
through
envy he
had
caused
him to
be
slain.
Pilate
answered
the
messenger,
saying
thus,
This man
was a
malefactor,
and a
man who
drew
after
himself
all the
people;
so,
after
counsel
taken of
the wise
men of
the
city, I
caused
him to
be
crucified.
And as
the
messenger
returned
to his
lodgings
he met a
certain
woman
named
Veronica,
who had
been
acquainted
with
Jesus,
and he
said, 0
woman,
there
was a
certain
physician
in this
city,
who
healed
the sick
by his
word
alone,
why have
the Jews
slain
him? And
she
began to
weep,
saying,
Ah, me,
my lord,
it was
my God
and my
Lord
whom
Pilate
through
envy
delivered
up,
condemned,
and
commanded
to be
crucified.
Then he,
grieving
greatly,
said, I
am
exceedingly
sorry
that I
cannot
fulfil
that for
which my
lord
hath
sent me.
Veronica
said to
him,
When my
Lord
went
about
preaching,
and I
was very
unwillingly
deprived
of his
presence,
I
desired
to have
his
picture
painted
for me,
that
while I
was
deprived
of his
presence,
at least
the
figure
of his
likeness
might
give me
consolation.
And when
I was
taking
the
canvas
to the
painter
to be
painted,
my Lord
met me
and
asked
whither
I was
going.
And when
I had
made
known to
him the
cause of
my
journey,
He asked
me for
the
canvas,
and gave
it back
to me
printed
with the
likeness
of his
venerable
face.
Therefore,
if thy
lord
will
devoutly
look
upon the
sight of
this, he
will
straightway
enjoy
the
benefit
of
health.
Is a
likeness
of this
kind to
be
procured
with
gold or
silver?
he
asked.
No, said
she, but
with a
pious
sentiment
of
devotion.
Therefore,
I will
go with
thee,
and
carry
the
likeness
to
Caesar
to look
upon,
and will
return.
So
Volusianus
came
with
Veronica
to Rome,
and said
to
Tiberius
the
emperor,
Jesus,
whom
thou
hast
long
desired,
Pilate
and the
Jews
have
surrendered
to an
unjust
death,
and
through
envy
fastened
to the
wood of
the
cross.
Therefore,
a
certain
matron
hath
come
with me
bringing
the
likeness
of the
same
Jesus,
and if
thou
wilt
devoutly
gaze
upon it,
thou
wilt
presently
obtain
the
benefit
of thy
health.
So
Caesar
caused
the way
to be
spread
with
cloths
of silk,
and
ordered
the
portrait
to be
presented
to him;
and as
soon as
he had
looked
upon it
he
regained
his
original
health.
Then
Pontius
Pilate
was
apprehended
by
command
of
Caesar
and
brought
to Rome.
Caesar,
hearing
that
Pilate
had come
to Rome,
was
filled
with
exceeding
wrath
against
him, and
caused
him to
be
brought
to him.
Now
Pilate
brought
with him
the
seamless
coat of
Jesus,
and wore
it when
before
the
emperor.
As soon
as the
emperor
saw him
he laid
aside
all his
wrath,
and
forthwith
rose to
him, and
was
unable
to speak
harshly
to him
in
anything:
and he
who in
his
absence
seemed
so
terrible
and
fierce
now in
his
presence
is found
comparatively
gentle.
And when
he had
dismissed
him, he
soon
became
terribly
inflamed
against
him,
declaring
himself
wretched,
because
he had
not
expressed
to him
the
anger of
his
bosom.
And
immediately
he had
him
recalled,
swearing
and
protesting
that he
was a
child of
death,
and
unfitted
to live
upon
earth.
And when
he saw
him he
instantly
greeted
him, and
laid
aside
all the
fury of
his
mind.
All were
astonished,
and he
was
astonished
himself,
that he
was so
enraged
against
Pilate
while
absent,
and
could
say
nothing
to him
sharply
while he
was
present.
At
length,
by
Divine
suggestion,
or
perhaps
by the
persuasion
of some
Christian,
he had
him
stripped
of the
coat,
and soon
resumed
against
him his
original
fury of
mind.
And when
the
emperor
was
wondering
very
much
about
this,
they
told him
it had
been the
coat of
the Lord
Jesus.
Then the
emperor
commanded
him to
be
kept
in
prison
till he
should
take
counsel
with the
wise men
what
ought to
be done
with
him.
And
after a
few days
sentence
was
given
against
Pilate
that he
should
be
condemned
to the
most
ignominious
death.
When
Pilate
heard
this he
slew
himself
with his
own
dagger,
and by
such a
death
put an
end to
his
life.
When
Pilate's
death
was made
known
Caesar
said,
Truly he
has died
a most
ignominious
death,
whose
own hand
has not
spared
him. He
was
therefore
fastened
to a
great
block of
stone
and sunk
in the
river
Tiber.
But
wicked
and
unclean
spirits,
rejoicing
in his
wicked
and
unclean
body,
all
moved
about in
the
water,
and
caused
in the
air
dreadful
lightning
and
tempests,
thunder
and
hail, so
that all
were
seized
with
horrible
fear. On
which
account
the
Romans
dragged
him out
of the
river
Tiber,
bore him
away in
derision
to
Vienne,
and sunk
him in
the
river
Rhone.
For
Vienne
means,
as it
were,
Way of
Gehenna,
because
it was
then a
place of
cursing.
And evil
spirits
were
there
and did
the same
things.
Those
men,
therefore,
not
enduring
to be so
harassed
by
demons,
removed
the
vessel
of
cursing
from
them and
sent it
to be
buried
in the
territory
of
Losania.
But when
they
were
troubled
exceedingly
by the
aforesaid
vexations,
they put
it away
from
them and
sunk it
in a
certain
pool
surrounded
by
mountains,
where
even
yet,
according
to the
account
of some,
sundry
diabolical
contrivances
are said
to Issue
forth.
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