The Protoevangelium of
James
Or the Infancy Gospel of James
Ruben's Holy Family with Saint Anne
National Gallery of Art Washington
About the Infancy Gospel of
James
By Peter Kirby
Click to Name to Go to the Website for Additional
Information
The Infancy Narrative of James is also known as the Protevangelium
of James. The author claims to be James, the
stepbrother of Jesus. In The Other Gospels,
Ron Cameron
says that this name "implies that most of the events recorded in this
'initial gospel' of James occur prior to those
recorded in the gospels of the New Testament." The gospel received this
name when it was first published in the sixteenth century.
There are about one hundred and thirty Greek manuscripts containing the
Infancy Gospel of Thomas, but the vast majority of these come from the tenth
century or later. The earliest known manuscript of the text was found in 1958;
it is now kept in Geneva's Bodmer Library. The manuscript dates to the third century;
however, according to Cameron, "many of its
readings seem to be secondary."
Cameron identifies three different sources
for the Infancy Gospel of Thomas: extracanonical traditions, the Old Testament,
and the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. The
mythical element of birth in a cave, for example, is an extracanonical also
known to Justin Martyr.
Cameron states of the author's use of Jewish scriptures: "Not only are
individual words, phrases, and even whole paragraphs reminiscent of the
Septuagint; such discrete forms as the hymn and the lament of Anna also display
conscious, direct 'remembrance' of the stories recorded in the
scriptures." Concerning the use of the canonical gospels, Cameron
observes, "Frequently the respective passages in Matthew
and Luke are harmonized into a single story in
the Protevangelium of James; in some
instances the two texts are conflated. It is by combining composite traditions
with a harmony of the synoptic infancy stories that the Protevangelium
of James has constructed the dramatic scenes of its gospel."
In The Complete Gospels,
Ronald
Hock divides the Infancy Gospel of James
into three parts. In the first eight chapters, there is the story of
Mary's
own unique birth and childhood, wherein it is related that Anna,
Mary's mother, becomes pregnant only after
supplication to God. In the second eight chapters, the story starts "with
the crisis posed by Mary's becoming a woman and
thus her imminent pollution of the temple. The priests resolve the crisis by
turning her over to a divinely chosen widower, the carpenter Joseph,
who agrees to be her guardian, but refeuses to marry
her." When Mary becomes pregnant, a priest
suspects Joseph and Mary
of wrong-doing and put the two to a test, which they pass. In the last eight
chapters, we hear of the birth of Jesus with the
visit of midwifes, the hiding of Jesus from
Herod
in a feeding trough, and even the hiding of John
from Herod in the hills with his mother Elizabeth.
These legends are embellishments upon the stories given in Matthew
and Luke.
The author cannot have actually been James
because the author seems to be dependent upon Matthew
and Luke. Only Matthew
tells us about the massacre of the infants arranged by Herod,
while only Luke tells us about the birth of
John
to Elizabeth.
Concerning the question of how John escaped
Herod's
wrath, Hock argues that the author "answered this question by having
Zechariah
choose death rather than tell of John's whereabouts
and by having Elizabeth
flee to the hills with John." Since
James
death at the hands of Ananias occured in 62 CE and since the Gospels of Matthew and
Luke
were composed later, the author must be pseudonymous.
According to Hock, a major development found in the Protevangelium
of James is this: "Mary, the central
character, is no longer a virgin in the ordinary sense of a young woman of
marriageable age, but a virgin of extraordinary purity and unending
duration." Hock goes on to argue: "Indeed, Mary's
purity is so emphasized that it becomes thematic and thus answers the
fundamental question which guides the narrative: why Mary,
of all the virgins in Israel,
was chosen to be the mother of the son of God. The answer: no one could have
been any purer. Thus Anna transforms
Mary's
bedroom into a sanctuary where she receives no impure food and is amused by the
undefiled daughters of the Hebrews (6:5). When she turns three years of age,
these young women escort her to the temple in Jerusalem
where she spends the next nine years in absolute purity and is even fed by the
hand on an angel (7:4-8:2). When, at age twelve, she is made the ward of
Joseph,
she spends her time spinning thread for the temple with the other virgins from Israel
(10:1-12:1). When she is later suspected of impurity, she passes a test and has
her innocence proclaimed by the high priest (15:1-16:7). Finally, when she
gives birth to Jesus, two midwives certify that
she remains a virgin (19:18-20:11).
In short, it is through her purity that Mary fulfills
the blessing which the priests made when she was only one year old: that she
might be blessed with a blessing that could not be surpassed (6:9)."
Cameron also sees another theme in this
infancy gospel: "In using and expanding the infancy narratives, the Protevangelium of James has carried forward
the aretalogical tradition of the gospels, including
in the traditional enumeration of heroic feats the birth of the holy family.
The bucolic scenes in the narrative of Jesus' birth recall other stories of the
birth of 'divine men' in antiquity, and are part of that tradition of Christian
propaganda which sought to demonstrate the superiority of Jesus among heroes
and gods."
The terminus a quo is set by the use of
Matthew
and Luke. The terminus ad quem
is set a reference from Origen and
by the Bodmer papyrus. Within this range, a dating in
the middle of the second century is most likely. This dating is suggested by
the prevalence of harmonies of Matthew and
Luke
at this time, as shown from Justin
Martyr. The Infancy Gospel of James itself
may have been dependent on a harmony of Matthew
and Luke, but in any case it stands in the
harmonizing spirit of the era before the four canonical gospels were considered
to be sacred scripture.

The Protoevangelium of
James
Or the Infancy Gospel of James
The Birth of Mary the Holy Mother of God,
Translation by Andrew Bernhard
From the
Gospels.Net
IN THE RECORDS OF THE TWELVE TRIBES OF ISRAEL was
Joachim,
a man rich exceedingly; and he brought his offerings double, saying: There
shall be of my superabundance to all the people, and there shall be the
offering for my forgiveness to the Lord for a propitiation for me. For the great day of the Lord was at hand, and the sons of Israel
were bringing their offerings. And there stood over against him Rubim, saying: It is not meet for thee first to bring thine
offerings, because thou hast not made seed in Israel.
And Joachim was exceedingly grieved, and went
away to the registers of the twelve tribes of the people, saying: I shall see
the registers of the twelve tribes of Israel,
as to whether I alone have not made seed in Israel.
And he searched, and found that all the righteous had raised
up seed in Israel.
And he called to mind the patriach Abraham, that in
the last day God gave him a son Isaac. And
Joachim was exceedingly grieved, and did not come into the presence of his
wife; but he retired to the desert, and there pitched his tent, and fasted
forty days and forty nights, saying in himself: I will not go down either for
food or for drink until the Lord my God shall look upon me, and prayer shall be
my food and drink.
2. And his wife Anna mourned in two mournings, and lamented in two lamentations, saying: I
shall bewail my widowhood; I shall bewail my childlessness. And the great day
of the Lord was at hand; and Judith her
maid-servant said: How long dost thou humiliate thy soul? Behold, the great day
of the Lord is at hand, and it is unlawful for thee to mourn. But take this
head-band, which the woman that made it gave to me; for it is not proper that I
should wear it, because I am a maid-servant, and it has a royal appearance. And
Anna said: Depart from me; for I have not done
such things, and the Lord has brought me very low. I fear that some wicked
person has given it to thee, and thou hast come to make me a sharer in thy sin.
And Judith said: Why should I curse thee, seeing
that the Lord hath shut thy womb, so as not to give thee fruit in Israel?
And Anna was grieved exceedingly, and put off her garments of mourning, and
cleaned her head, and put on her wedding garments, and about the ninth hour
went down to the garden to walk. And she saw a laurel, and sat under it, and
prayed to the Lord, saying: O God of our fathers, bless me and hear my prayer,
as Thou didst bless the womb of Sarah, and didst
give her a son Isaac.
3. And gazing towards the heaven, she saw a sparrow's nest in the laurel,
and made a lamentation in herself, saying: Alas! who
begot me? and what womb produced me? because I have become a curse in the presence of the sons of
Israel, and I
have been reproached, and they have driven me in derision out of the temple of
the Lord. Alas! to what have I been likened? I am not
like the fowls of the heaven, because even the fowls of the heaven are
productive before Thee, O Lord. Alas! to what have I
been likened? I am not like the beasts of the earth, because even the beasts of
the earth are productive before Thee, O Lord. Alas! to
what have I been likened? I am not like these waters, because even these waters
are productive before Thee, O Lord. Alas! to what have
I been likened? I am not like this earth, because even the earth bringeth forth its fruits in season, and blesseth Thee, O Lord.
4. And, behold, an angel of the Lord stood by, saying:
Anna,
Anna, the Lord hath heard thy prayer, and thou shalt conceive, and shall bring forth; and thy seed shall
be spoken of in all the world. And Anna
said: As the Lord my God liveth, if I beget either
male or female, I will bring it as a gift to the Lord my God; and it shall
minister to Him in holy things all the days of its life. And, behold, two
angels came, saying to her: Behold, Joachim thy
husband is coming with his flocks. For an angel of the Lord went down to him,
saying: Joachim, Joachim,
the Lord God hath heard thy prayer Go down hence; for, behold,
thy wife Anna shall conceive. And Joachim
went down and called his shepherds, saying: Bring me hither ten she-lambs
without spot or blemish, and they shall be for the Lord my God; and bring me
twelve tender calves, and they shall be for the priests and the elders; and a
hundred goats for all the people. And, behold, Joachim came with his flocks;
and Anna stood by the gate, and saw Joachim coming, and she ran anti hung upon
his neck, saying: Now I know that the Lord God hath blessed me exceedingly;
for, behold the widow no longer a widow, and I the childless shall conceive.
And Joachim rested the first day in his house.
5. And on the following day he brought his offerings, saying in himself: If
the Lord God has been rendered gracious to me, the plate on the priest's
forehead will make it manifest to me. And Joachim
brought his offerings, and observed attentively the priest's plate when he went
up to the altar of the Lord, and he saw no sin in himself. And Joachim
said: Now I know that the Lord has been gracious unto me, and has remitted all
my sins. And he went down from the temple of the Lord justified, and departed
to his own house. And her months were fulfilled, and in the ninth month
Anna
brought forth. And she said to the midwife: What have I brought forth? and she said: A girl. And said Anna:
My soul has been magnified this day. And she laid her down. And the days having
been fulfilled, Anna was purified, and gave the
breast to the child, and called her name Mary.
6. And the child grew strong day by day; and when she was six months old,
her mother set her on the ground to try whether she could stand, and she walked
seven steps and came into her bosom; and she snatched her up, saying: As the
Lord my God liveth, thou shall not walk on this earth
until I bring thee into the temple of the Lord. And she made a sanctuary in her
bed-chamber, and allowed nothing common or unclean to pass through her. And she
called the undefiled daughters of the Hebrews, and they led her astray. And
when she was a year old, Joachim made a great
feast, and invited the priests, and the scribes, and the elders, and all the
people of Israel.
And Joachim brought the child to the priests;
and they blessed her, saying: O God of our fathers, bless
this child, and give her an everlasting name to be named in all generations.
And all the people said: So be it, so be it, amen. And
he brought her to the chief priests; and they blessed her, saying: O God most
high, look upon this child, and bless her with the
utmost blessing, which shall be for ever. And her mother snatched her up, and
took her into the sanctuary of her bed-chamber, and gave her the breast. And
Anna made a song to the Lord God, saying: I will sing a song to the Lord my
God, for He hath looked upon me, and hath taken away the reproach of mine
enemies; and the Lord hath given the the fruit of His
righteousness, singular in its kind, and richly endowed before Him. Who will
tell the sons of Rubim that Anna
gives suck? Hear, hear, ye twelve tribes of Israel,
that Anna gives suck. And she laid her to rest
in the bed-chamber of her sanctuary, and went out and ministered unto them. And
when the supper was ended, they went down rejoicing, and glorifying the God of
Israel.
7. And her months were added to the child. And the child was two years old,
and Joachim said: Let us take her up to the
temple of the Lord, that we may pay the vow that we have vowed, lest perchance
the Lord send to us, and our offering be not received.
And Anna said: Let us wait for the third year,
in order that the child may not seek for father or mother. And Joachim
said: So let us wait. And the child was three years old, and Joachim said:
Invite the daughters of the Hebrews that are undefiled, and let them take each
a lamp, and let them stand with the lamps burning, that the child may not turn
back, and her heart be captivated from the temple of the Lord. And they did so until
they went up into the temple of the Lord. And the priest received her, and
kissed her, and blessed her, saying: The Lord has magnified thy name in all
generations. In thee, on the last of the days, the Lord will manifest His
redemption to the sons of Israel.
And he set her down upon the third step of the altar, and the Lord God sent
grace upon her; and she danced with her feet, and all the house of Israel
loved her.
8. And her parents went down
marveling, and
praising the Lord God, because the child had not turned back. And
Mary
was in the temple of the Lord as if she were a dove that dwelt there, and she
received food from the hand of an angel. And when she was twelve years old
there was held a council of the priests, saying: Behold, Mary
has reached the age of twelve years in the temple of the Lord. What then shall
we do with her, test perchance she defile the sanctuary of the Lord? And they
said to the high priest: Thou standest by the altar
of the Lord; go in, and pray concerning her; and whatever the Lord shall
manifest unto thee, that also will we do. And the high priest went in, taking
the robe with the twelve bells into the holy of holies; and he prayed
concerning her. And behold an angel of the Lord stood by him, saying unto him:
Zacharias, Zacharias, go out and assemble the
widowers of the people, and let them bring each his rod; and to whomsoever the
Lord shall show a sign, his wife shall she be. And the
heralds went out through all the circuit of Judea,
and the trumpet of the Lord sounded, and all ran.
9. And Joseph, throwing away his axe, went
out to meet them; and when they had assembled, they went away to the high
priest, taking with them their rods. And he, taking the rods of all of them,
entered into the temple, and prayed; and having ended his prayer, he took the
rods and came out, and gave them to them: but there was no sign in them, and
Joseph took his rod last; and, behold, a dove came out of the rod, and flew
upon Joseph's head. And the priest said to Joseph,
Thou hast been chosen by lot to take into thy keeping the virgin of the Lord.
But Joseph refused, saying: I have children, and
I am an old man, and she is a young girl. I am afraid lest I become a
laughing-stock to the sons of Israel.
And the priest said to Joseph: Fear the Lord thy
God, and remember what the Lord did to Dathan, and Abiram, and Korah; how the earth
opened, and they were swallowed up on account of their contradiction. And now
fear, O Joseph, lest the same things happen in thy house. And Joseph
was afraid, and took her into his keeping. And Joseph
said to Mary: Behold, I have received thee from
the temple of the Lord; and now I leave thee in my house, and go away to build
my buildings, and I shall come to thee. The Lord will protect thee.
10. And there was a council of the priests, saying: Let us make a veil for
the temple of the Lord. And the priest said: Call to me the undefiled virgins
of the family of David. And the officers went
away, and sought, and found seven virgins. And the priest remembered the child
Mary, that she was
of the family of David, and undefiled before
God. And the officers went away and brought her. And they brought them into the
temple of the Lord. And the priest said: Choose for me by lot who shall spin
the gold, and the white, and the fine linen, and the silk, and the blue, and
the scarlet, and the true purple. And the true purple and the scarlet fell to
the lot of Mary, and she took them, and went
away to her house. And at that time Zacharias
was dumb, and Samuel was in his place until the
time that Zacharias spake. And Mary took the
scarlet, and span it.
11. And she took the pitcher, and went out to fill it with water. And,
behold, a voice saying: Hail, thou who hast received grace; the Lord is with
thee; blessed art thou among women! And she looked round, on the right hand and
on the left, to see whence this voice came. And she went away, trembling, to
her house, and put down the pitcher; and taking the purple, she sat down on her
seat, and drew it out. And, behold, an angel of the Lord stood before her,
saying: Fear not, Mary; for thou hast found
grace before the Lord of all, and thou shalt
conceive, according to His word. And she hearing, reasoned with herself,
saying: Shall I conceive by the Lord, the living God? and
shall I bring forth as every woman brings forth? And the angel of the Lord
said: Not so, Mary; for the power of the Lord
shall overshadow thee: wherefore also that holy thing which shall be born of
thee shall be called the Son of the Most High. And thou shalt
call His name Jesus, for He shall save His
people from their sins. And Mary said: Behold,
the servant of the Lord before His face: let it be unto me according to thy
word.
12. And she made the purple and the scarlet, and took them to the priest.
And the priest blessed her, and said: Mary, the
Lord God hath magnified thy name, and thou shall be blessed in all the
generations of the earth. And Mary, with great
joy, went away to Elizabeth
her kinswoman, and knocked at the door. And when
Elizabeth
heard her, she threw away the scarlet, and ran to the door, and opened it; and
seeing Mary, she blessed her, and said: Whence
is this to me, that the mother of my Lord should come
to me? for, behold, that which is in me leaped and
blessed thee. But Mary had forgotten the
mysteries of which the archangel Gabriel had
spoken, and gazed up into heaven, and said: Who am I, O Lord, that all the
generations of the earth should bless me? And she remained three months with
Elizabeth;
and day by day she grew bigger. And Mary being
afraid, went away to her own house, and hid herself from the sons of Israel.
And she was sixteen years old when these mysteries happened.
13. And she was in her sixth month; and, behold,
Joseph
came back from his building, and, entering into his house, he discovered that
she was big with child. And he smote his face, and threw himself on the ground
upon the sackcloth, and wept bitterly, saying: With
what face shall I look upon the Lord my God? and what
prayer shall I make about this maiden? because I
received her a virgin out of the temple of the Lord, and I have not watched
over her. Who is it that has hunted me down? Who has done this evil thing in my
house, and defiled the virgin? Has not the history of Adam
been repeated in me? For just as Adam was in the hour of his singing praise,
and the serpent came, and found Eve alone, and completely deceived her, so it
has happened to me also. And Joseph stood up
from the sackcloth, and called Mary, and said to
her: O thou who hast been cared for by God, why hast thou done this and
forgotten the Lord thy God? Why hast thou brought low thy soul, thou that wast brought up in the holy of holies, and that didst
receive food from the hand of an angel? And she wept bitterly, saying: I am
innocent, and have known no man. And Joseph said
to her: Whence then is that which is in thy womb? And she said: As the Lord my
God liveth, I do not know whence it is to me.
14. And Joseph was greatly afraid, and retired from her, and considered what
he should do in regard to her. And Joseph said:
If I conceal her sin, I find myself fighting against the law of the Lord; and
if I expose her to the sons of Israel,
I am afraid lest that which is in her be from an angel, and I shall be found
giving up innocent blood to the doom of death. What then shall I do with her? I
will put her away from me secretly. And night came upon him; and, behold, an
angel of the Lord appears to him in a dream, saying: Be not afraid for this
maiden, for that which is in her is of the Holy Spirit; and she will bring
forth a Son, and thou shall call His name Jesus, for He will save His people
from their sins. And Joseph arose from sleep,
and glorified the God of Israel, who had given him this grace; and he kept her.
15. And Annas the scribe came to
him, and said: Why hast thou not appeared in our assembly? And Joseph
said to him: Because I was weary from my journey, and rested the first day. And
he turned, and saw that Mary was with child. And
he ran away to the priest? and said to him:
Joseph,
whom thou didst vouch for, has committed a grievous crime. And the priest said:
How so? And he said: He has defiled the virgin whom he received out of the
temple of the Lord, and has married her by stealth, and has not revealed it to
the sons of Israel.
And the priest answering, said: Has Joseph done this? Then said Annas the scribe: Send officers,
and thou wilt find the virgin with child. And the officers went away, and found
it as he had said; and they brought her along with Joseph
to the tribunal. And the priest said: Mary, why
hast thou done this? and why hast thou brought thy
soul low, and forgotten the Lord thy God? Thou that wast
reared in the holy of holies, and that didst receive
food from the hand of an angel, and didst hear the hymns, and didst dance
before Him, why hast thou done this? And she wept bitterly, saying: As the Lord
my God liveth, I am pure before Him, and know not a
man. And the priest said to Joseph: Why hast
thou done this? And Joseph said: As the Lord liveth, I am pure concerning her. Then said the priest:
Bear not false witness, but speak the truth. Thou hast married her by stealth,
and hast not revealed it to the sons of Israel,
and hast not bowed thy head under the strong hand, that thy seed might be
blessed. And Joseph was silent.
16. And the priest said: Give up the virgin whom thou didst receive out of
the temple of the Lord. And Joseph burst into
tears. And the priest said: I will give you to drink of the water of the ordeal
of the Lord, and He shall make manifest your sins in your eyes. And the priest
took the water, and gave Joseph to drink and
sent him away to the hill-country; and he returned unhurt. And he gave to
Mary
also to drink, and sent her away to the hill-country; and she returned unhurt.
And all the people wondered that sin did not appear in them. And the priest
said: If the Lord God has not made manifest your sins, neither do I judge you.
And he sent them away. And Joseph took
Mary,
and went away to his own house, rejoicing and glorifying the God of Israel.
17. And there was an order from the Emperor
Augustus,
that all in Bethlehem of Judea should be enrolled.
And Joseph said: I shall enroll
my sons, but what shall I do with this maiden? How shall I enroll
her? As my wife? I am ashamed. As my
daughter then? But all the sons of Israel
know that she is not my daughter. The day of the Lord shall itself bring it to
pass as the Lord will. And he saddled the ass, and set her upon it; and his son
led it, and Joseph followed. And when they had
come within three miles, Joseph turned and saw
her sorrowful; and he said to himself: Likely that which is in her distresses
her. And again Joseph turned and saw her
laughing. And he said to her: Mary, how is it that I see in thy face at one time laughter, at
another sorrow? And Mary said to Joseph:
Because I see two peoples with my eyes; the one weeping and lamenting, and the
other rejoicing and exulting. And they came into the middle of the road, and
Mary
said to him: Take me down from off the ass, for that which is in me presses to
come forth. And he took her down from off the ass, and said to her: Whither
shall I lead thee, and cover thy disgrace? for the
place is desert.
18. And he found a cave there, and led her into it; and leaving his two sons
beside her, he went out to seek a midwife in the
district of Bethlehem. And I Joseph was walking, and was not walking; and I
looked up into the sky, and saw the sky astonished; and I looked up to the pole
of the heavens, and saw it standing, and the birds of the air keeping still.
And I looked down upon the earth, and saw a trough lying, and work-people
reclining: and their hands were in the trough. And those that were eating did
not eat, and those that were rising did not carry it up, and those that were
conveying anything to their mouths did not convey it; but the faces of all were
looking upwards. And I saw the sheep walking, and the sheep stood still; and
the shepherd raised his hand to strike them, and his hand remained up. And I
looked upon the current of the river, and I saw the mouths of the kids resting
on the water and not drinking, and all things in a moment were driven from
their course.
19. And I saw a woman coming down from the hill-country, and she said to me:
O man, whither art thou going? And I said: I am seeking an
Hebrew midwife. And she answered and said unto me: Art thou of Israel?
And I said to her: Yes. And she said: And who is it that is bringing forth in
the cave? And I said: A woman betrothed to me. And she said to me: Is she not
thy wife? And I said to her: It is Mary that was
reared in the temple of the Lord, and I obtained her by lot as my wife. And yet
she is not my wife, but has conceived of the Holy Spirit. And the
midwife said to him: Is this true? And Joseph
said to her: Come and see. And the midwife went away with him. And they stood
in the place of the cave, and behold a luminous cloud overshadowed the cave.
And the midwife said: My soul has been magnified this day, because mine eyes
have seen strange things -- because salvation has been brought forth to Israel.
And immediately the cloud disappeared out of the cave, and a great light shone
in the cave, so that the eyes could not bear it. And in a
little that light gradually decreased, until the infant appeared, and went and
took the breast from His mother Mary. And the midwife cried out, and said: This is a great day
to me, because I have seen this strange sight. And the midwife went forth out
of the cave, and Salome met her. And she said to her: Salome,
Salome, I have a strange sight to relate to thee: a virgin has
brought forth -- a thing which her nature admits not of. Then said Salome:
As the Lord my God liveth, unless I thrust in my
finger, and search the parts, I will not believe that a virgin has brought
forth.
20. And the midwife went in, and said to
Mary:
Show thyself; for no small controversy has arisen about thee. And Salome
put in her finger, and cried out, and said: Woe is me for mine iniquity and
mine unbelief, because I have tempted the living God; and, behold, my hand is
dropping off as if burned with fire. And she bent her knees before the Lord,
saying: O God of my fathers, remember that I am the seed of Abraham, and Isaac,
and Jacob; do not make a show of me to the sons of Israel, but restore me to
the poor; for Thou knowest, O Lord, that in Thy name
I have performed my services, and that I have received my reward at Thy hand.
And, behold, an angel of the Lord stood by her, saying to her: Salome,
Salome, the Lord hath heard thee. Put thy hand to the infant,
and carry it, and thou wilt have safety and joy. And Salome
went and carried it, saying: I will worship Him, because a great King has been
born to Israel.
And, behold, Salome was immediately cured, and she went forth
out of the cave justified. And behold a voice saying: Salome,
Salome,
tell not the strange things thou hast seen, until the child has come into
Jerusalem.
21. And, behold, Joseph was ready to go into Judaea. And there was a great commotion in
Bethlehem of Judea, for Magi came, saying: Where is
he that is born king of the Jews? for we have seen his
star in the east, and have come to worship him. And when Herod
heard, he was much disturbed, and sent officers to the Magi. And he sent for
the priests, and examined them, saying: How is it written about the Christ?
where is He to be born? And they said: In Bethlehem of
Judea, for so it is written. And he sent them away.
And he examined the Magi, saying to them: What sign have you seen in reference
to the king that has been born? And the Magi said: We have seen a star of great
size shining among these stars, and obscuring their light, so that the stars
did not appear; and we thus knew that a king has been born to Israel,
and we have come to worship him. And Herod said: Go and seek
him; and if you find him, let me know, in order that I also may go and worship
him. And the Magi went out. And, behold, the star which they had seen in the
east went before them until they came to the cave, and it stood over the top of
the cave. And the Magi saw the infant with His mother Mary;
and they brought forth from their bag gold, and frankincense, and myrrh. And
having been warned by the angel not to go into Judaea,
they went into their own country by another road.
22. And when Herod knew that he had been mocked by the
Magi, in a rage he sent murderers, saying to them: Slay the children from two
years old and under. And Mary, having heard that
the children were being killed, was afraid, and took the infant and swaddled
Him, and put Him into an ox-stall. And Elizabeth,
having heard that they were searching for John,
took him and went up into the hill-country, and kept looking where to conceal
him. And there was no place of concealment. And
Elizabeth,
groaning with a loud voice, says: O mountain
of God, receive mother and child.
And immediately the mountain was cleft, and received her. And a light shone
about them, for an angel of the Lord was with them, watching over them.
23. And Herod searched for
John,
and sent officers to Zacharias,
saying: Where hast thou hid thy son? And he, answering, said to them: I am the
servant of God in holy things, and I sit constantly in the temple of the Lord:
I do not know where my son is. And the officers went away, and reported all
these things to Herod. And Herod was enraged,
and said: His son is destined to be king over Israel.
And he sent to him again, saying: Tell the truth; where is thy son? for thou knowest that thy life is
in my hand. And Zacharias
said: I am God's martyr, if thou sheddest my blood;
for the Lord will receive my spirit, because thou sheddest
innocent blood at the vestibule of the temple of the Lord. And Zacharias was murdered about daybreak. And
the sons of Israel
did not know that he had been murdered.
24. But at the hour of the salutation the priests went away, and
Zacharias did not come forth to meet them
with a blessing, according to his custom. And the priests stood waiting for
Zacharias to salute him at the prayer, and
to glorify the Most High. And he still delaying, they were all afraid. But one
of them ventured to go in, and he saw clotted blood beside the altar; and he
heard a voice saying: Zacharias
has been murdered, and his blood shall not be wiped up until his avenger come.
And hearing this saying, he was afraid, and went out and told it to the
priests. And they ventured in, and saw what had happened; and the fretwork of
the temple made a wailing noise, and they rent their clothes from the top even
to the bottom. And they found not his body, but they found his blood turned
into stone. And they were afraid, and went out and reported to the people that
Zacharias had been murdered. And all the
tribes of the people heard, and mourned, and lamented for him three days and
three nights. And after the three days, the priests consulted as to whom they
should put in his place; and the lot fell upon Simeon. For it was he who had been warned by the Holy Spirit that he should
not see death until he should see the Christ in the flesh.
And I James that wrote this history in Jerusalem, a commotion having arisen
when Herod died, withdrew myself to the wilderness until the commotion in
Jerusalem ceased, glorifying the Lord God, who had given me the gift and the
wisdom to write this history. And grace shall be with them that fear our Lord
Jesus Christ, to whom be glory to ages of ages. Amen.
For A complete library of all early Christian
writings click on the Gospels.net logo, including the Infancy of James.
