The
Martyrdom of the Holy and Glorious
Apostle Bartholomew
HISTORIANS
DECLARE that India is divided into three parts; and the first
is said to end at Ethiopia, and the second at Media, and the
third completes the country; and the one portion of it ends
in the dark, and the other in the ocean. To this India, then,
the holy Bartholomew the apostle of Christ went, and took
up his quarters in the temple of Astaruth, and lived there
as one of the pilgrims and the poor. In this temple, then,
there was an idol called Astaruth, which was supposed to heal
the infirm, but rather the more injured all. And the people
were in entire ignorance of the true God; and from want of
knowledge, but rather from the difficulty of going to any
other, they all fled for refuge to the false god. And he brought
upon them troubles, infirmities, damage, violence, and much
affliction; and when any one sacrificed to him, the demon,
retiring, appeared to give a cure to the person in trouble;
and the foolish people, seeing this, believed in him. But
the demons retired, not because they wished to cure men, but
that they might the more assail them, and rather have them
altogether in their power; and thinking that they were cured
bodily, those that sacrificed to them were the more diseased
in soul.
And it came to pass, that while the holy apostle of Christ,
Bartholomew, stayed there, Astaruth gave no response, and
was not able for curing. And when the temple was full of sick
persons, who sacrificed to him daily, Astaruth could give
no response; and sick persons who had come from far countries
were lying there. When, therefore, in that temple not even
one of the idols was able to give a response, and was of benefit
neither to those that sacrificed to them nor to those who
were in the agonies of death on their account, they were compelled
to go to another city, where there was a temple of idols,
where their great and most eminent god was called Becher.
And having there sacrificed, they demanded, asking why their
god Astaruth had not responded to them. And the demon Becher
answered and said to them: From the day and hour that the
true God, who dwelleth in the heavens, sent his apostle Bartholomew
into the regions here, your god Astaruth is held fast by chains
of fire, and can no longer either speak or breathe. They said
to him: And who is this Bartholomew? He answered: He is the
friend of the Almighty God, and has just come into these parts,
that he may take away all the worship of the idols in the
name of his God. And the servants of the Greeks said to him:
Tell us what he is like, that we may be able to find him.
And the demon answered and said: He has black hair, a shaggy
head, a fair skin, large eyes, beautiful nostrils, his ears
hidden by the hair of his head, with a yellow beard, a few
grey hairs, of middle height, and neither tall nor stunted,
but middling, clothed with a white undercloak bordered with
purple, and upon his shoulders a very white cloak; and his
clothes have been worn twenty-six years, but neither are they
dirty, nor have they waxed old. Seven times a day he bends
the knee to the Lord, and seven times a night does he pray
to God. His voice is like the sonnet of a strong trumpet;
there go along with him angels of God, who allow him neither
to be weary, nor to hunger, nor to thirst; his face, and his
soul, and his heart are always glad and rejoicing; he foresees
everything, he knows and speaks every tongue of every nation.
And behold now, as soon as you ask me, and I answer you about
him, behold, he knows; for the angels of the Lord tell him;
and if you wish to seek him, if he is willing he will appear
to you; but if he shall not be willing, you will not be able
to find him. I entreat you, therefore, if you shall find him,
entreat him not to come here, lest his angels do to me as
they have done to my brother Astaruth.
And when the demon had said this, he held his peace. And they
returned, and set to work to look into every face of the pilgrims
and poor men, and for two days they could find him no where.
And it came to pass, that one who was a demoniac set to work
to cry out: Apostle of the Lord, Bartholomew, thy prayers
are burning me up. Then said the apostle to him: Hold thy
peace, and come out of him. And that very hour, the man who
had suffered from the demon for many years was set free.
And Polymius, the king of that country, happened to be standing
opposite the apostle; and he had a daughter a demoniac, that
is to say, a lunatic. And he heard about the demoniac that
had been healed, and sent messengers to the apostle, saying:
My daughter is grievously torn; I implore thee, therefore,
as thou hast delivered him who suffered for many years, so
also to order my daughter to be set free. And the apostle
rose up, and went with them. And he sees the king's daughter
bound with chains, for she used to tear in pieces all her
limbs; and if any one came near her, she used to bite, and
no one dared to come near her. The servants say to him: And
who is it that dares to touch her? The apostle answered them:
Loose her, and let her go. They say to him again: We have
her in our power when she is bound with all our force, and
dost thou bid us loose her? The apostle says to them: Behold,
I keep her enemy bound, and are you even now afraid of her?
Go and loose her; and when she has partaken of food, let her
rest, and early to-morrow bring her to me. And they went and
did as the apostle had commanded them; and thereafter the
demon was not able to come near her.
Then the king loaded camels with gold and silver, precious
stones, pearls, and clothing, and sought to see the apostle;
and having made many efforts, and not found him, he brought
everything back to his palace.
And it happened, when the night had passed, and the following
day was dawning, the sun having risen, the apostle appeared
alone with the king in his bed-chamber, and said to him: Why
didst thou seek me yesterday the whole day with gold and silver,
and precious stones, pearls, and raiment? For these gifts
those persons long for who seek earthly things; but I seek
nothing earthly, nothing carnal. Wherefore I wish to teach
thee that the Son of God deigned to be born as a man out of
a virgin's womb. He was conceived in the womb of the virgin;
He took to Himself her who was always a virgin, having within
herself Him who made the heaven and the earth, the sea, and
all that therein is. He, born of a virgin, like mankind, took
to Himself a beginning in time, He who has a beginning neither
of times nor days; but He Himself made every beginning, and
everything created, whether in things visible or invisible.
And as this virgin did not know man, so she, preserving her
virginity, vowed a vow to the Lord God. And she was the first
who did so.
For, from the time that man existed from the beginning of
the world, no woman made a vow of this mode of life; but she,
as she was the first among women who loved this in her heart,
said, I offer to Thee, O Lord, my virginity. And, as I have
said to thee, none of mankind dared to speak this word; but
she being called for the salvation of many, observed this--that
she might remain a virgin through the love of God, pure and
undefiled. And suddenly, when she was shut up in her chamber,
the archangel Gabriel appeared, gleaming like the sun; and
when she was terrified at the sight, the angel said to her,
Fear not, Mary; for thou hast found favour in the sight of
the Lord, and thou shall conceive. And she cast off fear,
and stood up, and said, How shall this be to me, since I know
not man? The angel answered her, The Holy Ghost shall come
upon thee, and the power of the Most High shall overshadow
thee; wherefore also that holy thing which is born of thee
shall be called Son of God. Thus, therefore, when the angel
had departed from her, she escaped the temptation of the devil,
who deceived the first man when at rest. For, having tasted
of the tree of disobedience, when the woman said to him, Eat,
he ate; and thus the first man was cast out of paradise, and
banished to this life. From him have been horn the whole human
race. Then the Son of God having been born of the virgin,
and having become perfect man, and having been baptized, and
after His baptism having fasted forty days, the tempter came
and said to Him: If thou art the Son of God, tell these stones
to become loaves. And He answered: Not on bread alone shall
man live, but by every word of God. Thus therefore the devil,
who through eating bad conquered the first man, was conquered
through the fasting of the second man; and as he through want
of self-restraint had conquered the first man, the son of
the virgin earth, so we shall conquer through the fasting
of the second Adam, the Son of the Virgin Mary.
The king says to him: And how is it that thou saidst just
now that she was the first virgin of whom was born God and
man? And the apostle answered: I give thanks to the Lord that
thou hearest me gladly. The first man, then, was called Adam;
he was formed out of the earth. And the earth, his mother
out of which he was, was virgin, because it had neither been
polluted by the blood of man nor opened for the burial of
any one. The earth, then, was like the virgin, in order that
he who conquered the son of the virgin earth might be conquered
by the Son of the Virgin Mary. And, behold, he did conquer;
for his wicked craft, through the eating of the tree by which
man, being deceived, came forth from paradise, kept paradise
shut. Thereafter this Son of the virgin conquered all the
craft of the devil. And his craft was such, that when he saw
the Son of the virgin fasting forty days, he knew in truth
that He was the true God. The true God and man, therefore,
hath not given Himself out to be known, except to those who
are pure in heart, and who serve Him by good works. The devil
himself, therefore, when he saw that after the forty days
He was again hungry, was deceived into thinking that He was
not God, and said to Him, Why hast thou been hungry? tell
these stones to become loaves, and eat. And the Lord answered
him, Listen, devil; although thou mayst lord it over man,
because he has not kept the commandment of God. I have fulfilled
the righteousness of God in having fasted, and shall destroy
thy power, so that thou shalt no longer lord it over man.
And when he saw himself conquered, he again takes Jesus to
an exceeding high mountain, and shows Him all the kingdoms
of the world, and says, All these will I give thee, if thou
wilt fall down and worship me. The Lord says to him, Get thee
behind me, Satan; for it is written, Thou shall worship the
Lord thy God, and Him only shall thou serve. And there was
a third temptation for the Lord; for he takes Him up to the
pinnacle of the temple, and says, If thou art the Son of God,
cast thyself down. The Lord says to him, Thou shall not tempt
the Lord thy God. And the devil disappeared. And he indeed
that once conquered Adam, the son of the virgin earth, was
thrice conquered by Christ, the Son of the Virgin Mary.
And when the Lord had conquered the tyrant, He sent His apostles
into all the world, that He might redeem His people from the
deception of the devil; and one of these I am, an apostle
of Christ. On this account we seek not after gold and silver,
but rather despise them, because we labour to be rich in that
place where the kingdom of Him alone endureth for ever, where
neither trouble, nor grief, nor groaning, nor death, has place;
where there is eternal blessedness, and ineffable joy, and
everlasting exultation, and perpetual repose. Wherefore also
the demon sitting in your temple, who makes responses to you,
is kept in chains through the angel of the Lord who has sent
me. Because if thou shall be baptized, and wishest thyself
to be enlightened, I will make thee behold Him, and learn
from how great evils thou hast been redeemed. At the same
time hear also by what means he injures all those who are
lying sick in the temple. The devil himself by his own art
causes the men to be sick, and again to be healed, in order
that they may the more believe in the idols, and in order
that he may have place the more in their souls, in order that
they may say to the stock and the stone, Thou art our God.
But that demon who dwells in the idol is held in subjection,
conquered by me, and is able to give no response to those
who sacrifice and pray there. And if thou wishest to prove
that it is so, I order him to return into the idol, and I
will make him confess with his own mouth that he is bound,
and able to give no response.
The king says to him: To-morrow, at the first hour of the
day, the priests are ready to sacrifice in the temple, and
I shall come there, and shall be able to see this wonderful
work.
And it came to pass on the following day, as they were sacrificing,
the devil began to cry out: Refrain, ye wretched ones, from
sacrificing to me, lest ye suffer worse for my sake; because
I am bound in fiery chains, and kept in subjection by an angel
of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, whom the Jews crucified:
for, being afraid of him, they condemned him to death. And
he put to death Death himself, our king, and he bound our
prince in chains of fire; and on the third day, having conquered
death and the devil, rose in glory, and gave the sign of the
cross to his apostles, and sent them out into the four quarters
of the world; and one of them is here just now, who has bound
me, and keeps me in subjection. I implore you, therefore,
supplicate him on my account, that he may set me free to go
into other habitations.
Then the apostle answered: Confess, unclean demon, who is
it that has injured all those that are lying here from heavy
diseases? The demon answered: The devil, our ruler, he who
is bound, he sends us against men, that, having first injured
their bodies, we may thus also make an assault upon their
souls when they sacrifice to us. For then we have complete
power over them, when they believe in us and sacrifice to
us. And when, on account of the mischief done to them, we
retire, we appear curing them, and are worshipped by them
as gods; but in truth we are demons, and the servants of him
who was crucified, the Son of the virgin, have bound us. For
from that day on which the Apostle Bartholomew came I am punished,
kept hound in chains of fire. And for this reason I speak,
because he has commanded me. At the same time, I dare not
utter more when the apostle is present, neither I nor our
rulers.
The apostle says to him: Why dost thou not save all that have
come to thee? The demon says to him: When we injure their
bodies, unless we first injure their souls, we do not let
their bodies go. The apostle says to him: And how do you injure
their souls? The demon answered him: When they believe that
we are gods, and sacrifice to us, God withdraws from those
who sacrifice, and we do not take away the sufferings of their
bodies, but retire into their souls.
Then the apostle says to the people: Behold, the god whom
you thought to cure you, does the more mischief to your souls
and bodies. Hear even now your Maker who dwells in the heavens,
and do not believe in lifeless stones and stocks. And if you
wish that I should pray for you, and that all these may receive
health, take down this idol, and break it to pieces; and when
you have done this, I will sanctify this temple in the name
of our Lord Jesus Christ; and having baptized all of you who
are in it in the baptism of the Lord, and sanctified you,
I will save all.
Then the king gave orders, and all the people brought ropes
and crowbars, and were not at all aide to take down the idol.
Then the apostle says to them: Unfasten the ropes. And when
they had unfastened them, he said to the demon dwelling in
it: In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, come out of this
idol, and go into a desert place, where neither winged creature
utters a cry, nor voice of man has ever been heard. And straightway
he arose at the word of the apostle, and lifted it up from
its foundations; and in that same hour all the idols that
were in that place were broken to pieces.
Then all cried out with one voice, saying: He alone is God
Almighty whom Bartholomew the apostle proclaims. Then the
holy Bartholomew, having spread forth his hands to heaven,
said: God of Abraham, God of Isaac, God of Jacob, who for
the salvation of men hast sent forth Thine only begotten Son,
our Lord Jesus Christ, in order that He might redeem by His
own blood all of us enslaved by sin, and declare us to be
Thy sons, that we may know Thee, the true God, that Thou existest
always to eternity God without end: one God, the Father, acknowledged
in Son and Holy Spirit; one God, the Son, glorified in Father
and Holy Spirit; one God, the Holy Spirit, worshipped in Father
and Son; and acknowledged to be truly one, the Father unbegotten,
the Son begotten, the Holy Spirit proceeding; and in Thee
the Father, and in the Holy Spirit, Thine only begotten Son
our Lord Jesus Christ is, in whose name Thou hast given us
power to heal the sick, to cure paralytics, to expel demons,
and raise the dead: for He said to us, Verily I say unto you,
that whatever ye shall ask in my name ye shall receive. I
entreat, then, that in His name all this multitude may be
saved, that all may know that Thou alone art God in heaven,
and in the earth, and in the sea, who seekest the salvation
of men through that same Jesus Christ our Lord, with whom
Thou livest and reignest in unity of the Holy Spirit for ever
and ever.
And when all responded to the Amen, suddenly there appeared
an angel of the Lord, shining brighter than the sun, winged,
and other four angels holding up the four corners of the temple;
and with his finger the one sealed the temple and the people,
and said: Thus saith the Lord who hath sent me, As you have
all been purified from all your infirmity, so also this temple
shall be purified from all uncleanness, and from the demons
dwelling in it, whom the apostle of God has ordered to go
into a desert place; for so hath God commanded me, that I
may manifest Him to you. And when ye behold Him, fear nothing;
but when I make the sign of the cross, so also do ye with
your finger seal your faces, and these evil things will flee
from you. Then he showed them the demon who dwelt in the temple,
like an Ethiopian, black as soot; his face sharp like a dog's,
thin-cheeked, with hair down to his feet, eves like fire,
sparks coming out of his mouth; and out of his nostrils came
forth smoke like sulphur, with wings spined like a porcupine;
and his hands were bound with fiery chains, and he was firmly
kept in. And the angel of the Lord said to him: As also the
apostle hath commanded, I let thee go; go where voice of man
is not heard, and be there until the great day of judgment.
And when he let him go, he flew away, groaning and weeping,
and disappeared. And the angel of the Lord went up into heaven
in the sight of all.
Then the king, and also the queen, with their two sons, and
with all his people, and with all the multitude of the city,
and every city round about, and country, and whatever land
his kingdom ruled over, were saved, and believed, and were
baptized in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy
Spirit. And the king laid aside his diadem, and followed Bartholomew
the apostle of Christ.
And after these things the unbelievers of the Greeks, having
come together to Astreges the king, who was the eider brother
of the king who had been baptized, say to him: O king, thy
brother Polymius has become disciple to a certain magician,
who has taken down our temples, and broken our gods to pieces.
And while they were thus speaking and weeping, behold, again
there came also some others from the cities round about, both
priests and people; and they set about weeping and making
accusations before the king. Then King Astreges in a rage
sent a thousand armed men along with those priests, in order
that, wherever they should find the apostle, they might bring
him to him bound. And when they bad done so, and found him,
and brought him, he says to him: Art thou he who has perverted
my brother from the gods? To whom the apostle answered: I
have not perverted him, but have converted him to God. The
king says to him: Art thou he who caused our gods to be broken
in pieces? The apostle says to him: I gave power to the demons
who were in them, and they broke in pieces the dumb and senseless
idols, that all men might believe in God Almighty, who dwelleth
in the heavens. The king says to him: As thou hast made my
brother deny his gods, and believe in thy God, so I also will
make you reject thy God and believe in my gods. The apostle
says to him: If I have bound and kept in subjection the god
which thy brother worshipped, and at my order the idols were
broken in pieces, if thou also art able to do the same to
my God, thou canst persuade me also to sacrifice to thy gods;
but if thou canst do nothing to my God, I will break all thy
gods in pieces; but do thou believe in my God.
And when he had thus spoken, the king was informed that his
god Baldad and all the other idols had fallen down, and were
broken in pieces. Then the king rent the purple in which he
was clothed, and ordered the holy apostle Bartholomew to be
beaten with rods; and after having been thus scourged, to
be beheaded.
And innumerable multitudes came from all the cities, to the
number of twelve thousand, who had believed in him along with
the king; and they took up the remains of the apostle with
singing of praise and with all glory, and they laid them in
the royal tomb, and glorified God. And the king Astreges having
heard of this, ordered him to be thrown into the sea; and
his remains were carried into the island of Liparis.
And it came to pass on the thirtieth day after the apostle
was carried away, that the king Astreges was overpowered by
a demon and miserably strangled; and all the priests were
strangled by demons, and perished on account of their rising
against the apostle, and thus died by an evil fate.
And there was great fear and trembling, and all came to the
Lord, and were baptized by the presbyters who had been ordained
by the holy apostle Bartholomew. And according to the commandment
of the apostle, all the clergy of the people made King Polymius
bishop; and in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ he received
the grace of healing, and began to do signs. And he remained
in the bishopric twenty years; and having prospered in all
things, and governed the church well, and guided it in right
opinions, he fell asleep in peace, and went to the Lord: to
whom be glory and strength for ever and ever. Amen.
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