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PAPIAS , of See also: Hierapolis in See also: Phrygia, one of the " Apostolic
Fathers " (q.v.)
.
His Exposition of the See also: Lord's Oracles, the See also: prime early authority as to the Gospels of See also: Matthew and Mark (see GOSPELS), is known only through fragments in later writers, chiefly See also: Eusebius of Caesarea (H
.
E. iii
.
39)
.
The latter had a See also: bias against Papias on account of the influence which his See also: work had in perpetuating, through See also: Irenaeus and others, belief in a millennial reign of Christ upon See also: earth
.
He calls him a See also: man of small See also: mental capacity, who took the figurative language of apostolic traditions for literal fact
.
This may have been so to some degree; but Papias (whose name itself denotes that he was of the native Phrygian stock, and who shared the enthusiastic religious temper characteristic of Phrygia, see See also: MONTANISM) was nearer in spirit to the actual See also: Christianity of the sub-apostolic age, especially in western See also: Asia, than Eusebius realized
.
In Papias's circle the exceptional in connexion with Christianity seemed quite normal
.
Eusebius quotes from him the resurrection of a dead See also: person' in the experience of " See also: Philip the Apostle" —who had resided in Hierapolis, and from whose daughters Papias derived the story—and also the drinking of
See also: poison (" when put to the test by the unbelievers," says Philip of See also: Side, by " Justus, surnamed Barsabbas") without See also: ill effect.6 Papias
' G
.
F
.
See also: Hill, Brit
.
See also: Mus
.
See also: Cat
.
Coins of See also: Cyprus (See also: London, 1904), pls. xv.-xviii
.
(coins of See also: Paphos), pl. See also: xxvi
.
(other coins and gems)
.
2 M
.
R
.
See also: James, E
.
A
.
See also: Gardner, and others, Journ
.
Hellenic Studies, ix
.
334, 147 sqq
.
3 Dio See also: Cass. liv
.
23, 7; See also: Strabo 683; Tac
.
Hist
.
2, 2 sqq.; See also: Jerome, Vit
.
Hilarionis
.
For the "Paphian Diamonds " (See also: Pliny, Nat
.
Hist. See also: xxxvii
.
58), see E
.
Oberhummer, loc. cit., p
.
185
.
For the fame of Paphian oil see See also: Horn
.
Od. viii
.
362 sqq
.
; Hymn Aphr . 58 sqq . ; Isidore, Origines, xvii . 7, 64 . ' " The See also: mother of Manaim " (cf
.
Acts xiii
.
1), according to the See also: citation in Philip of Side
.
6 Perhaps this is the basis of a clause in the secondary ending to Mark's Gospel (xvi
.
18)
.
XX
.
24also believed a revolting See also: story as to the supernatural swelling of the See also: body of Judas Iscariot
.
But if he was credulous of marvels, he was careful to insist on See also: good evidence for what he accepted as Christ's own teaching, in the face of current unauthorized views
.
Papias was also a See also: pioneer in the habit, later so general, of taking the work of the Six Days (Hexaemeron) and the account of See also: Paradise as referring mystically to Christ and His See also: Church (so says
See also: Anastasius of See also: Sinai)
.
About his date, which is important in connexion with his witness, there is some doubt
.
Setting aside the exploded tradition that he was martyred along with See also: Polycarp (c
.
A.D
.
155), we have the witness of Irenaeus that he was " a companion (&aipos) of Polycarp," who was See also: born not later than A.D
.
69
.
We may waive his other statement that Papias was "a hearer of See also: John," owing to the possibility of a false inference in this
See also: case
.
But the fact that Irenaeus thought of him as Polycarp's contemporary and " a man of the old See also: time " (apXaios avilp), together with the See also: affinity between the religious tendencies described in Papias's Preface (as quoted by Eusebius) and those reflected in the Epistles of Polycarp and See also: Ignatius, all point to his having flourished in the first quarter of the 2nd century
.
Indeed, Eusebius, who deals with him along with See also: Clement and Ignatius (rather than Polycarp) under the reign of Trajan, and before referring at all to See also: Hadrian's reign (A.D
.
117-138), suggests that he wrote6 about A.D
.
115
.
It has been usual, however, to assign to his work a date c
.
130-140, or even later . No fact is known inconsistent with c . 60-135 as the See also: period of Papias's See also: life
.
Eusebius (iii
.
36) calls him " See also: bishop " of Hierapolis, but whether with good ground is uncertain
.
Papias uses the See also: term " the Elders," or Fathers of the Christian community, to describe the See also: original witnesses to Christ's teaching, i.e. his See also: personal disciples in particular
.
It was their traditions as to the purport of that teaching which he was concerned to preserve
.
But to Irenaeus the term came to mean the See also: primitive custodians of tradition derived from these, such as Papias and his contemporaries, whose traditions Papias committed to writing
.
Not a few such traditions Irenaeus has embodied in his work Against Heresies, so preserving in some cases the substance of Papias's Exposition (see Lightfoot, Apostolic Fathers, 1891, for these, as for all texts bearing on Papias)
.
See articles in the Did. of Christian Biog., Did. of Christ and the Gospels, and Hauck's Realencyklopadie, xiv., in all of which further references will be found
.
(J
.
V
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