Apocalyptic literature

From New World Encyclopedia
Revision as of 18:27, 18 November 2007 by Stephen Henkin (talk | contribs)


Apocalyptic literature was a new genre of prophetical writing that developed in post-Exilic Jewish culture and was popular among millennialist early Christians.

"Apocalypse" is from the Greek word for "revelation" which means "an unveiling or unfolding of things not previously known and which could not be known apart from the unveiling" (Goswiller 1987, p. 3). The poetry of the Book of Revelation that is traditionally ascribed to John is well known to many Christians who are otherwise unaware of the literary genre it represents.

The apocalyptic literature of Judaism and Christianity embraces a considerable period, from the centuries following the exile down to the close of the middle ages. In the present survey, we shall limit ourselves to the great formative periods in this literature—in Judaism from 200 B.C.E. to 100 C.E., and in Christianity from 50 to approximately 350 C.E.

Apocalyptic literature is written in symbolism, poetry, and imageries, as well as in an Old Testament prophecy style (Matt. 24-25; Mark 13; Luke 21; Rev. 1:2-4; 19:9; 22:7-19), all woven as a tapestry to describe literal events but with a twist, using language with symbols that are cataclysmic, words that are exaggerated, and metaphors that may be lost to a twenty-first century person. Such imagery is often used for God’s judgments and the end of days, and when emploted in narrative style, provides exaggeration for a purpose, such as in Daniel and most of Revelation. Metaphors are also evident in apocalyptic writing, such as when Jesus says he is the bread of life (John 6:35). Apocalyptic writing is a more specific form of prophecy that warns us of future events, but the full meaning is hidden to us for the time being.

Perspectives on the apocalyptic

An apocalypse is a literary report of a fearful, often violent, vision that reveals truths about past, present, and future times in highly symbolic and poetical terms. The poet may represent himself as transported into a heavenly realm, or the vision may be unveiled— and even interpreted— by an angelic messenger. Apocalyptic exhortations are aimed at chastening and reforming their hearers with threats of punishment and rewards in the coming "end times." A brief apocalyptic vision is found in Gospel of Mark 13 is sometimes called the "Little Apocalypse" and parallel passages can be found in Matthew 24 and Luke 21.

Apocalyptic poetry concentrates the character that Northrop Frye has found in the Bible as a whole: "a series of ecstatic moments or points of expanding apprehension—this approach is in fact the assumption on which every selection of a text for a sermon is based" (Frye 1957, p. 326).

In connection with a PBS documentary "Apocalypse!" Dr. L. Michael White said, "Apocalyptic thinking has been called "the child of prophecy in a new idiom." White drew attention to the new direction prophecy took after the Hebrews' return from the trauma of the "Babylonian captivity." Earlier prophets of Israel and Judah had spoken of the word of God, calling the children of Israel to their duty. The newer apocalyptic writings, in the aftermath of the destruction of Solomon's temple looked forward to coming divine retribution and made forecasts of the future that contrasted hope and despair.

The throne of David, itself, as it was not unshakeable as events had proved, took on metaphoric meanings. Early examples of the apocalyptic world-view can be found in the late additions made to Isaiah by the pseudepigraphical writer called the "Third Isaiah" (chapters 56 to 66), and in the collection of prophetic forecasts of this new kind that are collected as Ezekiel

The new cultural element included extreme and vivid polarized contrasts, a distinctly realized Satan in opposition to Yahweh, a city of Evil (Babylon) contrasted to the city of God (Jerusalem), the evil, corruption, and despair of the visible world contrasted with the blinding light of the world to come and often embodied in demons and dragons, elements deriving from Zoroastrian dualism. A new focus on eschatology, the End of All Things, was also foreign to the earlier Hebrew tradition. Some, though not all apocalyptic literature was messianic, predicting the imminent arrival of a savior—even in Essene writings, of more than one savior.

The overtly allegorical nature of this new literature inspired new allegorical readings, now applied to every kind of earlier statement, a detailed unravelling of texts, often to give results not originally foreseen, which influenced the development of techniques of exegesis for Jewish and Christian scholar alike and became a foundation of the medieval hermeneutics, which are still practiced today in some traditionalist circles, as "Biblical hermeneutics."

Among books of prophecy of this new kind, the Book of Daniel was accepted into the Hebrew Bible, among the "Writings," as the sense of a canonic literature developed in the Rabbinic tradition during the first centuries of the Common Era. Other apocalyptic literature did not make the cut: The Book of Enoch, some of which is older than Daniel (though it has received some Christian interpolations and editing in the versions that have survived) was never considered canonical by Jews or Christians, though it is quoted or paralleled dozens of times in the New Testament. Enoch has been called "an ecstatic elaboration" of the line in Genesis (v.22): "And Enoch walked with God three hundred years after he begat Methuselah."

The book of Jubilees (second century B.C.E.) also contains some apocalyptic poetry. The so-called Sibylline Oracles, which were assembled partly in Alexandria, are filled with pseudo-prophecy (vaticinium ex eventu, written after the fact) and threatening generalities; they bridge any apparent gap between late Jewish apocalyptic literature and early Christian writings in the genre.

Within the Christian tradition, the Apocalypse of Peter and The Shepherd of Hermas are examples of apocalyptic literature that devotees of Revelation would also enjoy, though their poetry never reaches the same intensity.

Apocalyptic literature has had a long history. Some aspects of apocalyptic visions can be found in the Kabbalah.

Old Testament Era Apocalyptic Literature

Canonical books

Non-Canonical Books

  • Book of Noah. This is a lost work, known through fragments.
  • 1 Enoch, or the Ethiopic Book of Enoch. This is the most important of all the apocryphal writings for the history of religious thought.
  • Testaments of the 12 Patriarchs. This book, in some respects, is the most important of Old Testament apocryphs, has only recently come into its own. Owing to Christian interpolations, it was taken to be a Christian apocryph, written originally in Greek in the second century C.E. Now it is acknowledged by Christian and Jewish scholars alike to have been written in Hebrew in the second century B.C.E. From Hebrew it was translated into Greek and from Greek into Amenian and Slavonic. The versions have come down in their entirety, and small portions of the Hebrew text have been recovered from later Jewish writings.The Testaments were written about the same date as the Book of Jubilees. These two books form the only Apology in Jewish literature for the religious and civil hegemony of the Maccabees from the Pharisaic standpoint. To the Jewish interpolation of the first century B.C.E. (about 60-40), a large interest attaches; for these, like I Enoch 91.-104. and the Psalms of Solomon, constitute an unmeasured attack on every office—prophetic, priestly, and kingly—administered by the Maccabees.
  • Psalms of Solomon. These psalms, in all 18, enjoyed but small consideration in early times, for only six direct references to them are found in early literature. Their ascription to Solomon is due solely to the copyists or translators, for no such claim is made in any of the psalms. They protest against the Asmonaean house for usurping the throne of David, and laying violent hands on the high priesthood (17. 5, 6, 8), and proclaim the coming of the Messiah, the Son of David, who is to set all things right and establish the supremacy of Israel.
  • The Assumption of Moses. This book was lost for many centuries till a large fragment of it was discovered by Antonio Maria Ceriani in 1861 (Monumenta Sacra, 1. 1. 55-64) from a palimpsest of the sixth century. Very little was known about the contents of this book prior to this discovery. The book was written between 4 B.C.E. and 7 C.E. As for the author, he was a Chasid of the ancient type, and glorifies the ideals which were cherished by the old Pharisaic party, but which were now being fast disowned in favor of a more active role in the political life of the nation. His object was to protest against the growing secularization of the Pharisaic party through its adoption of popular Messianic beliefs and political ideals.
  • Syriac Apocalypse of Baruch. This apocalypse has survived only in the Syriac version. The Syriac is a translation from the Greek, and the Greek in turn from the Hebrew. The book treats of the Messiah and the Messianic kingdom, the woes of Israel in the past and the destruction of Jerusalem in the present, as well as of theological questions relating to original sin, free will, and works. The views expressed on several of these subjects are often conflicting. We must, therefore, assume a number of independent sources put together by an editor or else that the book is on the whole the work of one author who made use of independent writings but failed to blend them into one harmonious whole. In its present form the book was written soon after A.D. 70.
  • 4 Ezra. This apocryph is variously named. In the first Arabic and Ethiopic versions it is called 1 Ezra; in some Latin MSS. and in the English authorized version it is 2 Ezra, and in the Armenian 3 Ezra. With the majority of the Latin MSS. we designate the book 4 Ezra. In its fullest form this apocryph consists of sixteen chapters, but 1.-2. and 15.-16. are of different authorship from each other and from the main work 3.-14. The book was written originally in Hebrew.
  • Greek Apocalypse of Baruch. This book survives in two forms in Slavonic and Greek. The Slavonic is only of secondary value, as it is merely an abbreviated form of the Greek. Even the Greek cannot claim to be the original work, but only to be a recension of it; for, whereas Origen states that this apocalypse contained an account of the seven heavens, the existing Greek work describes only five, and the Slavonic only two. As the original, work presupposes 2 Enoch and the Syriac Apocalypse of Baruch (2 Baruch) and was known to Origen, an early Christian scholar, theologian, and one of the most distinguished of the early fathers of the Christian Church. It was written between A.D. 80 and 200, and nearer the earlier date than the later, as it would otherwise be hard to understand how it came to circulate among Christians.
  • Apocalypse of Abraham. This book is of Jewish origin, but in part worked over by a Christian reviser. The first part treats of Abraham's conversion, and the second forms an. apocalyptic expansion of Gen. 15.
  • Lost Apocalypses: Prayer of Joseph. The Prayer of Joseph is quoted by Origen as speaking and claiming to be "the first servant in God's presence," "the first-begotten of every creature animated by God," and declaring that the angel who wrestled with Jacob (and was identified by Christians with Christ) was only eighth in rank. The work was obviously anti-Christian.
  • Book of Eldad and Modad. This book was written in the name of the two prophets mentioned in Num. 11. 26-29. It consisted, according to the Targ. Jon. on Num. 11. 26-20, mainly of prophecies on Magog's last attack on Israel.
  • Apocalypse of Elijah.
  • Apocalypse of Zephaniah. Apart from two of the lists, this work is known to us in its original form only through a citation in Clem. Alex. Strom. 5. 2, 77.
  • 2 Enoch, or the Slavonic Enoch, or the Book of the Secrets of Enoch. This new fragment of the Enochic literature was recently brought to light through five MSS. discovered in Russia and Servia. The book in its present form was written before A.D. 70 in Greek by an orthodox Hellenistic Jew, who lived in Egypt.
  • Oracles of Hystaspes.
  • Testament of Job. Apocrypha Anecdota, 2. pp. 72.-102., 104-137, holds that the book in its present form was written by a Christian Jew in Egypt on the basis of a Hebrew Midrash on Job in the second or third century.
  • Testaments of the 3 Patriarchs. This work was written in Egypt, according to James, and survives also in Slavonic, Romanian, Ethiopic, and Arabic versions. It deals with Abraham's reluctance to die and the means by which his death was brought about. With the exception of chaps. 10.-11., it is really a legend and not an apocalypse.
  • Sibylline Oracles. Of the books which have come down to us, the main part is Jewish, and was written at various dates, 3. 97-829, 4.-5. are decidedly of Jewish authorship, and probably 11.-12., 14. and parts of 1.-2. The oldest portions are in 3., and belong to the second century B.C.E.

New Testament Era Apocalyptic Literature

Apocalyptic literature of the New Testament era transcends that of the Old Testament in that the newer age is not based on prophetic books bearing the names of the patriarchs, but rather from the words of brave living men who acted as God's messengers. Christianity was, in spirit, the descendant of ancient Jewish prophecy, which had expressed its highest aspirations and ideals in its apocalyptic literature. Hence, we are not surprised to find that the apocalyptic tradition is fully represented in primitive Christianity. In the stress and storm of the first century, the forerunner on the side of its declared asceticism appealed more readily to primitive Christianity than that of He who came "eating and drinking," declaring both worlds good and both God's.

Thus, early Christianity had a natural and special fondness for apocalyptic literature. It was Christianity that preserved the Jewish apocalyptic, when it was abandoned by Judaism as it sank into Rabbinism, and gave it a Christian character. Moreover, it cultivated this form of literature and made it the vehicle of its own ideas. Though the apocalyptic tradition served its purpose in the opening centuries of the Christian era, it must be confessed that in many of its aspects it did belong to the essence of Christian thought. When once it had taught men that the next world was God's, though it did so at the cost of relinquishing the present to Satan, it had achieved its real task. The time had come for it to quit the stage of history. Christianity appeared as the heir of this true spiritual achievement, but it was no less assuredly the heir of ancient prophecy. Therefore, as spiritual representative of what was true in prophecy and the apocalyptic; Christianity's essential teaching was that of its founder—that both worlds were of God and that both should be made God's.

Canonical apocryphal works

  • Apocalypse in Mark 13:
  • 2 Thessalonians 2:
  • Apocalypse (Revelation)

Non-Canonical apocryphal works

  • Greek Apocalypse of Peter: The significance of the Apocalypse of Peter as an important witness of the Petrine literature is not to be underestimated. Peter is the decisive witness of the resurrection event. Hence he is also deemed worthy of further revelations, which he hands on (in revelation documents) with authority.
  • Coptic Apocalypse of Peter: The Apocalypse of Peter contains important source material for a gnostic Christology that understands Jesus as a docetic redeemer. The view of the Gnostic community, including its relationship to Peter as its originator, is another key theme of this document.
  • Testament of Hezekiah: A Christian apocalypse, its explains Beliar's anger against Isaiah, who predicted the destruction of Sammael (Satan), the redemption of the world by Jesus, the persecution of the Church by Nero, and the final judgment.
  • Testament of Abraham: A Jewish work probably of Egyptian origin, it has many themes in common with several other works, most notably 2En and 3Bar. It should not be confused with the Apocalypse of Abraham, even though the latter work also describes a heavenly tour.
  • Oracles of Hystaspes: This eschatological work, according to Lactantius, prophecied the overthrow of Rome and the advent of Zeus to help the godly and destroy the wicked, but omitted all reference to the sending of the Son of God. According to Justin, it prophesied the destruction of the world by fire. According to the Apocryph of Paul, cited by Clement, Hystaspes foretold the conflict of the Messiah with many kings and His advent.
  • Vision of Isaiah: The sixth chapter of Isaiah contains the prophet's Vision Of The Holy God. It is commonly thought the vision served as his commission to be a prophet of God and thus marks the beginning of his ministry. Others believe it came to him after years of preaching and was designed to deepen his spirituality (ISBE).
  • Shepherd of Hermas: The book is a picturesque religious allegory and is primarily a call to repentance and adherence to a life of strict morality, addressed to Christians among whom the memory of persecution is still fresh, and over whom now hangs the shadow of another great tribulation.
  • 5 Ezra: This book contains a strong attack on the Jews, whom it regards as the people of God. It also itself to the Christians as God's people and promises them the heavenly kingdom. Its tone is strongly anti-Jewish. The style is very vigorous and the materials of a strongly apocalyptic character.
  • 6 Ezra: Its contents relate to the destruction of the world through war and natural catastrophes—for the heathen a source of menace and fear, but for the persecuted people of God one of admonition and comfort. There is nothing specifically Christian in the book, which represents a persecution that extends over the whole eastern part of the Empire. Moreover, the idiom is particularly Semitic.
  • Christian Sibyllines: Critics are still at variance as to the extent of the Christian Sibyllines. Most writers are in favour of Christian authorship; but not so Johannes Geffcken (Oracula Sibyllina, 1902), who strongly insists on the Jewish origin of large sections of these books
  • Apocalypses of Paul, Thomas, and Stephen: These are mentioned in the Gelasian decree. The first may possibly be the [Greek: Anabagikon Paulou] mentioned by Epiphanius (Haer. xxxviii. 2) as current among the Cainites. It is not to be confounded with the apocalypse mentioned two sections later.
  • Apocalypse of Esdras: In this Greek production, the prophet is perplexed about the mysteries of life, and questions God respecting them. The punishment of the wicked especially occupies his thoughts. Since they have sinned in consequence of Adam's fall, their fate is considered worse than that of the irrational creation.
  • Apocalypse of Paul: This work contains a description of the things which the apostle saw in heaven and hell. The text, as first published in the original Greek by Tischendorf, consists of 51 chapters, but is imperfect.
  • Apocalypse of John: This contains a description of the future state, the general resurrection and judgment, with an account of the punishment of the wicked, as well as the bliss of the righteous. It appears to be the work of a Jewish Christian.
  • Arabic Apocalypse of Peter: Contains a narrative of events from the foundation of the world till the second advent of Christ. The book is said to have been written by Clement, Peter's disciple. This 88-chapter Arabic work has not been printed, but a summary of the contents is given by Alexander Nicoll in his catalogue of the Oriental MSS.
  • Apocalypse of the Virgin: This book contains her descent into hell. It is not entirely published, but only several portions from Greek MSS.
  • Apocalypse of Sedrach: This late apocalypse, deals with the subject of intercession for sinners and Sedrach's unwillingness to die.
  • Apocalypse of Daniel: The primary example of apocalyptic literature in the Hebrew Bible is the book of Daniel. After a long period of fasting, Daniel is standing by a river when a heavenly being appears to him, and the revelation follows (Daniel 10:2). Past history (the rise and fall of the Greek Empire) is often included in the vision, usually in order to give the proper historical setting to the prediction, as the panorama of successive events passes over imperceptibly from the known to the unknown.
  • The Revelations of Bartholomew: A fragment of the apocryphal revelations of St Bartholomew contains a narration of the pardon obtained by Adam, in which it is said that the Son ascending from Olivet prays the Father on behalf of His apostles; who consequently receive consecration from the Father, together with the Son and Holy Spirit—Peter being made archbishop of the universe.
  • Questions of St Bartholomew: Attributed to Bartholomew which attained some popularity; the Greek manuscripts do not call it a Gospel, but the Questions of Bartholomew. The message: After the resurrection from the dead of our Lord Jesus Christ, Bartholomew came unto the Lord and questioned him, saying: Lord, reveal unto me the mysteries of the heavens. Jesus answered and said unto him: If I put off the body of the flesh, I shall not be able to tell them unto thee.
  • Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius: This apocalypse shaped the eschatological imagination of Christendom throughout the Middle Ages. Written in in reaction to the Islamic conquest of the Near East, it is falsely attributed to the fourth-century Church Father Methodius of Olympus. It depicts many familiar Christian eschatological themes: the rise and rule of Antichrist, the invasions of Gog and Magog, and the tribulations that precede the end of the world.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Chartsworth, James H. Apocalyptic Literature and Testaments, Anchor Bible, 1983. ISBN 978-0385096300
  • Cook, Stephen L. The Apocalyptic Literature: Interpreting Biblical Texts, Abingdon Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0687051960
  • Collins, John Joseph. The Apocalyptic Imagination: A Introduction to Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1998. ISBN 978-0802843715
  • Goswiller, Richard. Revelation, Pacific Study Series, Melbourne, 1987.
  • Reddish, Mitchell G. Apocalyptic Literature: A Reader, Hendrickson Publishers, 1995. ISBN 978-1565632103

External links

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.