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The Acts and
Martyrdom of St. Matthew the Apostle
ABOUT that time Matthew, the holy apostle and evangelist of
Christ, was abiding in the mountain resting, and praying in
his tunic and apostolic robes without sandals; and, behold,
Jesus came to Matthew in the likeness of the infants who
sing in paradise, and said to him: Peace to thee, Matthew!
And Matthew having gazed upon Him, and not known who He was,
said: Grace to thee, and peace, O child highly favoured! And
why hast thou come hither to me, having left those who sing
in paradise, and the delights there? Because here the place
is desert; and what sort of a table I shall lay for thee, O
child, I know not, because I have no bread nor oil in a jar.
Moreover, even the winds are at rest, so as not to cast down
from the trees to the ground anything for food; because, for
the accomplishing of my fast of forty days, I, partaking
only of the fruits falling by the movement of the winds, am
glorifying my Jesus. Now, therefore, what shall I bring
thee, beautiful boy? There is not even water near, that I
may wash thy feet. And the child said: Why sayest thou, O
Matthew? Understand and know that good discourse is better
than a calf, and words of meekness better than every herb of
the field, and a sweet saying as the perfume of love, and
cheerfulness of countenance better that feeding, and a
pleasant look is as the appearance of sweetness. Understand,
Matthew, and know that I am paradise, that I am the
comforter, I am the power of the powers above, I the
strength of those that restrain themselves, I the crown of
the virgins, I the self-control of the once married, I the
boast of the widowed, I the defence of the infants, I the
foundation of the Church, I the kingdom of the bishops, I
the glory of the presbyters, I the praise of the deacons. Be
a man, and be strong, Matthew, in, these words. And Matthew
said: The sight of thee hast altogether delighted me, O
child; moreover also, thy words are full of life. For
assuredly thy face shines more than the lightning, and thy
words are altogether most sweet. And that indeed I saw thee
in paradise when thou didst sing with the other infants who
were killed in Bethlehem, I know right well; but how thou
hast suddenly come hither, this altogether astonishes me.
But I shall ask thee one thing, O child: that impious Herod,
where is he? The child says to him: Since thou hast asked,
hear his dwelling-place. He dwells, indeed, in Hades; and
there has been prepared for him fire unquenchable, Gehenna
without end, bubbling mire, worm that sleeps not, because he
cut off three thousand infants, wishing to slay the child
Jesus, the ancient of the ages; but of all these ages I am
father. Now therefore, O Matthew, take this rod of mine, and
go down from the mountain, and go into Myrna, the city of
the man-eaters, and plant it by the gate of the church which
thou and Andrew founded; and as soon as thou hast planted
it, it shall be a tree, great and lofty and with many
branches, and its branches shall extend to thirty cubits,
and of each single branch the fruit shall be different both
to the sight and the eating, and from the top of the tree
shall flow down much honey; and from its root there shall
come forth a great fountain, giving drink to this country
round about, and in it creatures that swim and creep; and in
it the man-eaters shall wash themselves, and eat of the
fruit of the trees of the vine and of the honey; and their
bodies shall be changed, and their forms shall be altered so
as to be like those of other men; and they shall be ashamed
of the nakedness of their body, and they shall put on
clothing of the rams of the sheep, and they shall no longer
eat unclean things; and there shall be to them fire in
superabundance, preparing the sacrifices for offerings, and
they shall bake their bread with fire; and they shall see
each other in the likeness of the rest of men, and they
shall acknowledge me, and glorify my Father who is in the
heavens. Now therefore make haste, Matthew, and go down
hence, because the departure from thy body through fire is
at hand, and the crown of thy endurance.
And the child having said this, and given him the rod, was
taken up into the heavens. And Matthew went down from the
mountain, hastening to the city. And as he was about to
enter into the city, there met him Fulvana the wife of the
king, and his son Fulvanus and his wife Erva, who were
possessed by an unclean spirit, and cried out shouting: Who
has brought thee here again, Matthew? or who has given thee
the rod for our destruction? for we see also the child
Jesus, the Son of God, who is with thee. Do not go then, O
Matthew, to plant the rod for the food, and for the
transformation of the man-eaters: for I bare found what I
shall do to thee. For since thou didst drive me out of this
city, and prevent me from fulfilling my wishes among the
man-eaters, behold, I will raise up against thee the king of
this city, and he will burn thee alive. And Matthew, having
laid his hands on each one of the demoniacs, put the demons
to flight, and made the people whole; and they followed him.
And thus the affair being made manifest, Plato the bishop,
having heard of the presence of the holy Apostle Matthew,
met him with all the clergy; and having fallen to the
ground, they kissed his feet. And Matthew raised them, and
went with them into the church, and the child Jesus was also
with him. And Matthew, having come to the gate of the
church, stood upon a certain lofty and immoveable stone; and
when the whole city ran together, especially the brethren
who had believed, began to say: Men and women who appear in
our sight, heretofore believing in the universe, but now
knowing Him who has upheld and made the universe; until now
worshipping the Satyr, and mocked by ten thousand false
gods, but now through Jesus Christ acknowledging the one and
only God, Lord, Judge; who have laid aside the immeasurable
greatness of evil, and put on love, which is of like nature
with affectionateness, towards men; once strangers to
Christ, but now confessing Him Lord and God; formerly
without form, but now transformed through Christ;--behold,
the staff which you see in my hand, which Jesus, in whom you
have believed and will believe, gave me; perceive now what
comes to pass through me, and acknowledge the riches of the
greatness which He will this day make for you. For, behold,
I shall plant this rod in this place, and it shall be a sign
to your generations, and it shall become a tree, great and
lofty and flourishing, and its fruit beautiful to the view
and good to the sight; and the fragrance of perfumes shall
come forth from it, and there shall be a vine twining round
it, full of clusters; and from the top of it honey coming
down, and every flying creature shall find covert in its
branches; and a fountain of water shall come forth from the
root of it, having swimming and creeping things, giving
drink to all the country round about.
And having said this, and called upon the name of the Lord
Jesus, he fixed his rod in the ground, and straightway it
sprung up to one cubit; and the sight was strange and
wonderful. For the rod having straightway shot up, increased
in size, and grew into a great tree, as Matthew had said.
And the apostle said: Go into the fountain and wash your
bodies in it, and then thus partake both of the fruits of
the tree, and of the vine and the honey, and drink of the
fountain, and you shall be transformed in your likeness to
that of men; and after that, having gone into the church,
you will clearly recognise that you have believed in the
living and true God. And having done all these things, they
saw themselves changed into the likeness of Matthew; then,
having thus gone into the church, they worshipped and
glorified God. And when they had been changed, they knew
that they were naked; and they ran in haste each to his own
house to cover their nakedness, because they were ashamed.
And Matthew and Plato remained in the church spending the
night, and glorifying God. And there remained also the
king's wife, and his son and his wife, and they prayed the
apostle to give them the seal in Christ. And Matthew gave
orders to Plato; and he, having gone forth, baptized them in
the water of the fountain of the tree, in the name of the
Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost. And so thereafter,
having one into the church, they communicated in the holy
mysteries of Christ; and they exulted and passed the night,
they also along with the apostle, many others having also
come with them; and all in the church sang the whole night,
glorifying God.
And when the dawn had fully come, the blessed Matthew,
having gone along with the bishop Plato, stood in the place
in which the rod had been planted, and he sees the rod grown
into a great tree, and near it a vine twined round it, and
honey coming down from above even to its root; and that tree
was at once beautiful and flourishing, like the plants in
paradise, and a river proceeded from its root watering all
the land of the city of Myrna. And all ran together, and ate
of the fruit of the tree and the vine, just as any one
wished.
And when what had come to pass was reported in the palace,
the king Fulvanus, having learned what had been done by
Matthew about his wife, and his son, and his
daughter-in-law, rejoiced for a time at their purification;
but seeing that they were inseparable from Matthew, he was
seized with rage and anger, and endeavoured to put him to
death by fire. And on that night in which the king intended
to lay hands on Matthew, Matthew saw Jesus saying to him: I
am with thee always to save thee, Matthew; be strong, and be
a man.
And the blessed Matthew, having awoke, and sealed himself
over all the body, rose up at dawn, and proceeded into the
church; and having bent his knees, prayed earnestly. Then
the bishop having come, and the clergy, they stood in common
in prayer, glorifying God. And after they had ended the
prayer, the bishop Plato said: Peace to thee, Matthew,
apostle of Christ! And the blessed Matthew said to him:
Peace to you! And when they had sat down, the apostle said
to the bishop Plato, and to all the clergy: I wish you,
children, to know, Jesus having declared it to me, that the
king of this city is going to send soldiers against me, the
devil having entered into him, and manifestly armed him
against us. But let us give ourselves up to Jesus, and He
will deliver us from every trial, and all who have believed
in Him.
And the king, plotting against the blessed Matthew how he
should lay hands on him, and seeing also that the believers
were very many, was very much at fault, and was in great
difficulty.
Therefore the wicked and unclean devil who had come forth
from the king's wife, and his son, and his daughter-in-law,
put to flight by Matthew, having transformed himself into
the likeness of a soldier, stood before the king, and said
to him: O king, why art thou thus put to the worse by this
stranger and sorcerer? Knowest thou not that he was a
publican, but now he has been called an apostle by Jesus,
who was crucified by the Jews? For, behold, thy wife, and
thy son, and thy daughter-in-law, instructed by him, have
believed in him, and along with him sing in the church. And
now, behold, Matthew is going forth, and Plato with him, and
they are going to the gate called Heavy; but make haste, and
thou wilt find them, and thou shalt do to him all that may
be pleasing in thine eyes.
The king having heard this, and being the more exasperated
by the pretended soldier, sent against the blessed Matthew
four soldiers, having threatened them, and said: Unless you
bring Matthew to me, I shall burn you alive with fire; and
the punishment which he is to undergo, you shall endure. And
the soldiers, having been thus threatened by the king, go in
arms to where the Apostle Matthew and the bishop Plato are.
And when they came near them, they heard their speaking
indeed, but saw no one. And having come, they said to the
king: We pray thee, O king, we went and found no one, but
only heard the voices of persons talking. And the king,
being enraged, and having blazed up like fire, gave orders
to send other ten soldiers--man-eaters--saying to them: Go
stealthily to the place, and tear them in pieces alive, and
eat up Matthew, and Plato, who is with him. And when they
were about to come near the blessed Matthew, the Lord Jesus
Christ, having come in the likeness of a most beautiful boy,
holding a torch of fire, ran to meet them, burning out their
eyes. And they, having cried out and thrown their arms from
them, fled, and came to the king, being speechless.
And the demon who had before appeared to the king in the
from of a soldier, being again transformed into the form of
a soldier, stood before the king, and said to him: Thou
seest, O king, this stranger has bewitched them all. Learn,
then, how thou shall take him. The king says to him: Tell me
first wherein his strength is, that I may know, and then I
will draw up against him with a great force. And the demon,
compelled by an angel, says to the king: Since thou wishest
to hear accurately about him, O king, I will tell thee all
the truth. Really, unless he shall be willing to be taken by
thee of his own accord, thou labourest in vain, and thou
wilt not be able to hurt him; but if thou wishest to lay
hands on him, thou wilt be struck by him with blindness, and
thou wilt be paralyzed. And if thou send a multitude of
soldiers against him, they also will be struck with
blindness, and will be paralyzed. And we shall go, even
seven unclean demons, and immediately make away with thee
and thy whole camp, and destroy all the city with lightning,
except those naming that awful and holy name of Christ; for
wherever a footstep of theirs has come, thence, pursued, we
flee. And even if thou shall apply fire to him, to him the
fire will be dew; and if thou shalt shut him up in a
furnace, to him the furnace will be a church; and if thou
shalt put him in chains in prison, and seal up the floors,
the doors will open to him of their own accord, and all who
believe in that name will go in, even they, and say, This
prison is a church of the living God, and a holy habitation
of those that live alone. Behold, O king, I have told thee
all the truth. The king therefore says to the pretended
soldier: Since I do not know Matthew, come with me, and
point him out to me from a distance, and take from me gold,
as much as thou mayst wish, or go thyself, and with thy
sword kill him, and Plato his associate. The demon says to
him: I cannot kill him. I dare not even look into his face,
seeing that he has destroyed all our generation through the
name of Christ, proclaimed through him.
The king says to him: And who art thou? And he says: I am
the demon who dwelt in thy wife, and in thy son, and in thy
daughter-in-law; and my name is Asmodaeus; and this Matthew
drove me out of them. And now, behold, thy wife, and thy
son, and thy daughter-in-law sing along with him in the
church. And I know, O king, that thou also after this wilt
believe in him. The king says to him: Whoever thou art,
spirit of many shapes, I adjure thee by the God whom he whom
thou callest Matthew proclaims, depart hence without doing
hurt to any one. And straightway the demon, no longer like a
soldier, but like smoke, became invisible; and as he fled he
cried out: O secret name, armed against us, I pray thee,
Matthew, servant of the holy God, pardon me, and I will no
longer remain in this city. Keep thou thine own; but I go
away into the fire everlasting.
Then the king, affected with great fear at the answer of the
demon, remained quiet that day. And the night having come,
and he not being able to sleep because lie was hungry,
leaped up at dawn, and went into the church, with only two
soldiers without arms, to take Matthew by craft, that he
might kill him. And having summoned two friends of Matthew,
he said to them: Show to Matthew, says he, that I wish to be
his disciple. And Matthew hearing, and knowing the craft of
the tyrant, and having been warned also by the vision of the
Lord to him, went forth out of the church, led by the hand
by Plato, and stood in the gate of the church.
And they say to the king: Behold Matthew in the gate! And he
says: Who he is, or where he is, I see not. And they said to
him: Behold, he is in sight of thee. And he says: All the
while I see nobody. For he had been blinded by the power of
God. And he began to cry out: Woe to me, miserable! what
evil has come upon me, for my eyes have been blinded, and
all my limbs paralyzed? O Asmodaeus Beelzebul Satan! all
that thou hast said to me has come upon me. But I pray thee,
Matthew, servant of God, forgive me as the herald of the
good God; for assuredly the Jesus proclaimed by the three
days ago through the night appeared to me altogether
resplendent as with lightning, like a beautiful young man,
and said to me, Since thou art entertaining evil counsels in
the wickedness of thine heart in regard to my servant
Matthew, know I have disclosed to him that through thee will
be the release of his body. And
straightway I saw him going up into heaven. If therefore he
is thy God, and if he wishes thy body to be buried in our
city for a testimony of the salvation of the generations
after this, and for the banishing of the demons, I shall
know the truth for myself by this, by thee laying on hands
upon me, and I shall receive my sight. And the apostle
having laid his hands upon his eyes, and saying EPHPHATHA,
Jesus, he made him receive his sight instantly. And
straightway the king, laying hold of the apostle, and
leading him by the right hand, brought him by craft into the
palace; and Plato was on Matthew's left hand, going along
with him, and keeping hold of him. Then Matthew says: O
crafty tyrant, how long dost thou not fulfil the works of
thy father the devil? And he was enraged at what had been
said; for he perceived that he would inflict upon him a more
bitter death. For he resolved to put him to death by fire.
And he commanded several executioners to come, and to lead
him away to the place by the seashore, where the execution
of malefactors was wont to take place, saying to the
executioners: I hear, says he, that the God whom he
proclaims delivers from fire those who believe in him.
Having laid him, therefore, on the ground on his back, and
stretched him out, pierce his hands and feet with iron
nails, and cover him over with paper, having smeared it with
dolphins' oil, and cover him up with brimstone and asphalt
and pitch, and put tow and brushwood above. Thus apply the
fire to him; and if any of the same tribe with him rise up
against you, he shall get the same punishment. And the
apostle exhorted the brethren to remain undismayed, and that
they should rejoice, and accompany him with great meekness,
singing and praising God, because they were deemed worthy to
have the relics of the apostle. Having therefore come to the
place, the executioners, like most evil wild beasts, pinned
down to the ground Matthew's hands and feet with long nails;
and having done everything as they had been bid, applied the
fire. And they indeed laboured closely, kindling it all
round; but all the fire was changed into dew, so that the
brethren, rejoicing, cried out: The only God is the
Christians', who assists Matthew, in whom also we have
believed: the only God is the Christians', who preserves His
own apostle in the fire. And by the voice the city was
shaken. And some of the executioners, having gone forth,
said to the king: We indeed, O king, by every contrivance of
vengeance, have kindled the fire; but the sorcerer by a
certain name puts it out, calling upon Christ, and invoking
his cross; and the Christians surrounding him play with the
fire, and walking in it with naked feet, laugh at us, and we
have fled ashamed.
Then he ordered a multitude to carry coals of fire from the
furnace of the bath in the palace, and the twelve gods of
gold and silver; and place them, says he, in a circle round
the sorcerer, lest he may even somehow bewitch the fire from
the furnace of the palace. And there being many executioners
and soldiers, some carried the coals; and others, bearing
the gods, brought them. And the king accompanied them,
watching lest any of the Christians should steal one of his
gods, or bewitch the fire. And when they came near the place
where the apostle was nailed down, his face was looking
towards heaven, and all his body was covered over with the
paper, and much brushwood over his body to the height of ten
cubits. And baring ordered the soldiers to set the gods in a
circle round Matthew, five cubits off, securely fastened
that they might not fall, again he ordered the coal to be
thrown on, and to kindle the fire at all points.
And Matthew, having looked up to heaven, cried out, ADONAI
ELOI SABAOTH MARMARI MARMUNTH; that is, O God the Father, O
Lord Jesus Christ, deliver me, and burn down their gods
which they worship; and let the fire also pursue the king
even to his palace, but not to his destruction: for perhaps
he will repent and be converted. And when he saw the fire to
be monstrous in height, the king, thinking that Matthew was
burnt up, laughed aloud, and said: Has thy magic been of any
avail to thee, Matthew? Can thy Jesus now give thee any
help?
And as he said this a dreadful wonder appeared; for all the
fire along with the wood went away froth Matthew, and was
poured round about their gods, so that nothing of the gold
or the silver was any more seen; and the king fled, and
said: Woe's me, that my gods are destroyed by the rebuke of
Matthew, of which the weight was a thousand talents of gold
and a thousand talents of silver. Better are the gods of
stone and of earthenware, in that they are neither melted
nor stolen.
And when the fire had thus utterly destroyed their gods, and
burnt up many soldiers, there came to pass again another
stranger wonder. For the fire, in the likeness of a great
and dreadful dragon, chased the tyrant as far as the palace,
and ran hither and thither round the king, not letting him
go into the palace. And the king, chased by the fire, and
not allowed to go into his palace, turned back to where
Matthew was, and cried out, saying: I beseech thee, whoever
thou art, O mail, whether magician or sorcerer or god, or
angel of God, whom so great a pyre has not touched, remove
from me this dreadful and fiery dragon; forget the evil I
have done, as also when thou madest me receive my sight. And
Matthew, having rebuked the fire, and the flames having been
extinguished, and the dragon having become invisible,
stretching his eyes to heaven, and praying in Hebrew, and
commending his spirit to the Lord, said: Peace to you! And
having glorified the Lord, he went to his rest about the
sixth hour.
Then the king, having ordered more soldiers to come, and the
bed to be brought from the palace, which had a great show of
gold, he ordered the apostle to be laid on it, and carried
to the palace. And the body of the apostle was lying as if
in sleep, and his robe and his tunic unstained by the fire;
and sometimes they saw him on the bed, and sometimes
following, and sometimes going before the bed, and with his
right hand put upon Plato's head, and singing along with the
multitude, so that both the king and the soldiers, with the
crowd, were struck with astonishment. And many diseased
persons and demoniacs, having only touched the bed, were
made sound; and as many as were savage in appearance, in
that same hour were changed into the likeness of other men.
And as the bed was going into the palace, we all saw Matthew
rising up, as it were, from the bed, and going into heaven,
led by the hand by a beautiful boy; and twelve men in
shining garments came to meet him, having never-fading and
golden crowns on their head; and we saw how that child
crowned Matthew, so as to be like them, and in a flash of
lightning they went away to heaven.
And the king stood at the gate of the palace, and ordered
that no one should come in but the soldiers carrying the
bed. And having shut the doors, he ordered an iron coffin to
be made, put the body of Matthew into it, and sealed it up
with lead; through the eastern gate of the palace at
midnight put it into a boat, no one knowing of it, and threw
it into the deep part of the sea.
And through the whole night the brethren remained before the
gate of the palace, spending the night, and singing; and
when the dawn rose there was a voice: O bishop Plato, carry
the Gospel and the Psalter of David; go along with the
multitude of the brethren to the east of the palace, and
sing the Alleluia, and read the Gospel, and bring as an
offering the holy bread; and having pressed three clusters
from the vine into a cup, communicate with me, as the Lord
Jesus showed us how to offer up when He rose from the dead
on the third day.
And the bishop having run into the church, and taken the
Gospel and the Psalter of David, and having assembled the
presbyters and the multitude of the brethren, came to the
east of the palace at the hour of sunrise; and having
ordered the one who was singing to go upon a certain lofty
stone, he began to praise in singing of a song to God:
Precious in the sight of God is the death of His saints. And
again: I laid me down and slept; I arose: because the Lord
will sustain me. And they listened to the singing of a song
of David: Shall he that is dead not rise again? Now I shall
raise him up for myself, saith the Lord. And all shouted out
the Alleluia. And the bishop read the Gospel, and all cried
out: Glory to Thee, Thou who hast been glorified in heaven
and on earth. And so then they offered the gift of the holy
offering for Matthew; and having partaken for thanksgiving
of the undefiled and life-giving mysteries of Christ, they
all glorified God.
And it was about the sixth hour, and Plato sees the sea
opposite about seven furlongs off; and, behold, Matthew was
standing on the sea, and two men, one on each side, in
shining garments, and the beautiful boy in front of them.
And all the brethren saw these things, and they heard them
saying Amen, Alleluia. And one could see the sea fixed like
a stone of crystal, and the beautiful boy its front of them,
when out of the depth of the sea a cross came up, and at the
end of the cross the coffin going up in which was the body
of Matthew; and in the hour of the piercing on the cross,
the boy placed the coffin on the ground, behind the palace
towards the east, where the bishop had offered the offering
for Matthew.
And the king having seen these things from the upper part of
the house, and being terror-struck, went forth from the
palace, and ran and worshipped towards the east at the
coffin, and fell down before the bishop, and the presbyters,
and the deacons, in repentance and confession, saying: Truly
I believe in the true God, Christ Jesus. I entreat, give me
the seal in Christ, and I will give you my palace, in
testimony of Matthew, and you shall put the coffin upon my
golden bed, in the great dining-room; only, having baptized
me in it, communicate to me the Eucharist of Christ. And the
bishop having prayed, and ordered him to take off his
clothes, and having examined him for a long time, and he
having confessed and wept over what he had done, having
sealed him, and anointed him with oil, put him down into the
sea, in the name of Father, and Son, and Holy Ghost. And
when he came up from the water he ordered him to put on
himself splendid garments, and so then having given praise
and thanks, communicating the holy bread and mixed cup, the
bishop first gave them to the king, saying: Let this body of
Christ, and this cup, His blood shed for us, be to thee for
the remission of sins unto life. And a voice was heard from
on high: Amen, amen, amen. And when he had thus communicated
in fear and joy, the apostle appeared and said: King
Fulvanus, thy name shall no longer be Fulvanus; but thou
shall be called Matthew. And thou, the son of the king,
shall no longer be called Fulvanus, but Matthew also; and
thou Ziphagia, the wife of the king, shall be called Sophia;
and Erva, the wife of your son, shall be called Synesis. And
these names of yours shall be written in the heavens, and
there shall not fail of your loins from generation to
generation. And in that same hour Matthew appointed the king
a presbyter, and he was thirty-seven years old; and the
king's son he appointed deacon, being seventeen years old;
and the king's wife he appointed a presbyteress; and his
son's wife he appointed a deaconess, and she also was
seventeen years old. And then he thus blessed them, saying:
The blessing and the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ shall be
with you to time everlasting. Then the king, having awakened
out of sleep, and rejoiced with all his house at the vision
of the holy Apostle Matthew, praised God. And the king,
having gone into his palace, broke all the idols to pieces,
and gave a decree to those in his kingdom, writing thus:
King Matthew, to all those under my kingdom, greeting.
Christ having appeared upon earth, and having saved the
human race, the so-called gods nave been found to be
deceivers, and soul-destroyers, and plotters against the
human race. Whence, divine grace having shone abroad, and
come even to us, and we having come to the knowledge of the
deception of the idols, that it is vain anti false, it has
seemed good to our divinity that there should not be many
gods, but one, and one only, the God in the heavens. And
you, having received this our decree, keep to the purport of
it, and break to pieces and destroy every idol; and if any
one shall be detected from this time forth serving idols, or
concealing them, let such an one be subjected to punishment
by the sword. Farewell all, because we also are well.
And when this order was given out, all, rejoicing and
exulting, broke their idols to pieces, crying out and
saying: There is one only God, He who is in the heavens, who
does good to men.
And after all these things had come to pass, Matthew the
apostle of Christ appeared to the bishop Plato, and said to
him: Plato, servant of God, and our brother, be it known
unto thee, that after three years shall be thy rest in the
Lord, and exultation to ages of ages. And the king himself,
whom after my own name I have called Matthew, shall receive
the throne of thy bishopric, and after him his son. And he,
having said Peace to thee and all the saints, went to
heaven. And after three years the bishop Plato rested in the
Lord. And King Matthew succeeded him, having given up his
kingdom willingly to another, whence there was given him
grace against unclean demons, and he cured every affliction.
And he advanced his son to be a presbyter, and made him
second to himself.
And Saint Matthew finished his course in the country of the
man-eaters, in the city of Myrna, on the sixteenth of the
month of November, our Lord Jesus Christ reigning, to whom
be glory and strength, now and ever, and to ages of ages.
Amen.
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