THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES.
THIS book is to treat of the General Epistle of St. James and the
General Epistle of St. Jude. According to the most common, but not
invariable arrangement, they form the first and the last letters in
the collection which for fifteen centuries has been known as the
Catholic Epistles. The epithet "General," which appears in the
titles of these Epistles in the English versions, is simply the
equivalent of the epithet "Catholic," the one word being of Latin
(generalis), the other of Greek (καθολικος) origin. In Latin,
however, e.g., in the Vulgate, these letters are not called Generales, but Catholicae.
The meaning of the term Catholic Epistles (καθολικαι επιστολαι)
has
been disputed, and more than one explanation may be found in
commentaries; but the true signification is not really doubtful. It
certainly does not mean orthodox or canonical; although from the
sixth century, and possibly earlier, we find these Epistles
sometimes
called the Canonical Epistles ("Epistolae Canonicae"), an
expression in which "canonical" is evidently meant to be an
equivalent for "catholic." This use is said to occur first in the
"Prologus in Canonicas Epistolas" of the Pseudo-Jerome given by
Cassiodorus ("De Justit. Divin. Litt.," 8.); and the expression is
used by Cassiodorus himself, whose writings may be placed between
540
and 570, the period spent in his monastery at Viviers, after he had
retired from the conduct of public affairs. The term "catholic" is
used in the sense of "orthodox" before this date, but not in
connection with these letters. There seems to be no earlier evidence
of the opinion, certainly erroneous, that this collection of seven
Epistles was called "Catholic" in order to mark them as Apostolic
and authoritative, in distinction from other letters which were
heterodox, or at any rate of inferior authority. Five out of the
seven letters, viz., all but the First Epistle of St. Peter and the
First Epistle of St. John, belong to that class of New Testament books which from the
time
of Eusebius ("H.E.," 3. 25:4) have been spoken of as "disputed"
(αντιλεγομενα), i.e., as being up to the beginning of the fourth
century not universally admitted to be canonical. And it would have
been almost a contradiction in terms if Eusebius had first called
these Epistles "catholic" ("H.E.," 2. 23. 25; 6. 14. 1) in the
sense of being universally accepted as authoritative, and had then
classed them among the "disputed" books. Nor is it accurate to say that these letters are called "catholic"
because they are addressed to both Jewish and Gentile Christians
alike, a statement which is not true of all of them, and least of
all
of the Epistle which generally stands first in the series; for the
Epistle of St. James takes no account of Gentile Christians.
Moreover, there are Epistles of St. Paul which are addressed to both
Jews and Gentiles in the Churches to which he writes. So that this
explanation of the term makes it thoroughly unsuitable for the
purpose for which it is used, viz., to mark off these seven Epistles
from the Epistles of St. Paul. Nevertheless, this interpretation is
nearer to the truth than the former one. The Epistles are called "Catholic" because they are not addressed
to any particular Church, whether of Thessalonica, or Corinth, or
Rome, or Galatia, but to the Church universal, or at any rate to a
wide circle of readers. This is the earliest Christian use of the
term "catholic," which was applied to the Church itself before it
was applied to these or any other writings. "Wheresoever the bishop
shall appear, there let the people be," says Ignatius to the Church
of Smyrna (8.), "just as where Jesus Christ is, there is the
Catholic Church,"—the earliest passage in Christian literature in
which the phrase "Catholic Church" occurs. And there can be no
doubt as to the meaning of the epithet in this expression. In later
times, when Christians were oppressed by a consciousness of the slow
progress of the Gospel, and by the knowledge that as yet only a
fraction of the human race had accepted it, it became customary to
explain "catholic" as meaning that which embraces and teaches the
whole truth, rather than as that which spreads everywhere and covers
the whole earth. But in the first two or three centuries the feeling
was rather one of jubilation and triumph at the rapidity with which
the "good news" was spreading, and of confidence that "there is
not one single race of men, whether barbarians or Greeks, or
whatever
they may be called, nomads or vagrants, or herdsmen living in tents,
among whom prayers and giving of thanks are not offered, through the
name of the crucified Jesus, to the Father and Creator of all
things" (Justin Martyr, "Trypho," 118.); and that as "the soul is
diffused through all the members of the body, Christians are
scattered through all the cities of the world" ("Epistle to
Diognetus," 6.). Under the influence of such exultation as this,
which was felt to be in harmony with Christ’s promise and
command, {Lu 24:47 Mt 28:10} it was natural to use "catholic"
of the universal extension of Christendom, rather than of the
comprehensiveness of the truths of Christianity. And this meaning
still prevails in the time of Augustine, who says that "the Church
is called ‘Catholic’ in Greek, because it is diffused throughout the
whole world" ("Epp.," 52. 1); although the later use, as meaning
orthodox, in distinction to schismatical or heretical, has already
begun; e.g., in the Muratorian Fragment, in which the writer speaks
of heretical writing "which cannot be received into the Catholic
Church; for wormwood is not suitable for mixing with honey"
(Tregelles, pp. 20, 47; Westcott "On the Canon," Appendix C,
p. 500); and the chapter in Clement of Alexandria on the priority
of the Catholic Church to all heretical assemblies ("Strom.," 7.
17.). The four Gospels and the Epistles of St. Paul were the Christian
writings best known during the first century after the Ascension,
and
universally acknowledged as of binding authority; and it was common
to speak of them as "the Gospel" and "the Apostle," much in the
same way as the Jews spoke of "the Law" and "the Prophets." But
when a third collection of Christian documents became widely known
another collective term was required by which to distinguish it from
the collections already familiar, and the feature in these seven
Epistles which seems to have struck the recipients of them most is
the absence of an address to any local Church. Hence they received
the name of Catholic, or General, or Universal Epistles. The name
was
all the more natural because of the number seven, which emphasized
the contrast between these and the Pauline Epistles. St. Paul had
written to seven particular Churches—Thessalonica, Corinth, Rome,
Galatia, Philippi, Colossae, and Ephesus; and here were seven
Epistles without any address to a particular Church; therefore they
might fitly be called "General Epistles." Clement of Alexandria
uses this term of the letter addressed to the Gentile Christians "in
Antioch and Syria and Cilicia" {Ac 15:23} by the Apostles, in
the so-called Council of Jerusalem ("Strom.," 4. 15.); and Origen
uses it of the Epistle of Barnabas ("Con. Celsum," 1. 63.), which
is addressed simply to "sons and daughters," i.e., to Christians
generally. That this meaning was well understood, even after the misleading
title "Canonical Epistles" had become usual in the West, is shown by
the interesting Prologue to these Epistles written by the Venerable,
Bede, cir. A.D. 712. This prologue is headed, ‘Here begins, the
Prologue to the seven Canonical Epistles,’ and it opens thus: "James,
Peter, John, and Jude published seven Epistles, to which
ecclesiastical custom gives the name of Catholic, i.e., universal." The name is not strictly accurate, excepting in the cases of 1 John,
2 Peter, and Jude. It is admissible in a qualified sense of 1 Peter
and James; but it is altogether inappropriate to 2 and 3 John, which
are addressed, not to the Church at large, nor to a group of local
Churches, but to individuals. But inasmuch as the common title of
these letters was not the Epistles "to the Elect Lady" and "to
Gaius," as in the case of the letters to Philemon, Titus, and
Timothy, but simply the Second and Third of John, they were regarded
as without address, and classed with the Catholic Epistles. And of
course it was natural to put them into the same group with the First
Epistle of St. John, although the name of the group did not suit
them. At what date this arrangement was made is not certain; but
there is reason for believing that these seven Epistles were already
regarded as one collection in the third century, when Pamphilus, the
friend of Eusebius, was making his famous library at Caesarea.
Euthalius (cir. A.D. 450) published an edition of them, in making
which he had collated "the accurate copies" in this library; and it
is probable that he found the grouping already existing in those
copies, and did not make it for himself. Moreover, it is probable
that the copies at Caesarea were made by Pamphilus himself; for the
summary of the contents of the Acts published under the name of
Euthalius is a mere copy of the summary given by Pamphilus, and it
became the usual practice to place the Catholic Epistles immediately
after the Acts. If, then, Euthalius got the summary of the Acts from
Pamphilus, he probably got the arrangement from him also, viz., the
putting of these seven Epistles into one group, and placing them
next
to the Acts. The order which makes the Catholic Epistles follow immediately after
the Acts is very ancient, and it is a matter for regret that the
influence of Jerome, acting through the Vulgate, has universally
disturbed it in all Western Churches. "The connection between these
two, portions (the Acts and the Catholic Epistles.), commended by
its
intrinsic appropriateness, is preserved in a large proportion of
Greek MSS. of all ages, and corresponds to marked affinities of
textual history." It is the order followed by Cyril of Jerusalem,
Athanasius, John of Damascus, the Council of Laodicea, and also by
Cassian. It has been restored by Tischendorf, Tregelles, and
Westcott
and Hort; but it is not: to be expected that even their powerful
authority will avail to re-establish the ancient arrangement. The order of the books in the group of the Catholic Epistles is not
quite constant; but almost always James stands first. In a very few
authorities Peter stands first, an arrangement naturally preferred
in
the West, but not adopted even there, because the authority of the
original order was too strong. A scholiast on the Epistle of James
states that this Epistle has been placed before 1 Peter, "because it
is more catholic than that of Peter," by which he seems to mean that
whereas 1 Peter is addressed "to the Dispersion," without any
limitation. The Venerable Bede, in the Prologue to the Catholic
Epistles quoted above, states that James is placed first, because he
undertook to rule the Church of Jerusalem, which was the fount and
source of that evangelic preaching which has spread throughout the
world; or else because he sent his Epistle to the twelve tribes of
Israel, who were the first to believe. And Bede calls attention to
the fact that St. Paul himself adopts this order when he speaks of
"James, and Cephas, and John, they who were reputed to be
pillars". {Ga 2:9} It is possible, however, that the order
James, Peter, John was meant to represent a belief as to the
chronological precedence of James to Peter, and Peter to John; Jude
being placed last because of its comparative insignificance, and
because it was not at first universally admitted. The Syriac
Version,
which admits only James, 1 Peter, and 1 John, has the three in this
order; and if the arrangement had its origin in reverence for the
first Bishop of Jerusalem, it is strange that most of the Syriac
copies should have a heading to the effect that these three Epistles
of James, Peter, and John are by the three who witnessed the
Transfiguration. Those who made and those who accepted this comment
certainly had no idea of reverencing the first Bishop of Jerusalem,
for it implies that the Epistle of James is by the son of Zebedee
and
brother of John, who was put to death by Herod. But it is probable
that this heading is a mere blundering conjecture. If persons who
believed the Epistle to be written by James the brother of John had
fixed the order, they would have fixed it thus—Peter, James, John,
as in Mt 17:1 Mr 5:37 9:2 13:3 14:33; comp. Mt 26:37; or
Peter, John, James, as in Lu 8:51 9:28 Ac 1:13. But the former
arrangement would be more reasonable than the latter, seeing that
John wrote so long after the other two. The traditional order
harmonizes with two facts which were worth marking— (1) that two of the three were Apostles, and must therefore be
placed together; (2) that John wrote last, and must therefore be placed last; but
whether or no the wish to mark these facts determined the order, we
have not sufficient knowledge to enable us to decide. How enormous would have been the loss had the Catholic Epistles been
excluded from the canon of the New Testament it is not difficult to
see. Whole phases of Christian thought would have been missing. The
Acts and the Epistles of St. Paul would have told us of their
existence, but would not have shown to us what they were. We should
have known that there were serious differences of opinion even among
the Apostles themselves, but we should have had a very imperfect
knowledge as to their nature and reconciliation. We might have
guessed that those who had been with Jesus of Nazareth throughout
His
ministry would not preach Christ in the same way as St. Paul, who
had
never seen Him until after the Ascension, but we should not have
been
sure of this; still less could we have seen in what the difference
would have consisted; and we should have known very little indeed of
the distinctive marks of the three great teachers who "were reputed
to be pillars" of the Church. Above all, we should have known sadly
little of the Mother Church of Jerusalem, and of the teaching of
those many early Christians who, while heartily embracing the Gospel
of Jesus Christ, believed that they were bound to hold fast not only
to the morality, but to the discipline of Moses. Thus in many
particulars we should have been left to conjecture as to how the
continuity in the Divine Revelation was maintained; how the Gospel
not merely superseded, but fulfilled, and glorified, and grew out of
the Law. All this has to a large extent been made plain to us by the
providence of God in giving to us and preserving for us in the
Church
the seven Catholic Epistles. We see St. James and St. Jude
presenting
to us that Judaic form of Christianity which was really the
complement, although when exaggerated it became the opposite, of the
teaching of St. Paul. We see St. Peter mediating between the two,
and
preparing the way for a better comprehension of both. And then St.
John lifts us up into a higher and clearer atmosphere, in which the
controversy between Jew and Gentile has faded away into the dim
distance, and the only opposition which remains worthy of a
Christian’s consideration is that between light and darkness, truth
and falsehood, love and hate, God and the world, Christ and
Antichrist, life and death. |