Sean McDowell, “A historical
evaluation of the evidence of the death of the apostles as martyrs for their
faith,” Chapter 11, pp. 287-303
The Martyrdom of St. Andrew
The apostle Andrew is
probably best known as the brother of Peter (Mark 1:16). Like the Zebedee
brothers, Andrew and Peter were both fishermen (Matt 4:18).1
Both Andrew and Peter
became disciples of Jesus after he said, “Follow me, and I will make you
fishers of men” (4:19b). This was not necessarily their first encounter with
Jesus, nor does it contradict the Johannine account.2 John reports
that Andrew first brought Peter to Jesus, making a remarkable Christological
confession (John 1:41). This essential material regarding Andrew, that he was a
fisherman in Galilee who followed the call of Jesus, seems to reflect an
authentic Jesus tradition.3
The name Andrew is
Greek for “manly.” He was originally from Bethsaida, a city about twenty-five
miles east of Nazareth on the Sea of Galilee (John 1:44), but he moved to
Capernaum with his family. Before becoming one of the twelve apostles, he was a
disciple of John the Baptist (John 1:3-42). Jesus undoubtedly made a powerful
impression upon him. Andrew must have been utterly convinced that Jesus was the
Messiah. While not all of John’s disciples followed Jesus (John 3:25-27),
Andrew did. And he immediately brought Peter to him saying, “We have found the
Messiah” (John 1:41b).4 Andrew likely received a similar education as his
brother, but since he lived with Peter and his family at the beginning of his
ministry, some have suggested he was not married.5
The Synoptics provide
little information about Andrew. Mark reports one instance where Andrew joins
Peter, James, and John in hearing Jesus’ teaching on the Mount of Olives
(13:3-37), where Jesus proclaims the destruction of the temple and its
precincts. While most scholars conclude that Andrew was not among the inner
circle, Andrew may have been on the fringes of the group. Interestingly, there
is an early tradition that Andrew was a member of the inner circle, perhaps
even more prominent than his brother Peter. This finds support from a quote by
Papias in his The Sayings of the Lord Interpreted, in which he lists Andrew as
the first apostle he sought to learn about the words of Jesus (Ecclesiastical
History 3.39). The Muratorian Canon also links Andrew to the origin of the
Gospel of John. Emil Kraeling believes this may simply be “a supposition based
on the attention he [Andrew] receives in the opening chapter of John.”6
On the contrary,
Patrick believes these traditions, along with internal evidence from the Gospel
of John, reveal that Andrew was in fact the closest disciple to Jesus and was
the Beloved Disciple.7 While Patrick believes the presbyter John wrote the
fourth Gospel, he credits Andrew and the rest of the Johannine circle as being
the source behind the stories.8 While this hypothesis has not met with widespread
approval in the scholarly community, it does raise interesting questions about
the role and significance of Andrew in the early church.
Andrew is mentioned
three times in the Gospel of John. On two of these occasions he is mentioned
along with Philip (6:8; 12:12). And the third time he is mentioned right before
Philip (cf. 1:40, 1:44). Clearly there was some special connection between
these two.
Every time Andrew
appears in John he is bringing someone to Jesus. The first time he brings Peter
to Jesus (1:41-42). In the second instance, Andrew brings a small boy to Jesus
who had five small loaves of bread and two fish (6:8). The third time involved
some Greeks who wanted to worship Jesus. They first approached Philip, who told
Andrew about their request, and then Andrew decided the two of them should tell
Jesus together (12:20-22). It may seem that Philip went to Andrew because he
was closer to Jesus, but Colin Kruse suggests he approached Andrew with the
request because he was the only other member of the twelve who had a Greek
name.9 Philip
may have been unsure if Jesus would accept Gentiles, so together they
approached Jesus.
Some have even
speculated that Andrew first brought Philip to Jesus. After admitting that it
is pure speculation, William LaSor notes, “They were both from the same town
(Bethsaida: John 1:44); they both had Greek names, whereas the rest of the
apostles had Hebrew names; their names are often joined in the New Testament;
and on two occasions Philip came to Andrew to get his help or advice on some
problem.”10 If
so, then Andrew would be indirectly responsible for Nathanael hearing about
Jesus as well (John 1:45). Whether or not this is true, Andrew is unmistakably
characterized as having a missionary mindset from the moment he meets Jesus.
Ronald Brownrigg
captures what can seemingly be known about the character of Andrew:
Compared with his
bombastic brother, Andrew emerges as a sensitive and approachable man who
always had time and patience to listen to enquiries, even from children and
foreigners. He was a selfless and considerate man, who did not resent the
leadership of his brother. If his brother, Peter, was the skipper of the crew,
Andrew was indeed the “ferry man” always willing to take people to Jesus. He
was a kindly and faithful disciple, not fearful of ridicule even though he
offered a picnic basket to feed five thousand. Although himself a Jew, he
enabled Greeks to meet Jesus and he has been called the first “home missionary”
as well as the first “foreign” missionary of the Christian church.11
Beginning in the second
century, Andrew became a popular figure in apocryphal writings such as the Acts
of Andrew, the Acts of Andrew and Matthias, the Acts of Peter and Andrew, the
Acts of Andrew and Bartholomew, and the Pistis Sophia. As with the other
disciples, Andrew was an eyewitness of the risen Jesus (1 Cor 15:5; Matt
28:9-10; Luke 24:36-53; John 20:19-23) Along with Peter, Thomas, Philip, Nathanael,
and the brothers of Zebedee, Andrew is one of the chief disciples mentioned in
John. He witnessed the events the Gospel records, as well as many more that
were not recorded (John 20:30, 21:25). He was willing to suffer for his
conviction that Jesus is the messiah (Acts 5:17-42). And many ancient
traditions state that Andrew was in fact persecuted for his faith.12 Despite a
substantial record of his travels and persecutions, there is no record he ever
waivered in his commitment to Jesus Christ.
Missionary Endeavors of Andrew
The earliest
information about the missionary travels of Andrew comes from Origen, who
states that he went to Scythia, which is in southern Russia.13 Eucherius of Lyons
(d. c. 450) and Hippolytus on the Twelve also mention Andrew preaching in
Scythia. There were Jews in the surrounding area of Scythia from the time of
the first century BC, and given the easy route of access to Scythia from
Jerusalem, it was a logical place for Andrew to missionize. The Scythians were
a vital political and economic force during their heyday. They were a nomadic
people who lived in southern Russia. According to Tamara Talbot Rice, who
studied the Scythians of the first millennium BC, “The Scythians indeed played
as active a part in commerce as in war and constituted so important an element
in the life of their age that Herodotus found it necessary to devote to them an
entire book of his great history.”14 They were polytheistic and deeply superstitious.15 Tertullian
includes Scythia in his list of nations the gospel has reached by the time he
writes at the end of the second century.16 Given the date of the tradition, as well as the
plausibility of travel to Scythia in the first century AD, Francis Dvornik
concludes that this tradition by Origen “seems to be well founded.”17
While many scholars
agree Andrew travelled to Scythia, there is substantial disagreement about the
remaining traditions, including his martyrdom. When considering the question of
the martyrdom of Andrew, Stewart Lamont concludes, “The evidence is not at all
supportive that he did [die as a martyr].”18 On the other hand, William Barclay concludes, “Even
if we doubt the details, we cannot doubt that Andrew died a martyr for his
Master.”19 Yet
as to be seen, the truth is likely somewhere between these two perspectives.
Greek scholar George
Alexandrou has written a 1,000-page book on the missionary travels of Andrew
called He Raised the Cross on the Ice.20 His goal was not to critique the traditions, but to
begin with the following premise, “I accept all evidence as possible, whether
it is a writing of the Holy Fathers, an oral tradition from Uzbekistan, a
Coptic text from Ethiopia, a simple dream, or the archaeological excavations of
a Chinese scholar.”21 He then lined up all the traditions of Andrew to see
if he could trace his missionary travels with any level of probability.
Alexandrou concluded, “It was like a train, one car after another, until I had
only twenty years missing from St. Andrew’s return to the Black Sea from Valaamo
until he went to Sinope—and from there to Patras in Achaia, to his martyrdom.”22 Alexandrou
eventually found a tradition of Andrew living in a cave in Romania for twenty
years that fit the void in his timeline exactly. Perhaps the most interesting
finding from his studies is how smoothly the traditions fit together when they
are lined up chronologically and geographically.23
According to
Alexandrou, ancient traditions reveal four missionary journeys of Andrew that
include locations such as Constantinople, Pontus, central Asia, Ethiopia,
Georgia,24 southern
Russia, and more. Given the travel conditions of the first century, Alexandrou
concludes that there is nothing intrinsically impossible about each of these
missionary journeys. Given the current state of information, it is impossible
to determine the validity of every single account, yet it seems overly
skeptical to dismiss them entirely as legendary.
The first tradition
that Andrew was in Patrae (Greece), the traditional site of his martyrdom, is
found in the Acts of Andrew, which is typically dated between the middle of the
second century and the beginning of the third. Four other sources mention his
sojourn in Greece before the dawn of the sixth century.25 Thus, the
tradition that Andrew ministered in Greece is consistent, widespread, and
relatively early. Ursula Hall finds the tradition of Andrew visiting Greece
doubtful, because it was the missionary field of other men, in particular Paul.26 It is not
clear, however, why it is implausible for a number of men to minister in the
same region. Paul often visited cities (such as Corinth) that already had an
established community of believers. Peter and Paul both went to Rome. Some claim
that both Thomas and Bartholomew visited India. Whether this tradition is true
or not is irrelevant. The point is that there is nothing implausible about two
or more apostles ministering in the same place, as Hall suggests was the case
for Andrew and Greece.
According to the Syriac
Teaching of the Apostles,27 Andrew ministered in Nicaea, Nicomedia, Bithynia, and
inner Galatia. This is similar to where Peter ministered (1 Pet 1:1). Given
that the disciples often went out in twos (Mark 6:7; Luke 10:1), some scholars
have suggested that Andrew may have ministered for a period of time with his brother
Peter.28 Lamont
finds this tradition questionable since earlier traditions place him in the
region of the Black Sea.29 The simple answer is that he may have ministered in
both areas. There is nothing chronologically or geographically impossible about
Andrew ministering in both regions. As for the apostles, the Teaching of the
Apostles also cites that James wrote in Jerusalem, Simon [Peter] in Rome, John
from Ephesus, and Judas Thomas from India. Given that the author got these
ascriptions correct (at least according to my assessment), is it not at least
probable he also got the tradition correct about Andrew?
A few factors make at
least some missionary travels of Andrew highly likely, even if one cannot
currently ascertain the probability of every individual tradition. First, there
is a substantial amount of traditions involving Andrew. Unlike the apostle
Thomas, who was consistently considered an apostle of the East (greater India),
Andrew has multiple traditions throughout Judea, Africa, central Asia, and
Europe. The chances that all of them are fictional seem remote. Second, as
Alexandrou observes, even though the traditions developed independently, they
naturally line up chronologically and geographically. Third, the earliest
accounts of Andrew, found in the Gospels, reveal Andrew as having a missionary
mindset. It is within the known character of Andrew to engage in missions.
Fourth, archaeological evidence has been found to support certain traditions.30 When these
four considerations are combined with the commission by Jesus to evangelize the
world (Matt 28:19-20; Acts 1:8), and the early textual evidence that the
apostles actually carried out this commission, there is convincing reason to
believe Andrew was a missionary who advanced the gospel of Christ.
Evidence of the Martyrdom of Andrew
The earliest known
written source reporting the martyrdom of Andrew is the Acts of Andrew (c. AD
150-210). It begins with the summoning of Andrew by Maximilla, the wife of the
proconsul Aegeates, to cast a demon out of a servant boy. After seeing Andrew
deliver the boy, Stratocles (the brother of Aegeates) joins Maximilla in
becoming a disciple of Andrew. With the encouragement of Andrew, Maximilla
began to resist the sexual advances of her husband in an attempt to love God
alone.31 Knowing
he would be upset, Maximilla devised a plan to have a servant girl named Euclia
sleep with Aegeates in her place. This occurred for about eight months until
Aegeates discovered that Andrew was behind the change in his wife and so he had
him thrown in prison, promising to have Andrew released only if Maximilla would
sleep with him and bear his children. But Andrew refuses to back down,
proclaiming that he would rather be killed. Aegeates has Andrew crucified, but
without nails so he would experience the torment of being eaten by dogs if he
were still alive at night. In perhaps the most memorably scene from the Acts of
Andrew, Andrew speaks to the cross as he approaches the site of crucifixion and
commands the executioners to carry out their orders. He preaches for four days
from the cross until a large crowd demands Aegeates release him. But Andrew
refuses to accept the pardon and dies by crucifixion.32 After the
death of Andrew, Maximilla leaves Aegeates, and he commits suicide by leaping
from a tall height. Unlike Peter, Paul, and Thomas in their respective Acts,
Andrew does not appear again after his death.
There is significant
debate about when to date the Acts of Andrew, ranging from the middle of the
second century to the beginning of the third.33 The Acts of Andrew may very well fall within the
range of living memory, but one cannot be sure. There are many later written
accounts of the death of Andrew, but it seems they can be traced back through
the Acts of Andrew.34 This is also likely true for ancient calendars as
well as liturgical prayers such as the Irish Palimpsest Sacramentary and the
Missale Gothicum (c. AD 700).35
One possible
independent early source is a work attributed to Hippolytus, a 3rd century
bishop.36 Hippolytus
on the Twelve says, “Andrew preached to the Scythians and Thracians, and was
crucified, suspended on an olive tree, at Patrae, a town of Achaia; and there
too he was buried.”37 This account confirms the mission to Scythia as
reported by Origen, but also the crucifixion in Patras as stated by the Acts of
Andrew. Interestingly, it mentions Andrew was crucified “upright on an olive
tree,” which may indicate it is an independent tradition.38 Even if
Hippolytus did not write this work, it may be early. Nevertheless, given the
questions that remain about this text, the matter of the reliability of the
martyrdom account of Andrew rests largely upon the trustworthiness of the
tradition behind the Acts of Andrew.
Between the third and
ninth centuries, the Acts of Andrew was widely read and diffused in such
diverse places as Africa, Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Armenia, Asia Minor, Greece,
Italy, Gaul, and Spain.39 It has not survived in its original form, but
scholars are able to reconstruct a version that likely comes close to the
earliest version.40 Judging from the various versions of the Acts of
Andrew, the original text consisted of the missionary travels of Andrew and his
journey to Patras, where he was executed. Fernando Lanzilotta observes that
“the textual witnesses for the martyrdom are more numerous and their testimony
somewhat more homogeneous” when compared with the travels of Andrew.41
And yet he notes that
some of the early texts contain a few quick notes about his death rather than a
developed martyrdom account.42 Nevertheless, even though there are a variety of
adaptations, the activity and death of Andrew in Patras was the goal of his voyage
and likely part of the original text.43 All the recensions of the Acts of Andrew share his
conflict with pagan authorities, which leads to his death.44
Eusebius provides the
earliest reference to the Acts of Andrew. He suggests the Acts of Andrew, as
well as the Acts of John and other apocryphal Acts should be “cast aside as and
absurd and impious.”45 It should be noted that in rejecting the Acts of
Andrew, Eusebius was not rejecting that it had any claim to historicity; he
rejected it theologically. In the same section Eusebius discusses the Acts of
Andrew, he also rejects the Gospel of Peter as heretical. Yet he clearly
believes the Gospel of Peter was correct to affirm the resurrection of Jesus as
a historical fact, even though it also contained other material Eusebius
rejected. The same may be true for the historical kernel in the Acts of Andrew.
As a whole, the Acts of Andrew received a mixed reception in the early church—
ranging from condemnation (Pope Innocent I) to adaptation and use for popular
piety (Gregory of Tours).
Like the rest of the
Apocryphal Acts, the Acts of Andrew contains clear legendary embellishment.
Given that the sixth century Bishop Gregory of Tours combines the more
legend-filled and fantastic Acts of Andrew and Matthias (AAM) with the Acts of
Andrew, some have concluded that it was part of the original text.46 But this seems
unlikely.47 The
key question is whether or not the Acts of Andrew preserves a historical
nucleus. Taken at its core, it reports the missionary travels of Andrew and his
ministry and execution in Patras. While the Acts of Peter, Paul, Thomas, and
John contain legendary accretion, they also preserve the most reliable
destination and fate for their respective apostles (including a natural death
for John). External corroboration confirms that the various Acts likely got the
fate of these apostles correct. Although the writer of the various Apocryphal
Acts had creative license, he (or she) was also bound by known tradition. Is it
not reasonable to conclude that the same is likely true for the Acts of Andrew,
even though it is not possible to verify the claims externally in the same way
as the other Apocryphal Acts?48
For all their
diversity, the five Apocryphal Acts share at least five structural
similarities.49 First, they include the activities and travels of an
apostle in a certain city. Second, the apostle proclaims Jesus as Lord and
preaches repentance. Third, the apostle is the hero who teaches, works
miracles, heals, and imitates Christ, but is an otherwise undeveloped
character. Fourth, the end of the story contains some version of a
retrospective prayer. Fifth, each Act uses the “we-form” in imitation of the
canonical Acts. It could also be added that each Act builds toward and reaches
its climax with the fate of the apostle. These similarities do not imply any
special relationship between individual Acts, but they do show the authors
followed a similar script and approach in chronicling the activities of each
apostle. The authors clearly invent unbelievable stories for their respective
apostles, but they are bound by a known historical tradition nonetheless.
The Apocryphal Acts
were frequently grouped together because of their theology and genre. For
instance, Eusebius condemns the various Apocryphal Acts together as a group and
the Manichaeans lumped them together in a special corpus they used as scripture
instead of the biblical book of Acts.50 Given the similarities in structure and genre, there
is no good reason to doubt that the Acts of Andrew (like the other four
Apocryphal Acts) is a historical novel that preserved the known fate of the
apostle Andrew toward the end of the second century.
Dvornik does not accept
this tradition because he finds it strange that Eusebius does not report any
missionary travels of Andrew beyond Scythia, including his fate in Patras:
“First of all, it is, strange that Origen, or the transmitter of this old
tradition to Eusebius, who knew about Andrew’s missionary activity in Scythia,
knew nothing of his work in Achaea, or of his death in Patras.”51 Given that
Origen had been to Achaia, Dvornik finds it more likely that Andrew never made
it there and simply died in Scythia. If Dvornik is right, Andrew still may have
died as a martyr in Scythia. In The Contendings of the Apostles, Budge records
that Andrew died by crucifixion in Scythia.52
Dvornik suggests the
facts are not quite as straightforward. While Eusebius clearly cites Origen as
the source for his information in this section about the journeys of the
apostles Thomas, Andrew, John, Peter, and Paul, he does not quote Origen
specifically. Since Origen’s Commentary on Genesis is not extant, it is not
possible to determine in what manner Eusebius was utilizing his source.
Eusebius could have been summarizing Origen, pulling out the information he
felt necessary. He may have included all the information Origen wrote about or
merely part of it. It is at least possible Origen included it in his Commentary
but Eusebius left it out for some unknown reason. This may seem strange, but
Eusebius does discuss other martyrs without including their deaths, so it is
entirely plausible he would do the same with Andrew.53
Even if Origen did not
include further information about Andrew in his original Commentary, it does
not follow, as Dvornik suggests, that he knew nothing of the tradition.54 Maybe he wrote
about it elsewhere. It is certainly fair to ask why Origen may not have
included it, but it is not reasonable to assume that the lack of mention
implies the account is false and that Origen was completely unaware of such a
tradition. The objection of Dvornik is an argument from silence, and thus
provides minimal reason to doubt the tradition of Andrew’s death in Patras.
Given the agnosticism concerning how Eusebius used his source, Dvornik is
unwarranted in concluding definitively that the tradition regarding the martyrdom
of Andrew did not exist in Achaia during the time of Origen.
Following the lead of
Dvornik, Lamont finds it extremely strange that Luke, who likely wrote his
Gospel in Achaia,55 never mentions the tradition that Andrew died in Patras.
He concludes along with Dvornik that Andrew likely never visited there.56
However, this is also
an argument from silence. As already seen, Luke leaves out seemingly important
details such as the fate of Peter, Paul and James, the brother of Jesus. This
is because he had a different purpose for his writings than merely tracing the
lives of the individual apostles. As interesting and important as the question
of the fate of Andrew is to this investigation, it was not the primary (or even
secondary) matter for Luke. It is not surprising that Luke would ignore the
fate of Andrew in Achaia.
A final consideration
is the matter of the persecution of Christians in Greece during the time Andrew
was traditionally put to death (c. AD 65-69). There is no record of formal
state-directed persecution against Christians in Greece during this time. Yet
the date falls directly during the time of the Neronian persecution in Rome. As
noted previously, Christians were specifically targeted as scapegoats, starting
with the fire in Rome in AD 64. Given the precedent set by Caesar at the
capital of Rome, it is entirely plausible that a local governor used Christians
as a scapegoat for some political reason as well. Or, if there was some local
religious disturbance, such as the kind that lead to the persecution of Paul or
the death of Jesus, a provincial governor may have put Andrew to death.
Determining the
likelihood of the fate of Andrew is a difficult task. The evidence is clearly
not as demonstrative as for Peter, Paul, and James. Ursula Hall says, “We may
conclude that, while it is not impossible that our St Andrew was put to death
by the Roman authorities at Patras, there is not much of a context in which to
set this event, and no positive evidence to support it.”57 Her conclusion
is understandable and is certainly a reasonable inference from the evidence.
Yet where I disagree is over her conclusion that there is “no positive evidence
to support it.” The evidence is admittedly weaker than for other apostles, but
there is at least some evidence that cannot be simply dismissed. I cannot get
myself to believe that the earliest traditions of the works and fate of the
apostle Andrew, an important and well-known figure in the first and second
centuries, were entirely fabricated and not linked to a reliable tradition.
The consistent and
relatively early account of his fate by crucifixion cannot simply be dismissed.
Some accounts differ as to where he was crucified, but there is general
agreement that he died in this manner.58 There is no early contrary tradition claiming a
natural death, which for an apostle as prominent as Andrew, is not
insignificant. Minimally, it must be deemed at least plausible that Andrew died
as a martyr. While some scholars may be inclined to take a more critical view,
the evidence seems to point ever so slightly towards the following conclusions:
1.
Andrew engaged in missions—very probably
true (Acts of Andrew; Origen Commentary on Genesis, vol. 3 in Eusebius, Eccl.
Hist 3.1; Teachings of the Apostles; Andrew had a missionary mindset (John
1:41, 6:8-9, 12:22); geographical and chronological fit of various traditions;
archaeological support; evidence the apostles generally engaged in missions).
2.
Andrew went to Greece—more probable than
not (Acts of Andrew; Philastrius, de Haeresibus liber 88; Gregory of Nazianzen
Oration 33.11; Jerome Ad Marcellum; Evodius de Fide contra Manichaeos;
Theodoretus Commentary on Psalm 116)
3.
Andrew experienced martyrdom—more
probable than not (Acts of Andrew; Hippolytus on the Twelve Apostles 2; Peter
Chrysologus of Ravenna, Sermon 133: “Saint Andrew the Apostle”; lack of competing
narrative; acceptance of tradition in the east and west).
1 Some have suggested that Andrew and Peter must have
been financially poor fisherman, unlike the Zebedee brothers, since Matthew
does not mention that they own a boat. This is contradicted by Luke 5:3, and
also goes against the intentions of the passage. R. T. France notes, “So to use
this difference of terminology to propose a social stratification, with Simon
and Andrew belonging to the poorer shore-fishermen while the Zebedee family
were more affluent and owned a boat, goes well beyond any clear hint in
Matthew’s wording” (R. T. France, The Gospel of Matthew [Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 2007], 147).
2 Andreas Köstenberger, “Apologetics Commentary on the
Gospel of John,” The Holman Apologetics Commentary on the Bible, ed. Jeremy
Royal Howard (Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2013), 515.
3 Craig S. Keener, A Commentary on the Gospel of
Matthew (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 148-50.
4 Scholars have wondered at how Andrew so quickly came
to the assurance that Jesus was the Christ. It is not possible that Jesus did a
special miracle for him, because John 2:11 says his first miracle was turning
water to wine. Most likely it was the proclamation of John the Baptist along
with the unique teachings and personality of Jesus. See Everett Falconer
Harrison, “The Son of God among the Sons of Men,” Bibliotheca Sacra 102
(April-June 1945): 170-78.
5 C. Bernard Ruffin, The Twelve: The Lives of the
Apostles After Calvary (Huntington, IN: Our Sunday Visitor, 1997), 61.
6 Emil G. Kraeling, The Disciples (Skokie, IL: Rand
McNally, 1966), 30.
7 Patrick notes that while Andrew is the faithful
disciple of John 1-12, he disappears in the rest of the book, which suggests he
is the Beloved Disciple. He claims that “when the Gospel text is analyzed apart
from the context of Synoptic influence and Irenaean apology, the Beloved
Disciple of the Johannine circle is, on the evidence of the text alone, Andrew,
Peter’s brother, an identification perhaps too obvious to have merited much
attention, but a fact members of the Johannine circle would have assumed”
(James Patrick, Andrew of Bethsaida and the Johannine Circle [New York: Peter
Lang, 2013], 58-59).
8 Ibid., 68.
9 Colin G. Kruse, John: An Introduction and
Commentary, ed. Leon Morris (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 2003), 264.
10 William LaSor, Great Personalities of the New
Testament (Westwood, NJ: Revell, 1952), 58.
11 Ronald Brownrigg, The Twelve Apostles (New York:
Macmillan, 1974), 46-47.
12 There are Coptic and Arabic traditions stating
Andrew was persecuted by the Anthropofagi. There are also traditions he was
persecuted in Sinope, Thessalonica, and Patras. See George Alexandrou and Nun
Nectaria McLees, “The Astonishing Missionary Journeys of the Apostle Andrew,”
Road to Emmaus 4 (2010): 48.
13 “Commentary on Genesis,” in Eusebius, Ecclesiastical
History , Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace,
vol. 3 (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1890), 1.
14 Tamara Rice, The Scythians (New York: Frederick A.
Praeger, 1957), 23.
15 Ibid., 85-86.
16 Tertullian, An Answer to the Jews VII.
17 Francis Dvornik, The Idea of Apostolicity in
Byzantium and the Legend of the Apostle Andrew (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1958), 199.
18 Stewart Lamont, The Life of Saint Andrew (London:
Hodder & Stoughton, 1997), 41.
19 William Barclay, The Master’s Men (London: SCM,
1960), 43.
20 At the time of this writing, Alexandrou had not yet
published his book. He has worked with over fifty different languages to
chronicle all the traditions surrounding the travels of the apostle Andrew and
to see if they could plausibly fit together. He revealed some of his preliminary
findings in his article. See Alexandrou and McLees, “The Astonishing Missionary
Journeys,” 3-55.
21 Ibid., 13.
22 Ibid.
23 The one exception Alexandrou noted is the tradition
that Andrew went to Scotland. While he observes that it is not physically
impossible, the cult of Saint Andrew likely originated in the seventh century.
See Marinell Ash and Dauvit Brown, “The Adoption of Saint Andrew as Patron
Saint of Scotland,” Medieval Art and Architecture in the Diocese of St Andrews,
ed. John Higgit (London: The British Archaeological Association, 1994), 16-24.
For a dated but still insightful analysis of the traditions surrounding Andrew
in Scotland, see Peter Ross, Saint Andrew: The Disciple, the Missionary, the
Patron Saint (New York: The Scottish American, 1886).
24 According to tradition, Andrew visited Georgia three
times. On his third journey, he was joined by Simon the Zealot and Matthias.
See Giuli Alasania, “Twenty Centuries of Christianity in Georgia,” IBSU
International Refereed Multi-Disciplinary Scientific Journal 1 (2006): 117-18.
25 Besides the Acts of Andrew, four other sources
mention the sojourn of Andrew in Greece before the dawn of the fourth century,
including Philastrius, de Haeresibus liber 88; Gregory of Nazianzen, Oration
33.11; Jerome, Ad Marcellum; Evodius de Fide contra Manichaeos; Theodoretus,
Interpretatio in Psalmos 116. See Peter M. Peterson, Andrew, Brother of Simon
Peter: His History and His Legends (Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 1958),
8-13.
26 Ursula Hall, The Cross of St. Andrew (Edinburgh:
Birlinn, 2006), 13.
27 William Cureton, Ancient Syriac Documents (London: Williams
and Norgate, 1864), 34.
28 Thomas E. Schmidt, The Apostles after Acts: A Sequel
(Eugene, OR: Cascade, 2013), 154.
29 Lamont, The Life of Saint Andrew, 43.
30 There is an ancient tradition that Andrew arrived in
Samtskhe (Georgia), performed a number of miracles, converted many of the
population, and left behind the icon of the Holy Virgin in Atskuri. After
considering the archaeological evidence lying behind this tradition, Vakhtang
Licheli concludes, “The possibility of the arrival of the Apostle Andrew to
Samtskhe wholly supported archaeologically” (Vakhtang Licheli, “St. Andrew in Samtskhe—Archaeological
Proof?” in Ancient Christianity in the Caucasus, ed. Tamila Mgaloblishvili [New
York: Curzon, 1998], 37).
31 François Bovon has noted that in encouraging
Maximilla to resist the sexual advances of her husband, Aegeates would reverse
Eve’s fault and allow Andrew to reverse Adam’s sin. Thus, sex is directly tied
to original sin. The ActAndr thus has the same encratic tendencies common among
the Apocryphal Acts. See François Bovon, “The Words of Life in the Acts of the
Apostle Andrew,” Harvard Theological Review 87 (1994): 142.
32 The ActAndr does not mention the “St. Andrew’s
cross,” which is shaped as an x. That was first associated with him in the
fourteenth century. See Frederick W. Norris, “Acts of Andrew,” in Encyclopedia
of Early Christianity, ed. Everett Ferguson (New York: Garland, 1997), 1:11.
33 Schneemelcher prefers a date closer to AD 150.
Elliott says an early third century date is “probable.” See Wilhelm
Schneemelcher, ed., New Testament Apocrypha, ed. and trans. R. McL. Wilson (Louisville:
Westminster John Knox, 2003), 2:115; and J. K. Elliott, The Apocryphal New
Testament (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 236.
34 Peterson traces the Egyptian, Byzantine, Latin, and
Syriac traditions of Andrew and argues they all stem from some version of the
ActAndr. Before AD 500, there is also a record of the death of Andrew in the
writings of Gregory of Nazianzen (d. c. AD 389) and St. Peter Chrysologus of
Ravenna (c. AD 380-450) in his sermon 133: “Peter mounted a tree and Andrew a
cross. In this way they who longed to suffer with Christ showed forth in
themselves the kind and manner of his suffering; redeemed upon a cross, they
were made perfect for their palms. Thus, even if Andrew is second in dignity,
he is not inferior in regard to the reward or the suffering” (Peter M.
Peterson, The Fathers of the Church: St. Peter Chrysologus Sermons, St.
Valerian Homilies, trans. George E. Ganss [Washington, DC: The Catholic
University of America Press, 2004], 220). After AD 500, there are a significant
number of sources in the West and East that attest to Andrew’s death by
crucifixion in Patras. See Peterson, Andrew, Brother of Simon Peter, 14-23,
40-43.
35 The author of the Missale Gothicum provides specific
details regarding the tradition that Andrew preached and died as a martyr in
Achaia. And yet it is likely dependent upon a Latin version of the ActAndr that
predates the Book of Miracles (Miracula sancti Andreae apostoli) by Gregory of
Tours, written in the second half of the sixth century. See Els Rose,
“Apocryphal Tradition in Medieval Latin Liturgy: A New Research Project
Illustrated with the Case of the Apostle Andrew,” Apocrypha 15 (2004): 115-38.
36 Hippolytus is often considered one of the most
important church figures of the third century, but there is substantial debate
about what texts are genuinely his and which are spurious. See David Dunbar,
“The Problem of Hippolytus of Rome: A Study in Historical-Critical
Reconstruction,” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 25 (1982): 63-74.
Also see Ulrich Volp, “Hippolytus,” Expository Times 120 (2009): 521-29.
37 Pseudo-Hippolytus, Hippolytus on the Twelve, as
cited in Translations of the Writings of the Fathers down to A.D. 325: Fathers
of the Third Century, The Ante-Nicene Fathers, ed. Alexander Roberts and James
Donaldson, rev. A. Cleveland Coxe, vol. 5 (Buffalo: The Christian Literature
Company, 1885), 255.
38 There are different traditions that report Andrew
died “on an olive tree,” or “one a tree” or simply by crucifixion. There are
even some later traditions that Andrew was crucified upside down.
39 Schneemelcher, New Testament Apocrypha, 2:104.
40 The most reliable translation is The Acts of Andrew
and the Acts of Andrew and Matthias in the City of Cannibals by Dennis
MacDonald. While he is confident that his reconstruction is largely accurate,
he admits it is “a conjectural reconstruction based on literary debris.” But he
does provide an important qualification: “At some points the text is secure—as
in the case of Andrew’s martyrdom—but most materials printed here are textual
offspring, more or less resembling their parents but not to be mistaken for
them” (Dennis R. MacDonald, The Acts of Andrew and the Acts of Andrew and
Matthias in the City of Cannibals [Atlanta: Scholars, 1990], ix).
41 Fernando Lautaro Roig Lanzilotta, “The Apocryphal
Acts of Andrew: A New Approach to the Character, Thought and Meaning of the
Primitive Text” (PhD. diss., Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, 2004), 348.
42 The early texts that contain a few quick notes about
the death of Andrew include the Epitome, Vita, VitaEsc and VitaParis.
43 Hans Josef Klauck, The Apocryphal Acts of the
Apostles, trans. Brian McNeil (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2008), 114.
44 Johannes Quasten, Patrology: The Beginnings of
Patristic Literature (Westminster, MD: Newman, 1950), 1:138.
45 Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History 3.25.6, as cited in
Eusebius: Church History, Life of Constantine the Great, and Oration in Praise
of Constantine, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry
Wace, vol. 1 (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1890), 157.
46 MacDonald, The Acts of Andrew, 22-47.
47 After noting similarities between the ActAndr and
the AAM, Hilhorst and Lalleman provide eleven substantial differences between
the two documents. They argue the AAM was likely written two centuries later
and conclude, “Thus, there is no obstacle to come to the only possible
conclusion: that the AAM was not part of the original AA ” (A. Hilhorst and
Pieter J. Lalleman, “The Acts of Andrew: Is It Part of the Original Acts of
Andrew?” in The Apocryphal Acts of Andrew, ed. Jan N. Bremmer [Leuven, Belgium:
Peeters, 2000], 13).
48 It is true that the key figures in the ActAndr are
unverifiable historically. But does the lack of evidence for the historicity of
any of the key figures in the ActAndr imply they are entirely fictitious and
that the ActAndr is without any historical merit? Key figures in ActAndr may
indeed be fictitious, but it seems an overreach to affirm that the book is
entirely indifferent to historical considerations because of the lack of
verification for Aegeates, Maximilla, Stratocles, and other key figures.
Skeptics dismissed the Acts of Thomas (which was likely written even later)
with similar derision, but it turns out Gondophares (and possibly other figures
in the narrative) really existed. The same may be true for the ActAndr.
49 Pieter J. Lalleman, “The Acts of Andrew and the Acts
of John,” in The Apocryphal Acts of Andrew, 141.
50 Dvornik, The Idea of Apostolicity, 196.
51 Ibid., 211.
52 E. A. Wallis Budge, The Contendings of the Apostles:
Being the Histories and the Lives and Martyrdoms and Deaths of the Twelve
Apostles and Evangelists (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1935), 181-85. There
is also an Arabic version of a Coptic original stating Andrew died in the East
in Lydda, Israel. While there are a few different traditions about where he
died, it is interesting that there is nearly unanimous agreement that he died
as a martyr by crucifixion.
53 My thanks to Paul Maier for drawing this to my
attention in a personal email on January 22, 2014. As an example, Eusebius
mentions Hippolytus of Rome (Ecclesiastical History 6.20, 22, 39) without
mentioning the traditions of his martyrdom. Hippolytus was probably a disciple
of Irenaeus, and thus may have been linked back to the apostles through
Polycarp and John. Justin Martyr is an interesting example as well. He was
executed during the reign of Antoninus Pius. While Eusebius recognizes Justin
as a martyr he gives no details of his death in the Ecclesiastical History.
54 Although speculative, it is certainly possible
Origen heard of the tradition regarding Andrew from Hippolytus (d. AD 235).
Origen heard Hippolytus preach on at least one occasion during his visit to
Rome in AD 212. Hippolytus on the Twelve, a work that is attributed to
Hippolytus, although many consider it spurious, says, “Andrew preached to the
Scythians and Thracians, and was crucified, suspended on an olive tree, at
Patrae, a town of Achaia; and there too he was buried” Pseudo-Hippolytus,
Hippolytus on the Twelve, as cited in Translations of the Writings of the
Fathers down to A.D. 325: Fathers of the Third Century, The Ante-Nicene
Fathers, ed. Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, rev. A. Cleveland Coxe, vol.
5 (Buffalo: The Christian Literature Company, 1885), 255. Interestingly,
Hippolytus also mentions that Peter was crucified upside down by Nero (1).
Origen is typically considered the first theologian who mentions this as a
historical fact (outside the Acts of Peter). This may indicate some early
connection between Hippolytus and Origen regarding the fate of the apostles.
55 The evidence Lamont provides to support his claim
that Luke wrote his Gospel in Achaia is the ancient Lukan prologue, which
claims the gospel was written in the regions of Achaia.
56 Lamont, The Life of Saint Andrew, 42.
57 Hall, The Cross of Saint Andrew, 14.
58 It is difficult to assess the merits of Andrew’s
death specifically by crucifixion. In one sense, it could have been invented so
as to make his fate similar to both Jesus and his brother Andrew. There was
certainly a tendency in the third and fourth centuries to give the apostles
“fitting” deaths. On the other hand, there are multiple accounts of his
crucifixion, even if they differ as to the location and of whether or not he
was executed on a cross or a tree. Death by crucifixion shows up in the
earliest account, the ActAndr. Crucifixion was a common penalty for criminals
and other enemies of the state and so it is entirely believable Andrew was
crucified for either creating disturbances or upsetting the proconsul, as the
ActAndr reports. Yet the tradition Andrew was crucified on a X-shaped cross is
almost certainly false. It plays no role in the ActAndr. There is no evidence
the Romans crucified with such a cross, and the earliest record of the X-shaped
cross being used for his death comes from the twelfth century. Ibid., 31, 73,
101.
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