Review:The baptism of the Holy Spirit
(Aramaic roots I)
Jesus said, "There
are many standing at the door, but those who are alone
will enter the bridal suite." (Thomas 75)
According to Mr. Sasagu Arai, author of
the Japanese version of The Gospel of Thomas, 'nymphon,'
the original word of 'bridal suite,' literally means
'the place of marriage' where is performed the 'Holy
Marriage' liturgy, that is, the liturgy for separated a
male and a female to restore to the primitiveness which
has not been split into male and female through Gnosis.
Nymphon is given the highest status among the 'five
liturgies of the Gospel of Philip.' The 'bridal suite'
is a symbol of the kingdom where a male and a female are
promised to enter as 'a single one.' 'A single one'
means 'one who transcends division and recovers the
original integration (propator = original Self) in
himself or herself.' And the reign of this 'original
Self' means realization of the kingdom of God. In the
Gospel of Thomas, the phrase of 'single one' is
repeatedly used as a keyword.
Aramaic roots
Now, if the Hebrew version of the Old
Testament was established through the nation-building
myth of nomads, who had frequently went back and forth
in the region from Mesopotamia to Egypt, was grafted
with Sumerian mythology, typified by the legends of the
paradise of Timrun and Babylonian flood, it seems that,
of course,
Greco-Roman culture greatly influenced the
formation of the New Testament written in Greek
language, which is considered a new salvation
contract for Gentiles, who recognize themselves as
grafted into Abraham's family tree under the New
Covenant, but it is not possible to forget Aramaic roots
also influenced it. It is known that Jesus also used
Aramaic regularly. Therefore, I will examine the Aramaic
roots of Christianity and deliver the results in four
parts from this time.
The Abrahamic people themselves used
Aramaic before Hebrew. In fact, Aramaic was the generic
term for the languages of the nomads in the Mesopotamian
region, including Assyria and Babylonia, and the Hebrew
language, which was used in the Kingdom of Judah, was
Canaan dialect of Aramaic.
East-west division of
evangelism
According to Mr. Shlomo Sand, Professor
of history at Tel Aviv University, the Jewish population
in Palestine was only about 800 thousand in the 1st
century. In contrast, the Jewish population in the world
was about 4 million. There might have been much more
huge number of reserve army of believers who had not
been circumcised. There was a robust community of such
gentile Judaists especially in Rome.
Thus Paul, Peter, and John went westward
and were missionary to Greece and Rome, but Thomas,
Bartholomew (Nathanael), and Thaddaeus (one of the
Seventy Disciples but not the Twelve Apostles, that is,
brother of Thomas) were reportedly missionary to
Assyria, India, and China immediately after Jesus'
death.
According to Jerome (347-420), one of
early church fathers, Bartholomew died in Albanopolis,
Armenia after evangelizing in India.
Thaddaeus was instructed by his elder
brother Thomas and evangelized in Assyria's Edessa
(Ulfa) and Parthia. Edessa was the home city of the
Assyrian Eastern Church and on a second-century coin
found in the area is depicted a portrait of King Edessa
wearing a crown with a cross. Bishops existed in 19
cities in Assyria in 95 C.E. Christianity spread to
Media, Persia and Bactria in 161 C.E.
The east wind overwhelms the west
wind
While it is known that Jesus used
Aramaic regularly, there were native Jewish communities
using Aramaic in the east, especially in the Assyrian
region. Thus missionary work in the east achieved more
than in the west. Christian states were born in Edessa
and Armenia before Rome adopted Christianity as a state
religion and Eastern Churches were formed. According to
Protestant Bible commentator Mr. Arimasa Kubo, who was
the first pastor of the Ikebukuro-Nishi Church, The
United Church of Christ in Japan, "The number of
Christians in the East was far greater than the number
of Christians in the West from 800 AD to the 14th
century."
St. Thomas Legend
According to the social anthropologist
Yoshio Sugimoto's 'A Genealogical Study of St. Thomas in
South India,' the Synoptic Gospels (the Gospels of
Matthew, Luke and Mark) mention Thomas as one of the
Twelve Apostles, but Thomas is not his real name, but
the Aramaic nickname given to him by Jesus and means
twin which is Didimo (s) in Greek. His real name was
Judas.
According to Mr. Sugimoto, the name of
Thomas only appears in the list of the Twelve Apostles
in the Synoptic Gospels and is mentioned four times in
the Gospel of John, he is known only as 'the Incredulity
of Thomas' and 'the doubting Thomas' and his character
is not clear in the Western Christian world.
On the other hand, in the Eastern
Christian Church, the legend of St. Thomas has two
characteristics. One is 'Thomas the Knower,' or Thomas
who preaches Gnostic teachings. St. Thomas occupies an
important position in the Gnostic tradition of Eastern
Christianity and stands opposite St. Peter in Western
Christianity. The other one is 'Thomas the Wanderer,'
that is, Thomas as the evangelist and founder of the
Eastern Church. Legend has it that Thomas traveled to
Syria, Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, Pakistan, and finally
China and even Brazil and Mexico.
Edessa
The center of St. Thomas's religion is
believed to have been in Edessa, Mesopotamia (currently
located in Urfa, Turkey). The old name of the city was
Urhai (Orhai), and it became an independent state for a
while (132 BC - 242 AD) after being named Edessa in 303
BC. The city was later occupied by the Roman Empire, and
was called Urfa by Turkey in 1146. Regarding the
introduction of Christianity to this region, it was said
that St. Thomas himself had been sent and had carried
out a ministry, but recently it is presumed that Thomas
sent his brother Thaddaeus. Although Edessa flourished
as the center of the Eastern Syrian Church, the invasion
of Muslims in the seventh century called off its
glorious history. In the city, a church of St. Thomas,
containing the relics of the apostle Thomas, had been
built in the 4th century, but was destroyed by
Turkey.
Mr. Kubo says, "According to historians,
St. Thomas traveled to Assyria around 35 C.E., two years
after Jesus' ascension, and then went on a mission to
India. He reportedly landed at Cranganore in Kerala,
built seven churches, thereafter went
to Madras in Tamil Nadu, and then left to Beijing (北京,
Chang'an 長安?), China in 62 C.E. Thomas, who had returned
to India again after his mission in China, was martyred
in 68-75 C.E., and was buried in Mylapore (Chennai
district of Tamil Nadu). Thomas was listed as the first
Archbishop of the Assyrian Eastern Church (Syrian
Church). Indian Christians have called themselves Thomas
Christians. Assyrian Eastern Church was called Jing-jiao
(景教: Luminous Religion) in China."
Why no one enters it?
It is possible that the verse 75 of the
Gospel of Thomas was a pair of the verse 74.
He said, "Lord,
there are many around the drinking trough, but there is
nothing in the well." (Thomas 74)
The drinking trough is 'a spring of
water welling up to eternal life,' that is, the one
which is promised that if one drinks from it, he or she
can become like Jesus. And it, like 'bridal suite,' is a
symbol of 'original Self' and refers to 'the Kingdom.'
Origenes Adamantius (182?-251), who have won the high
honor of the greatest early Christian theologian, asks
"Why so many people are around the fountain, but no one
enters it?" in his writing 'Against Celsus.'
After having been preaching for more
than 40 years in various parts of India, Buddha said to
Sariputra, one of the ten great his disciples,
"Shariputra, the truth existed as universality within
individual events and things in this world, in other
words, the real image, can only be understood and shared
among Buddhas but not among ordinary men. It is useless
to explain to the ordinary. However, now I, joyful and
fearless, in the midst of the bodhisattvas, honestly
discarding expedient means, will preach only the
unsurpassed Way. (Lotus Sutra Chapter 2: Expedient
Means)" Then he preached the unsurpassed Way, that is,
the Lotus Sutra.
The unsurpassed Way of Buddhism is that
only Buddha can understand and he or she, who can drink
from 'a spring of water welling up to eternal life,' is
only one who can marry Jesus and become 'a single one.'
Therefore, it is not surprising that many people gather
at church, but none enter the spring.
However, Zen Master Sengcan Jianzhi
(僧璨鑑智?-606), who is known as the Third Chinese Patriarch
of Zen Buddhism, said in his book 《Xinxinming (信心銘:
Inscribed on the Believing Mind)》,
"The supreme Way is not difficult; it
simply dislikes choosing." Indeed, Christians say,
"Just declare the name of Christ. Salvation in it,"
While the Founder of Japanese Soto Zen Buddhism (日本曹洞宗)
Dogen (道元), the Founder of Japanese Hokke Buddhism
(日本法華宗) Nichiren (日蓮) and the Founder of Japanese Jodo
Shinshu (日本浄土真宗) Shinran (親鸞) recommended just to sit
straight, chant the title of the sutra and invoke Amida
Buddha respectively. <To be continued>
What is "Baptism with The Holy
Spirit"?
According to the dialectic of the Gospel
of John,
【Thesis】"A man can possess eternal life
through accepting testimony of the Son of man and being
baptized by him." (John 5:24)
【Anti-thesis】But "The one who comes from
the earth cannot accept the testimony by one from
heaven." (John 3:32)
How then can a man possess eternal
life?
【Synthesis】"If you want to be baptized
with the Holy Spirit, you can just go back to the word
which was with God in the beginning (John 1:1) and
certify that God is truthful. (John 3:33)"
When he said, "You are Huichao," Zen
Master Fayan thrusted vivid Self in Huichao in front of
his eyes.
Purchase
here
One world:AD-SEAnews
Your Comments / Unsubscribe
SEAnews Messenger
SEAnewsFacebook
SEAnews eBookstore
SEAnews world circulation