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About St. John Knowledge of the life of St. John of
Patmos (also known as the 'Theologian' or the 'Divine'), the author of the
Book of Revelation, which includes the letters to the seven churches of
Asia Minor, mostly comes from apocryphal stories recorded after his death.
Christian tradition identifies him with Other New Testament figures of
the same name, St. John the Evangelist, the traditional author of the
Fourth Gospel who is also claimed to be St. John the Apostle. The accounts
of the Gospels agree that the latter is the son of Zebedee; together with
his brother James (the Greater), he decided to follow Christ while fishing
in the lake Galilee. He became one of Christ's closest disciples and is
said to have been with him on various significant occasions such as the
Transfiguration and the Crucifixion. According to the Fourth Gospel, also
known as the Gospel of John (In 19:26-27), on the cross:
When Jesus saw his mother and the disciple there whom he loved, he said to
his mother, Woman, behold, your son. ' Then he said to the disciple, 'Behold,
your mother. ' And from that hour the disciple took her into his home.
The disciple whom he loved is thought to have been St. John. He is said to
have been martyred like his brother St. James and buried in Jerusalem.
Another tradition holds that taking the Virgin with him, St. John traveled
to Ephesus in Asia Minor, was exiled to the island of Patmos, wrote the
Fourth Gospel and the Book of Revelation there and finally returned to
Ephesus where he died and was buried. The second half of the first century
was full of disasters for the early Christians. The Romans at first
regarded Christianity as a new Jewish movement. Like the others it 'was
expected to disappear or survive as a sect after the crucifixion of Christ.
When this did not happen and Christians began to challenge (probably not
in quantity but in essence) the accepted doctrine of the Synagogue and
Rome, its leaders were caught and eliminated. St. Stephen and St. James
the less (the traditional brother of Christ) were stoned to death and St.
James the Greater put to the sword. St. Peter and St. Paul were taken to
Rome and executed. Many believers had to leave Palestine and seek shelter
in other countries. It is during this period, probably during the Jewish
Revolt (66-70) which ended with the destruction of the Second Temple in
Jerusalem that St. John, taking the Virgin with him, traveled to Ephesus .
At that time Ephesus probably had a population of over hundred and fifty
thousand, which must have included a large number of Jews, and about a
thousand or more Jewish and Gentile Christians. Following the Jewish
Revolt, Jews and Jewish Christians of the diaspora began to lose their
favorable position in Roman eyes and fall into disgrace. To the discontent
of the Jews, the Gentile Christians, since they had not participated in
the revolt, were treated better. However by this time the solid Christian
communities established during the first missionary wave had been weakened
by dissensions and declining numbers. On arriving in Ephesus , St. John
was shocked to see how some Christians had compromised with pagan
practices, a situation which he refers to in his first letter of the
Revelation. This is addressed to the Christians in Ephesus .
The first part of the major ancient source which is thought to have
narrated the arrival and first stay of St. John in Ephesus is lost. What
survives relates mostly to his return from Patmos exile; how he began
proclaiming the Gospel in Ephesus , his contests with both pagans and
heretics among his own community, his miracles and his death there.
In the Book of Revelation St. John does not give any detailed information
about the cause of his exile. He merely says that he was exiled to Patmos
on account of the word of God and the testimony of Christ (Rv1 :9).
Preaching was not a capital crime which would lead to banishment. As long
as they did not cause disturbances the Roman administration allowed the
people under their rule to worship whatever god or cult they chose.
Christians were not regarded as criminals in Roman eyes but members of an
illicit religion.
When he was serving as the governor of the province of Bithynia, the
younger Pliny wrote to Trajan asking the emperor's advice on what to do
with the Christians whose numbers kept on increasing. The governor
admitted that although he executed Christians as his predecessors had
done, he did not know the exact nature of their crime. Pliny's letter is
the first documented account of Christian presence in Anatolia. Trajan,
although in the course of time he changed his opinion, did not regard the
Christians as dangerous.
In Ephesus it is probable that St. John was accused of being an agitator.
Being the most prominent figure of his group he might have been chosen to
serve as an example. The worst punishment reserved for criminals not
sentenced to death, was to strip them of their civil rights and material
possessions and banish them to a remote corner of the empire or to an
isolated spot. If St. John had been accused of refusing to sacrifice to
the imperial cult, especially the cult of Domitian (81-96) which was then
established in Ephesus , this would have been a capital crime punishable
by death. The huge edifice to the south of the state agora in Ephesus was
the first temple of the imperial cult erected in Anatolia and its impact
must have been on the Christians in this city.
A late Greek tradition has it that after arriving in Ephesus the story of
St. John's miracles reached the ears of Domitian and he was called to Rome.
Here his power was tested in front of the emperor by making him drink a
cup of poison which killed a criminal but did not harm him, and by asking
him to raise a girl who had supposedly been slain by an evil spirit.
Domitian, impressed by what he had witnessed, decided only to banish him
to Patmos. His banishment lasted until the death of the emperor.
A tradition popular only among Latin authors, relates that St. John was
first taken to Rome as prisoner upon the order of the emperor and cast
into a cauldron of hot oil at the Latin Gate (the origin of the feast of
St. John 'Port Latin' or at the 'Latin Gate,' May 6), but he came out
unscathed.
The place chosen to banish St. John was one of the volcanic islands
scattered in the Aegean about eighty kilometers south of Ephesus , and was
used as a penal colony. A later Byzantine chronicle refers to the island
as being 'deserted and uncultivated, covered with and made impassable by
thorns and shrubs, and by reason of its aridity completely barren', St.
John was exiled to Patmos together with his young disciple Prochorus, one
of the deacons of the Jerusalem church (Acts 6:5). On the way to Patmos he
rescued a boy who fell from the ship into the sea. The length of his exile
is claimed to have been one and half, or five or fifteen years. During his
stay there he did not stop preaching the Gospel and converting the
inhabitants. A tradition has it that when his activity was heard at the
Temple of Apollo, the priests asked help from a famous magician called
Kynops whose most popular trick was to jump into the sea and come out
after a while, unharmed. In front of the witnesses challenging St. John,
he did the same.
St. John extended his arms in the form of a cross and prayed '0 Thou, who
didst grant to Moses by this similitude to overthrow the Amalek, 0 Lord
Jesus Christ, bring down Kynops to the deep of the sea; let him never more
behold this sun, nor converse with living men', After a short while the
petrified body of the magician surfaced as a rock on the water a short
distance away. The local fishermen claim that to this day the bad taste of
the shellfish caught around the rock derives from this magician. On Patmos
St. John was unchained and free to go wherever he wished. It was in a
grotto on Patmos that he wrote the Fourth Gospel and received the visions
of the last book of the New Testament known as the Book of Revelation.
Some of the imagery, for instance:
Then the sky was divided like a torn scroll curling up, and every
mountain and island was moved from its place
(Rv 6:14)
or
Every island fled, and mountains disappeared
(Rv 16:20)
is thought to have been inspired by the island. The Book of Revelation
gives few facts about St. John's life, except for the fact that he had a
Jewish background and probably a priestly ancestry. So far as is known, he
remained celibate. In art he is often shown as an old man on Patmos,
seated and writing his book, standing or sitting in front of a cave and
looking up into heaven, and writing or dictating to his disciple Prochorus.
Sometimes he is shown sitting alone writing the Fourth Gospel. In such
representations the inscription on the Gospel or open scroll in his hand
or in front of his disciple Prochorus reads In the beginning was the Word
(In 1 : 1). His attribute is an eagle, because his words carry the reader
up to heaven and paper, ink, and a scroll are the common accessories of
such compositions.
St. John's Patmos exile terminated with Domitian's death. However, his
ship was wrecked on leaving Patmos and swimming on a cork St. John landed
at Miletos ; from there he went to Ephesus. Afterwards he is said to have
governed the churches in Asia and given advice to their elders until his
death in the reign of Trajan (98-117). The apocryphal tradition mentions
that one day while preaching in the Temple of Artemis the altar and other
objects in the temple and half of the temple itself, collapsed. Once he
was challenged by Aristodemus, high priest of the Temple of Artemis, the
Roman Diana, to show the superiority of the Christians' God by drinking
out of a poisoned cup. When St. John made the sign of cross over the cup,
the poison emerged in the shape of a serpent, and he drained the vessel.
St. John also restored to life two criminals under sentence of death who
had been made to test beforehand the result of the poison. Having
witnessed the miracle both Aristodemus and the proconsul of Ephesus are
said to have accepted Christian faith. Among the other miracles he is said
to have performed in Ephesus was the raising of Drusiana, a widow with
whom he had lodged before he was exiled to Patmos. As her funeral passed
by she sat up in her coffin at St. John's command and went home to prepare
a meal for him. During his residence in Ephesus he is claimed to have gone
to Smyrna where he won St. Polycarp to Christianity and made him the
bishop of the city.
Another tradition claims that during his last years St. John built a hut
on the isolated Ayasuluk hill and lived there and wrote the fourth book of
the New Testament known by his name. He is thought to have died at a great
age, claimed to have been a hundred and twenty, around the year 100 and to
be buried on the hill. This may be the reason why he is sometimes depicted
as a very old man with a long white beard, even when he is in the early
years of his life in Palestine.
According to tradition, after his tomb was dug, he laid himself down in it
and gave up his spirit. The following day his body was not found because
presumably he had ascended to heaven. Another tradition claims that only
his sandals were found and the earth over his grave was moving as if
stirred by his breathing. The Latin tradition has it that after his prayer
there appeared over him a great light at which no one could look; then he
laid himself down and gave up his ghost. Immediately manna issued from his
tomb and continued issuing forth. By the end of the second century most of
the churches in western Anatolia regarded him as their founder.
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