Melito, servant of Christ, bishop of the church of Sardis, to the venerable brethren in the Lord appointed at Laodicea, in peace greeting. I remember that I have often written of one Leucius, who, having along with ourselves associated with the apostles, turned aside through alienated feekings and a rash soul from the path of rectitude, and inserted very many things in his books about the acts of the apostles. Of their powers, indeed, he said many and diverse things; but of their teaching he gave a very false account, affirming that they taught otherwise than they did, and establishing his own impiouis statements, as it were, by their words. Nor did he think this to be enough, he even vitiated, by his impious writing, the assumption of the blessed ever-virgin Mary, the mother of God, to such a degree that it would be impious not only to read it in the church of God, but even to hear it. When you ask, therefore, what we heard from the apostle John, we simply write this, and have directed it to your brotherhood: believing not the strange dogmas hatched by heretics, but the Father in the Son, the Son in the Father, while the threefold person of the Godhead and undivided substance remains: believing not that two human natures were created, a good and a bad, but that one good nature was created by a good God, which by the craft of the serpent was vitiated through sin, and restored through the grace of Christ.
1. Therefore, when the Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ was hanging on the tree fastened by the nails of
the cross for the life of the whole world, He saw about the cross
His mother standing, and John the evangelist, whom He peculiarly
loved above the rest of the apostles, because he alone of them
was a virgin in the body. He gave him, therefore, the charge of
holy Mary, saying to him: Behold thy mother! and saying, to her:
Behold thy son! From that hour the! holy mother of God remained
specially in the care of John, as long as she had her habitation
in this life. And when the apostles had divided the world by lot
for preaching, she settled in the house of his parents near Mount
Olivet.
2. In the second year, therefore, after Christ had vanquished
death, and ascended up into heaven, on a certain day, Mary, burning
with a longing for Christ, began to weep alone, within the shelter
of her abode. And, behold, an angel, shining in a dress of great
light, stood before her and gave utterance to the words of salutation
saying: Hail! thou blessed by the Lord, receive the salutation
of Him who commanded safety to Jacob by His prophets. Behold,
said He a palm branch I have brought it to thee from the
paradise of the Lord which thou wilt cause to be carried
before thy bier, when on the third day thou shalt be taken up
from the body. For, lo, thy Son awaits thee with thrones and angels,
and all the powers of heaven. Then Mary said to the angel: I beg
that all the apostles of the Lord Jesus Christ he assembled to
me. To whom the angel said: Behold, today, by the power of my
Lord Jesus Christ, all the apostles will come to thee. And Mary
says to him: I ask that thou send upon me thy blessing, that no
power of the lower world may withstand me in that hour in which
my soul shall go out of my body, and that I may not see the prince
of darkness. And the angel said: No power indeed of the lower
world will hurt thee; and thy Lord God, whose servant and messenger
I am, hath given thee eternal blessing; but do not think that
the privilege of not seeing the prince of darkness is to be given
thee by me, but by Him whom thou hast carried in thy womb; for
to Him belongeth power over all for ever and ever. Thus saying,
the angel departed with great splendor. And that palm shone with
exceeding great light. Then Mary, undressing herself, put on better
garments. And, taking the palm which she had received from the
hands of the angel, she went out to the mount of Olivet, and began
to pray, and say: I had not been worthy, O Lord, to bear Thee,
unless Thou hadst had compassion on me; but nevertheless I have
kept the treasure which Thou entrustedst to me. Therefore I ask
of Thee, O King of glory, that the power of Gehenna hurt me not.
For if the heavens and the angels daily tremble before Thee, how
much more man who is made from the ground, who possesses no good
thing, except as much as he has received from Thy benignant bounty!
Thou art, O Lord, God always blessed for ever. And thus saying,
she went back to her dwelling.
3. And, behold, suddenly, while St. John was preaching in Ephesus,
on the Lords day, at the third hour of the day, there was
a great earthquake, and a cloud raised him and took him up from
the eyes of all, and brought him before the door of the house
where Mary was. And knocking at the door, he immediately went
in. And when Mary saw him, she exulted in joy, and said: I beg
of thee, my son John, be mindful of the words of my Lord Jesus
Christ, in which He entrusted me to thee. For, behold, on the
third day, when I am to depart from the body, I have heard the
plans of the Jews, saying, Let us wait for the day when she who
bore that seducer shall die, and let us burn her booty with fire.
She therefore called St. John, and led him into the secret chamber
of the house, and showed him the robe of her burial, and that
palm of light which she had received from the angel, instructing
him that he should cause it to be carried before her couch when
she was going to her tomb.
4. And St. John said to her: How shall I alone perform thy funeral
rites, unless my brethren and fellow-apostles of my Lord Jesus
Christ come to pay honor to thy body? And, behold, on a sudden,
by the command of God, all the apostles were snatched up, raised
on a cloud, from the places in which they were preaching the word
of God, and set down before the door of the house in which Mary
dwelt. And, saluting each other, they wondered, saying: What is
the cause for which the Lord hath assembled us here?
5. Then all the apostles, rejoicing with one mind, finished their
prayer. And when they had said the Amen, behold, on a sudden,
there came the blessed John, and told them all these things. The
apostles then, having entered the house, found Mary, and saluted
her, saying: Blessed art thou by the Lord, who hath made heaven
and earth. And she said to them: Peace be with you, most beloved
brethren! How have you come hither? And they recounted to her
how they had come, each one raised on a cloud by the Spirit of
God, and set down in the same place. And she said to them: God
hath not deprived me of the sight of you. Behold, I shall go the
way of all the earth, and I doubt not that the Lord hath now conducted
you hither to bring me consolation for the anguish which is just
coming upon me. Now therefore I implore you, that without intermission
you all with one mind watch, even till that hour in which the
Lord will come, and I shall depart from the body.
6. And when they had sat down in a circle consoling her, when
they had spent three days in the praises of God, behold, on the
third day, about the third hour of the day, a deep sleep seized
upon all who were in that house, and no one was at all able to
keep awake but the apostles alone, and only the three virgins
who were there. And, behold, suddenly the Lord Jesus Christ came
with a great multitude of angels; and a great brightness came
down upon that place, and the angels were singing a hymn, and
praising God together. Then the Savior spoke, saying: Come, most
precious pearl, within the receptacle of life eternal.
7. Then Mary prostrated herself on the pavement, adoring God,
and said: Blessed be the name of Thy glory, O Lord my God, who
hast deigned to choose me Thine handmaid, and to entrust to me
Thy hidden mystery. Be mindful of me, therefore, O King of glory,
for Thou knowest that I have loved Thee with all my heart, and
kept the treasure committed to me. Therefore receive me, Thy servant,
and free me from the power of darkness, that no onset of Satan
may oppose me, and that I may not see filthy spirits standing
in my way. And the Savior answered her: When I, sent by my Father
for the salvation of the world, was hanging on the cross, the
prince of darkness came to me; but when he was able to find in
me no trace of his work, he went off vanquished and trodden under
foot. But when thou shall see him, thou shall see him indeed by
the law of the human race, in accordance with which thou hast
come to the end of thy life; but he cannot hurt thee, because
I am with thee to help thee. Go in security, because the heavenly
host is waiting for thee to lead thee in to the joys of paradise.
And when the Lord had thus spoken, Mary, rising from the pavement,
reclined upon her couch, and giving thanks to God, gave up the
ghost. And the apostles saw that her soul was of such whiteness,
that no tongue of mortals can worthily utter it; for it surpassed
all the whiteness of snow, and of every metal, and of gleaming
silver, by the great brightness of its light.
8. Then the Savior spoke, saying: Rise, Peter, and take the body
of Mary, and send it to the right hand side of the city towards
the east, and thou wilt find there a new tomb, in which you will
lay her, and wait until I come to you. And thus saying, the Lord
delivered the soul of St. Mary to Michael, who was the ruler of
paradise, and the prince of the nation of the Jews; and Gabriel
went with them. And immediately the Savior was received up into
heaven along with the angels.
9. And the three virgins, who were in the same place, and were
watching, took up the body of the blessed Mary, that they might
wash it after the manner of funeral rites. And when they had taken
off her clothes, that sacred body shone with so much brightness,
that it could be touched indeed for preparation for burial, but
the form of it could not be seen for the excessive flashing light:
except that the splendor of the Lord appeared great, and nothing
was perceived, the body, when it was washed, was perfectly clean,
and stained by no moisture of filth. And when they had put the
dead-clothes on her, that light was gradually obscured. And the
body of the blessed Mary was like lily flowers; and an odor of
great sweetness came forth from it, so that no sweetness could
be found like it.
10. Then, accordingly, the apostles laid the holy body on the
bier, and said to each other: Who is to carry this palm before
her bier? Then John said to Peter: Thou, who hast precedence of
us in the apostleship, shouldst carry this palm before her couch.
And Peter answered him: Thou wast the only virgin among us chosen
by the Lord, and thou didst find so great favor that thou didst
recline upon His breast. And He, when for our salvation He was
hanging upon the stem of the cross, entrusted her to thee with
His own mouth. Thou therefore oughtest to carry this palm, and
let us take up that body to carry it even to the place of sepulture.
After this, Peter, raising it, and saying, Take the body, began
to sing and say: Israel hath gone forth out of Egypt. Alleluiah.
And the other apostles along with him carried the booty of the
blessed Mary, and John bore the palm of light before the bier.
And the other apostles sang with a most sweet voice.
11. And, behold, a new miracle. There appeared above the bier
a cloud exceeding great, like the great circle which is wont to
appear beside the splendor of the moon; and there was in the clouds
an army of angels sending forth a sweet song, and from the sound
of the great sweetness the earth resounded. Then the people, baring
gone forth from the city, about fifteen thousand, wondered, saying;
What is that sound of so great sweetness? Then there stood up
one who said to them: Mary has departed from the body, and the
disciples of Jesus are singing praises around her. And looking,
they saw the couch crowned with great glory, and the apostles
singing with a loud voice. And, behold, one of them, who was chief
of the priests of the Jews in his rank, filled with fury and rage,
said to the rest: Behold, the tabernacle of him who disturbed
us and all our race, what glory has it received? And going up,
he wished to overturn the bier, and throw the body down to the
ground. And immediately his hands dried up from his elbows, and
stuck to the couch. And when the apostles raised the bier, part
of him hung, and part of him adhered to the couch; and he was
vehemently tormented with pain, while the apostles were walking
and singing. And the angels who were in the clouds smote the people
with blindness.
12. Then that chief cried out, saying: I implore thee, Saint Peter,
do not despise me, I beseech thee, in so great an extremity, because
I am exceedingly tortured by great torments. Bear in mind that
when, in the praetorium, the maid that kept the door recognized
thee, and told the others to revile thee, then I spoke good words
in thy behalf. Then Peter answering, said: It is not for me to
give other to thee; but if thou believest with thy whole heart
on the Lord Jesus Christ, whom she carried in her womb, and remained
a virgin after the birth, the compassion of the Lord, which with
profuse benignity saves the unworthy, will give thee salvation.
To this he replied: Do we not believe? But what shall we do? The
enemy of the human race has blinded our hearts, and confusion
has covered our face, lest we should confess the great things
of God, especially when we ourselves uttered maledictions against
Christ, shouting: His blood be upon us, and upon our children.
Then Peter said: Behold, this malediction will hurt him who has
remained unfaithful to Him; but to those who turn themselves to
God mercy is not denied. And he said: I believe all that thou
sayest to me; only I implore, have mercy upon me, lest I die.
13. Then Peter made the couch stand still, and said to him: If
thou believest with all thy heart upon the Lord Jesus Christ,
thy hands will be released from the bier. And when he had said
this his hands were immediately released from the bier, and he
began to stand on his feet; but his arms were dried up, and the
torture did not go away from him. Then Peter said to him: Go up
to the body, and kiss the couch, and say: I believe in God, and
in the Son of God, Jesus Christ, whom she bore, and I believe
all whatsoever Peter the apostle of God has said to me. And going
up, he kissed the couch, and immediately all pain went away from
him, and his hands were healed. Then he began greatly to bless
God, and from the books of Moses to render testimony to the praises
of Christ, so that even the apostles themselves wondered, and
wept for joy, praising the name of the Lord.
14. And Peter said to him: Take this palm from the hand of our
brother John, and going into the city thou wilt find much people
blinded, and declare to them the great things of God; and whosoever
shall believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, thou shalt put this palm
upon their eyes, and they shall see; but those who will not believe
shall remain blind. And when he had done so, he found much people
blinded, lamenting thus: Woe unto us, because we have been made
like the Sodomites struck with blindness. Nothing now is left
to us but to perish. But when they heard the words of the chief
who had been cured speaking, they believed in the Lord Jesus Christ;
and when he put the palm over their eyes, they recovered sight.
Five of them remaining in hardness of heart died. And the chief
of the priests going forth, carried back the palm to the apostles,
reporting all things whatsoever had been done.
15. And the apostles, carrying Mary, came to the place of the
Valley of Jehoshaphat which the Lord had showed them; and they
laid her in a new tomb, and closed the sepulcher. And they themselves
sat down at the door of the tomb, as the Lord had commanded them;
and, behold, suddenly the Lord Jesus Christ came with a great
multitude of angels, with a halo of great brightness gleaming,
and said to the apostles: Peace be with you! And they answered
and said: Let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us, as we have hoped
in Thee. Then the Savior spoke to them, saying: Before I ascended
to my Father I promised to you, saying that you who have followed
me in the regeneration, when the Son of man shall sit upon the
throne of His majesty, will sit, you also, upon twelve thrones,
judging the twelve tribes of Israel. Her, therefore, did I choose
out of the tribes of Israel by the command of my Father, that
I should dwell in her. What, therefore, do you wish that I should
do to her? Then Peter and the other apostles said: Lord, Thou
didst choose beforehand this Thine handmaid to become a spotless
chamber for Thyself, and us Thy servants to minister unto Thee.
Before the ages Thou didst foreknow all things along with the
Father, with whom to Thee and the Holy Spirit there is one Godhead,
equal and infinite power. If, therefore, it were possible to be
done in the presence of the power of Thy grace, it had seemed
to us Thy servants to be right that, just as Thou, having vanquished
death, reignest in glory, so, raising up again the body of Thy
mother, Thou shouldst take her with Thee in joy into heaven.
16. Then the Savior said: Let it be according to your opinion.
And He ordered the archangel Michael to bring the soul of St.
Mary. And, behold, the archangel Michael rolled back the stone
from the door of the tomb; and the Lord said: Arise, my beloved
and my nearest relation; thou who hast not put an corruption by
intercourse with man, suffer not destruction of the body in the
sepulcher. And immediately Mary rose from the tomb, and blessed
the Lord, and falling forward at the feet of the Lord, adored
Him, saying: I cannot render sufficient thanks to Thee, O Lord,
for Thy boundless benefits which Thou hast deigned to bestow upon
me Thine handmaiden. May Thy name, O Redeemer of the world, God
of Israel, be blessed for ever.
17. And kissing her, the Lord went back, and delivered her soul
to theangels, that they should carry it into paradise. And He
said to the apostles: Come up to me. And when they had come up
He kissed them, and said: Peace be to you! as I have always been
with you, so will I be even to the end of the world. And immediately,
when the Lord had said this, He was lifted up on a cloud, and
taken back into heaven, and the angels along with Him, carrying
the blessed Mary into the paradise of God. And the apostles being
taken up in the clouds, returned each into the place allotted
for his preaching, telling the great things of God, and praising
our Lord Jesus Christ, who liveth and reigneth with the Father
and the Holy Spirit, in perfect unity, and in one substance of
Godhead, for ever and ever. Amen (Ante-Nicene
Fathers, Volume 8, The Passing of Mary, pp. 595-598. See
also The Assumption of the Virgin: Latin Narrative of Pseudo-Melito
in The Apocryphal New Testament, Montague Rhodes James, Translator
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924), pp. 209-216).