Journeys without End: Narrative Endings and Implied Readers in Acts of the Apostles and Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius of Tyana
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method and Approach
3. Aims and Implied Audiences
3.1. Acts of the Apostles
3.2. Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius of Tyana
Judging from this statement, Philostratus’ main aim in writing Life is to contest views on Apollonius that contradict his own, especially those that “think [Apollonius] a sorcerer (μάγος) and misrepresent him as a philosophic impostor (βιαίως σοφός)” (V A 1.2.1).13 A symbol of earlier views which Philostratus sets out to contradict is Moeragenes, whose work on Apollonius, writes Philostratus, “does not deserve attention: he wrote four books about Apollonius and yet was greatly ignorant about the Master” (V A 1.3.2). Thus, Philostratus’ biography sets out, in Ewen Bowie’s words, “partly to create a monumental tribute to Apollonius, partly to establish his work as definitive and clearly fuller (as well as more correct) than the four books of Moeragenes” (Bowie 1994, p. 194).I have therefore decided to remedy the general ignorance and to give an accurate account (ἐξακριβόω) of the Master, observing the chronology of his words and acts, and the special character of the wisdom by which he came close to being thought possessed and inspired (δαιμόνιός τε καὶ θεῖος).12
4. Acts 28:16–31: The Journey Continues
16 When we came into Rome, Paul was allowed to live by himself, with the soldier who was guarding him. 17 Three days later he called together the local leaders of the Jews. When they had assembled, he said to them, “Brothers, though I had done nothing against our people or the customs of our ancestors, yet I was arrested in Jerusalem and handed over to the Romans. 18 When they had examined me, the Romans wanted to release me because there was no reason for the death penalty in my case. 19 But when the Jews objected, I was compelled to appeal to the emperor—even though I had no charge to bring against my people. 20 For this reason therefore I asked to see you and speak with you, since it is for the sake of the hope of Israel that I am bound with this chain.”
21 They replied, “We have received no letters from Judea about you, and none of the brothers coming here has reported or spoken anything evil about you. 22 But we would like to hear from you what you think, for with regard to this sect we know that everywhere it is spoken against.”
23 After they had set a day to meet with him, they came to him at his lodgings in great numbers. From morning until evening he explained the matter to them, testifying to the kingdom of God and trying to convince them about Jesus both from the law of Moses and from the prophets. 24 Some were convinced by what he had said, while others refused to believe.
25 So they disagreed with each other, and as they were leaving Paul made one further statement: “The Holy Spirit was right in saying to your ancestors through the prophet Isaiah, 26 ‘Go to this people and say, You will indeed listen but never understand, and you will indeed look but never perceive. 27 For this people’s heart has grown dull, and their ears are hard of hearing, and they have shut their eyes; otherwise they might look with their eyes and listen with their ears and understand with their heart and turn—and I would heal them.’ 28 “Let it be known to you, then, that this salvation of God has been sent to the non-Jews;15 they will listen.”
These verses bring together several threads that run through the book of Acts. As such, they provide both closure and open-endedness to the Acts narrative (Kurz 1987, pp. 212–15; Troftgruben 2020; Marguerat 2022, pp. 856–58). In Troy Troftgruben’s words, “[b]y fulfilling expectations …, summarizing earlier events …, recalling earlier scenes …, reiterating key themes …, and portraying representative activity …, the ending ties together strands from throughout Acts” (Troftgruben 2020, p. 179). In these verses, the apostles’ eventful journeys, which began with Jesus’ promise in Acts 1:8 and culminated in Paul’s sea journey and shipwreck on his way to Rome (Acts 27–28:15), come to a halt. With them, the narrative appears to end. At the same time, continues Troftgruben, “this conclusion is not definitive” (Troftgruben 2020, p. 179). When the Acts narrative reaches its end, several questions remain unanswered and issues unresolved. Jesus’ announcement that the apostles would be his witnesses “until the end of the earth” (Acts 1:8) has not yet reached its fulfillment by Acts 28:30. What is more, Paul’s final journey to Jerusalem, which begins in Acts 21:15, sets in motion the final episode of the narrative, in which Paul is arrested, put on trial, and eventually transferred to Rome. This final episode builds up towards Paul’s defense before the emperor—only to remain silent on his actual trial and its outcome.30 He lived there two whole years at his own expense and welcomed all who came to him, 31 proclaiming the kingdom of God and teaching about the Lord Jesus Christ with all boldness and without hindrance (μετὰ πάσης παρρησίας ἀκωλύτως).
4.1. The Journey Continues
4.2. The Way: An Eschatological Community of Jews and Non-Jews
4.3. The Way Amidst the Roman Empire
5. Philostr., V A 8.29–31: Elusive Apollonius
8.29 The account of Apollonius of Tyana given by Damis the Assyrian ends with these words. As for the manner of his death, if he did die, there are many versions, though none given by Damis. I, however, must not leave this item out, for my account surely must have its proper ending (δεῖ γάρ που τὸν λόγον ἔχειν τὸ ἑαυτοῦ πέρας).
In what follows, Philostratus offers three different accounts of Apollonius’ death, the final one of which includes Apollonius’ ascension. This is followed by the story of a young man traveling to Tyana “who was eager for disputes, and did not accept the true doctrine”—meaning that he denied the immortality of the soul (V A 8.31.1). When he was asleep one day, however, Apollonius appeared to the youngster and lectured him “on the mysteries of the soul (ὑπὲρ τῶν τῆς ψυχῆς ἀπορρήτων)” (V A 8.31.3). Life ends with Philostratus’ comment that he has nowhere found a “tomb or cenotaph of the Master,” and that the sanctuary devoted to Apollonius in Tyana is a sign of the honors the emperors bestowed on this exemplary sage (V A 8.31.3).Damis has not said anything about the Master’s age either, though some say it was eighty, some over ninety, and some that he passed a hundred, youthful and sound in all his body, and handsomer than a young man. Even wrinkles have a kind of bloom, and in him it was especially evident, as can be seen from the Master’s statues in the sanctuary at Tyana and by descriptions that celebrate Apollonius’s old age more than they once celebrated the youth of Alcibiades.
5.1. Dealing with Damis: The Implied Reader as Critical Reader
1.2.3 I have gathered my materials from the many cities that were devoted to [Apollonius], from the shrines that he set right when their rules had fallen into neglect, from other people’s reports about him, and from his own letters. These he wrote to kings, sophists, philosophers, Eleans, Delphians, Indians, and Egyptians, on the subject of gods, about customs, morals, and laws, setting upright whatever had been overturned among such people.
1.3.1 But my more detailed information I have gathered as follows. There was a certain Damis, not devoid of wisdom, who once lived in Old Ninos. This man became a disciple of Apollonius (τῷ Ἀπολλωνίῳ προσφιλοσοφήσας) and wrote up (ἀναγέγραφεν) not only his journeys, on which he claims to have been his companion (κοινωνῆσαι), but also his sayings, speeches, and predictions.
The notebooks containing the memoirs of Damis (τὰς δέλτους τῶν ὑπομνημάτων) were unknown until a member of his family brought them to the attention of the empress Julia. Since I was a member of her salon (for she admired and encouraged all rhetorical discourse), she set me to transcribe (μεταγράψαι) these works of Damis and to take care over their style (καὶ τῆς ἀπαγγελίας αὐτῶν ἐπιμεληθῆναι), since the style of the man from Ninos was clear but rather unskillful (σαφῶς μέν, οὐ μὴν δεξιῶς).
The historicity of this passage and the Damis source have been heavily debated, and scholars remain divided on the issue (see Meyer 1917; Bowie 1978). Regardless of its historical value, however, this passage fulfills a key role in Philostratus’ project, as it creates the elaborate fiction of an eyewitness account of Apollonius’ journeys and deeds, which was hidden until it was recovered by the empress Julia Domna. She, in turn, assigned Philostratus with the task of editing Damis’ notes into a book. In this passage, the importance of eyewitness testimony in historiography and the evocation of a book known only by title combine to support Philostratus’ claim to have exclusive access, through Damis, to a source as close to Apollonius as anyone could be.24 This claim bolsters Philostratus’ credibility as a biographer of Apollonius and that of Life as an authoritative account of this sage’s wisdom.1.3.2 I have also read the book of Maximus of Aegeae, which contains all that Apollonius did there, and the will written by Apollonius himself, which gives an idea of how inspired he was in his philosophy. Moeragenes does not deserve attention: he wrote four books about Apollonius and yet was greatly ignorant about the Master. So much for the way I gathered these scattered materials and for my care in assembling them. May my work bring honor to the Master who is its subject, and profit to those with an inclination to learning, for they really might learn things quite new to them.
Romm points out that Philostratus is indebted to ethnographical tropes, which invite his readers to take Apollonius’ journeys and the wonders he encounters en route as allegories for his wisdom (Romm 1992, pp. 116–19, followed by Elsner 1997, p. 29). Yet the import of this passage, I would suggest, concerns not only allegory: an exhortation to neither believe nor disbelieve does not amount to an allegorical interpretation of the information Damis provides. Instead, Philostratus urges his readers to develop a critical attitude, just as he, as editor-author, exhibits in his authoring of Life. Apollonius’ journeys may instill a sense of wonder in Philostratus’ readers and contribute to Philostratus’ portrayal of Apollonius as an ideal sage, but Philostratus reminds his readership that the wonders that Damis describes must not be taken at face value (cf. Whitmarsh 2004; Gyselinck and Demoen 2009, pp. 108–14). The implied readers of Life are given a share in Apollonius’ wondrous world, but the wonders they encounter in Damis must be mediated by Philostratus’—and, ultimately, his readers’—critical faculty, which allows them to distinguish between what to believe and what to disbelieve.3.45.1 Damis also wrote up the following conversation that they had on the subject of the fabulous beasts, springs, and men of India. I should not therefore leave it out, since one might do well neither to believe nor to disbelieve all the details.
8.30.1 Some say he died in Ephesus in the care of two maid servants, for the freedmen whom I mentioned at the beginning were now dead. When he set one of these women free, and he was reproached by the other for not doing the same favor to her, he said, “You should even be her slave, since that will bring you luck.” So at his death the one became the other’s slave, until her mistress for some petty reason sold her to a trader, and someone bought her from him, though she was no beauty. Even so, this man fell in love with her, and being a smart businessman made her his wife and acknowledged his children by her.
8.30.2 Others say that he died in Lindos after passing into the sanctuary of Athena and vanishing inside. Another version is that he died in Crete even more miraculously than is related at Lindos. Apollonius was staying in Crete, admired even more than before, when he visited the sanctuary of Dictynna at dead of night. Protection of the sanctuary is entrusted to dogs that guard its treasures, and the Cretans consider them nothing short of bears or other animals equally savage. But they did not even bark when Apollonius arrived, but ran up and greeted him even more than they did those they were fully accustomed to.
This passage is all the more striking when one takes into account Apollonius’ final words to Damis (V A 8.28). According to Philostratus, these came down to an exhortation to follow Apollonius’ example when seeking wisdom. Had Philostratus intended his implied readers simply to walk into his hero’s footsteps, a more fitting ending could hardly be imaginable. Rather than leaving his account where Damis left his, however, Philostratus adds these three alternative scenarios for Apollonius’ death. The fact that the Cretan story is the longest of the three and is the only one that describes Apollonius’ ascension (which appears to be implied in the story of the youngster) might suggest that Philostratus preferred this account over the others, but this remains implicit.8.30.3 The officials of the sanctuary put him in chains as a sorcerer3 and a robber, claiming that he had thrown something to the dogs to pacify them. But at about midnight he set himself free, and after calling his jailers so that they would notice, he ran to the doors of the sanctuary, which flew open. As he entered, the doors returned to their original position, and there emerged the sound of girls singing, and their song went, “Proceed from earth! Proceed to heaven! Proceed!” In other words, “Ascend from earth.”
5.2. Apollonius beyond Time and Space
- The youth said, “It seems that he has come to talk to me alone about the things I failed to believe, so let me tell you how he immortalizes the doctrine:
- Immortal is the soul, and is not yours
- But Providence’s (πρόνοια). When the body wastes,
- The soul starts like a racehorse from the gate,
- And nimbly leaping mingles with light air,
- Hating its fearful, heavy servitude.
- For you, what use is this? When you’re no more
- You will believe it: why then while alive
- Pry uselessly into such hidden things?”
- This is Apollonius’s clear pronouncement on the mysteries of the soul, enabling us with courage and knowledge of our own natures to journey (πορεύεσθαι) to the place where the Fates (Μοῖραι) station us.
6. Conclusion and Reflection: A Shared Intellectual Background
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | On the importance of Hezser’s work for the study of ancient Jewish travel, see (Hartog and Teugels 2021). |
2 | See below (Section 2) on my use of the terms “travel narrative” and “implied reader.” |
3 | The centrality of travel as a literary motif has been recognized for both Acts and Life. See, e.g., (Filson 1970; Robbins 1978; Alexander 2003, 2005a, 2005b; Hartog 2023a on Acts and Elsner 1997; Whitmarsh 2012; Abraham 2014; Eshleman 2017; Hägg 2018) on Life. Comparative treatments of the travel theme in these two writings are rarer (but cf. the brief comments on Acts in Elsner 1997, p. 27), as comparisons of Acts and Life tend to focus on other aspects, most notably miracles and magic (Koskenniemi 1994; Reimer 2002). Troftgruben (2020, pp. 61–113) offers an extensive comparative analysis of ending in ancient literature but does not discuss Life. |
4 | On Acts’ genre, see (Sterling 1992; Adams 2012, 2013a; Smith and Kostopoulos 2017). On the genre of Life, see (Bowie 1978; Boter 2015; Abraham 2017). |
5 | See also (Bale 2015) on Acts. |
6 | On Apollonius’ travels as a Philostratean invention, see (Bowie 1978; Elsner 1997). |
7 | Philostratus, the narrator in Life, must be distinguished from Philostratus, the historical author of Life. See (Whitmarsh 2004). |
8 | The prologue to the Gospel of Luke (Luke 1:1–4) might confirm this image, but it is methodologically problematic to use that prologue to characterize the narrator in Acts: I am inclined to accept the idea of Acts having been written as a sequel to the Gospel of Luke but not necessarily by the same author as the gospel. I am sympathetic to the argument that Acts’ final sections conclude not just the book of Acts but a narrative development that began already in Luke (cf. Dupont 1978; Alexander 2005c), but I will not discuss this issue elaborately here. |
9 | See the preceding note on my approach to the relationship between Luke and Acts. On the broader debate, see (Bird 2007). |
10 | This is not to suggest, incidentally, that the purpose of Luke’s prologue is entirely evident. Whilst it has often been related to historiography, (Alexander 1993) argues that, in its structure, Luke’s prologue resembles that of scientific treatises rather than that of history-writing. For reactions to Alexander, see (Sterling 1992, pp. 339–46; Adams 2006; Moles 2011; Dawson 2019). |
11 | With φοβέω in Acts 10:2, 22, 35; 13:16, 26; with σέβομαι in Acts 13:43, 50; 16:15; 17:4, 17; 18:7, 13. On the two expressions being synonymous, see (Esler 1987, pp. 38–42). |
12 | Translations of Life follow C. P. Jones (LCL), unless otherwise indicated. |
13 | Philostratus does not name the addressees of his critique. Based on Orig., C. Cels. 6.41, many have assumed that those who portrayed Apollonius as a magician included Moeragenes, but cf. (Bowie 1978). |
14 | Cf. in this regard Philostratus’ mention of a shrine of Apollonius erected by Caracalla (V A 8.31.3). See further below. |
15 | NRSVUE: “gentiles.” |
16 | (Smit 2017, p. 20) argues that “the end of the earth” in Acts refers in a general sense to “everything that is not Jerusalem” and so includes Rome. While I am sympathetic to Smit’s observation that Acts consciously looks beyond Rome, I am less convinced that Jerusalem remains the center for Acts’ author and Rome becomes the periphery. Rather, both Jerusalem and Rome appear as significant stages in the emergence of a global movement. |
17 | On the location of the Pillars of Hercules, see, e.g., Strabo 3.5.5; Plin., HN 3.4; Philostr., V A 5.1. The relationship between Paul’s letters and Acts of the Apostles is a vexed issue in New Testament scholarship. On the indebtedness of Acts’ portrayal of Paul to the Corpus Paulinum, see, e.g., (van Eck 2003, pp. 21–22; Walker 2008; Moessner et al. 2012). |
18 | (Omerzu 2001, p. 152, note 119) refers to Cadbury as suggesting that Luke’s source had come to an end, but Cadbury leaves open other possibilities, including the possibility that Luke had once written a third volume to Theophilus that is now lost (Cadbury 1961, pp. 320–24). |
19 | On Paul as an exemplar in Acts, see (Kurz 1990). Specifically, on Acts 28:17–31, see (Zmijewski 1994, p. 889). |
20 | |
21 | The expression “lord of all” (πάντων κύριος) reflects Pauline vocabulary, as Paul employs the term in his letters to refer both to Christ (Rom 10:12) and to the believer (Gal 4:1). Already in Paul, the term resonates not only with other usages of the term in cultic contexts within and outside Judaism but also with claims in non-Judean sources such as Polybius and Strabo, which depict the Romans as “rulers of all” (e.g., Polyb. 36.4.4; Strabo 9.2.2) as well as with Roman sources that portray the emperor in these terms (references in Conzelmann 1987, p. 83; Rowe 2005, pp. 292–94). The combination with “peace” in Acts 10:36 brings to mind the Roman connection even more explicitly. The book of Acts knows the Romans as bringers of peace (Acts 24:2), and the combined use of the terms “peace” and “lord of all” puts Jesus’ work and the peace he brings on a par with the famous pax Romana. Cf. (Hartog 2023a, p. 105). |
22 | As the starting point of the Acts narrative, Jerusalem remains significant in Acts but as a point of departure and a reference point throughout the narrative, not as a locality to which the eschatological community will return. I am hesitant, therefore, to accept Smit’s argument that “Acts is remapping the world by presenting Jerusalem as its centre and the rest as periphery” (Smit 2017, p. 18). I do think Acts looks beyond Rome, but that is not the same as defining Rome as the periphery. |
23 | Authorship came with the responsibility of providing proper endings wherever one’s sources lacked them. Cf. in this regard how New Testament manuscripts, as well as the authors of the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, offer various endings for the Gospel of Mark (which Larsen and Letteney 2019 argue was treated as a ὑπόμνημα not unlike Damis’ putative notes). |
24 | On the importance of αὐτοψία in ancient historiography, see, e.g., (Schepens 1980, 2007; Alexander 1993, pp. 34–41; Marincola 1997, pp. 63–86; Hartog 2021a). On the importance of books “known only by title” and their literary function in a variety of Jewish and Christian writings from the Hellenistic and Roman periods, see (Lied et al. 2023). |
25 | At the meeting in Aarhus, Mark Letteney drew my attention to the implications of the term ὑπόμνημα for how Philostratus presents his own activity as “authoring” sources that hold a more preliminary status. I am grateful to Letteney for his suggestions, which have shaped my thinking on this issue and made their way into the pages of this article. See, in addition to (Larsen and Letteney 2019; Larsen 2018). |
26 | Translation Conybeare (LCL). Jones (LCL) translates more freely: “The Assyrian’s Greek was mediocre.” Even if the implication is that Damis wrote in Greek, Philostratus does not explicitly state this. |
27 | On ἀναγράφω to describe Damis’ work, see Philostr., V A 1.19.3; 1.24.1; 2.28.1; 3.45.1; 5.7.1; 6.3.1; 6.4.1; 6.7; 7.42.1; 8.29. The verb carries a range of meanings, and this semantic variety is also reflected in Life. In Philostr., V A 5.37.3 ἀναγράφω refers to Apollonius’ recounting of the wonders of India, and in Philostr., V A 8.6.1, the verb describes Philostratus’ work. It is therefore only in connection with Philostratus’ overall depiction of Damis’ writing in Philostr., V A 1.3 and 1.19 that ἀναγράφω defines the Assyrian’s recording as preliminary in comparison to Philostratus’ own work. |
28 | Jones’ translation “transcribe” may suggest that Damis’ notes had been written in an Assyrian script, which Philostratus transcribed into Greek. While μεταγράφω can bear this meaning (see, e.g., Thuc. 4.50), it is probably not in view here. Not only would it fail to correspond with the only other occurrence of the verb in Life, but it would also be inconsistent with Philostratus’ claim that Damis’ writing was “clear (σαφῶς) but rather unskillful”: a work in another script than Greek could hardly be considered “clear.” |
29 | Omissions: Philostr., V A 1.20.3; 7.28.1; additions: Philostr., V A 8.29. |
30 | Cf. Philostr., V A 2.43, which describes how on the banks of the river Hyphasis, Apollonius encounters a stele reading: “Alexander stopped here.” As Apollonius crosses the Hyphasis, he leaves Alexander’s Hellenistic world behind him and enters unexplored territory (at least from the perspective of Life). On the symbolism of Apollonius’ crossing of the Hyphasis, see (Romm 1992, pp. 116–18; Abraham 2014, pp. 469–70; Whitmarsh 2012, p. 464; Hartog 2021b, pp. 136–37). |
31 | Jones has “that scares him”; the translation given here has been adapted in line with Whitmarsh’s translation of ἐκπλήσσω. |
32 | Cass. Dio 78.18.4 mentions that the shrine was erected by the emperor Caracalla, Julia Domna’s son. Cassius Dio adds, however, that Caracalla’s fascination with Apollonius was caused by his “delight in magicians (μάγος) and jugglers (γόης)” (trans. Cary [LCL])—precisely the association that Philostratus combated. By presenting this shrine in the context of Apollonius’ ascension and his location beyond earthly space, Philostratus seems to downplay its relevance, thus offering a subtle criticism of the symbolism Caracalla attached to the shrine according to Dio. On the politics of Philostratus’ writing in relation to the Severan dynasty, see (Kemezis 2014a; 2014b, pp. 150–95). |
33 | Cf. the we-passages in Acts. |
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Hartog, P.B. Journeys without End: Narrative Endings and Implied Readers in Acts of the Apostles and Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius of Tyana. Religions 2024, 15, 606. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050606
Hartog PB. Journeys without End: Narrative Endings and Implied Readers in Acts of the Apostles and Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius of Tyana. Religions. 2024; 15(5):606. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050606
Chicago/Turabian StyleHartog, Pieter B. 2024. "Journeys without End: Narrative Endings and Implied Readers in Acts of the Apostles and Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius of Tyana" Religions 15, no. 5: 606. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050606
APA StyleHartog, P. B. (2024). Journeys without End: Narrative Endings and Implied Readers in Acts of the Apostles and Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius of Tyana. Religions, 15(5), 606. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050606