Ante-Nicene Fathers The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. I
Ignatius
Introductory Note to the
Syriac Version of the Ignatius Epistles.
When the Syriac version of the Ignatian
Epistles was introduced to the English world in 1845, by Mr. Cureton, the
greatest satisfaction was expressed by many, who thought the inveterate
controversy about to be settled. Lord Russell made the learned divine a
canon of Westminster Abbey, and the critical Chevalier Bunsen68 committed
himself as its patron. To the credit of the learned, in general, the work
was gratefully received, and studied with scientific conscientiousness by
Lightfoot and others. The literature of this period is valuable; and the
result is decisive as to the Curetonian versions at least, which are
fragmentary and abridged, and yet they are a valuable contribution to the
study of the whole case.
The following is the original Introductory Notice:-
Some account of the discovery of the Syriac version of the Ignatian Epistles
has been already given. We have simply to add here a brief description of
the mss. from which the Syriac text has been printed. That which is named a
by Cureton, contains only the Epistle to Polycarp, and exhibits the text of
that Epistle which, after him, we have followed. He fixes its age somewhere
in the first half of the sixth century, or before the year 550. The second
ms., which Cureton refers to as b, is assigned by him to the seventh or
eighth century. It contains the three Epistles of Ignatius, and furnishes
the text here followed in the Epistles to the Ephesians and Romans. The
third ms., which Cureton quotes as g, has no date, but, as he tells us,
"belonged to the collection acquired by Moses of Nisibis in a.d. 931, and
was written apparently about three or four centuries earlier." It contains
the three Epistles to Polycarp, the Ephesians, and the Romans. The text of
all these mss. is in several passages manifestly corrupt, and the
translators appear at times to have mistaken the meaning of the Greek
original.
[N.B.-Bunsen is forced to allow the fact that the discovery of the lost work
of Hippolytus "throws new light on an obscure point of the Ignatian
controversy," i.e., the Sige in the Epistle to the Magnesians (cap. viii.);
but his treatment of the matter is unworthy of a candid scholar.]