Ante-Nicene Fathers The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325
Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. I
Introductory Note to the
Fragments of Papias
[a.d. 70-155.] It seems unjust to the holy man of whose comparatively
large contributions to early Christian literature such mere relics have been
preserved, to set them forth in these versions, unaccompanied by the copious
annotations of Dr. Routh. If even such crumbs from his table are not by any
means without a practical value, with reference to the Canon and other
matters, we may well credit the testimony (though disputed) of Eusebius,
that he was a learned man, and well versed in the Holy Scripture. All who
name poor Papias are sure to do so with the apologetic qualification of that
historian, that he was of slender capacity. Nobody who attributes to him the
millenarian fancies, of which he was but a narrator, as if these were the
characteristics rather than the blemishes of his works, can fail to accept
this estimate of our author. But more may be said when we come to the great
name of Irenaeus, who seems to make himself responsible for them.
Papias has the credit of association with Polycarp, in the friendship of
St. John himself, and of "others who had seen the Lord." He is said to have
been bishop of Hierapolis, in Phrygia, and to have died about the same time
that Polycarp suffered; but even this is questioned. So little do we know of
one whose lost books, could they be recovered, might reverse the received
judgment, and establish his claim to the disputed tribute which makes him,
like Apollos, "an eloquent man, and mighty in the Scriptures."
The following is the original Introductory Notice:-
The principal information in regard to Papias is given in the extracts
made among the fragments from the works of Irenaeus and Eusebius. He was
bishop of the Church in Hierapolis, a city of Phrygia, in the first half of
the second century. Later writers affirm that he suffered martyrdom about
a.d. 163; some saying that Rome, others that Pergamus, was the scene of his
death.He was a hearer of the Apostle John, and was on terms of intimate
intercourse with many who had known the Lord and His apostles. From these he
gatherer! the floating traditions in regard to the sayings of our Lord, and
wove them into a production divided into five books. This work does not seem
to have been confined to an exposition of the sayings of Christ, but to have
contained much historical information.
Eusebius speaks of Papias as a man most learned in all things, and well
acquainted with the Scriptures. In another passage he describes him as of
small capacity. The fragments of Papias are translated from the text given
in Routh's Reliquiae Sacrae, vol. i.