Acts of Peter by Callie Callon

The Acts of Peter is one of the five ancient apocryphal Acts that relate the missionary activities of the apostles beyond the canonical account. The primary focus of this narrative is a wonder working contest between Peter and the magician Simon set in the city of Rome. Through a variety of miracles, including a revivified salted fish, a talking dog and baby, and a resurrection competition set in the Forum, Peter demonstrates his (and by extension early Christianity’s) legitimacy. The final chapters relate how Peter’s teaching prompted wives and concubines associated with imperial figures to reject conjugal relations, causing these men to seek fatal retaliation. Peter’s attempt to flee is abandoned upon his encounter with a vision of Jesus in the famous “Quo Vadis” scene where Jesus claims he is going to Rome to be crucified again. Upon his return Peter is arrested and sentenced to death by crucifixion. He is crucified upside down at his own request and delivers a lengthy discourse prior to his death. The text as it is typically published in translation is compiled from a handful of discrete sources, some of which are disputed as being components of an original Greek composition. This original text is commonly held to be composed in the later portion of the 2nd century. The narrative was influential on much subsequent ancient Petrine literature.

Scholarly Assessments of the Contents of the Acts of Peter

The Acts of Peter survives in a mostly complete 4th-century Latin translation known as the Actus Vercellenses (the Vercelli Acts) preserved in a 6th- or 7th-century Codex (Cod. Verc. CLVIII). There is some dispute as to whether the first three chapters, which relate Paul’s departure from Rome, and chapter 41, which includes the first reference to Nero named as such, are original or a later interpolation to the text. Lapham 2003 maintains chapters 1–3 are original to the text, while Vouaux 1922, Poupon 1988 and Thomas 2003 argue that they are more likely an interpolation. The final chapters narrating Peter’s martyrdom also exist in Greek texts that also circulated independently, and P. Oxy 849, a 4th-century Greek vellum page that corresponds to portions of chapters 25–26 of the Vercelli Acts. Using these in comparison with the Latin, Zwierlein 2013 is the most recent scholar to maintain that the Vercelli Acts are a largely faithful translation of a Greek original. Baldwin 2005 has challenged previous scholarship, which held a similar perspective, arguing that the Vercelli Acts are best understood as purely the product of the 4th century and are of no use in trying to re-create an earlier Greek original, if one even existed in the first place. It is a meticulous work that highlights the caution that should be used in approaching the text, although his conclusions are ultimately too conservative. This view is supported in Döhler 2018, which engages briefly but directly with aspects of the work. Based on the Stichometry of Nicephorus, which listed the original text as being comprised of 2750 stichoi, several scholars thus posit that one-third of the original text is now lost. Schmidt 1903 argues that the episode pertaining to Peter’s successful prayer for the disablement of his daughter to thwart her sexual temptation for men, found in Codex Berol. 8502.4, was originally a component of this missing portion, as was a similar episode pertaining to a gardener’s daughter (found in the Epistle of Pseudo-Titus). While many scholars and translations of the work follow Schmidt’s proposal that these episodes corresponded to the missing third of the text, which related Peter’s events in Jerusalem prior to coming to Rome, some authors, in works such as Luttikhuizen 1998 and Molinari 2000, argue against this.

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