The Lost Scriptures.
The Acts of Peter
“…a multitude gathered together, and they brought unto Peter many sick that he might heal them. And one of the multitude adventured to say unto Peter: Lo, Peter, in our presence thou hast made many blind to see and the deaf to hear and the lame to walk, and hast succoured the weak and given them strength: but wherefore hast thou not succoured thy daughter, the virgin, which grew up beautiful and hath believed in the name of God? For behold, her one side is wholly palsied, and she lieth there stretched out in the corner helpless. We see them that have been healed by thee: thine own daughter thou hast neglected.
But Peter smiled and said unto him: My son, it is manifest unto God alone wherefore her body is not whole. Know then that God is not weak nor powerless to grant his gift unto my daughter: but that thy soul may be convinced, and they that are here present may the more believe -then he looked unto his daughter and said to her: Raise thyself up from thy place, without any helping thee save Jesus only, and walk whole before all these, and come unto me. And she arose and came to him; and the multitude rejoiced at that which was come to pass. Then said Peter unto them: Behold, your heart is convinced that God is not without strength concerning all things that we ask of him. Then they rejoiced yet more and praised God. And Peter said to his daughter: Go unto thy place, and lay thee down and be again in thine infirmity, for this is expedient for me and for thee. And the maiden went back and lay down in her place and was as beforetime: and the whole multitude wept, and entreated Peter to make her whole.
But Peter said unto them: As the Lord liveth, this is expedient for her and for me. For on the day when she was born unto me I saw a vision, and the Lord said unto me: Peter, this day is a great temptation born unto thee, for this daughter will bring hurt unto many souls if her body continue whole. But I thought that the vision did mock me.”
The Acts of Peter is a document written sometime during the second century. In this writing, Peter is described as a miracle-maker trying to use his power to instill faith in the people of Rome. His enemies are the pagans. He will be crucified for converting pagan wives to Christianity. His enemy in this text is Simon Magus, a well-known rival Christian Gnostic. Peter’s encounters with this man, the back and forth of attacks through miracles, are the stuff of legend.
One story tells about Peter’s daughter who is paralyzed, lying in a corner. The people ask him why he does not heal his own daughter. He heals her, asks her to rise to prove her restored health, but then Peter orders her back to her infirmity. Peter is safeguarding her virginity – sexual abstinence leads to salvation in the teachings of Peter. In a famous contest between Simon Magus and Peter, they are in the forum matching each other with miracles. First there are talking dogs; then the dead are raised. The climax comes when Simon vows to fly into the sky up to G-d. The next day, as the crowds gather all over Rome, they see Simon passing over the temples and the hills. Peter cries to the Lord Jesus Christ and prays for Simon to fall and cripple himself by breaking his leg in three places. Simon falls, and because the crowds favor Peter’s faith over Simon’s, they stone Simon. The angel of the Devil later kills the sorcerer Simon Magus, which leads Peter and is brethren to rejoice in the Lord.
The importance of the working of the Holy Spirit in the lives of the early Apostles and followers of Jesus cannot be lost on us. Whether these stories are exaggerations or not, that is not the point. The point, my friends, is that the power of the Holy Spirit is not to be downplayed, or trifled with.
Pastor Dave