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- Q3629160 subject Q8211397.
- Q3629160 subject Q9033466.
- Q3629160 abstract "The text of the pseudepigraphical Acts of Barnabas claims to identify its author as John Mark, the companion of Paul the Apostle, as if writing an account of Barnabas, the Cypriot Jew who was a member of the earliest church at Jerusalem; through the services of Barnabas, the convert Saul was welcomed into the apostolic community. Three pseudepigraphical works are linked with the name of Barnabas: the Epistle of Barnabas, written between AD 70 and 135, this Acts and the medieval text Gospel of Barnabas. None of them were accepted into the Biblical canon.The language and the ecclesiastical politics of Acts of Barnabas reveal it to be a work of the 5th century, designed to strengthen the claims of the church of Cyprus to apostolic foundation as the site of Barnabas' grave, and therefore of its bishops' independence from the patriarch of Antioch. These are 5th century concerns, the independence of the Church of Cyprus having been declared by the First Council of Ephesus in 431 and confirmed by Emperor Zeno in 488.Some have mistakenly assumed that the reference to a gospel used by Barnabas referred to in the Acts of Barnabas was the medieval document, the Gospel of Barnabas. However, this is clearly false, as the quotation reveals: Barnabas, having unrolled the Gospel, which we have received from Matthew his fellow-labourer, began to teach the Jews.By omitting this emphasized phrase in quoting this passage, the impression may be given that there is a Gospel of Barnabas earlier than the so-called "Decretum Gelasianum", an agenda for those who would maintain the late Gospel's authenticity.".
- Q3629160 wikiPageExternalLink anf08-90.htm.
- Q3629160 wikiPageExternalLink c8.pdf.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q1182112.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q183452.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q184332.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q185856.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q1992340.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q262557.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q51623.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q808428.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q8211397.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q827597.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q865026.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q9033466.
- Q3629160 wikiPageWikiLink Q9200.
- Q3629160 comment "The text of the pseudepigraphical Acts of Barnabas claims to identify its author as John Mark, the companion of Paul the Apostle, as if writing an account of Barnabas, the Cypriot Jew who was a member of the earliest church at Jerusalem; through the services of Barnabas, the convert Saul was welcomed into the apostolic community.".
- Q3629160 label "Acts of Barnabas".