from the site:
Pesher Technique
 
  
Paul and Thecla
© 2005 Dr. Barbara Thiering (July,  2005)

A story known as the Acts of Paul and Thecla is found in the longer 
document  the Acts of Paul. It records how a young woman named Thecla in South 
Galatia  decided to become a nun under the influence of the preaching of Paul, 
and  continued in that resolve despite intense persecution.  
One reason why the story was once believed to be fictitious, like all the  
"apocryphal" works, was the assumption that there was no such thing as 
Christian  monasticism, with its orders of monks and nuns, until at least the 
third century  AD. That assumption was reinforced by Protestantism, but it was 
possible to hold  it in the apparent absence of evidence for any such 
institution.  
As we have been seeing at point after point of traditional Christian 
belief,  the information from the Dead Sea Scrolls has overturned the 
assumption.  
Christians came from Essenes - as some scholars had recognised long before 
the  discovery of the DSS. The Essenes were a monastic institution, prizing 
celibacy  as the holiest way of life. Sexual activity was considered to be a 
defilement,  and should only be practiced by members of dynasties in order 
to continue their  lines. A man who wanted to be a "holy one" - a saint - 
was a permanent celibate,  and women also could adopt the same way of life.  
It was in South Galatia that the preaching mission of Barnabas and John 
Mark  was carried out, as we have seen in the _Acts  of Barnabas_ 
(javascript:FindExcerpt('../The_Other_Gospels/Acts_of_Barnabas.html#'))  (in 
this section 
on this site). They belonged to the celibate  branch of the early 
Christians, and had sharp differences from Paul and Peter.  Once the 
historicity of 
the Acts of Barnabas is accepted, there is every reason  for believing that a 
young woman in South Galatia should want to adopt the  "holy" way of life.  
However, the story of Thecla says that it was Paul who preached celibacy.  
Paul himself says that he emphasised different teachings in different 
company.  "To the Jews I became as a Jew, in order to win Jews...To those 
outside 
the Law  I became as one outside the Law....I have become all things to all 
men, that I  might by all means save some." (_1 Corinthians 9:19-23_ (jav
ascript:FindVerse('1 Corinthians 9:19-23')) ).  In countries close to the 
homeland he communicated with people holding the  original ascetic doctrine, 
which was much more popular in the east. He was  maintaining its value while 
giving it a more Christian language.  
Another point of interest is that the story contains a physical description 
 of Paul.  
He was said to be "small of stature, with a bald head and crooked legs, in 
a  good state of body, with eyebrows meeting and nose somewhat hooked, full 
of  friendliness; for now he appeared like a man, and now he had the face of 
an  angel".  
The story was intended to recruit women to the kind of life that Thecla had 
 espoused. It is a missionary document, telling impressionable girls and 
women  about the great experiences of their role model Thecla. Natural events 
are  presented as miracles after the manner of the gospels.  
It begins with Paul's arrival in Iconium, and his stay in the existing 
church  in the house of Onesiphorus, a man who was later commended by Paul in 
_2 
Timothy 1:16-18_ (javascript:FindVerse('2 Timothy 1:16-18')) . Paul  broke 
bread and preached, his preaching including beatitudes upholding celibacy.  
After "blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God", is found 
"Blessed  are they who have kept the flesh pure, for they shall become a temple 
of God.  Blessed are the continent, for to them will God speak. Blessed are 
they who have  renounced this world, for they shall be well pleasing unto 
God. Blessed are they  who have wives as if they had them not, for they shall 
inherit God... Blessed  are the bodies of the virgins, for they shall be 
well pleasing to God, and shall  not lose the reward of their purity." The form 
of a beatitude is found in both  the gospels and the Scrolls, but in this 
case the form set out the benefits of  the celibate way of life. It would 
have been a set of precepts already in  existence, quoted by Paul.  
A young woman named Thecla, aged seventeen, who was betrothed, sat at a  
nearby window and listened night and day to "the word of the virgin life as it 
 was spoken by Paul", and as a result devoted herself to his teaching, and  
refused to marry. Paul is quoted as saying to women: "Otherwise there is no 
 resurrection for you, except you remain chaste and do not defile the 
flesh, but  keep it pure". The man she was to marry was advised to bring Paul 
before the  governor, for "seducing the crowds to the new doctrine of the 
Christians". When  Paul was brought to judgment he gave an account of himself: 
"The living God, the  God of vengeance, the jealous God, the God who has need 
of nothing, has sent me  since he desires the salvation of men, that I may 
draw them away from corruption  and impurity, all pleasure and death, that 
they may sin no more".  
Paul was imprisoned for a time, then scourged and driven out of the city, 
and  Thecla was subjected to cruel tortures, from which she was miraculously 
rescued.  The fire that was to burn her did not touch her. After she was put 
on a pile of  faggots to be burned, "a cloud overshadowed them from above, 
full of water and  hail. And the fire was put out, and Thecla saved". The 
more natural explanation  is that influence was brought to bear on the 
authorities by "the Cloud", the  levite who enacted the part of the Pillar of 
Cloud 
in the Exodus drama of the  Therapeuts. A holder of this office appears in 
_Luke 9:34-35_ (javascript:FindVerse('Luke 9:34-35'))  and _Acts 1:9._ 
(javascript:FindVerse('Acts 1:9')) .  
Thecla was taken into the care of a distinguished woman named Tryphena. A  
Tryphena appears in the list to whom Paul sent greetings in Rome (_Romans 
16:12_ (javascript:FindVerse('Romans 16:12')) ). She would have  acted in the 
role that became that of Mother Superior.  
On the orders of the governor, Thecla was then stripped and exposed to the  
lions. But a "cloud of fire" was seen near her, "so that neither could the 
wild  beasts touch her, nor could she be seen naked". In other words, she 
was again  protected by a Christian minister, one who acted the part of the 
Pillar of Fire.  
Thecla subsequently went to Seleucia, where she lived as an ascetic for 
many  years, dying at the age of 90. During this time she went to Rome to visit 
Paul,  but found that he had died. A visit to him at Myra in Lycia is 
recorded in the  story; it could have occurred when Paul's ship called in at 
Myra 
on his way to  Rome in AD 60 (_Acts 27:5_ (javascript:FindVerse('Acts 
27:5')) ).

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