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The Apocalypse of Elijah refers an anonymous apocryphal work presenting itself as a revelation given by an angel. Two versions are known today, a Coptic Christian fragmentary version and a Hebrew Jewish version. The title derives from mentions of Elijah within the text, although there is no other reason to assume that he is meant to be the author.
[edit] Dating and provenanceThis apocalypse is mentioned in the Apostolic Constitutions, the List of Sixty Books, the Synopsis of Pseudo-Athanasius, the Stichometry of Nicephorus, and the Armenian list of Mechithar. Origen, Ambrosiaster, and Euthalius ascribe I Cor. 2:9 to it:
If they are right, the apocalypse is pre-Pauline. The peculiar form in which this quotation appears appears in Clement of Alexandria, Protrepticus x. 94, and the Apostolic Constitutions vii. 32, shows that both have the same source, probably this apocalypse. Epiphanius[1] ascribes to this work Eph. 5:14:
The Jewish version of the Apocalypse of Elijah was published by Adolf Jellinek[2], and Moses Buttenwieser in 1897. Theodor Zahn[3] assigns this apocalypse to the 2nd century A.D.[4] but other scholars reject such an early date.[5] The two extant versions are thought to be derived from the same original, which would be the one quoted by Paul. The Coptic version has been Christianized and the Hebrew version abridged. [edit] TextThe Christian version is essentially a redaction of five originally separate works:
[edit] Notes
[edit] See also[edit] External links
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