2015-08-01

Acts and Virgil’s Aeneid: comparison and influence

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

by Neil Godfrey

quote_begin

Let me be transparent from the outset: the authors of the Gospels did not imitate Vergil’s Latin epic. . . . [Rather] the Evangelist was aware of the Aeneid and shaped his book to rival it. The affinities between Luke and Vergil thus pertain to genre or, better, to narrative structure and development, not to imitations of particular episodes or characterizations.

MacDonald, Dennis R. (2014-11-05). Luke and Vergil: Imitations of Classical Greek Literature (The New Testament and Greek Literature) (Kindle Locations 101-107). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Kindle Edition.

quote_end

 

quote_begin

Luke has endeavored to interpret the underlying meaning of the whole of Christian history — and in a manner surprisingly analogous to Virgil’s interpretation of the meaning of Roman history.

Bonz, Marianne Palmer (2000). The Past as Legacy: Luke-Acts and Ancient Epic. Fortress Press.

quote_end

This post is following up a point I touched on the recent interview: a possible link between the Acts of the Apostles and the famous founding epic of Rome, Virgil’s Aeneid.

Painting by Jean-Joseph Taillasson: Virgil reading the Aeneid to Augustus and Octavia. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Painting by Jean-Joseph Taillasson: Virgil reading the Aeneid to Augustus and Octavia. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It’s an intriguing idea. I know of a handful of scholars who have published positively about the possibility though I understand most do not accept it. Here are my own reasons for my suspicions that the author of Acts had in part an emulation of the Aeneid in mind. The “in part” qualifier points to indications that the author was interested in depicting the founding of the Christian movement as pointing towards both a New Jerusalem and a New Rome as one.

The Aeneid is an epic poem about Aeneas, a Trojan hero who escaped the city after its capture by the Greeks and after an adventurous westward journey across the Mediterranean in search for a new divinely appointed home he eventually found his way to Italy where he established a new settlement that became the ancestors of the Romans. The epic was widely known and esteemed from the moment of its composition for the ensuing centuries, even among Christians. (We know Christians at least from the time of Lactantius understood Virgil’s poetic hope of child to come to usher in a new golden age was a divinely inspired prophecy of Jesus.) Virgil’s fame extended beyond the literary elite:

Verses and characters from his poetry appear in wall-paintings and graffiti, mosaics and sarcophagi, even the occasional silver spoon, in locations ranging from Somerset to Halicarnassus. (Tarrant, 56)

Monuments to Aeneas became almost as common as those to Romulus in the wake the Aeneid‘s entrance into the world.

The celebrity of Virgil’s works in the Roman world was immediate and lasting. The Aeneid enjoyed the rare distinction of being hailed as a canonical poem while it was still being written: ‘something greater than the Iliad is being born’. . . , wrote the elegist Propertius in the mid-20s, perhaps with a touch of irony, but anticipating the serious comparisons with Homer that would become conventional. (Tarrant, 56)

Poets, story tellers and historians were influenced by Virgil in general and his Aeneid in particular. I’m not referring just to literary style but especially to what Tarrant calls an “ideological engagement” (pp. 63, 64). Subsequent authors would strive to revise or reapply Virgil’s message about the greatness of Rome finding its culmination in the reign of Augustus. One poet adapted Virgil’s message to argue that Nero was the true turning point in Rome’s history. A later historian inverted the Aeneid’s message to reject entirely the dynasty that had produced both Augustus and Nero and to promise a pessimistic future for the empire. Nor was the influence uni-linear. Emulators did not attempt to re-do Virgil’s style but engaged with his ideas and expressed them through a wide spectrum of the styles of other writers, in poetry, drama and prose.

The striking similarities

Despite the above another scholar, John Taylor, believes it is “much less likely” that the author of Acts “knew the Aeneid” but even he acknowledges “striking similarities” in Classics and the Bible: Hospitality and Recognition. I dot-point those he identifies:

  • In both we have the story of an apparently defeated remnant destined to rebuild their community. (As Bonz points out (p. 56), the defeated are transformed into victors.)
  • The pilgrim people in both cases need to reformulate their identity: the Trojans become the proto-Romans; the Jewish movement becomes the Christian church. (Bonz intimates that both works define a new people’s religious values and a higher moral vision.)
  • This new people emerges by incorporating former enemies, the Trojans and Italians become one; Jews and gentiles become one; the Trojan refugee Aeneas wins Greek allies and Paul gains the favour — and the conversion — of Roman officials.
  • Divine destiny guides both the progress of the Trojan refugees led by Aeneas and the Christian movement led by the apostles and Paul and guarantees that all human obstacles are overcome.
  • Both narratives are tales of two cities: people leave Troy and travel west to find a new destiny to be based in Rome; a movement begins at Jerusalem and moves west to find a new quarters in the imperial centre. “In both cases the journey to Rome is proleptically symbolic of a rise to world symbolic importance…”
  • Both stories end on a dark note: “(Aeneas heedless of the Roman aspiration to be merciful to the defeated, Paul in prison awaiting sentence)”
  • Readers interpret each in the light of events known to have followed.

Another striking similarity to anyone who has read both works (and one that Taylor addresses earlier (p. 86)) is the prophetic driven plot. In both we find prophecies of the successful accomplishments of the “new people” and are assured repeatedly of their inevitable fulfilment. Rome is to grow an empire that will bring civilization, law, piety and peace to the world; God’s new people will take their message of peace and a new kingdom to the entire world. Once Paul is settled in Rome and poised to preach the gospel from there to the highest powers in the empire, we can be satisfied in one sense that the entire world has in effect been reached.

This becomes especially significant if we concur with those who date Acts to well into the second century when the Roman church was known to have assumed a dominant role, at least one to rival other centres (e.g. Alexandria, Antioch) of Christianity. (On a late date for Acts see posts here, here, here, here, here, here and here.)

I think most of the above similarities can be readily noticed by anyone who reads the Aeneid while mindful of Acts.

But there are other details that invite us to wonder if the author of Acts was waving to draw our attention to a comparison of similarities and differences with the foundation epic of Rome.

Aeneas and Tabitha “which by interpretation is called Dorcas”

http://museopalazzovenezia.beniculturali.it/index.php?en/129/ricerca-nel-catalogo/98/eneide-ascanio-e-il-cervo-di-silvia
Ascanius Killing the Deer of Silvia

Just as readers of Acts reach the cusp of the church’s expansion to the gentiles (Acts 10 — Peter’s vision and baptism of Cornelius) we find Peter healing an Aeneas in the city of Lydda. The name Aeneas is familiar enough; but is it going too far to wonder if the author has chosen Lydda as the scene in order to remind us of Troy, the city that had once in mythic times dominated Lydia?

Peter then gets a message from the saints at Joppa concerning the illness (and apparently even the death) of a woman named Tabitha, “which by interpretation is called Dorcas”. Joppa is known from the Jonah story. It was the port from to which Jonah fled to avoid taking God’s message to the centre of the imperial power of his day, Nineveh, capital of Assyria. (In the story God overturned Jonah’s intentions to flee westward to Tarshish and returned him to Nineveh, as we know.) So we may have in Joppa a faint association with the time when the message is to be taken westward and to the centre of the Roman world.

But why are we told Tabitha’s name means “Dorcas” — or a roe, a female deer?

Two passages in the Aeneid (I know the Aeneid was composed in Latin, but see above for its influence well beyond its primary literary circles) raise a possibility in my mind. The turning point of the Aeneid is book seven when a Fury (Alecto) stirs up strife between the indigenous Latin inhabitants and Aeneas’s newly arrived Trojans. The critical incident that sparks immediate bloodshed is the slaying of a deer well-beloved (like Cecil the lion) by the locals and cared for especially tenderly by Sylvia. Sylvia is even said to have woven garlands around its horns. There is no healing of this deer and war ensues between the two peoples over its death.

Earlier Virgil compared the queen of Carthage and Aeneas’s lover, Dido, with a young deer, a roe. Dido felt the deep wound of Aeneas having left her:

Deep in her heart the wound was silently alive. Poor Dido was afire, and roamed distraught all over her city; like a doe caught off her guard and pierced by an arrow of some armed shepherd. (Jackson Knight’s translation)

Aeneas tells Dido about the fall of Troy, by Pierre-Narcisse Guérin
Aeneas tells Dido about the fall of Troy, by Pierre-Narcisse Guérin

There is no doubt that Virgil is describing Dido with the imagery of a slain deer that anticipates the literal slaying of the deer that sparks the outbreak of war.

The deer, Sylvia, Dido — all are renowned for their kindness and giving of joy to others through their good works.

These scenes of the twin healings, of Aeneas and a roe, set in Lydda and Joppa, are sandwiched between calls to take the gospel to the gentiles. Just before to the healing of Aeneas we read of Paul’s conversion and commission to preach to gentiles; immediately following the healing of the woman named Roe we come to Peter’s vision to open up baptism to a Roman centurion and all gentiles.

If this is an instance of literary chiasm we have an additional literary warrant to interpret Peter’s encounters in Lydda and Joppa as proleptic of the conversion of the gentiles more generally. Do not the details of the personal and geographic names suggest the author was positioning his story to dialogue with the well-known national epic of Rome?

Dennis MacDonald has a footnote in Luke and Vergil that I find complementary to the above:

Michael Kochenash has proposed that Luke’s translation of the name Tabitha as Δορκάς, “gazelle” (Acts 9: 36) links her with Dido, largely because the preceding story in Acts is the healing of a cripple named Aeneas, a Greek transliteration of the Latin spelling! Both Dorcas and Dido are generous widows whose bodies other women took to their private chambers (cf. Aen. 4.391– 392 and Acts 9: 37). Both women died, but Peter raised “Gazelle” back to life.

MacDonald, Dennis R. (2014-11-05). Luke and Vergil: Imitations of Classical Greek Literature (The New Testament and Greek Literature) (Kindle Locations 6405-6408). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Kindle Edition.

Theophilus and Augustus?

MacDonald finds another possible allusion to the Aeneid through the name Theophilus to whom Acts is dedicated:

The affinities between Luke-Acts and the Aeneid may shed light on the elusive identity of the stated recipient: Theophilus, “lover of God.” Scholars often have viewed this name as a veiled reference to Luke’s readers and not to a historical character, but most modern interpreters have rejected this explanation in favor of taking him as Luke’s literary benefactor. 17 Such dedicatory prefaces are frequent in ancient writings, but similarities between Luke-Acts and the Aeneid add weight to the name as a fiction. Vergil had written his epic for Augustus, the divi filius, “son of the divinized” Caesar (cf. Aen. 6.792: divi genus). The similarities with the name Theophilus are striking: divi filius (son of the divinized); theo-philos (“ lover-of-God”).

MacDonald, Dennis R. (2014-11-05). Luke and Vergil: Imitations of Classical Greek Literature (The New Testament and Greek Literature) (Kindle Locations 200-206). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Kindle Edition.

Other exploratory ideas

Some years ago I explored other possible thematic links to the Aeneid through my discussions of the “we-passages” in Luke. I won’t repeat those exploratory posts here apart from one detail. Paul’s journey to Rome starts from Troas, or Troy. On his way he decides to spend some time in Jerusalem where his journey nearly comes to a premature end. Aeneas was likewise distracted from his quest by an overlong stay at Carthage that threatened to end his quest although in quite different circumstances. Both Carthage and Jerusalem were destined to be destroyed by Rome. These and other details I explored some years ago in the following posts:

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 1

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 2

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 3

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 4

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 5

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 6

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 7

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 8

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 9

The We-Passages in Acts: a Roman audience interpretation. Pt 10

A ship of Adramyttium

As I said above, I also believe the author of Acts, or the final redactor of Luke and Acts emulated Israel’s history as found in Genesis to 2 Kings. I have also written in some detail on aspects of this argument and may do another post to set out the details alongside this one.

 



Bonz, M.P. 2000. The Past as Legacy: Luke-Acts and Ancient Epic, Fortress Press, Minneapolis.

MacDonald, D.R. 2014. Luke and Vergil: Imitations of Classical Greek Literature, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Kindle Edition.

Tarrant, R.J. 1997. “Aspects of Virgil’s Reception in Antiquity” in C. Martindale (ed), The Cambridge Companion to Virgil. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 56-72.

Taylor, J. 2007. Classics and the Bible: Hospitality and Recognition, Duckworth, London.

Virgil, The Aeneid, Translator W.F. Jackson Knight, Penguin.



The following two tabs change content below.

Neil Godfrey

Neil is the author of this post. To read more about Neil, see our About page.

Latest posts by Neil Godfrey (see all)



If you enjoyed this post, please consider donating to Vridar. Thanks!


5 thoughts on “Acts and Virgil’s Aeneid: comparison and influence”

  1. Arguably Luke’s Gospel reflects a Rome-friendly attitude. In Luke’s gospel the greatest temptation in the wilderness did not imply that Satan possessed all earthy power, i.e. the Roman Empire. According to Luke the curse of the fig tree mentioned by Mark and Matthew gives way to a parable based on the idea that a withering fig tree could be revived. The symbol of the fig tree is a central aspect of the founder myth of Romulus and Remus. Then there is the strange reference to Quirinius that does not easily fit chronology of the years in which to locate the birth of Jesus, but the very name held a possible subliminal message that recalled the origin of the Quirites, the Romans. Vergil himself has been deemed a prophet of Christianity on the strength of his reference to the birth of a child who would usher in a new age of peace, the culmination of Roman history.

      1. According to Plutarch’s Life of Romulus, the she-wolf came upon the twins under a fig tree. As to what, if any, plausible connection there might be between the two legends other than the bare presence of a fig tree I have no idea.

        1. Many interpreters of the Bible make much of the fact that the fig tree stands as a symbol of the Jewish nation. The curse of the fig tree in the NT had a highly ambivalent implication as Christianity found a dual context in the history of the Jews and in the Greco-Roman world. It is at least arguable therefore that Luke omitted any mention of the curse of a fig tree, a highly enigmatic event in any case, and in effect replaced it by a parable with a more charitable import, not least with Roman sensitivities in mind.

Leave a Reply to Julian Scutts Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from Vridar

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading