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Fifth Century Syriac Documents
By Tad Walch
Deseret Morning News
PROVO - When their boat capsized in
the Nile River, the Vatican monks feverishly dived for the priceless
manuscripts they had just obtained from an Egyptian monastery.
One monk died in the accident, but the
treasured writings of Ephrem the poet - copied by Assyrian monks
in A.D. 522 and 523 - were saved and laid on the shore to dry
in the early 18th century sun.
From there, the manuscripts traveled to the bowels of the Vatican
Library and nearly 300 years of exile, out of reach of members
of the Eastern Christian churches who revere Ephrem- until the
Vatican agreed to let teams from Brigham Young University scan
14,000 pages of Syriac Christian writings and publish the color
images next month on a DVD.
The texts provide a new window for study of Mesopotamian Christianity,
which began when missionaries from Jerusalem or Antioch visited
what is now Iraq and converted large numbers of people who spoke
Syriac, a dialect of Aramaic. The manuscripts, some never before
published and others never previously available in raw form,
could show the mind-set of Jesus Christ on cultural and religious
issues brought to the region by the missionaries soon after his
death, said Bishop Mar Bawai Soro of the Assyrian Church of the
East.
The Syriac churches remained separate from the Roman Catholic
Church and the Greek influences on the Catholics, said Noel Reynolds,
director of BYU's Institute for the Study and Preservation of
Ancient Religious Texts.
"These texts present important Eastern Christian traditions
that have not been preserved in the Greek manuscripts,"
Reynolds said. "Our perception of Christian history often
ignores the Eastern component, which was at least as important
historically." Bishop Soro, whose office is based in San
Jose, Calif., approached BYU in 1997 after he read about the
institute's creation of a digital database of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
"I think it was God's hand bringing
us together," he said. "This DVD will let us see how
primitive Mesopotamian Syriac Christians thought about various
issues, because that style of thinking is probably closest to
the way the Lord himself thought."
The project marks the first collaboration on ancient manuscripts
between the Vatican and LDS Church-owned BYU, as well as the
Assyrian Church of the East. The newly digitized collection of
33 manuscripts - some dating as far back as the fifth and sixth
centuries - includes unpublished manuals on church services,
commentary on Matthew and John and homilies by Jacob of Serugh.
Many of the texts have never been studied before, said Kristian
Heal, a research associate at BYU's institute and a specialist
in Syriac studies.
"That list of manuscripts, to any person who knows anything
about early Syriac Christianity, immediately make that person
like a child in a toy store," Bishop Soro said.
It is also only the first phase of the project. The Vatican recently
gave final approval to the DVD and raised the possibility of
completing the project, which Reynolds assumes would mean the
digitization of another 50 to 100 manuscripts.
Ephrem's fourth-century writings were copied in the early sixth
century and then purchased by Moses of Nisibis for the Egyptian
Monastery of the Syrians between 900 and 1000. The dry, warm
desert air preserved the manuscripts until emissaries from the
Vatican Library obtained them - and nearly lost them when their
barge capsized on the Nile.
For centuries, Syriac Christians have lamented the loss to the
West of such documents, either to foreign invaders, thieves or
libraries and museums. "We felt for a long time we were
being robbed," Bishop Soro said. "I cannot overstate
this point: Thank God for that robbery. Providentially, these
manuscripts were kept for us. Now we emphasize not ownership
but the accessibility to the ideas, that gospel, that good news
that is represented in the text."
While the DVDs will provide access to
original documents for some of the 1 million members of the Assyrian
Church of the East, they also will draw interest from scholars.
"My first reaction when I saw some of the images was that
the quality is much better than the original manuscript,"
said Syriac Christian scholar and Duke University professor Lucas
Van Rompay in a videotaped interview conducted by BYU. "What
I see here at Brigham Young
University is really a large-scale effort to preserve these manuscript
collections. I haven't seen anything of the same level, of the
same expertise and of the same breadth."
For Bishop Soro, the project is the realization of a dream.
"It was rather an emotional moment when I first viewed the
content of the DVD in Rome," Bishop Soro said. "These
manuscripts really tell our 'lost' story."
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