Nilus of Ancyra→Ptolemy|c. 415 AD|nilus ancyra|From Ancyra|AI-assisted
To the same person.
You often prepare to write to me, putting my lowliness to shame; for I, at least, am not reluctant in this matter. Now someone before our time has said that a tradition concerning these things is preserved in the Church by unwritten memory: namely, that Judea was the first land to have a human being as its inhabitant, since the first-formed Adam, after he was cast out of paradise, was settled there as a consolation for what he had lost. Palestine, then, was also the first to receive a dead human being, since it was there that Adam fulfilled his condemnation. It seemed a strange new thing to the people of that time to behold the bone of a head with the flesh still remaining about it; and having laid up the skull in a place, they named it the Place of the Skull [Golgotha]. It is likely that not even Noah, the founder of all human beings, was ignorant of the tomb, seeing that after the flood the whole flock was preserved through him. For this reason, he who searched out the beginnings of human death received his suffering [the Passion] in the place called the Place of the Skull, so that from the very place where corruption took its beginning among human beings, from there the life of the kingdom might also begin. And just as death prevailed in Adam, so it would be made weak in the death of Christ. This is why Isaiah the prophet has said, "On a horn, in a fertile place" [Isaiah 5:1]: "on a horn," inasmuch as it possesses the cross of the Master as a defense against death; and "in a fertile place," inasmuch as, after paradise, it was counted worthy of the primacy over all that is under the sun.
You often prepare to write to me, putting my lowliness to shame; for I, at least, am not reluctant in this matter. Now someone before our time has said that a tradition concerning these things is preserved in the Church by unwritten memory: namely, that Judea was the first land to have a human being as its inhabitant, since the first-formed Adam, after he was cast out of paradise, was settled there as a consolation for what he had lost. Palestine, then, was also the first to receive a dead human being, since it was there that Adam fulfilled his condemnation. It seemed a strange new thing to the people of that time to behold the bone of a head with the flesh still remaining about it; and having laid up the skull in a place, they named it the Place of the Skull [Golgotha]. It is likely that not even Noah, the founder of all human beings, was ignorant of the tomb, seeing that after the flood the whole flock was preserved through him. For this reason, he who searched out the beginnings of human death received his suffering [the Passion] in the place called the Place of the Skull, so that from the very place where corruption took its beginning among human beings, from there the life of the kingdom might also begin. And just as death prevailed in Adam, so it would be made weak in the death of Christ. This is why Isaiah the prophet has said, "On a horn, in a fertile place" [Isaiah 5:1]: "on a horn," inasmuch as it possesses the cross of the Master as a defense against death; and "in a fertile place," inasmuch as, after paradise, it was counted worthy of the primacy over all that is under the sun.
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.