Pseudepigraphy
Pseudepigrapha, from
Greek pseudes = "false", "epigraphe" = "inscription"— see
Epigraphy— are text works that are considered to have a wrongly attributed
authorship. For instance, several
Hebrew scholars would not insist that the
Song of Solomon was actually written by the king of Israel or ascribe the
Book of Enoch to the prophet
Enoch, and not all
Christian scholars would insist today that the
Second Epistle of Peter was written by
Saint Peter. Nevertheless, in some cases, especially for books belonging to a religious
canon, the question of whether a text is considered pseudepigraphical can become a matter of heavy dispute. The authenticity or value of the work itself, which is a separate question for experienced readers, often becomes sentimentally entangled in the association. Though the inherent value of the text may not be called into question, the weight of a revered or even apostolic author lends authority to a text. This is the essential motivation for pseudepigraphy in the first place.
Pseudepigraphy covers the false ascription of names of
authors to works, even to perfectly authentic works that make no such claim within their text. Thus a widely accepted but incorrect attribution of authorship may make a perfectly authentic text pseudepigraphical. In a parallel case,
forgers have been known to improve the market value of a perfectly genuine 17th-century Dutch painting by adding a painted signature
Rembrandt fecit.
On a related note, a famous name assumed by the author of a work is an
allonym. These are the basic and original meanings of the terms.
There have probably been pseudepigrapha almost from
the invention of full writing. For example ancient
Greek authors often refer to texts which claimed to be by
Orpheus or his pupil
Musaeus but which attributions were generally disregarded. The collection known as the "
Homeric hymns" is pseudepigraphical.
In
Biblical studies,
pseudepigrapha refers particularly to works which purport to be written by noted authorities in either the Old and New Testaments or by persons involved in Jewish or Christian religious study or history. These works can also be written about Biblical matters, often in such a way that they appear to be as authoritative as works which have been included in the many versions of the Judeo-Christian scriptures.
Eusebius of Caesarea Historia ecclesiae 6,12 indicates this usage dates back at least to
Serapion whom he records to have said:
But those writings which are falsely inscribed with their name (ta pseudepigrapha
), we as experienced persons reject...Many such works were also referred to as
Apocrypha, which originally connoted "secret writings", those that were rejected for liturgical public reading. An example of a text that is both apocryphal and pseudepigraphical is the
Odes of Solomon, pseudepigraphical because it was not actually written by Solomon but instead is a collection of early Christian (first to second century) hymns and poems, originally written not in Hebrew, and apocryphal because not accepted in either the
Tanach or the
New Testament.
But
Protestants have also applied the word
Apocrypha to texts found in the
Roman Catholic and
Orthodox scriptures which were not found in
Hebrew manuscripts. Roman Catholics called those texts "
deuterocanonical". Accordingly, there arose in some Protestant Biblical scholarship an extended use of the term
pseudepigrapha for works that appeared as though they ought to be part of the Bibical canon, because of the authorship ascribed to them, but which stood outside both the
Biblical canons recognized by Protestants and Catholics. These works were also outside the particular set of books that Roman Catholics called
deuterocanonical and to which Protestants had generally applied the term Apocryphal. The term accordingly as now used often among both Protestants and Roman Catholics, allegedly for the clarity it brings to discussion among protestants and Catholics, may make it difficult to discuss questions of pseudepigraphical authorship of canonical books dispassionately with an unsophisticated audience. To confuse the matter even more,
Orthodox Christians accept books as canonical, that Roman Catholics and most Protestant denominations consider pseudepigraphical or at best of much less authority. There exist also churches that reject some of the books that Roman Catholics, Orthodox and Protestants accept. The same is true of some
Jewish sects. These are matters more appropriately discussed at
Apocrypha.
There is a tendency not to use the word
pseudepigrapha when describing works later than about 300
C.E. when referring to Biblical matters. But see
Gospel of Barnabas,
Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius, and the author traditionally referred to as the "
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite"—a classic example of pseudepigraphy. There is also a category of
modern pseudepigrapha.
Examples of
Old Testament pseudepigrapha are the
Ethiopian Book of Enoch,
Jubilees (both of which are canonical in the
Abyssinian Church of Ethiopia); the
Life of Adam and Eve and the
Pseudo-Philo. Examples of New Testament pseudepigrapha (but here also likely to be called
New Testament Apocrypha) are the
Gospel of Peter, the attribution of the
Epistle to the Laodiceans to Paul, and
Acts of Thomas, which few would claim was actually written by Thomas. Other examples of New Testament pseudepigrapha are the
Shepherd of Hermas and
Gospel of Barnabas, and perhaps the
Gospel of Judas.