Pontius Pilate's wife

Saint Claudia Procles of Judea

Icon of Saint Claudia Procles
Governor of Judea, Saint, Martyr
Born Galilee, Israel
Died Judea, Roman Empire
Venerated in Eastern Orthodox Church
Ethiopian Orthodox Church
Feast 27 October (Eastern Orthodox)
25 June (Ethiopian Orthodox)

Pontius Pilate's wife (Greek: Πιλᾶτος (Pilate),[1] γυνὴ αὐτοῦ (his wife);[2] Latin: uxor Pilati; fl. 1st century) is unnamed in the New Testament, where she appears a single time in the Gospel of Matthew. In later Christian tradition, she is known variously as Saint Procula (also spelled Proculla or Procla), Saint Claudia, Claudia Procles or Claudia Procula. Christian literature and legends have amplified the brief anecdote about Pilate's wife in the New Testament.

Biblical references

In the New Testament, the only reference to Pilate's wife exists in a single sentence by Matthew. According to Matthew 27:19, she sent a message to her husband asking him not to condemn Jesus Christ to death:

While Pilate was sitting in the judgment hall, his wife sent him a message: "Have nothing to do with that innocent man, because in a dream last night, I suffered much on account of him."[2]

Pilate did not heed the warning of his wife, who is not named. The name "Claudia" appears only once in the New Testament, in the Second Epistle to Timothy 4:21: "Eubulus, Pudens, Linus and Claudia send their greetings, and so all the other Christians."

Early Christian literature

The Message of Pilate's Wife (1886–94) by James Tissot (Brooklyn Museum)

In the 3rd century, Origen suggested in his Homilies on Matthew that the wife of Pilate had become a Christian,[3][4] or at least that God sent her the dream mentioned by Matthew so that she would convert.[5][6] This interpretation was shared by several theologians of Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Rival theologians contended the dream was sent by Satan in an attempt to thwart the salvation that was going to result from Christ's death.[5][6]

Pilate's wife is mentioned in the apocryphal Gospel of Nicodemus (probably written around the middle of the 4th century),[7] which gives a more elaborate version of the episode of the dream than Matthew.[8][9] The name Procula derives from translated versions of that text. She is first named as Claudia in 1619, in the chronicle of Pseudo-Dexter.[6]

Sainthood

Procula is recognized as a saint in two churches within the Eastern Christian tradition: the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. In the Eastern Orthodox Church, she is celebrated on 27 October. The Ethiopian Orthodox Church celebrates Pilate and Procula together on 25 June.[3][10]

Purported letter by Pilate's wife

A letter, purportedly written in Latin by Pilate's wife from "a little Gallic mountain town" several years after Pilate left Jerusalem, was first published in English by Pictorial Review Magazine in April 1929.[11] The English version of the letter was provided by writer Catherine Van Dyke and it states that Pilate's wife successfully sought Jesus' aid to heal the crippled foot of her son Pilo.[12]

Depictions

Art and literature to 1800

Pilate's wife is sometimes shown in medieval depictions of scenes including her husband. She typically stands behind him, sometimes whispering in his ear.[13]

She is a major character in the Tapisters' and Couchers' Play of the York Mystery Plays cycle, where she introduces herself as "Dame Precious Percula".[14] Her dream is dictated by the Devil. He first soliloquises to the effect that if Jesus dies, he, the Devil, will lose control of men's souls. He then tells the sleeping Percula that Jesus is innocent, and that if he is condemned, she and Pilate will lose their privileged position. She wakes and sends a message to Pilate, but Annas and Caiaphas succeed in convincing him that her dream was inspired by Jesus's witchcraft.

Modern literature

Charlotte Brontë wrote the poem "Pilate's Wife's Dream" in 1846.[15] The biblical scholar Paul Maier, in Pontius Pilate: A Biographical Novel (1968), attempts to take what is known from the documented record and from there construct a fictional narrative as connective material. Maier refers to Pilate's wife as "Procula," arguing that the name "Claudia" only comes from a later tradition.[16]

Novels inspired by Pilate's wife include The Bride of Pilate (1959) by Esther Kellner; and Pilate's Wife: A Novel of the Roman Empire (2006), & Claudia: Daughter of Rome (2008), both by Antoinette May. All books use the name Claudia, and May's book depicts her parents as Roman aristocrats related by blood to Emperor Augustus.[17] Pilate's Wife by H.D. (Hilda Doolittle), written between 1929 and 1934 but posthumously published in 2000, presents Pilate's wife with the name Veronica.[18] Carol Ann Duffy's 1999 poetry collection 'The World's Wife' also contains a poem titled 'Pilate's Wife'.

Modern theatre, film, and television

The Dream of Pilate's Wife (ca. 1879), engraving by Alphonse François after Gustave Doré

In theater, the life of Pilate's wife has been the subject of the dramas “A Play for Easter” by Jewell Ellen Smith[19] and “Claudia Procula” by Curt M. Joseph.[20] The Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice stage musical Jesus Christ Superstar and the subsequent film version attribute the dream to Pontius Pilate instead of his wife. The film dedicates an entire number to this dream in the song "Pilate's Dream".[21]

In films, Pilate's wife was called “Proculla” in the 1927 Cecil B. DeMille epic The King of Kings; Majel Coleman played the role. She had a major part in Julien Duvivier's Golgotha (1935), played by Edwige Feuillère. She is mentioned briefly in Pilate's hand-washing scene in 1953's The Robe ("Even my wife had an opinion"). Other notable cinematic references include Barbara Billingsley in the 1954 Day of Triumph, Viveca Lindfors in the 1961 King of Kings (where she is identified as the daughter of the Emperor Tiberius), Jeanne Crain in the 1962 Italian film Ponzio Pilato, and Angela Lansbury in the 1965 epic The Greatest Story Ever Told.[22]

In the 2004 movie The Passion of the Christ, she is known as Claudia Procles (played by Claudia Gerini). In this film, Claudia fails in her effort to lobby her husband to save Jesus,[23] and consoles Jesus' mother Mary and Mary Magdalene as she generously hands them towels to clean up the blood from his scourging.[24]

Pontius Pilate's wife also has appeared in comedy: John Case played her in Monty Python's 1979 Life of Brian.[25]

On television, Pilate’s wife was played by Joan Leslie in the 1951 Family Theater episode "Hill Number One" (also starring James Dean as John the Apostle), and by Geraldine Fitzgerald in the 1952 Studio One episode "Pontius Pilate" (where Procula is depicted as half-Jewish, and is brought before Pilate as a Christian rebel herself, fifteen years after Jesus' death.) Hope Lange played her in the 1980 made-for-television film The Day Christ Died. More recently, Pilate's wife is featured in the 2008 TV serial The Passion, played by Esther Hall, and in the 2013 miniseries The Bible, portrayed by Louise Delamere.[26] Delamere reprised her role in 2014's Son of God. Joanne Whalley portrayed Pilate's wife in the 2015 series A.D.: The Bible Continues.

See also

References

  1. Matth 27:17
  2. 2.0 2.1 See, for instance, Wikisource:Bible (World English)/Matthew#Chapter 27, vs 19
  3. 3.0 3.1  "Pontius Pilate". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913.
  4. Paul L. Maier. Pontius Pilate: A Biographical Novel. Kregel Publications, 1995, ISBN 0-8254-3296-0, p. 370 (endnotes to Chapter 26)
  5. 5.0 5.1 Sandro Sticca. The Latin Passion Play: Its Origins and Development. SUNY Press, 1970, ISBN 0-87395-045-3, p. 98
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Ulrich Luz, Helmut Koester (contributor), James E. Crouch (translator). Matthew 21-28: A Commentary. Fortress Press, Minneapolis, 2005, ISBN 0-8006-3770-4, p. 499
  7.  "Acta Pilati". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913.
  8. The Acts of Pilate, Chapter 2, Paragraph 1, translated by M. R. James
  9. "The Gospel of Nicodemus, or Acts of Pilate", from The Apocryphal New Testament, M.R. James (translation and notes). Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924
  10. "The Fate of Pontius Pilate," Hermes 99.3 (1971), p. 362.
  11. Issana Press - this company published a version of Claudia's purported letter ("A Letter from Pontius Pilate's Wife") in the booklet Relics of Repentance ISBN 0-9625158-2-5
  12. Time Magazine, 1963-04-12: "Gospel According to Claudia"
  13. G Schiller, Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. II,1972 (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, p. 66, and passim see Index, ISBN 0-85331-324-5
  14. original text of Tapiters and Couchers Play at University of Michigan
  15. "Pilate's Wife's Dream" by Charlotte Brontë
  16. Paul L. Maier. Pontius Pilate: A Biographical Novel. Kregel Publications, 1995, ISBN 0-8254-3296-0. preview at Google Book Search
  17. USA Today coverage of "Pilate's Wife"
  18. Amazon.ca/Library Journal review
  19. The Dream of Claudia Procula - Jewell Ellen Smith
  20. Trunk-In-The-Attic Drama Resources - Contemporary Bible Dramas
  21. Original score listing for “Jesus Christ Superstar”
  22. Halliwell, Leslie (2003). Halliwell’s Film & Video Guide. HarperResource. ISBN 0-06-050890-6
  23. Variety review
  24. Boston Globe
  25. Chapman, Graham; Cleese, John; Gilliam, Terry; Idle, Eric; Jones, Terry; Palin, Michael (1979). Monty Python's The Life of Brian/Montypythonscrapbook. London: Eyre Methuen.
  26. Film and TV productions featuring the character Claudia Procula

External links