Chapter 3 - ST. JUSTIN MARTYR (AD 166)
Although Trajan was no friend to the Gospel, and put St. Ignatius
to death, he made a law which must have been a great relief to the
Christians. Until then they were liable to be sought out, and any
one might inform against them; but Trajan ordered that they should
not be sought out, although, if they were discovered, and refused
to give up their faith, they were to be punished. The next emperor,
too, whose name was Hadrian (AD 117-138) did something to make their
condition better; but it was still one of great hardship and danger.
Notwithstanding the new laws, any governor of a country, who disliked
the Christians, had the power to persecute and vex them cruelly.
And the common people among the heathens still believed the horrid
stories of their killing children and eating human flesh. If there
was a famine or a plague,--if the river Tiber, which runs through
Rome, rose above its usual height and did mischief to the neighbouring
buildings,-- or if the emperor's armies were defeated in war, the
blame of all was laid on the Christians. It was said that all these
things were judgments from the gods, who were angry because the
Christians were allowed to live. And then at the public games, such
as those at which St. Ignatius was put to death, the people used
to cry out, "Throw the Christians to the lions! away with the
godless wretches!" For, as the Christians were obliged to hold
their worship secretly, and had no images like those of the heathen
gods, and did not offer any sacrifices of beasts, as the heathens
did, it was thought that they had no God at all, since the heathens
could not raise their minds to the thought of that God who is a
spirit, and who is not to be worshipped under any bodily shape.
It was, therefore, a great relief when the Emperor Antoninus Pius
(AD 138 to 161), who was a mild and gentle old man, ordered that
governors and magistrates should not give way to such outcries,
and that the Christians should no longer be punished for their religion
only, unless they were found to have done wrong in some other way.
There were now many learned men in the Church, and some of these
began to write books in defence of their faith. One of them, Athenagoras,
had undertaken, while he was a heathen, to show that the Gospel
was all a deceit; but when he looked further into the matter, he
found that it was very different from what he had fancied; and then
he was converted, and, instead of writing against the Gospel, he
wrote in favour of it.
Another of these learned men was Justin, who was born at Samaria,
and was trained in all the wisdom of the Greeks; for the Greeks,
as they were left without such light as God had given to the Jews,
set themselves to seek out wisdom in all sorts of ways. And, as
they had no certain truth from heaven to guide them, they were divided
into a number of different parties, such as the Epicureans, and
the Stoics, who disputed with St. Paul at Athens (Acts xvii. 18).
These all called themselves "philosophers," (which means,
"lovers of wisdom"); and each kind of them thought to
be wiser than all the rest. Justin, then, having a strong desire
to know the truth, tried one kind of philosophy after another, but
could not find rest for his spirit in any of them.
One day, as he was walking thoughtfully on the sea-shore, he observed
an old man of grave and mild appearance, who was following him closely,
and at length entered into talk with him. The old man told Justin
that it was of no use to search after wisdom in the books of the
philosophers, and went on to speak of God the maker of all things,
of the prophecies which He had given to men in the time of the Old
Testament, and how they had been fulfilled in the life and death
of the blessed Jesus. Thus Justin was brought to the knowledge of
the Gospel; and the more he learnt of it, the more was he convinced
of its truth, as he came to know how pure and holy its doctrines
and its rules were, and as he saw the love which Christians bore
towards each other, and the patience and firmness with which they
endured sufferings and death for their Master's sake. And now, although
he still called himself a philosopher, and wore the long cloak which
was the common dress of philosophers, the wisdom which he taught
was not heathen but Christian wisdom. He lived mostly at Rome, where
scholars flocked to him in great numbers. And he wrote books in
defence of the Gospel against heathens, Jews, and heretics, or false
Christians.
The old Emperor Antoninus Pius, under whom the Christians had been
allowed to live in peace and safety, died in the year 161, and was
succeeded by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, whom he had adopted as his
son. Marcus Aurelius was not only one of the best emperors, but
in many ways was one of the best of the heathens. He had a great
character for gentleness, kindness, and justice, and he was fond
of books, and liked to have philosophers and learned men about him.
But, unhappily, these people gave him a very bad notion of Christianity,
and, as he knew no more of it than what they told him, he took a
strong dislike to it. And thus, although he was just and kind to
his other subjects, the Christians suffered more under his reign
than they had ever done before. All the misfortunes that took place,
such as rebellions, defeats in war, plague, and scarcity, were laid
to the blame of the Christians; and the emperor himself seems to
have thought that they were in fault, as he made some new laws against
them.
Now the success which Justin had as a teacher at Rome had long
raised the envy and malice of the heathen philosophers; and, when
these new laws against the Christians came out, one Crescens, a
philosopher of the kind called "Cynics", or "doggish"
(on account of their snarling, currish ways), contrived that Justin
should be carried before a judge, on the charge of being a Christian.
The judge questioned him as to his belief, and as to the meetings
of the Christians; to which Justin answered that he believed in
one God and in the Saviour Christ, the Son of God, but he refused
to say anything which could betray his brethren to the persecutors.
The judge then threatened him with scourging and death: but Justin
replied that the sufferings of this world were nothing to the glory
which Christ had promised to His people in the world to come. Then
he and the others who had been brought up for trial with him were
asked whether they would offer sacrifice to the gods of the heathen,
and as they refused to do this, and to forsake their faith, they
were all beheaded (AD 166). And on account of the death which he
thus suffered for the Gospel, Justin has ever since been especially
styled "The Martyr."
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