Chapter 6 - TERTULLIAN; PERPETUA AND COMPANIONS (AD 181-206)
The Emperor Marcus Aurelius died in 181, and the Church was little
troubled by persecution for the following twenty years.
About this time a false teacher named Montanus made much noise
in the world. He was born in Phrygia, and seems to have been crazed
in his mind. He used to fall into fits, and while in them, he uttered
ravings which were taken for prophecies, or messages from heaven:
and some women who followed him also pretended to be prophetesses.
These people taught a very strict way of living, and thus many persons
who wished to lead holy lives were deceived into running after them.
One of these was Tertullian, of Carthage, in Africa, a very clever
and learned man, who had been converted from heathenism, and had
written some books in defence of the Gospel, but he was of a proud
and impatient temper, and did not rightly consider how our Lord
Himself had said that there would always be a mixture of evil with
the good in His Church on earth (St. Matt. xiii. 38, 48). And hence,
when Montanus pretended to set up a new church, in which there should
be none but good and holy people, Tertullian fell into the snare,
and left the true Church to join the Montanists (as the followers
of Montanus were called). From that time he wrote very bitterly
against the Church; but he still continued to defend the Gospel
in his books against Jews and heathens, and all kinds of false teachers,
except Montanus. And when he was dead, his good deeds were remembered
more than his fall, so that, with all his faults, his name has always
been held in respect.
After more than twenty years of peace, there were cruel persecutions
in some places, under the reign of Severus. The most famous of the
martyrs who then suffered were Perpetua and her companions, who
belonged to the same country with Tertullian, and perhaps to his
own city, Carthage. Perpetua was a young married lady, and had a
little baby only a few weeks old. Her father was a heathen, but
she herself had been converted, and was a "catechumen"--
which was the name given to converts who had not yet been baptized,
but were in a course of "catechising", or training for
baptism. When Perpetua had been put into prison, her father went
to see her, in the hope that he might persuade her to give up her
faith. "Father," she said, "you see this vessel standing
here; can you call it by any other than its right name?" He
answered, "No." "Neither," said Perpetua, "can
I call myself anything else than what I am--a Christian." On
hearing this, her father flew at her in such anger that it seemed
as if he would tear out her eyes; but she stood so quietly that
he could not bring himself to hurt her, and he went away and did
not come again for some time.
In the meanwhile Perpetua and some of her companions were baptized;
and at her baptism she prayed for grace to bear whatever sufferings
might be in store for her. The prison in which she and the others
were shut up was a horrible dungeon, where Perpetua suffered much
from the darkness, the crowded state of the place, the heat and
closeness of the air, and the rude behaviour of the guards. But
most of all she was distressed about her poor little child, who
was separated from her, and was pining away. Some kind Christians,
however, gave money to the keepers of the prison, and got leave
for Perpetua and her friends to spend some hours of the day in a
lighter part of the building, where her child was brought to see
her. And after a while she took him to be always with her, and then
she felt as cheerful as if she had been in a palace.
The martyrs were comforted by dreams, which served to give them
courage and strength to bear their sufferings, by showing them visions
of blessedness which was to follow. When the day was fixed for their
trial, Perpetua's father went again to see her. He begged her to
take pity on his old age, to remember all his kindness to her, and
how he had loved her best of all his children. He implored her to
think of her mother and her brothers, and of the disgrace which
would fall on all the family if she were to be put to death as an
evil-doer. The poor old man shed a flood of tears; he humbled himself
before her, kissing her hands, throwing himself at her feet, and
calling her Lady instead of Daughter. But, although Perpetua was
grieved to the heart, she could only say, "God's pleasure will
be done on us. We are not in our own power, but in His."
One day, as the prisoners were at dinner, they were suddenly hurried
off to their trial. The market-place, where the judge was sitting,
was crowded with people, and when Perpetua was brought forward,
her father crept as close to her as he could, holding out her child,
and said, "Take pity on your infant." The judge himself
entreated her to pity the little one and the old man, and to sacrifice
but, painful as the trial was, she steadily declared that she was
a Christian, and that she could not worship false gods. At these
words, her father burst out into such loud cries that the judge
ordered him to be put down from the place where he was standing
and to be beaten with rods. Perhaps the judge did not mean so much
to punish the old man for being noisy as to try whether the sight
of his suffering might not move his daughter; but, although Perpetua
felt every blow as if it had been laid upon herself, she knew that
she must not give way. She was condemned, with her companions, to
be exposed to wild beasts; and, after she had been taken back to
prison, her father visited her once more. He seemed as if beside
himself with grief; he tore his white beard, he cursed his old age,
and spoke in a way that might have moved a heart of stone. But still
Perpetua could only be sorry for him; she could not give up her
Saviour.
The prisoners were kept for some time after their condemnation,
that they might be put to death at some great games which were to
be held on the birthday of one of the emperor's sons; and during
this confinement their behaviour had a great effect on many who
saw it. The gaoler himself was converted by it, and so were others
who had gone to gaze at them. At length the appointed day came,
and the martyrs were led into the amphitheatre. The men were torn
by leopards and bears; Perpetua and a young woman named Felicitas,
who had been a slave, were put into nets and thrown before a furious
cow, who tossed them and gored them cruelly; and when this was over,
Perpetua seemed as if she had not felt it, but were awaking from
a trance, and she asked when the cow was to come. She then helped
Felicitas to rise from the ground, and spoke words of comfort and
encouragement to others. When the people in the amphitheatre had
seen as much as they wished of the wild beasts, they called out
that the prisoners should be killed. Perpetua and the rest then
took leave of each other, and walked with cheerful looks and firm
steps into the middle of the amphitheatre, where men with swords
fell on them and dispatched them. The executioner who was to kill
Perpetua was a youth, and was so nervous that he stabbed her in
a place where the hurt was not deadly; but she herself took hold
of his sword, and showed him where to give her the death-wound.
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