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  <title>History of the Christian Church, Volume II: Ante-Nicene Christianity. A.D. 100-325.</title>
  <contributor role="x-Transcriber">whp</contributor>
  <contributor role="x-Markup">Wendy Huang</contributor>
  <creator subType="file-as" role="aut">Schaff, Philip (1819-1893)</creator>
  <creator subType="short-form" role="aut">Philip Schaff</creator>
  <subject subType="ccel">All; History;</subject>
  <subject subType="LCCN">BR145.S3</subject>
  <subject subType="lcsh1">Christianity</subject>
  <subject subType="lcsh2">History</subject>
  <date type="ISO" subType="Created">2002-11-27</date>
  <publisher>Grand Rapids, MI: Christian CLassics Ethereal Library</publisher>
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<div type="x-div1" divTitle="History of the Christian Church by Philip Schaff" n="i" osisID="i">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p1">HISTORY</p>

<p osisID="i.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p3"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p4">of the</p>

<p osisID="i.p5"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p6"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p7">CHRISTIAN CHURCH<note osisID="edn1"><p subType="x-MsoEndnoteText" osisID="i.p8"> Schaff, Philip, History of the Christian Church, (Oak
Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.) 1997. This material has been
carefully compared, corrected¸ and emended (according to the
1910 edition of Charles Scribner's Sons) by The Electronic Bible
Society, Dallas, TX, 1998.</p></note></p>

<p osisID="i.p9"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p10">by</p>

<p osisID="i.p11"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p12">PHILIP SCHAFF</p>

<p osisID="i.p13"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="i.p15">Christianus sum.                  
Christiani nihil a me
alienum puto</p>

<p osisID="i.p16"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p17">VOLUME II</p>

<p osisID="i.p18"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p19">ANTE-NICENE CHRISTIAINITY</p>

<p osisID="i.p20"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="i.p21">a.d. 100–325.</p>

<p osisID="i.p22"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p23"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="i.p24"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

</div>


<div type="x-div1" divTitle="Preface to the Third Edition Revised" n="ii" osisID="ii">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="ii.p1">PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION REVISED</p>

<p osisID="ii.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="ii.p3">A few months after the appearance of the revised
edition of this volume, Dr. Bryennios, the learned Metropolitan of
Nicomedia, surprised the world by the publication of the now famous
Didache, which he had discovered in the Jerusalem Monastery of
the Most Holy Sepulchre at Constantinople. This led me, in justice to
myself and to my readers, to write an independent supplement under the
title: The Oldest Church Manual, called the Teaching of the Twelve
Apostles, etc., which is now passing through the press.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="ii.p4">At the same time I have taken advantage of a new
issue of this History, without increasing the size and the
price, to make in the plates all the necessary references to the
Didache where it sheds new light on the post-apostolic age
(especially on pages 140, 184, 185, 202, 226, 236, 239, 241, 247, 249,
379, 640).</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="ii.p5">I have also brought the literature up to date, and
corrected a few printing errors, so that this issue may be called a
revised edition. A learned and fastidious German critic and
professional church historian has pronounced this work to be far in
advance of any German work in the fullness of its digest of the
discoveries and researches of the last thirty years. ("Theolog.
Literatur-Zeitung," for March 22, 1884.) But the Bryennios discovery,
and the extensive literature which it has called forth, remind me of
the imperfect character of historical books in an age of such rapid
progress as ours.</p>

<signed type="attr" osisID="ii.p5.1">The Author.</signed>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="ii.p6">New York, April 22, 1885.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div1" divTitle="Fifth Edition" n="iii" osisID="iii">

<p osisID="iii.p1"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iii.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iii.p3">FIFTH EDITION</p>

<p osisID="iii.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iii.p5"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p osisID="iii.p6">The fourth edition (1886) was a reprint of the third,
with a few slight improvements. In this fifth edition I have made
numerous additions to the literature, and adapted the text throughout
to the present stage of research, which continues to be very active and
fruitful in the Ante-Nicene period.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iii.p7">Several topics connected with the catechetical
instruction, organization, and ritual (baptism and eucharist) of the
early Church are more fully treated in my supplementary monograph,
The Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, or The Oldest Church
Manual, which first appeared in June, 1885, and in a third edition,
revised and enlarged, January, 1889, (325 pages).</p>

<signed type="attr" osisID="iii.p7.1">P. S.</signed>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="iii.p8">New York, July, 1889.</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div1" divTitle="Preface to the Second Edition" n="iv" osisID="iv">

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p1">PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION</p>

<p osisID="iv.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>


<p osisID="iv.p3">This second volume contains the history of
Christianity from the end of the Apostolic age to the beginning of the
Nicene.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p4">The first edict of Toleration, A. D. 311, made an
end of persecution; the second Edict of Toleration, 311 (there is no
third), prepared the way for legal recognition and protection; the
Nicene Council, 325, marks the solemn inauguration of the imperial
state-church. Constantine, like <name osisID="iv.p4.1">Eusebius</name>, the
theologian, and Hosius, the statesman, of his reign, belongs to both
periods and must be considered in both, though more fully in the
next.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p5">We live in an age of discovery and research,
similar to that which preceded the Reformation. The beginnings of
Christianity are now absorbing the attention of scholars.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p6">During the present generation early church history
has been vastly enriched by new sources of information, and almost
revolutionized by independent criticism. Among the recent literary
discoveries and publications the following deserve special mention:</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p7">The Syriac <name osisID="iv.p7.2">Ignatius</name> (by Cureton 1845 and
1849), which opened a new chapter in the Ignatian controversy so
closely connected with the rise of Episcopacy and Catholicism; the
Philosophumena of <name osisID="iv.p7.5">Hippolytus</name> (by Miller 1851, and
by Duncker and Schneidewin, 1859), which have shed a flood of light on
the ancient heresies and systems of thought, as well as on the
doctrinal and disciplinary commotions in the Roman church in the early
part of third century; the Tenth Book of The Pseudo-Clementine Homilies (by Dressel, 1853),
which supplements our knowledge of a curious type of distorted
Christianity in the post-apostolic age, and furnishes, by an undoubted
quotation, a valuable contribution to the solution of the Johannean
problem; the Greek Hermas from Mt. Athos (the
Codex Lipsiensis, published by Anger and Tischendorf, 1856); a new and
complete Greek MS. of the First Epistle of the
Roman Clement with several important new
chapters and the oldestwritten Christian prayer (about one tenth of the
whole), found in a Convent Library at Constantinople (by Bryennios,
1875); and in the same Codex the Second (so
called) Epistle of Clement, or post-Clementine Homily rather, in its complete form (20 chs. instead of
12), giving us the first post-apostolic sermon, besides a new Greek
text of the Epistle of Barnabus; a Syriac
Version of Clement in the library of Jules
Mohl, now at Cambridge (1876); fragments of <name osisID="iv.p7.18">Tatian</name>’s
Diatessaron with Ephraem’s
Commentary on it, in an Armenian version (Latin by
Mösinger 1878); fragments of the apologies of Melito (1858), and Aristides
(1878); the complete Greek text of the Acts of
Thomas (by Max Bonnet, 1883); and the crowning
discovery of all, the Codex Sinaiticus, the
only complete uncial MS. of the Greek Testament, together with the
Greek Barnabus and the Greek
Hermas (by Tischendorf, 1862), which, with the facsimile edition
of the Vatican Codex
(1868–1881, 6 vols.), marks an epoch in the science of
textual criticism of the Greek Testament and of those two Apostolic
Fathers, and establishes the fact of the ecclesiastical use of all our
canonical books in the age of <name osisID="iv.p7.29">Eusebius</name>.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p8">In view of these discoveries we would not be
surprised if the Exposition of the Lord’s Oracles by Papias, which was still in existence at Nismes in 1215,
the Memorials of Hegesippus, and the whole Greek
original of <name osisID="iv.p8.7">Irenaeus</name>, which were recorded by
a librarian as extant in the sixteenth century, should turn up in some
old convent.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p9">In connection with these fresh sources there has
been a corresponding activity on the part of scholars. The Germans have
done and are doing an astonishing amount of Quellenforschung and Quellenkritik in numerous monographs and
periodicals, and have given us the newest and best critical editions of
the Apostolic Fathers and Apologists. The English with their strong
common sense, judicial calmness, and conservative tact are fast
wheeling into the line of progress, as is evident from the collective
works on Christian Antiquities, and the Christian Biography, and from
Bp. Lightfoot’s Clementine Epistles, which are soon to
be followed by his edition of the Ignatian Epistles. To the brilliant
French genius and learning of Mr. Renan we owe a graphic picture of the
secular surroundings of early Christianity down to the time of <name osisID="iv.p9.5">Marcus Aurelius</name>, with sharp glances into the
literature and life of the church. His Historie des Origines du
Christianisme, now completed in seven volumes, after
twenty year’s labor, is well worthy to rank with
Gibbon’s immortal work. The Rise and Triumph of
Christianity is a grander theme than the contemporary Decline and Fall
of the Roman Empire, but no historian can do justice to it without
faith in the divine character and mission of that peaceful Conqueror of
immortal souls, whose kingdom shall have no end.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p10">The importance of these literary discoveries and
investigations should not blind us to the almost equally important
monumental discoveries and researches of Cavalier de Rossi, Garrucci,
and other Italian scholars who have illuminated the subterranean
mysteries of the church of Rome and of Christian art. Neander,
Gieseler, and Baur, the greatest church historians of the nineteenth
century, are as silent about the catacombs as Mosheim and Gibbon were
in the eighteenth. But who could now write a history of the first three
centuries without recording the lessons of those rude yet expressive
pictures, sculptures, and epitaphs from the homes of confessors and
martyrs? Nor should we overlook the gain which has come to us from the
study of monumental inscriptions, as for instance in rectifying the
date of <name osisID="iv.p10.1">Polycarp</name>’s martyrdom
who is now brought ten years nearer to the age of St. John.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p11">Before long there will be great need of an
historic architect who will construct a beautiful and comfortable
building out of the vast material thus brought to light. The Germans
are historic miners, the French and English are skilled manufacturers;
the former understand and cultivate the science of history, the latter
excel in the art of historiography. A master of both would be the ideal
historian. But God has wisely distributed his gifts, and made
individuals and nations depend upon and supplement each other.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p12">The present volume is an entire reconstruction of
the corresponding part of the first edition (vol. I p.
144–528), which appeared twenty-five years ago. It is
more than double in size. Some chapters (e.g. VI. VII. IX.) and
several sections (e.g. 90–93, 103,
155–157, 168, 171, 184, 189, 190, 193,
198–204, etc.) are new, and the rest has been improved
and enlarged, especially the last chapter on the literature of the
church. My endeavor has been to bring the book up to the present
advanced state of knowledge, to record every important work (German,
French, English, and American) which has come under my notice, and to
make the results of the best scholarship of the age available and
useful to the rising generation.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.p13">In conclusion, I may be permitted to express my
thanks for the kind reception which has been accorded to this revised
edition of the work of my youth. It will stimulate me to new energy in
carrying it forward as far as God may give time and strength. The third
volume needs no reconstruction, and a new edition of the same with a
few improvements will be issued without delay.</p>

<signed type="attr" osisID="iv.p13.1">Philip Schaff.</signed>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="iv.p14">Union Theological Seminary,</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading7" osisID="iv.p15">October, 1883.</p>

<p osisID="iv.p16"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>




<p osisID="iv.p289"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-p1" osisID="iv.p290">Illustrations from the Catacombs.</p>

<p subType="x-p1" osisID="iv.p291">Alphabetical Index.</p>

<p osisID="iv.p292"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.p293"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p294">SECOND PERIOD</p>

<p osisID="iv.p295"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.p296"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p297">ANTE-NICENE CHRISTIANITY</p>

<p osisID="iv.p298"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p299">or,</p>

<p osisID="iv.p300"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p301">THE AGE OF PERSECUTION AND MARTYRDOM</p>

<p osisID="iv.p302"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p303">from the</p>

<p osisID="iv.p304"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p305">DEATH OF JOHN TO CONSTANTINE THE GREAT</p>

<p osisID="iv.p306"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p307">a.d. 100–325.</p>

<p osisID="iv.p308"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.p309"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p310">"The blood
of martyrs is the seed of the church"</p>

<p osisID="iv.p311"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.p312"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p313">SECOND PERIOD</p>

<p osisID="iv.p314"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.p315"><milestone type="x-br"/></p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p316">ANTE-NICENE CHRISTIANITY</p>

<p osisID="iv.p317"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p318">or,</p>

<p osisID="iv.p319"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p320">THE AGE OF PERSECUTION AND MARTYRDOM</p>

<p osisID="iv.p321"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p322">from the</p>

<p osisID="iv.p323"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p324">DEATH OF JOHN TO CONSTANTINE THE GREAT</p>

<p osisID="iv.p325"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.p326">a.d.
100–325.</p>

<p osisID="iv.p327"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Literature on the Ante-Nicene Age" n="1" osisID="iv.1">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.1.p1">§ 1. Literature on the Ante-Nicene Age</p>

<p osisID="iv.1.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList2" osisID="iv.1.p3">I. Sources</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p4">1. The writings of the Apostolic Fathers, the
Apologists, and all the ecclesiastical authors of the 2nd and 3rd, and
to some extent of the 4th and 5th centuries; particularly <name osisID="iv.1.p4.1">Clement of Rome</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.3">Ignatius</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.5">Polycarp</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.7">Justin Martyr</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.9">Irenaeus</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.11">Hippolytus</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.13">Tertullian</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.15">Cyprian</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.17">Clement of Alexandria</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.19">Origen</name>, <name osisID="iv.1.p4.21">Eusebius</name>, Jerome, Epiphanius, and
Theodoret.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p5">2. The writings of the numerous heretics, mostly
extant only in fragments.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p6">3. The works of the pagan opponents of Christianity,
as Celsus, Lucian, Porphyry, Julian the
Apostate.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p7">4. The occasional notices of Christianity, in the
contemporary classical authors, Tacitus, Suetonius, the younger Pliny, Dion
Cassius.</p>

<p osisID="iv.1.p8"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList2" osisID="iv.1.p9">II. Collections of Sources, (besides those included
in the comprehensive Patristic Libraries):</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p10">Gebhardt, Harnack, and Zahn: Patrum Apostolicorum Opera. Lips.,
1876; second ed. 1878 sqq.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p11">Fr. Xav. Funk (R.C.): Opera Patrum Apost.
Tübing., 1878, 1881, 1887, 2 vols. The last edition includes
the Didache.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p12">I. C. Th. Otto: Corpus
Apologetarum Christianorum saeculi secundi. Jenae, 1841 sqq., in 9
vols.; 2nd ed. 1847–1861; 3rd ed. 1876 sqq. ("plurimum
aucta et emendata").</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p13">Roberts And Donaldson: Ante-Nicene Christian
Library. Edinburgh (T.&amp; T. Clark),
1868–’72, 25 volumes. American
edition, chronologically arranged and enlarged by Bishop A. C. Coxe, D.
D., with a valuable Bibliographical Synopsis by E. C. Richardson. New York (Christian
Literature Company), 1885–’87, 9
large vols.</p>

<p osisID="iv.1.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p15">The fragments of the earliest Christian writers,
whose works are lost, may be found collected in Grabe: Spicilegium Patrum ut et Haereticorum Saeculi I.
II. et III. (Oxon. 1700; new ed. Oxf. 1714, 3 vols.); in Routh: Reliquiae Sacrae, sive auctorum fere jam perditorum
secundi, tertiique saeculi fragmenta quae supersunt (Oxon. 1814 sqq. 4
vols.; 2nd ed. enlarged, 5 vols. Oxf. 1846–48); and in
Dom. I. B. Pitra (O. S. B., a French Cardinal
since 1863): Spicilegium Solesmense, complectens sanctorum patrum
scriptorumque eccles. anecdota hactenus opera, selecta e Graecis,
Orientialibus et Latinis codicibus (Paris,
1852–’60, 5 vols.). Comp. also Bunsen: Christianity and Mankind, etc. Lond. 1854,
vols. V., VI. and VII., which contain the Analecta Ante-Nicaena
(reliquicae literariae, canonicae, liturgicae).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p16">The haereseological writings of Epiphanius,
Philastrius, Pseudo-<name osisID="iv.1.p16.1">Tertullian</name>, etc. are
collected in Franc. Oehler: Corpus
haereseologicum. Berol. 1856–61, 3 vols. They belong
more to the next period.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p17">The Jewish and Heathen Testimonies are
collected by N. Lardner, 1764, new ed. by
Kippis, Lond. 1838.</p>

<p osisID="iv.1.p18"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList2" osisID="iv.1.p19">III. Histories.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList3" osisID="iv.1.p20">1. Ancient Historians.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p21">Hegesippus (a Jewish Christian of the middle of the
second century): ̔Υπομνήματα
τω̑ν
ἐκκλησιαστικω̑ν
πράξεων (quoted under the title πέντε
ὑπομνήματα
and πέντε
συγγράμματα). These ecclesiastical Memorials
are only preserved in fragments (on the martyrdom of James of
Jerusalem, the rise of heresies, etc.) in <name osisID="iv.1.p21.7">Eusebius</name> H. Eccl., collected by Grabe (Spicileg. II.
203–214), Routh (Reliqu. Sacrae, vol. I.
209–219), and Hilgenfeld ("Zeitschrift für
wissenschaftliche Theol." 1876, pp. 179 sqq.). See art. of
Weizsäcker in Herzog, 2nd ed., V. 695; and of Milligan in
Smith &amp; Wace, II. 875. The work was still extant in the 16th
century, and may be discovered yet; see Hilgenfeld’s
"Zeitschrift" for 1880, p. 127. It is strongly Jewish-Christian, yet
not Ebionite, but Catholic.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p22">*<name osisID="iv.1.p22.1">Eusebius</name> (bishop of
Caesarea in Palestine since 315, died 340, "the father of Church
History," "the Christian Herodotus," confidential friend, adviser, and
eulogist of Constantine the Great): ̓Εκκλησιαστικὴ
ἱστορία, from the incarnation to the
defeat and death of Licinius 324. Chief edd. by Stephens, Paris 1544
(ed. princeps); Valesius (with the other Greek church historians), Par.
1659; Reading, Cambr. 1720; Zimmermann, Francof. 1822; Burton, Oxon.
1838 and 1845 (2 vols.); Schwegler, Tüb. 1852;
Lämmer, Scaphus. 1862 (important for the text); F. A.
Heinichen, Lips. 1827, second ed. improved
1868–’70, 3 vols. (the most complete
and useful edition of all the Scripta Historica of Eus.); G. Dindorf,
Lips., 1871. Several versions(German, French, and English); one by
Hanmer (Cambridge; 1683, etc.); another by C. F. Crusé (an
Am. Episc., London, 1842, Phil., 1860, included in
Bagster’s edition of the Greek Eccles. Historians,
London, 1847, and in Bohn’s Eccles. Library); the best
with commentary by A. C. McGiffert (to be published by "The Christian
Lit. Comp.," New York, 1890).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p23">The other historical writings of <name osisID="iv.1.p23.1">Eusebius</name>, including his Chronicle, his Life of
Constantine, and his Martyrs of Palestine, are found in
Heinichen’s ed., and also in the ed. of his Opera
omnia, by Migne, "Patrol. Graeca," Par. 1857,
5 vols. Best ed. of his Chronicle, by Alfred
Schöne, Berlin, 1866 and 1875, 2 vols.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p24">Whatever may be said of the defects of <name osisID="iv.1.p24.1">Eusebius</name> as an historical critic and writer, his learning
and industry are unquestionable, and his Church History and Chronicle
will always remain an invaluable collection of information not
attainable in any other ancient author. The sarcastic contempt of
Gibbon and charge of willful suppression of truth are not justified,
except against his laudatory over-estimate of Constantine, whose
splendid services to the church blinded his vision. For a just estimate
of <name osisID="iv.1.p24.2">Eusebius</name> see the exhaustive article of
Bishop Lightfoot in Smith &amp; Wace, II. 308–348.</p>

<p osisID="iv.1.p25"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList3" osisID="iv.1.p26">2. Modern Historians.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p27">William Cave, (died 1713): Primitive Christianity.
Lond. 4th ed. 1682, in 3 parts. The same: Lives of the most eminent
Fathers of the Church that flourished in the first four centuries,
1677–’83, 2 vols.; revised by ed. H.
Carey, Oxford, 1840, in 3 vols. Comp. also Cave’s Scriptorum
ecclesiasticorum historia literaria, a Christo nato usque ad saeculum
XIV; best ed. Oxford 1740–’43, 2
vols. fol.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p28">*J. L. Mosheim: Commentarii
de rebus Christianis ante Constantinum M. Helmst. 1753. The same in
English by Vidal, 1813 sqq., 3 vols., and by Murdock, New Haven, 1852,
2 vols.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p29">*Edward Gibbon: The
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. London,
1776–’88, 6 vols.; best edd. by
Milman, with his own, Guizot’s and
Wenck’s notes, and by William Smith, including
the notes of Milman, etc. Reprinted, London, 1872, 8 vols., New York,
Harpers, 1880, in 6 vols. In Chs. 15 and 16, and throughout his great
work, Gibbon dwells on the outside, and on the defects rather than the
virtues of ecclesiastical Christianity, without entering into the heart
of spiritual Christianity which continued beating through all ages; but
for fullness and general accuracy of information and artistic
representation his work is still unsurpassed.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p30">H. G. Tzschirner: Der Fall des
Heidenthums. Leipz. 1829.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p31">Edw. Burton: Lectures upon the Ecclesiastical History of
the first three Centuries. Oxf. 1833, in 3 parts (in 1 vol. 1845). He
made also collections of the ante-Nicene testimonies to the Divinity of
Christ, and the Holy Spirit.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p32">Henry H. Milman: The History of Christianity from
the Birth of Christ to the Abolition of Paganism in the Roman Empire.
Lond. 1840. 3 vols.; 2nd ed. 1866. Comp. also the first book of his
History of Latin Christianity, 2d ed. London and New York, 1860, in 8
vols.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p33">John Kaye (Bishop of Lincoln, d. 1853).
Ecclesiastical History of the Second and Third Centuries, illustrated
from the writinqs of <name osisID="iv.1.p33.1">Tertullian</name>. Lond. 1845.
Comp. also his books on <name osisID="iv.1.p33.2">Justin Martyr</name>,
Clement of Alex., and the Council of Nicaea (1853).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p34">F. D. Maurice: Lectures
on the Eccles. Hist. of the First and Second Cent. Cambr. 1854.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p35">*A. Ritschl: Die Entstehung der
alt-katholischen Kirche. Bonn, 1850; 2nd ed. 1857.
The second edition is partly reconstructed and more positive.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p36">*E. de Pressensé (French Protestant):
Histoire de trois
premiers siècles de l’église
chrétienne. Par. 1858 sqq. The same in
German trans. by E. Fabarius. Leipz.
1862–’63, 4 vols. English transl. by
Annie Harwood Holmden, under the title: The Early Years of
Christianity. A Comprehensive History of the First Three Centuries of
the Christian Church, 4 vols. Vol. I. The Apost. Age; vol. II. Martyrs
and Apologists; vol. III. Heresy and Christian Doctrine; vol. IV.
Christian Life and Practice. London (Hodder &amp; Stoughton), 1870
sqq., cheaper ed., 1879. Revised edition of the original, Paris, 1887
sqq.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p37">W. D. Killen
(Presbyterian): The Ancient Church traced for the first three
centuries. Edinb. and New York, 1859. New ed. N. Y., 1883.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p38">Ambrose Manahan (R. Cath.): Triumph of the Catholic
Church in the Early Ages. New York, 1859.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p39">Alvan Lamson (Unitarian): The Church of the First
Three Centuries, with special reference to the doctrine of the Trinity;
illustrating its late origin and gradual formation. Boston, 1860.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p40">Milo Mahan (Episcopalian): A Church History of the
First Three centuries. N. York, 1860. Second ed., 1878 (enlarged).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p41">J. J. Blunt: History of
the Christian Church during the first three centuries. London,
1861.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p42">Jos. Schwane (R.C.): Dogmengeschichte der vornicänischen
Zeit. Münster, 1862.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p43">Th. W. Mossman: History
of the Cath. Church of J. Christ from the death of John to the middle
of the second century. Lond. 1873.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p44">*Ernest Renan: L’ Histoire des origines du
Christianisme. Paris, 1863–1882, 7
vols. The last two vols., I’ église
Chrétienne, 1879, and Marc
Aurèle, 1882, belong to this period. Learned, critical, and
brilliant, but thoroughly secular, and skeptical.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p45">*Gerhard Uhlhorn: Der Kampf des Christenthums
mit dem Heidenthum. 3d improved ed. Stuttgart, 1879.
English transl. by Profs. Egbert C. Smyth and C. J. H. Ropes: The
Conflict of Christianity, etc. N. York, 1879. An admirable translation
of a graphic and inspiring, account of the heroic conflict of
Christianity with heathen Rome.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p46">*Theod. Keim, (d. 1879):
Rom und das
Christenthum. Ed. from the author’s
MSS. by H. Ziegler. Berlin, 1881. (667 pages).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p47">Chr. Wordsworth (Bishop of Lincoln): A Church
History to the Council of Nicea, a.d. 325. Lond. and N. York, 1881.
Anglo-Catholic.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p48">A. Plummer: The Church
of the Early Fathers, London, 1887.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.1.p49">Of the general works on Church History, those of
Baronius, Tillemont (R.C.), Schröckh, Gieseler, Neander, and Baur. (the third revised ed. of vol. 1st, Tüb.
1853, pp. 175–527; the same also transl. into English)
should be noticed throughout on this period; but all these books are
partly superseded by more recent discoveries and discussions of
special points, which will be noticed in the respective sections.</p>

<p osisID="iv.1.p50"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="General Character of Ante-Nicene Christianity" n="2" osisID="iv.2">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.2.p1">§ 2. General Character of Ante-Nicene
Christianity.</p>

<p osisID="iv.2.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.2.p3">We now descend from the primitive apostolic church to
the Graeco-Roman; from the scene of creation to the work of
preservation; from the fountain of divine revelation to the stream of
human development; from the inspirations of the apostles and prophets
to the productions of enlightened but fallible teachers. The hand of
God has drawn a bold line of demarcation between the century of
miracles and the succeeding ages, to show, by the abrupt transition and
the striking contrast, the difference between the work of God and the
work of man, and to impress us the more deeply with the supernatural
origin of Christianity and the incomparable value of the New Testament.
There is no other transition in history so radical and sudden, and yet
so silent and secret. The stream of divine life in its passage from the
mountain of inspiration to the valley of tradition is for a short time
lost to our view, and seems to run under ground. Hence the close of the
first and the beginning of the second centuries, or the age of the
Apostolic Fathers is often regarded as a period for critical conjecture
and doctrinal and ecclesiastical controversy rather than for historical
narration.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p4">Still, notwithstanding the striking difference,
the church of the second and third centuries is a legitimate
continuation of that of the primitive age. While far inferior in
originality, purity, energy, and freshness, it is distinguished for
conscientious fidelity in preserving and propagating the sacred
writings and traditions of the apostles, and for untiring zeal in
imitating their holy lives amidst the greatest difficulties and
dangers, when the religion of Christ was prohibited by law and the
profession of it punished as a political crime.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p5">The second period, from the death of the apostle
John to the end of the persecutions, or to the accession of
Constantine, the first Christian emperor, is the classic age of the
ecclesia pressa, of heathen persecution, and of Christian martyrdom and
heroism, of cheerful sacrifice of possessions and life itself for the
inheritance of heaven. It furnishes a continuous commentary on the
Saviour’s words: "Behold, I send you forth as sheep in
the midst of wolves; I came not to send peace on earth, but a sword."<note osisID="edn2"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.2.p6">r.
4:10; <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.2.p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.8.36">Rom. 8:36</reference>; <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.2.p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Phil.3.10">Phil. 3:10</reference> sq. <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.2.p6.4" osisRef="Bible:Col.1.24">Col. 1:24</reference> sq.; <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.2.p6.5" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.2.21">1 Pet. 2:21</reference></p></note> To merely human religion could have
stood such an ordeal of fire for three hundred years. The final victory
of Christianity over Judaism and heathenism, and the mightiest empire
of the ancient world, a victory gained without physical force, but by
the moral power of patience and perseverance, of faith and love, is one
of the sublimest spectacles in history, and one of the strongest
evidences of the divinity and indestructible life of our religion.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p7">But equally sublime and significant are the
intellectual and spiritual victories of the church in this period over
the science and art of heathenism, and over the assaults of Gnostic and
Ebionitic heresy, with the copious vindication and development of the
Christian truth, which the great mental conflict with those open and
secret enemies called forth.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p8">The church of this period appears poor in earthly
possessions and honors, but rich in heavenly grace, in world-conquering
faith, love, and hope; unpopular, even outlawed, hated, and persecuted,
yet far more vigorous and expansive than the philosophies of Greece or
the empire of Rome; composed chiefly of persons of the lower social
ranks, yet attracting the noblest and deepest minds of the age, and
bearing, in her bosom the hope of the world; "as unknown, yet
well-known, as dying, and behold it lives;" conquering by apparent
defeat, and growing on the blood of her martyrs; great in deeds,
greater in sufferings, greatest in death for the honor of Christ and
the benefit of generations to come.<note osisID="edn3"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.2.p9">ect, as well as affection; for theirs was the fervor of a
steady faith in things unseen and eternal; theirs, often, a meek
patience under the most grievous wrongs; theirs the courage to maintain
a good profession before the frowning face of philosophy, of secular
tyranny, and of splendid superstition; theirs was abstractedness from
the world and a painful self-denial; theirs the most arduous and costly
labors of love; theirs a munificence in charity, altogether without
example; theirs was a reverent and scrupulous care of the sacred
writings; and this one merit, if they had no other, is of a superlative
degree, and should entitle them to the veneration and grateful regards
of the modern church. How little do many readers of the Bible,
nowadays, think of what it cost the Christians of the second and third
centuries, merely to rescue and hide the sacred treasures from the rage
of the heathen!"</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p10">The condition and manners of the Christians in
this age are most beautifully described by the unknown author of the
"Epistola ad Diognetum" in the early part of the second century.<note osisID="edn4"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.2.p11"/></note> "The Christians," he says, "are not
distinguished from other men by country, by language, nor by civil
institutions. For they neither dwell in cities by themselves, nor use a
peculiar tongue, nor lead a singular mode of life. They dwell in the
Grecian or barbarian cities, as the case may be; they follow the usage
of the country in dress, food, and the other affairs of life. Yet they
present a wonderful and confessedly paradoxical conduct. They dwell in
their own native lands, but as strangers. They take part in all things
as citizens; and they suffer all things, as foreigners. Every foreign
country is a fatherland to them, and every native land is a foreign.
They marry, like all others; they have children; but they do not cast
away their offspring. They have the table in common, but not wives.
They are in the flesh, but do not live after the flesh. They live upon
the earth, but are citizens of heaven. They obey the existing laws, and
excel the laws by their lives. They love all, and are persecuted by
all. They are unknown, and yet they are condemned. They are killed and
are made alive. They are poor and make many rich. They lack all things,
and in all things abound. They are reproached, and glory in their
reproaches. They are calumniated, and are justified. They are cursed,
and they bless. They receive scorn, and they give honor. They do good,
and are punished as evil-doers. When punished, they rejoice, as being
made alive. By the Jews they are attacked as aliens, and by the Greeks
persecuted; and the cause of the enmity their enemies cannot tell. In
short, what the soul is in the body, the Christians are in the world.
The soul is diffused through all the members of the body, and the
Christians are spread through the cities of the world. The soul dwells
in the body, but it is not of the body; so the Christians dwell in the
world, but are not of the world. The soul, invisible, keeps watch in
the visible body; so also the Christians are seen to live in the world,
but their piety is invisible. The flesh hates and wars against the
soul, suffering no wrong from it, but because it resists fleshly
pleasures; and the world hates the Christians with no reason, but that
they resist its pleasures. The soul loves the flesh and members, by
which it is hated; so the Christians love their haters. The soul is
inclosed in the body, but holds the body together; so the Christians
are detained in the world as in a prison; but they contain the world.
Immortal, the soul dwells in the mortal body; so the Christians dwell
in the corruptible, but look for incorruption in heaven. The soul is
the better for restriction in food and drink; and the Christians
increase, though daily punished. This lot God has assigned to the
Christians in the world; and it cannot be taken from them."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p12">The community of Christians thus from the first
felt itself, in distinction from Judaism and from heathenism, the salt
of the earth, the light of the world, the city of God set on a hill,
the immortal soul in a dying body; and this its impression respecting
itself was no proud conceit, but truth and reality, acting in life and
in death, and opening the way through hatred and persecution even to an
outward victory over the world.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p13">The ante-Nicene age has been ever since the
Reformation a battle-field between Catholic and Evangelical historians
and polemics, and is claimed by both for their respective creeds. But
it is a sectarian abuse of history to identify the Christianity of this
martyr period either with Catholicism, or with Protestantism. It is
rather the common root out of which both have sprung, Catholicism
(Greek and Roman) first, and Protestantism afterwards. It is the
natural transition from the apostolic age to the Nicene age, yet
leaving behind many important truths of the former (especially the
Pauline doctrines) which were to be derived and explored in future
ages. We can trace in it the elementary forms of the Catholic creed,
organization and worship, and also the germs of nearly all the
corruptions of Greek and Roman Christianity.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p14">In its relation to the secular power, the
ante-Nicene church is simply the continuation of the apostolic period,
and has nothing in common either with the hierarchical, or with the
Erastian systems. It was not opposed to the secular government in its
proper sphere, but the secular heathenism of the government was opposed
to Christianity. The church was altogether based upon the voluntary
principle, as a self-supporting and self-governing body. In this
respect it may be compared to the church in the United States, but with
this essential difference that in America the secular government,
instead of persecuting Christianity, recognizes and protects it by law,
and secures to it full freedom of public worship and in all its
activities at home and abroad.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p15">The theology of the second and third centuries was
mainly apologetic against the paganism of Greece and Rome, and polemic
against the various forms of the Gnostic heresy. In this conflict it
brings out, with great force and freshness, the principal arguments for
the divine origin and character of the Christian religion and the
outlines of the true doctrine of Christ and the holy trinity, as
afterwards more fully developed in the Nicene and post-Nicene ages.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p16">The organization of this period may be termed
primitive episcopacy, as distinct from the apostolic order which
preceded, and the metropolitan and patriarchal hierarchy which
succeeded it. In worship it forms likewise the transition from
apostolic simplicity to the liturgical and ceremonial splendor of
full-grown Catholicism.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p17">The first half of the second century is
comparatively veiled in obscurity, although considerable light has been
shed over it by recent discoveries and investigations. After the death
of John only a few witnesses remain to testify of the wonders of the
apostolic days, and their writings are few in number, short in compass
and partly of doubtful origin: a volume of letters and historical
fragments, accounts of martyrdom, the pleadings of two or three
apologists; to which must be added the rude epitaphs, faded pictures,
and broken sculptures of the subterranean church in the catacombs. The
men of that generation were more skilled in acting out Christianity in
life and death, than in its literary defence. After the intense
commotion of the apostolic age there was a breathing spell, a season of
unpretending but fruitful preparation for a new productive epoch. But
the soil of heathenism had been broken up, and the new seed planted by
the hands of the apostles gradually took root.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.2.p18">Then came the great literary conflict of the
apologists and doctrinal polemics in the second half of the same
century; and towards the middle of the third the theological schools of
Alexandria, and northern Africa, laying the foundation the one for the
theology of the Greek, the other for that of the Latin church. At the
beginning of the fourth century the church east and west was already so
well consolidated in doctrine and discipline that it easily survived
the shock of the last and most terrible persecution, and could enter
upon the fruits of its long-continued sufferings and take the reins of
government in the old Roman empire.</p>

<p osisID="iv.2.p19"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Spread of Christianity" n="I" osisID="iv.I">

<title type="x-h3" subType="x-c19" osisID="iv.I.p0.2">CHAPTER I:</title>

<p osisID="iv.I.p1"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.I.p2">SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.p3"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Literature" n="3" osisID="iv.I.3">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.3.p1">§ 3. Literature.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.3.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.I.3.p3">I. Sources.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.3.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList2" osisID="iv.I.3.p5">No statistics or accurate statements, but only
scattered hints in</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p6">Pliny (107): <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.I.3.p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Eph.10.96">Ep. x. 96</reference> sq. (the letter to Trajan).
<name osisID="iv.I.3.p6.2">Ignatius</name> (about 110): Ad Magnes. c. 10. Ep.
ad Diogn. (about 120) c. 6.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p7"><name osisID="iv.I.3.p7.1">Justin Martyr</name> (about 140):
Dial. 117; Apol. I. 53.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p8"><name osisID="iv.I.3.p8.1">Irenaeus</name> (about 170): Adv.
Haer. I. 10; III. 3, 4; v. 20, etc.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p9"><name osisID="iv.I.3.p9.1">Tertullian</name> (about 200):
Apol. I. 21, 37, 41, 42; Ad Nat. I. 7; Ad Scap. c. 2, 5; Adv. <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.I.3.p9.2" osisRef="Bible:Judg.7">Jud. 7,
12, 13</reference>.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p10"><name osisID="iv.I.3.p10.1">Origen</name> (d. 254): Contr.
Cels. I, 7, 27; II. 13, 46; III. 10, 30; De Princ. l. IV. c. 1,
§ 2; Com. in Matth. p. 857, ed. Delarue.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p11"><name osisID="iv.I.3.p11.1">Eusebius</name> (d. 340): Hist.
Eccl III. 1; v. 1; vii, 1; viii. 1, also books ix. and x. RUFINUS:
Hist. <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.I.3.p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Eccl.9.6">Eccles. ix. 6</reference>.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p12"><name osisID="iv.I.3.p12.1">Augustin</name> (d. 430): De
Civitate Dei. Eng. translation by M. Dods, Edinburgh, 1871; new ed. (in
Schaff’s "Nicene and Post-Nicene Library"), N. York,
1887.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.3.p13"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.I.3.p14">II. Works.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.3.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p16">Mich. Le Quien (a learned Dominican, d. 1733):
Oriens Christianus. Par. 1740. 3 vols. fol. A complete ecclesiastical
geography of the East, divided into the four patriarchates of
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p17">Mosheim: Historical Commentaries, etc. (ed. Murdock)
I. 259–290.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p18">Gibbon: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
Chap. xv.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p19">A. Beugnot: Histoire de la destruction du
paganisme en Occident. Paris 1835, 2 vols. Crowned by
the Académie des inscriptions et
belles-letters.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p20">Etienne Chastel: Histoire de la destruction du paganisme dans
I’ empire d’
Orient. Paris 1850. Prize essay of the Académie.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p21">Neander: History of the Christian Relig. and Church
(trans. of Torrey), I. 68–79</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p22">Wiltsch: Handbuch der kirchl. Geographie u. Statistik.
Berlin 1846. I. p. 32 sqq.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p23">Chs. Merivale: Conversion of the Roman Empire (Boyle
Lectures for 1864), republ. N. York 1865. Comp. also his History of the
Romans under the Empire, which goes from Julius Caesar to <name osisID="iv.I.3.p23.1">Marcus Aurelius</name>, Lond. &amp; N. York, 7 vols.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p24">Edward A. Freeman: The Historical Geography of
Europe. Lond. &amp; N. York 1881. 2 vols. (vol. I. chs. II. &amp; III.
pp. 18–71.)</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p25">Comp. Friedländer, Sittengesch. Roms. III. 517
sqq.; and Renan:
Marc-Aurèle. Paris 1882, ch. xxv. pp.
447–464 (Statistique et extension géographique du
Christianisme).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.3.p26">V. Schultze: Geschichte des Untergangs des
griech-römischen. Heidenthums. Jena,
1887.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.3.p27"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Hindrances and Helps" n="4" osisID="iv.I.4">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.4.p1">§ 4. Hindrances and Helps.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.4.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.4.p3">For the first three centuries Christianity was placed
in the most unfavorable circumstances, that it might display its moral
power, and gain its victory over the world by spiritual weapons alone.
Until the reign of Constantine it had not even a legal existence in the
Roman empire, but was first ignored as a Jewish sect, then slandered,
proscribed, and persecuted, as a treasonable innovation, and the
adoption of it made punishable with confiscation and death. Besides, it
offered not the slightest favor, as Mohammedanism afterwards did, to
the corrupt inclinations of the heart, but against the current ideas of
Jews and heathen it so presented its inexorable demand of repentance
and conversion, renunciation of self and the world, that more,
according to <name osisID="iv.I.4.p3.1">Tertullian</name>, were kept out of the
new sect by love of pleasure than by love of life. The Jewish origin of
Christianity also, and the poverty and obscurity of a majority of its
professors particularly offended the pride of the Greeks, and Romans.
Celsus, exaggerating this fact, and ignoring the many exceptions,
scoffingly remarked, that "weavers, cobblers, and fullers, the most
illiterate persons" preached the "irrational faith," and knew how to
commend it especially "to women and children."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.4.p4">But in spite of these extraordinary difficulties
Christianity made a progress which furnished striking evidence of its
divine origin and adaptation to the deeper wants of man, and was
employed as such by <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.1">Irenaeus</name>, Justin, <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.2">Tertullian</name>, and other fathers of that day. Nay, the
very hindrances became, in the hands of Providence, means of promotion.
Persecution led to martyrdom, and martyrdom had not terrors alone, but
also attractions, and stimulated the noblest and most unselfish form of
ambition. Every genuine martyr was a living proof of the truth and
holiness of the Christian religion. <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.3">Tertullian</name> could exclaim to the heathen: "All your
ingenious cruelties can accomplish nothing; they are only a lure to
this sect. Our number increases the more you destroy us. The blood of
the Christians is their seed." The moral earnestness of the Christians
contrasted powerfully with the prevailing corruption of the age, and
while it repelled the frivolous and voluptuous, it could not fail to
impress most strongly the deepest and noblest minds. The predilection
of the poor and oppressed for the gospel attested its comforting and
redeeming power. But others also, though not many, from the higher and
educated classes, were from the first attracted to the new religion;
such men as Nicodemus, Joseph of Arimathaea, the apostle Paul, the
proconsul Sergius Paulus, Dionysius of Athens, Erastus of Corinth, and
some members of the imperial household. Among the sufferers in
Domitian’s persecution were his own near kinswoman
Flavia Domitilla and her husband Flavius Clemens. In the oldest part of
the Catacomb of Callistus, which is named after St. Lucina, members of
the illustrious gens Pomponia, and perhaps also of the Flavian house,
are interred. The senatorial and equestrian orders furnished several
converts open or concealed. Pliny laments, that in Asia Minor men of
every rank (omnis ordinis) go over to the Christians. <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.4">Tertullian</name> asserts that the tenth part of Carthage, and
among them senators and ladies of the noblest descent and the nearest
relatives of the proconsul of Africa professed Christianity. The
numerous church fathers from the middle of the second century, a <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.5">Justin Martyr</name>, <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.6">Irenaeus</name>,
<name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.7">Hippolytus</name>, Clement, <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.8">Origen</name>, <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.9">Tertullian</name>, <name osisID="iv.I.4.p4.10">Cyprian</name>, excelled, or at least equalled in talent
and culture, their most eminent heathen contemporaries.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.4.p5">Nor was this progress confined to any particular
localities. It extended alike over all parts of the empire. "We are a
people of yesterday," says <name osisID="iv.I.4.p5.1">Tertullian</name> in his
Apology, "and yet we have filled every place belonging to
you—cities, islands, castles, towns, assemblies, your
very camp, your tribes, companies, palace, senate, forum! We leave you
your temples only. We can count your armies; our numbers in a single
province will be greater." All these facts expose the injustice of the
odious charge of Celsus, repeated by a modern sceptic, that the new
sect was almost entirely composed of the dregs of the
populace—of peasants and mechanics, of boys and women,
of beggars and slaves.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.4.p6"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Causes of the Success of Christianity" n="5" osisID="iv.I.5">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.5.p1">§ 5. Causes of the Success of
Christianity.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.5.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.5.p3">The chief positive cause of the rapid spread and
ultimate triumph of Christianity is to be found in its own absolute
intrinsic worth, as the universal religion of salvation, and in the
perfect teaching and example of its divine-human Founder, who proves
himself to every believing heart a Saviour from sin and a giver of
eternal life. Christianity is adapted to all classes, conditions, and
relations among men, to all nationalities and races, to all grades of
culture, to every soul that longs for redemption from sin, and for
holiness of life. Its value could be seen in the truth and
self-evidencing power of its doctrines; in the purity and sublimity of
its precepts; in its regenerating and sanctifying effects on heart and
life; in the elevation of woman and of home life over which she
presides; in the amelioration of the condition of the poor and
suffering; in the faith, the brotherly love, the beneficence, and the
triumphant death of its confessors.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p4">To this internal moral and spiritual testimony
were added the powerful outward proof of its divine origin in the
prophecies and types of the Old Testament, so strikingly fulfilled in
the New; and finally, the testimony of the miracles, which, according
to the express statements of Quadratus, <name osisID="iv.I.5.p4.1">Justin
Martyr</name>, <name osisID="iv.I.5.p4.2">Irenaeus</name>, <name osisID="iv.I.5.p4.3">Tertullian</name>, <name osisID="iv.I.5.p4.4">Origen</name>, and others,
continued in this period to accompany the preaching of missionaries
from time to time, for the conversion of the heathen.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p5">Particularly favorable outward circumstances were
the extent, order, and unity of the Roman empire, and the prevalence of
the Greek language and culture.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p6">In addition to these positive causes, Christianity
had a powerful negative advantage in the hopeless condition of the
Jewish and heathen world. Since the fearful judgment of the destruction
of Jerusalem, Judaism wandered restless and accursed, without national
existence. Heathenism outwardly held sway, but was inwardly rotten and
in process of inevitable decay. The popular religion and public
morality were undermined by a sceptical and materialistic philosophy;
Grecian science and art had lost their creative energy; the Roman
empire rested only on the power of the sword and of temporal interests;
the moral bonds of society were sundered; unbounded avarice and vice of
every kind, even by the confession of a Seneca and a Tacitus, reigned
in Rome and in the provinces, from the throne to the hovel. Virtuous
emperors, like Antoninus Pius and <name osisID="iv.I.5.p6.1">Marcus
Aurelius</name>, were the exception, not the rule, and could not
prevent the progress of moral decay. Nothing, that classic antiquity in
its fairest days had produced, could heal the fatal wounds of the age,
or even give transient relief. The only star of hope in the gathering
night was the young, the fresh, the dauntless religion of Jesus,
fearless of death, strong in faith, glowing with love, and destined to
commend itself more and more to all reflecting minds as the only living
religion of the present and the future. While the world was continually
agitated by wars, and revolutions, and public calamities, while systems
of philosophy, and dynasties were rising and passing away, the new
religion, in spite of fearful opposition from without and danger from
within, was silently and steadily progressing with the irresistible
force of truth, and worked itself gradually into the very bone and
blood of the race.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p7">"Christ appeared," says the great <name osisID="iv.I.5.p7.1">Augustin</name>, "to the men of the decrepit, decaying world,
that while all around them was withering away, they might through Him
receive new, youthful life."</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.5.p8"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.I.5.p9">Notes.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.5.p10"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p11">Gibbon, in his famous fifteenth chapter, traces
the rapid progress of Christianity in the Roman empire to five causes:
the zeal of the early Christians, the belief in future rewards and
punishment, the power of miracles, the austere (pure) morals of the
Christian, and the compact church organization. But these causes are
themselves the effects of a cause which Gibbon ignores, namely, the
divine truth of Christianity, the perfection of
Christ’s teaching and Christ’s
example. See the strictures of Dr. John Henry Newman, Grammar of
Assent, 445 sq., and Dr. George P. Fisher, The Beginnings of
Christianity, p. 543 sqq. "The zeal" [of the early Christians], says
Fisher, "was zeal for a person, and for a cause identified with Him;
the belief in the future life sprang out of faith in Him who had died
and risen again, and ascended to Heaven; the miraculous powers of the
early disciples were consciously connected with the same source; the
purification of morals, and the fraternal unity, which lay at the basis
of ecclesiastical association among the early Christians, were likewise
the fruit of their relation to Christ, and their common love to Him.
The victory of Christianity in the Roman world was the victory of
Christ, who was lifted up that He might draw all men unto Him."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p12">Lecky (Hist. of Europ. Morals, I. 412) goes deeper
than Gibbon, and accounts for the success of early Christianity by its
intrinsic excellency and remarkable adaptation to the wants of the
times in the old Roman empire. "In the midst of this movement," he
says, "Christianity gained its ascendancy, and we can be at no loss to
discover the cause of its triumph. No other religion, under such
circumstances, had ever combined so many distinct elements of power and
attraction. Unlike the Jewish religion, it was bound by no local ties,
and was equally adapted for every nation and for every class. Unlike
Stoicism, it appealed in the strongest manner to the affections, and
offered all the charm of a sympathetic worship. Unlike the Egyptian
religion, it united with its distinctive teaching a pure and noble
system of ethics, and proved itself capable of realizing it in action.
It proclaimed, amid a vast movement of social and national
amalgamation, the universal brotherhood of mankind. Amid the softening
influence of philosophy and civilization, it taught the supreme
sanctity of love. To the slave, who had never before exercised so large
an influence over Roman religious life, it was the religion of the
suffering and the oppressed. To the philosopher it was at once the echo
of the highest ethics of the later Stoics, and the expansion of the
best teaching of the school of Plato. To a world thirsting for prodigy,
it offered a history replete with wonders more strange than those of
Apollonius; while the Jew and the Chaldean could scarcely rival its
exorcists, and the legends of continual miracles circulated among its
followers. To a world deeply conscious of political dissolution, and
prying eagerly and anxiously into the future, it proclaimed with a
thrilling power the immediate destruction of the
globe—the glory of all its friends, and the damnation
of all its foes. To a world that had grown very weary gazing on the
cold passionless grandeur which Cato realized, and which Lucan sung, it
presented an ideal of compassion and of love—an ideal
destined for centuries to draw around it all that was greatest, as well
as all that was noblest upon earth—a Teacher who could
weep by the sepulchre of His friend, who was touched with the feeling
of our infirmities. To a world, in fine, distracted by hostile creeds
and colliding philosophies, it taught its doctrines, not as a human
speculation, but as a Divine revelation, authenticated much less by
reason than by faith. ’With the heart man believeth
unto righteousness;’ ’He that doeth
the will of my Father will know the doctrine, whether it be of
God;’ ’Unless you believe you cannot
understand;’ ’A heart naturally
Christian;’ ’The heart makes the
theologian,’ are the phrases which best express the
first action of Christianity upon the world. Like all great religions,
it was more concerned with modes of feeling than with modes of thought.
The chief cause of its success was the congruity of its teaching with
the spiritual nature of mankind. It was because it was true of the
moral sentiments of the age, because it represented faithfully the
supreme type of excellence to which men were then tending, because it
corresponded with their religious wants, aims, and emotions, because
the whole spiritual being could then expand and expatiate under its
influence that it planted its roots so deeply in the hearts of
men."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p13">Merivale (Convers. of the Rom. Emp., Preface)
traces the conversion of the Roman empire chiefly to four causes: 1)
the external evidence of the apparent fulfilment of recorded prophecy
and miracles to the truth of Christianity; 2) the internal evidence of
satisfying the acknowledged need of a redeemer and sanctifier; 3) the
goodness and holiness manifested in the lives and deaths of the
primitive believers; 4) the temporal success of Christianity under
Constantine, which "turned the mass of mankind, as with a sweeping
revolution, to the rising sun of revealed truth in Christ Jesus."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.5.p14">Renan discusses the reasons for the victory of
Christianity in the 31st chapter of his Marc-Aurèle (Paris
1882), pp. 561–588. He attributes it chiefly "to the
new discipline of life," and "the moral reform," which the world
required, which neither philosophy nor any of the established religions
could give. The Jews indeed rose high above the corruptions of the
times. "Glorie éternelle et
unique, qui doit faire oublier bien des folies et des violence! Les
Juifs sont les révolutionnaires du 1er et du
2e siècle
de notre ère." They gave to the world Christianity.
"Les populations se
précipitèrent, par une sorte du mouvement
instinctif, dans une secte qui satisfaisait leur aspirations les plus
intimes et ouvrait des ésperances
infinies."
Renan makes much account of the belief in immortality and the offer of
complete pardon to every sinner, as allurements to Christianity; and,
like Gibbon, he ignores its real power as a religion of salvation. This
accounts for its success not only in the old Roman empire, but in every
country and nation where it has found a home.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.5.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Means of Propagation" n="6" osisID="iv.I.6">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.6.p1">§ 6. Means of Propagation.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.6.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.6.p3">It is a remarkable fact that after the days of the
Apostles no names of great missionaries are mentioned till the opening
of the middle ages, when the conversion of nations was effected or
introduced by a few individuals as St. Patrick in Ireland, St. Columba
in Scotland, St. <name osisID="iv.I.6.p3.1">Augustin</name>e in England, St.
Boniface in Germany, St. Ansgar in Scandinavia, St. Cyril and Methodius
among the Slavonic races. There were no missionary societies, no
missionary institutions, no organized efforts in the ante-Nicene age;
and yet in less than 300 years from the death of St. John the whole
population of the Roman empire which then represented the civilized
world was nominally Christianized.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.6.p4">To understand this astonishing fact, we must
remember that the foundation was laid strong and deep by the apostles
themselves. The seed scattered by them from Jerusalem to Rome, and
fertilized by their blood, sprung up as a bountiful harvest. The word
of our Lord was again fulfilled on a larger scale: "One soweth, and
another reapeth. I sent you to reap that whereon ye have not labored:
others have labored, and ye are entered into their labor" (<reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.I.6.p4.1" osisRef="Bible:John.4.38">John 4:38</reference>).</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.6.p5">Christianity once established was its own best
missionary. It grew naturally from within. It attracted people by its
very presence. It was a light shining in darkness and illuminating the
darkness. And while there were no professional missionaries devoting
their whole life to this specific work, every congregation was a
missionary society, and every Christian believer a missionary, inflamed
by the love of Christ to convert his fellow-men. The example had been
set by Jerusalem and Antioch, and by those brethren who, after the
martyrdom of Stephen, "were scattered abroad and went about preaching
the Word."<note osisID="edn5"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.6.p6">
11:19.</p></note> <name osisID="iv.I.6.p6.2">Justin Martyr</name> was converted by a venerable old man whom
he met "walking on the shore of the sea." Every Christian laborer, says
<name osisID="iv.I.6.p6.3">Tertullian</name>, "both finds out God and manifests
him, though Plato affirms that it is not easy to discover the Creator,
and difficult when he is found to make him known to all." Celsus
scoffingly remarks that fuller, and workers in wool and leather, rustic
and ignorant persons, were the most zealous propagators of
Christianity, and brought it first to women and children. Women and
slaves introduced it into the home-circle, it is the glory of the
gospel that it is preached to the poor and by the poor to make them
rich. <name osisID="iv.I.6.p6.4">Origen</name> informs us that the city
churches sent their missionaries to the villages. The seed grew up
while men slept, and brought forth fruit, first the blade, then the
ear, after that the full corn in the ear. Every Christian told his
neighbor, the laborer to his fellow-laborer, the slave to his
fellow-slave, the servant to his master and mistress, the story of his
conversion, as a mariner tells the story of the rescue from
shipwreck.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.6.p7">The gospel was propagated chiefly by living
preaching and by personal intercourse; to a considerable extent also
through the sacred Scriptures, which were early propagated and
translated into various tongues, the Latin (North African and Italian),
the Syriac (the Curetonian and the Peshito), and the Egyptian (in three
dialects, the Memphitic, the Thebaic, and the Bashmuric). Communication
among the different parts of the Roman empire from Damascus to Britain
was comparatively easy and safe. The highways built for commerce and
for the Roman legions, served also the messengers of peace and the
silent conquests of the cross. Commerce itself at that time, as well as
now, was a powerful agency in carrying the gospel and the seeds of
Christian civilization to the remotest parts of the Roman empire.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.6.p8">The particular mode, as well as the precise time,
of the introduction of Christianity into the several countries during
this period is for the most part uncertain, and we know not much more
than the fact itself. No doubt much more was done by the apostles and
their immediate disciples, than the New Testament informs us of. But on
the other hand the mediaeval tradition assigns an apostolic origin to
many national and local churches which cannot have arisen before the
second or third century. Even Joseph of Arimathaea, Nicodemus,
Dionysius the Areopagite, Lazarus, Martha and Mary were turned by the
legend into missionaries to foreign lands.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.6.p9"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Extent of Christianity in the Roman Empire" n="7" osisID="iv.I.7">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.7.p1">§ 7. Extent of Christianity in the Roman
Empire.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.7.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.7.p3"><name osisID="iv.I.7.p3.1">Justin Martyr</name> says, about
the middle of the second century: "There is no people, Greek or
barbarian, or of any other race, by whatsoever appellation or manners
they may be distinguished, however ignorant of arts or agriculture,
whether they dwell in tents or wander about in covered
wagons—among whom prayers and thanksgivings are not
offered in the name of the crucified Jesus to the Father and Creator of
all things." Half a century later, <name osisID="iv.I.7.p3.2">Tertullian</name>
addresses the heathen defiantly: "We are but of yesterday, and yet we
already fill your cities, islands, camps, your palace, senate and
forum; we have left to you only your temples."<note osisID="edn6"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.7.p4">ola vobis
relinqitimus templa."Apol.c. 37. Long before <name osisID="iv.I.7.p4.2">Tertullian</name> the heathen Pliny, in his famous letter to
Trajan (Epp. x. 97) had spoken of "desolata templa" and "sacra solemnia
diu intermissa, " in consequence of the spread of the Christian
superstition throughout the cities and villages of Asia Minor.</p></note> These, and similar passages of <name osisID="iv.I.7.p4.3">Irenaeus</name> and Arnobius, are evidently rhetorical
exaggerations. <name osisID="iv.I.7.p4.4">Origen</name> is more cautious and
moderate in his statements. But it may be fairly asserted, that about
the end of the third century the name of Christ was known, revered, and
persecuted in every province and every city of the empire. <name osisID="iv.I.7.p4.5">Maximian</name>, in one of his edicts, says that "almost all"
had abandoned the worship of their ancestors for the new sect.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.7.p5">In the absence of statistics, the number of the
Christians must be purely a matter of conjecture. In all probability it
amounted at the close of the third and the beginning of the fourth
century to nearly one-tenth or one-twelfth of the subjects of Rome,
that is to about ten millions of souls.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.7.p6">But the fact, that the Christians were a closely
united body, fresh, vigorous, hopeful, and daily increasing, while the
heathen were for the most part a loose aggregation, daily diminishing,
made the true prospective strength of the church much greater.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.7.p7">The propagation of Christianity among the
barbarians in the provinces of Asia and the north-west of Europe beyond
the Roman empire, was at first, of course, too remote from the current
of history to be of any great immediate importance. But it prepared the
way for the civilization of those regions, and their subsequent
position in the world.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.7.p8"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.I.7.p9">Notes.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.7.p10"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.7.p11">Gibbon and Friedländer (III. 531)
estimate the number of Christians at the accession of Constantine (306)
probably too low at one-twentieth; Matter and Robertson too high at
one-fifth of his subjects. Some older writers, misled by the
hyperbolical statements of the early Apologists, even represent the
Christians as having at least equalled if not exceeded the number of
the heathen worshippers in the empire. In this case common prudence
would have dictated a policy of toleration long before Constantine.
Mosheim, in his Hist. Commentaries, etc.
(Murdock’s translation I. p. 274 sqq.) discusses at
length the number of Christians in the second century without arriving
at definite conclusions. Chastel estimates the number at the time of
Constantine at 1/15 in the West, 1/10 in the East, 1/12 on an average
(Hist. de la destruct.
du paganisme, p. 36). According to <name osisID="iv.I.7.p11.3">Chrysostom</name>, the Christian population of Antioch in his
day (380) was about 100,000, or one-half of the whole.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.7.p12"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Christianity in Asia" n="8" osisID="iv.I.8">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.8.p1">§ 8. Christianity in Asia.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.8.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.8.p3">Asia was the cradle of Christianity, as it was of
humanity and civilization. The apostles themselves had spread the new
religion over Palestine, Syria, and Asia Minor. According to the
younger Pliny, under Trajan, the temples of the gods in Asia Minor were
almost forsaken, and animals of sacrifice found hardly any purchasers.
In the second century Christianity penetrated to Edessa in Mesopotamia,
and some distance into Persia, Media, Bactria, and Parthia; and in the
third, into Armenia and Arabia. Paul himself had, indeed, spent three
years in Arabia, but probably in contemplative retirement preparing for
his apostolic ministry. There is a legend, that the apostles Thomas and
Bartholomew carried the gospel to India. But a more credible statement
is, that the Christian teacher Pantaeus of Alexandria journeyed to that
country about 190, and that in the fourth century churches were found
there.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.8.p4">The transfer of the seat of power from Rome to
Constantinople, and the founding of the East Roman empire under
Constantine I. gave to Asia Minor, and especially to Constantinople, a
commanding importance in the history of the Church for several
centuries. The seven oecumenical Councils from 325 to 787 were all held
in that city or its neighborhood, and the doctrinal controversies on
the Trinity and the person of Christ were carried on chiefly in Asia
Minor, Syria, and Egypt.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.8.p5">In the mysterious providence of God those lands of
the Bible and the early church have been conquered by the prophet of
Mecca, the Bible replaced by the Koran, and the Greek church reduced to
a condition of bondage and stagnation; but the time is not far distant
when the East will be regenerated by the undying spirit of
Christianity. A peaceful crusade of devoted missionaries preaching the
pure gospel and leading holy lives will reconquer the holy land and
settle the Eastern question.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.8.p6"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Christianity in Egypt" n="9" osisID="iv.I.9">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.9.p1">§ 9. Christianity in Egypt.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.9.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.9.p3">In Africa Christianity gained firm foothold first in
Egypt, and there probably as early as the apostolic age. The land of
the Pharaohs, of the pyramids and sphinxes, of temples and tombs, of
hieroglyphics and mummies, of sacred bulls and crocodiles, of despotism
and slavery, is closely interwoven with sacred history from the
patriarchal times, and even imbedded in the Decalogue as "the house of
bondage." It was the home of Joseph and his brethren, and the cradle of
Israel. In Egypt the Jewish Scriptures were translated more than two
hundred years before our era, and this Greek version used even by
Christ and the apostles, spread Hebrew ideas throughout the Roman
world, and is the mother of the peculiar idiom of the New Testament.
Alexandria was full of Jews, the literary as well as commercial centre
of the East, and the connecting link between the East and the West.
There the largest libraries were collected; there the Jewish mind came
into close contact with the Greek, and the religion of Moses with the
philosophy of Plato and Aristotle. There Philo wrote, while Christ
taught in Jerusalem and Galilee, and his works were destined to exert a
great influence on Christian exegesis through the Alexandrian
fathers.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.9.p4">Mark, the evangelist, according to ancient
tradition, laid the foundation of the church of Alexandria. The Copts
in old Cairo, the Babylon of Egypt, claim this to be the place from
which Peter wrote his first epistle (<reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.I.9.p4.1" osisRef="Bible:1Pet.5.13">1 Pet. 5:13</reference>); but he must mean
either the Babylon on the Euphrates, or the mystic Babylon of Rome.
<name osisID="iv.I.9.p4.2">Eusebius</name> names, as the first bishops of
Alexandria, Annianos (a.d.
62–85), Abilios (to 98), and Kerdon (to 110). This see
naturally grew up to metropolitan and patriarchal importance and
dignity. As early as the second century a theological school flourished
in Alexandria, in which Clement and <name osisID="iv.I.9.p4.4">Origen</name>
taught as pioneers in biblical learning and Christian philosophy. From
Lower Egypt the gospel spread to Middle and Upper Egypt and the
adjacent provinces, perhaps (in the fourth century) as far as Nubia,
Ethiopia, and Abyssinia. At a council of Alexandria in the year 235,
twenty bishops were present from the different parts of the land of the
Nile.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.9.p5">During the fourth century Egypt gave to the church
the Arian heresy, the Athanasian orthodoxy, and the monastic piety of
St. Antony and St. Pachomius, which spread with irresistible force over
Christendom.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.9.p6">The theological literature of Egypt was chiefly
Greek. Most of the early manuscripts of the Greek
Scriptures—including probably the invaluable Sinaitic
and Vatican MSS.—were written in Alexandria. But
already in the second century the Scriptures were translated into the
vernacular language, in three different dialects. What remains of these
versions is of considerable weight in ascertaining the earliest text of
the Greek Testament.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.9.p7">The Christian Egyptians are the descendants of the
Pharaonic Egyptians, but largely mixed with negro and Arab blood.
Christianity never fully penetrated the nation, and was almost swept
away by the Mohammedan conquest under the Caliph Omar (640), who burned
the magnificent libraries of Alexandria under the plea that if the
books agreed with the Koran, they were useless, if not, they were
pernicious and fit for destruction. Since that time Egypt almost
disappears from church history, and is still groaning, a house of
bondage under new masters. The great mass of the people are Moslems,
but the Copts—about half a million of five and a half
millions—perpetuate the nominal Christianity of their
ancestors, and form a mission field for the more active churches of the
West.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.9.p8"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle=" Christianity in North Africa" n="10" osisID="iv.I.10">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.10.p1">§ 10. Christianity in North Africa.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.10.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p3">Böttiger: Geschichte der Carthager.
Berlin, 1827.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p4">Movers: Die Phönizier.
1840–56, 4 vols. (A standard work.)</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p5">Th. Mommsen: Röm. Geschichte, I. 489 sqq.
(Book III. chs. 1–7, 5th ed.)</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p6">N. Davis: Carthage and
her Remains. London &amp; N. York, 1861.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p7">R. Bosworth Smith:
Carthage and the Carthaginians. Lond. 2nd ed. 1879. By the same:
Rome and Carthage. N. York, 1880.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p8">Otto Meltzer: Geschichte der Karthager. Berlin, vol. I.
1879.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p9">These books treat of the secular history of the
ancient Carthaginians, but help to understand the situation and
antecedents.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.I.10.p10">Julius Lloyd; The North African Church. London,
1880. Comes down to the Moslem Conquest.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.10.p11"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.10.p12">The inhabitants of the provinces of Northern Africa
were of Semitic origin, with a language similar to the Hebrew, but
became Latinized in customs, laws, and language under the Roman rule.
The church in that region therefore belongs to Latin Christianity, and
plays a leading part in its early history.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.10.p13">The Phoenicians, a remnant of the Canaanites, were
the English of ancient history. They carried on the commerce of the
world; while the Israelites prepared the religion, and the Greeks the
civilization of the world. Three small nations, in small countries,
accomplished a more important work than the colossal empires of
Assyria, Babylon, and Persia, or even Rome. Occupying a narrow strip of
territory on the Syrian coast, between Mount Lebanon and the sea, the
Phoenicians sent their merchant vessels from Tyre and Sidon to all
parts of the old world from India to the Baltic, rounded the Cape of
Good Hope two thousand years before Vasco de Gama, and brought back
sandal wood from Malabar, spices from Arabia, ostrich plumes from
Nubia, silver from Spain, gold from the Niger, iron from Elba, tin from
England, and amber from the Baltic. They furnished Solomon with cedars
from Lebanon, and helped him to build his palace and the temple. They
founded on the northernmost coast of Africa, more than eight hundred
years before Christ, the colony of Carthage.<note osisID="edn7"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.10.p14">Καρχηδών),
the Latin Carthago. It means New City (Neapolis). The word Kereth or
Carth enters also into the names of other cities of Phoenician origin,
as Cirta in Numidia.</p></note> From that favorable position they acquired the control
over the northern coast of Africa from the pillars of Hercules to the
Great Syrtes, over Southern Spain, the islands of Sardinia and Sicily,
and the whole Mediterranean sea. Hence the inevitable rivalry between
Rome and Carthage, divided only by three days’ sail;
hence the three Punic wars which, in spite of the brilliant military
genius of Hannibal, ended in the utter destruction of the capital of
North Africa (b.c. 146).<note osisID="edn8"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.10.p15"/></note> "Delenda est Carthago," was the narrow and cruel
policy of the elder Cato. But under Augustus, who carried out the wiser
plan of Julius Caesar, there arose a new Carthage on the ruins of the
old, and became a rich and prosperous city, first heathen, then
Christian, until it was captured by the barbarous Vandals (a.d. 439), and finally destroyed by a race cognate to its
original founders, the Mohammedan Arabs (647). Since that time "a
mournful and solitary silence" once more brooded over its ruins.<note osisID="edn9"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.10.p16">ions of N. Davis and B. Smith (Rome and
Carthage, ch. xx. 263-291). The recent conquest of Tunis by France
(1881) gives new interest to the past of that country, and opens a new
chapter for its future. Smith describes Tunis as the most Oriental of
Oriental towns, with a gorgeous mixture of
races—Arabs, Turks, Moors, and
Negroes—held together by the religion of Islam.</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.10.p17">Christianity reached proconsular Africa in the
second, perhaps already at the close of the first century, we do not
know when and how. There was constant intercourse with Italy. It spread
very rapidly over the fertile fields and burning sands of Mauritania
and Numidia. <name osisID="iv.I.10.p17.1">Cyprian</name> could assemble in 258 a
synod of eighty-seven bishops, and in 308 the schismatical Donatists
held a council of two hundred and seventy bishops at Carthage. The
dioceses, of course, were small in those days.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.10.p18">The oldest Latin translation of the Bible,
miscalled "Itala" (the basis of Jerome’s "Vulgata"),
was made probably in Africa and for Africa, not in Rome and for Rome,
where at that time the Greek language prevailed among Christians. Latin
theology, too, was not born in Rome, but in Carthage. <name osisID="iv.I.10.p18.1">Tertullian</name> is its father. Minutius Felix, Arnobius, and
<name osisID="iv.I.10.p18.2">Cyprian</name> bear witness to the activity and
prosperity of African Christianity and theology in the third century.
It reached its highest perfection during the first quarter of the fifth
century in the sublime intellect and burning heart of St. <name osisID="iv.I.10.p18.3">Augustin</name>, the greatest among the fathers, but soon after
his death (430) it was buried first beneath the Vandal barbarism, and
in the seventh century by the Mohammedan conquest. Yet his writings led
Christian thought in the Latin church throughout the dark ages,
stimulated the Reformers, and are a vital force to this day.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.10.p19"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle=" Christianity in Europe" n="11" osisID="iv.I.11">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.I.11.p1">§ 11. Christianity in Europe.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.11.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-ChapterSummary" osisID="iv.I.11.p3">"Westward the course of Empire takes its
way."</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.11.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.11.p5">This law of history is also the law of Christianity.
From Jerusalem to Rome was the march of the apostolic church. Further
and further West has been the progress of missions ever since.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p6">The church of Rome was by
far the most important one for all the West. According to <name osisID="iv.I.11.p6.2">Eusebius</name>, it had in the middle of the third century one
bishop, forty-six presbyters, seven deacons with as many sub-deacons,
forty-two acolyths, fifty readers, exorcists, and door-keepers, and
fifteen hundred widows and poor persons under its care. From this we
might estimate the number of members at some fifty or sixty thousand,
i.e. about one-twentieth of the population of the city, which
cannot be accurately determined indeed, but must have exceeded one
million during the reign of the Antonines.<note osisID="edn10"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.11.p7">is; thirty-first chapter, and Milman estimate the population of
Rome at 1,200,000; Hoeck (on the basis of the Monumentum Ancyranum),
Zumpt and Howson at two millions; Bunsen somewhat lower; while Dureau
de la Malle tries to reduce it to half a million, on the ground that
the walls of Servius Tullius occupied an area only one-fifth of that of
Paris. But these walls no longer marked the limits of the city since
its reconstruction after the conflagration under Nero, and the suburbs
stretched to an unlimited extent into the country. Comp. vol. I. p.
359</p></note> The strength of Christianity in Rome is also
confirmed by the enormous extent of the catacombs where the Christians
were buried.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p8">From Rome the church spread to all the cities of
Italy. The first Roman provincial synod, of
which we have information, numbered twelve bishops under the presidency
of Telesphorus (142–154). In the middle of the third
century (255) Cornelius of Rome held a council of sixty bishops.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p9">The persecution of the year 177 shows the church
already planted in the south of Gaul in the
second century. Christianity came hither probably from the East; for
the churches of Lyons and Vienne were intimately connected with those
of Asia Minor, to which they sent a report of the persecution, and
<name osisID="iv.I.11.p9.2">Irenaeus</name>, bishop of Lyons, was a disciple of
<name osisID="iv.I.11.p9.3">Polycarp</name> of Smyrna. Gregory of Tours states,
that in the middle of the third century seven missionaries were sent
from Rome to Gaul. One of these, Dionysius, founded the first church of
Paris, died a martyr at Montmartre, and became the patron saint of
France. Popular superstition afterwards confounded him with Dionysius
the Areopagite, who was converted by Paul at Athens.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p10">Spain probably became acquainted with Christianity
likewise in the second century, though no clear traces of churches and
bishops there meet us till the middle of the third. The council of
Elvira in 306 numbered nineteen bishops. The apostle Paul once formed
the plan of a missionary journey to Spain, and according to <name osisID="iv.I.11.p10.1">Clement of Rome</name> he preached there, if we understand
that country to be meant by "the limit of the West," to which he says
that Paul carried the gospel.<note osisID="edn11"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.11.p11"> <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.I.11.p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Rom.15.24">Rom. 15:24</reference>; Clem. R.
Ad Cor. c. 5 (τὸ τέρμα
τη̑ς
δύσεως)</p></note>0 But there is no trace of his labors in
Spain on record. The legend, in defiance of all chronology, derives
Christianity in that country from James the Elder, who was executed in
Jerusalem in 44, and is said to be buried at Campostella, the famous
place of pilgrimage, where his bones were first discovered under
Alphonse II, towards the close of the eighth century.1<note osisID="edn12"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.I.11.p12"> See J. B. Gams
(R.C.): Die Kirchengeschichte von
Spanien, Regensburg, 1862-1879, 5 vols. The first
vol. (422 pages) is taken up with the legendary history of the first
three centuries. 75 pages are given to the discussion of
Paul’s journey to Spain. Gams traces Christianity in
that country to Paul and to seven disciples of the Apostles sent to
Rome, namely, Torquatus, Ctesiphon, Secundus, Indaletius, Caecilius,
Hesychius, and Euphrasius (according to the Roman Martyrologium, edited
by Baronius, 1586).</p></note></p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p13">When <name osisID="iv.I.11.p13.1">Irenaeus</name> speaks of
the preaching of the gospel among the Germans
and other barbarians, who, "without paper and ink, have salvation
written in their hearts by the Holy Spirit," he can refer only to the
parts of Germany belonging to the Roman empire (Germania
cisrhenana).</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p14">According to <name osisID="iv.I.11.p14.1">Tertullian</name>
Britain also was brought under the power of
the cross towards the end of the second century. The Celtic church
existed in England, Ireland, and Scotland, independently of Rome, long
before the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons by the Roman mission of <name osisID="iv.I.11.p14.3">Augustin</name>e; it continued for some time after that
event and sent offshoots to Germany, France, and the Low Countries, but
was ultimately at different dates incorporated with the Roman church.
It took its origin probably from Gaul, and afterwards from Italy also.
The legend traces it to St. Paul and other apostolic founders. The
venerable Bede (†735) says, that the British king
Lucius (about 167) applied to the Roman bishop Eleutherus for
missionaries. At the council of Arles, in Gaul (Arelate), in 314, three
British bishops, of Eboracum (York), Londinum (London), and Colonia
Londinensium (i.e. either Lincoln or more probably Colchester),
were present.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.11.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.I.11.p16">The conversion of the barbarians of Northern and
Western Europe did not begin in earnest before the fifth and sixth
centuries, and will claim our attention in the history of the Middle
Ages.</p>

<p osisID="iv.I.11.p17"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div></div>


<div type="x-div2" divTitle="Persecution of Christianity and Christian Martyrdom" n="II" osisID="iv.II">

<p osisID="iv.II.p1"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<title type="x-h3" subType="x-c19" osisID="iv.II.p1.3">CHAPTER II:</title>

<p osisID="iv.II.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.p3">PERSECUTION OF CHRISTIANITY AND CHRISTIAN
MARTYRDOM.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<title type="x-h4" subType="x-c22" osisID="iv.II.p4.3">"Semen est sanguis Christianorum."—<name osisID="iv.II.p4.4">Tertullian</name>.</title>

<p osisID="iv.II.p5"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.p6">
–––––</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.p7"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Literature" n="12" osisID="iv.II.12">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.II.12.p1">§ 12. Literature.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.12.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.12.p3">I. Sources:</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.12.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p5"><name osisID="iv.II.12.p5.1">Eusebius</name>: H. E.,
particularly Lib. viii. and ix.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p6">Lactantius: De Mortibus persecutorum.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p7">The Apologies of <name osisID="iv.II.12.p7.1">Justin
Martyr</name>, Minucius Felix, <name osisID="iv.II.12.p7.3">Tertullian</name>, and <name osisID="iv.II.12.p7.4">Origen</name>, and the
Epistles of <name osisID="iv.II.12.p7.5">Cyprian</name>.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p8">Theod. Ruinart: Acta primorum martyrum sincera et
selecta. Par. 1689; 2nd ed. Amstel. 1713 (covering the first four
cent.).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p9">Several biographies in the Acta Sanctorum. Antw.
1643 sqq.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p10">Les
Acts des martyrs depuis l’origine de
l’église Chrétienne
jusqu’à nos temps. Traduits et
publiés par les R. R. P. P bénédictins
de la congreg. de France. Par. 1857 sqq.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p11">The Martyrol. Hieronymianum (ed.
Florentini, Luc. 1668, and in Migne’s Patrol. Lat.
Opp. Hieron. xi. 434 sqq.); the Martyrol. Romanum (ed.
Baron. 1586), the Menolog. Graec. (ed. Urbini, 1727); De Rossi, Roller, and other works on the Roman
Catacombs.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.12.p12"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.12.p13">II. Works.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.12.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p15">John Foxe (or Fox, d. 1587): Acts and Monuments of
the Church (commonly called Book of Martyrs), first pub. at Strasburg
1554, and Basle 1559; first complete ed. fol. London 1563; 9th ed. fol.
1684, 3 vols. fol.; best ed. by G. Townsend, Lond. 1843, 8 vols. 8o.;
also many abridged editions. Foxe exhibits the entire history of
Christian martyrdom, including the Protestant martyrs of the middle age
and the sixteenth century, with polemical reference to the church of
Rome as the successor of heathen Rome in the work of blood persecution.
"The Ten Roman persecutions" are related in the first volume.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p16">Kortholdt: De persecutionibus eccl. primcevae. Kiel,
1629.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p17">Gibbon: chap. xvi.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p18">Münter: Die Christen im heidnischen Hause vor
Constantin. Copenh. 1828.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p19">Schumann Von Mansegg (R.C.): Die Verfolgungen der ersten
christlichen Kirche. Vienna, 1821.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p20">W. Ad. Schmidt: Geschichte der Denk u. Glaubensfreiheit im ersten
Jahrhundert der Kaiserherrschaft und des
Christenthums. Berl. 1847.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p21">Kritzler: Die Heldenzeiten des Christenthums. Vol.
i. Der Kampf mit dem
Heidthum. Leipz. 1856.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p22">Fr. W. Gass: Das christl. Märtyrerthum in
den ersten
Jahrhunderten. 1859–60 (in
Niedner’s "Zeitschrift für Hist. Theol."
for 1859, pp. 323–392, and 1860, pp.
315–381).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p23">F. Overbeck: Gesetze der röm. Kaiser
gegen die Christen, in his Studien zur Gesch. der alten
Kirche, I. Chemn. 1875.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p24">B. Aubé: Histoire des
persécutions de l’église
jusqu’ à la fin des
Antonins. 2nd ed. Paris 1875 (Crowned by the
Académie française). By the same: Histoire des
persécutions de l’église, La
polémique paÿenne à la fin du II.
siècle, 1878. Les Chréstiens dans
l’empire romain, de la fin des Antonins au milieu du
IIIe siécle (180–249),
1881. L’église et
L’état dans la seconde moitié du
IIIe siécle, 1886.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p25">K. Wieseler: Die Christenverfolgungen der Cäsaren, Hist. und
chronol. untersucht. Gütersloh, 1878.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p26">Gerh. Uhlhorn: Der Kampf des Christenthums mit dem
Heidenthum. 3d ed. Stuttgart, 1879. Engl. transl. by
Smyth &amp; Ropes, 1879.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p27">Theod. Keim: Rom und das Christenthum. Berlin, 1881.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.12.p28">E. Renan:
Marc-Aurèle. Paris, 1882, pp.
53–69.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.12.p29"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="General Survey" n="13" osisID="iv.II.13">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.II.13.p1">§ 13. General Survey.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<index type="globalSubject" index1="persecution"/>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p3">The persecutions of Christianity during the first
three centuries appear like a long tragedy: first, foreboding signs;
then a succession of bloody assaults of heathenism upon the religion of
the cross; amidst the dark scenes of fiendish hatred and cruelty the
bright exhibitions of suffering virtue; now and then a short pause; at
last a fearful and desperate struggle of the old pagan empire for life
and death, ending in the abiding victory of the Christian religion.
Thus this bloody baptism of the church resulted in the birth of a
Christian world. It was a repetition and prolongation of the
crucifixion, but followed by a resurrection.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p4">Our Lord had predicted this conflict, and prepared
His disciples for it. "Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst
of wolves. They will deliver you up to councils, and in their
synagogues they will scourge you; yea and before governors and kings
shall ye be brought for My sake, for a testimony to them and to the
Gentiles. And brother shall deliver up brother to death, and the father
his child: and children shall rise up against parents, and cause them
to be put to death. And ye shall be hated of all men for My
name’s sake: but he that endureth to the end, the same
shall be saved." These, and similar words, as well as the recollection
of the crucifixion and resurrection, fortified and cheered many a
confessor and martyr in the dungeon and at the stake.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p5">The persecutions proceeded first from the Jews,
afterwards from the Gentiles, and continued, with interruptions, for
nearly three hundred years. History reports no mightier, longer and
deadlier conflict than this war of extermination waged by heathen Rome
against defenseless Christianity. It was a most unequal struggle, a
struggle of the sword and of the cross; carnal power all on one side,
moral power all on the other. It was a struggle for life and death. One
or the other of the combatants must succumb. A compromise was
impossible. The future of the world’s history depended
on the downfall of heathenism and the triumph of Christianity. Behind
the scene were the powers of the invisible world, God and the prince of
darkness. Justin, <name osisID="iv.II.13.p5.1">Tertullian</name>, and other
confessors traced the persecutions to Satan and the demons, though they
did not ignore the human and moral aspects; they viewed them also as a
punishment for past sins, and a school of Christian virtue. Some denied
that martyrdom was an evil, since it only brought Christians the sooner
to God and the glory of heaven. As war brings out the heroic qualities
of men, so did the persecutions develop the patience, the gentleness,
the endurance of the Christians, and prove the world-conquering power
of faith.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p6"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.13.p7">Number of Persecutions.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p8"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p9">From the fifth century it has been customary to
reckon ten great persecutions: under Nero, Domitian, Trajan, <name osisID="iv.II.13.p9.1">Marcus Aurelius</name>, Septimius Severus, Maximinus,
Decius, Valerian, Aurelian, and Diocletian.<note osisID="edn13"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.13.p10"> So <name osisID="iv.II.13.p10.2">Augustin</name>, De Civit. Dei, xviii. 52, but he mentions
Antoninus for <name osisID="iv.II.13.p10.3">Marcus Aurelius</name>. Lactantius
counts six, Sulpitius Severus nine persecutions.</p></note>2 This number was suggested by the ten
plagues of Egypt taken as types (which, however, befell the enemies of
Israel, and present a contrast rather than a parallel), and by the ten
horns of the Roman beast making war with the Lamb, taken for so many
emperors.1<note osisID="edn14"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.13.p11"> Ex. chs. 5-10; <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.II.13.p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.17.12">Rev.
17:12</reference> sqq. <name osisID="iv.II.13.p11.3">Augustin</name> felt the impropriety of
referring to the Egyptian plagues, and calls this a mere conjecture of
the human mind which "sometimes hits the truth and sometimes is
deceived." He also rectifies the number by referring to the
persecutions before Nero, mentioned in the N. T., and to the
persecutions after Diocletian, as that of Julian, and the Arian
emperors. "When I think of these and the like things," he says, "it
does not seem to me that the number of persecutions with which the
church is to be tried can be definitely stated."</p></note>
But the number is too great for the general persecutions, and too small
for the provincial and local. Only two imperial
persecutions—those, of Decius and
Diocletian—extended over the empire; but Christianity
was always an illegal religion from Trajan to Constantine, and subject
to annoyance and violence everywhere.1<note osisID="edn15"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.13.p12"> On the relation of
Christianity to the laws of the Roman empire, see Aubé,
De la legatité du
Christianisme dans l’empire Romain au Ier
siècle. Paris 1866.</p></note>
Some persecuting emperors—Nero, Domitian, Galerius,
were monstrous tyrants, but others—Trajan, <name osisID="iv.II.13.p12.4">Marcus Aurelius</name>, Decius,
Diocletian—were among the best and most energetic
emperors, and were prompted not so much by hatred of Christianity as by
zeal for the maintenance of the laws and the power of the government.
On the other hand, some of the most worthless
emperors—Commodus, Caracalla, and
Heliogabalus—were rather favorable to the Christians
from sheer caprice. All were equally ignorant of the true character of
the new religion.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p13"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.13.p14">The Result.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p16">The long and bloody war of heathen Rome against
the church, which is built upon a rock, utterly failed. It began in
Rome under Nero, it ended near Rome at the Milvian bridge, under
Constantine. Aiming to exterminate, it purified. It called forth the
virtues of Christian heroism, and resulted in the consolidation and
triumph of the new religion. The philosophy of persecution is best
expressed by the terse word of <name osisID="iv.II.13.p16.1">Tertullian</name>,
who lived in the midst of them, but did not see the end: "The blood of
the Christians is the seed of the Church."</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p17"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.13.p18">Religious Freedom.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p19"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p20">The blood of persecution is also the seed of civil
and religious liberty. All sects, schools, and parties, whether
religious or political, when persecuted, complain of injustice and
plead for toleration; but few practise it when in power. The reason of
this inconsistency lies in the selfishness of human nature, and in
mistaken zeal for what it believes to be true and right. Liberty is of
very slow, but sure growth.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p21">The ancient world of Greece and Rome generally was
based upon the absolutism of the state, which mercilessly trampled
under foot the individual rights of men. It is Christianity which
taught and acknowledged them.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p22">The Christian apologists first proclaimed, however
imperfectly, the principle of freedom of religion, and the sacred
rights of conscience. <name osisID="iv.II.13.p22.1">Tertullian</name>, in
prophetic anticipation as it were of the modern Protestant theory,
boldly tells the heathen that everybody has a natural and inalienable
right to worship God according to his conviction, that all compulsion
in matters of conscience is contrary to the very nature of religion,
and that no form of worship has any value whatever except as far as it
is a free voluntary homage of the heart.<note osisID="edn16"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.13.p23"> See the remarkable
passageAd Scapulam, c. 2: "Tamen humani juris et naturalis potestatis
est unicuique quod putaverit colere, nec alii obest, aut prodest
alterius religio. Sed religionis est cogere religionem, quae sponte
suscipi debeat non vi, cum et hostiae ab animo libenti expostulentur.
Ita etsi nos compuleritis ad sacrificandum, nihil praestabitis diis
vestris. Ab invitis enim sacrificia non desiderabunt, nisi si
contentiosi sunt; contentiosus autem deus non est." Comp. the similar
passage in <name osisID="iv.II.13.p23.2">Tertullian</name>, Apolog. c. 24, where
after enumerating the various forms of idolatry which enjoyed free
toleration in the empire he continues: "Videte enim ne et hoc ad
irreliqiositatis elogium concurrat, adimere libertatem reliqionis et
interdicere optionem divinitatis, ut non liceat mihi colere quem velim
sed cogar colere quem nolim. Nemo se ab invito coli volet, ne homo
quidem."</p></note>5</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p24">Similar views in favor of religious liberty were
expressed by <name osisID="iv.II.13.p24.1">Justin Martyr</name>,<note osisID="edn17"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.13.p25"> Apol. I. c. 2, 4,
12</p></note>6 and at the close of our period by
Lactantius, who says: "Religion cannot be imposed by force; the matter
must be carried on by words rather than by blows, that the will may be
affected. Torture and piety are widely different; nor is it possible
for truth to be united with violence, or justice with cruelty. Nothing
is so much a matter of free will as religion."<note osisID="edn18"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.13.p26"> Instit. div. V.
20.</p></note>7</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.13.p27">The Church, after its triumph over paganism,
forgot this lesson, and for many centuries treated all Christian
heretics, as well as Jews and Gentiles, just as the old Romans had
treated the Christians, without distinction of creed or sect. Every
state-church from the times of the Christian emperors of Constantinople
to the times of the Russian Czars and the South American Republics, has
more or less persecuted the dissenters, in direct violation of the
principles and practice of Christ and the apostles, and in carnal
misunderstanding of the spiritual nature of the kingdom of heaven.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.13.p28"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Jewish Persecution" n="14" osisID="iv.II.14">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.II.14.p1">§ 14. Jewish Persecution.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.14.p3">Sources.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p4"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p5">I. Dio Cassius: Hist.
Rom. LXVIII. 32; LXIX. 12–14; Justin M.: Apol. I. 31, 47; <name osisID="iv.II.14.p5.3">Eusebius</name>: H. Eccl. IV. 2. and 6. Rabbinical
traditions in Derenbourg: Histoire de la Palestine depuis Cyrus
jusqu’à Adrien (Paris
1867), pp. 402–438.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p6">II. Fr. Münter.:
Der Judische Krieg
unter Trajan u. Hadrian. Altona and Leipz. 1821.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p7">Deyling: Aeliae Capitol. origines et historiae.
Lips. 1743.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p8">Ewald: Gesch. des Volkes Israel, VII.
373–432.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p9">Milman: History of the Jews, Books 18 and 20.</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p10">Grätz: Gesch. der Juden. Vol. IV. (Leipz.
1866).</p>

<p subType="x-MsoList" osisID="iv.II.14.p11">Schürer: Neutestam. Zeitgeschichte (1874),
pp. 350–367.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p12"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p13">The Jews had displayed their obstinate unbelief and
bitter hatred of the gospel in the crucifixion of Christ, the stoning
of Stephen, the execution of James the Elder, the repeated
incarceration as of Peter and John, the wild rage against Paul, and the
murder of James the Just. No wonder that the fearful judgment of God at
last visited this ingratitude upon them in the destruction of the holy
city and the temple, from which the Christians found refuge in
Pella.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.14.p14">But this tragical fate could break only the
national power of the Jews, not their hatred of Christianity. They
caused the death of Symeon, bishop of Jerusalem (107); they were
particularly active in the burning of <name osisID="iv.II.14.p14.1">Polycarp</name> of Smyrna; and they inflamed the violence of the
Gentiles by eliminating the sect of the Nazarenes.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p15"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.14.p16">The Rebellion under Bar-Cochba. Jerusalem again
Destroyed.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p17"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.14.p18">By severe oppression under Trajan and Hadrian, the
prohibition of circumcision, and the desecration of Jerusalem by the
idolatry of the pagans, the Jews were provoked to a new and powerful
insurrection (a.d. 132–135).
A pseudo-Messiah, Bar-Cochba (son of the stars, <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.II.14.p18.2" osisRef="Bible:Num.24.17">Num. 24:17</reference>), afterwards
called Bar-Cosiba (son of falsehood), put himself at the head of the
rebels, and caused all the Christians who would not join him to be most
cruelly murdered. But the false prophet was defeated by
Hadrian’s general in 135, more than half a million of
Jews were slaughtered after a desperate resistance, immense numbers
sold into slavery, 985 villages and 50 fortresses levelled to the
ground, nearly all Palestine laid waste, Jerusalem again destroyed, and
a Roman colony, Aelia Capitolina, erected on its ruins, with an image
of Jupiter and a temple of Venus. The coins of Aelia Capitolina bear
the images of Jupiter Capitolinus, Bacchus, Serapis, Astarte.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.14.p19">Thus the native soil of the venerable religion of
the Old Testament was ploughed up, and idolatry planted on it. The Jews
were forbidden to visit the holy spot of their former metropolis upon
pain of death.<note osisID="edn19"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.14.p20"> As reported by
Justin M., a native of Palestine and a contemporary of this destruction
of Jerusalem. Apol. l.c. 47. <name osisID="iv.II.14.p20.2">Tertullian</name> also
says (Adv. <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.II.14.p20.3" osisRef="Bible:Judg.13">Jud. c. 13</reference>), that, "an interdict was issued forbidding any
one of the Jews to linger in the confines of the district."</p></note>8
Only on the anniversary of the destruction were they allowed to behold
and bewail it from a distance. The prohibition was continued under
Christian emperors to their disgrace. Julian the Apostate, from hatred
of the Christians, allowed and encouraged them to rebuild the temple,
but in vain. Jerome, who spent the rest of his life in monastic
retirement at Bethlehem (d. 419), informs us in pathetic words that in
his day old Jewish men and women, "in corporibus et in habitu suo iram
a Domini demonstrantes," had to buy from the Roman watch the privilege
of weeping and lamenting over the ruins from mount Olivet in sight of
the cross, "ut qui quondam emerant sanguinem Christi, emant lacrymas
suas, et ne fletus quidem i eis gratuitus sit."<note osisID="edn20"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.14.p21"> Ad Zephan. 1:15 sqq.
Schürer quotes the passage, p. 363.</p></note>9 The same sad privilege the Jews now
enjoy under Turkish rule, not only once a year, but every Friday
beneath the very walls of the Temple, now replaced by the Mosque of
Omar.<note osisID="edn21"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.14.p22"> "The Wailing Place
of the Jews" at the cyclopean foundation wall is just outside of the
Mosque El Aska, and near "Robinson’s Arch." There I
saw on Good Friday, 1877, a large number of Jews, old and young, men
and women, venerable rabbis with patriarchal beards, others dirty and
repulsive, kissing the stone wall and watering it with their tears,
while repeating from Hebrew Bibles and prayer-books the Lamentations of
Jeremiah, <reference type="scripRef" osisID="iv.II.14.p22.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.76">Psalms 76</reference>th
and 79th, and various
litanies. Comp. Tobler, Topographie von Jerusalem I. 629.</p></note>0</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p23"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.14.p24">The Talmud.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p25"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.14.p26">After this the Jews had no opportunity for any
further independent persecution of the Christians. Yet they continued
to circulate horrible calumnies on Jesus and his followers. Their
learned schools at Tiberias and Babylon nourished this bitter
hostility. The Talmud, i.e. Doctrine, of which the first part
(the Mishna, i.e. Repetition) was composed towards the end of
the second century, and the second part (the Gemara, i.e.
Completion) in the fourth century, well represents the Judaism of its
day, stiff, traditional, stagnant, and anti-Christian. Subsequently the
Jerusalem Talmud was eclipsed by the Babylonian
(430–521), which is four times larger, and a still
more distinct expression of Rabbinism. The terrible imprecation on
apostates (pratio haereticorum), designed to deter Jews from going over
to the Christian faith, comes from the second century, and is stated by
the Talmud to have been composed at Jafna, where the Sanhedrin at that
time had its seat, by the younger Rabbi Gamaliel.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.14.p27">The Talmud is the slow growth of several
centuries. It is a chaos of Jewish learning, wisdom, and folly, a
continent of rubbish, with hidden pearls of true maxims and poetic
parables. Delitzsch calls it "a vast debating club, in which there hum
confusedly the myriad voices of at least five centuries, a unique code
of laws, in comparison with which the law-books of all other nations
are but lilliputian." It is the Old Testament misinterpreted and turned
against the New, in fact, though not in form. It is a rabbinical Bible
without inspiration, without the Messiah, without hope. It shares the
tenacity of the Jewish race, and, like it, continues involuntarily to
bear testimony to the truth of Christianity. A distinguished historian,
on being asked what is the best argument for Christianity, promptly
replied: the Jews.<note osisID="edn22"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.14.p28"> On the literature of
the Talmud see the articles in Herzog, and in McClintock &amp; Strong,
and especially Schürer, Neutestamentl. Zeitgeschichte (Leipz. 1874), pp.
45-49, to which I add Schürer’s essay:
Die Predigt Jesu Christi in ihrem
Verhältniss zum Altem Testament und zum
Judenthum, Darmstadt, 1882. The relation of the
Talmud to the Sermon on the Mount and the few resemblances is discussed
by Pick in McClintock &amp; Strong, vol. ix. 571.</p></note>1</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.14.p29">Unfortunately this people, still remarkable even
in its tragical end, was in many ways cruelly oppressed and persecuted
by the Christians after Constantine, and thereby only confirmed in its
fanatical hatred of them. The hostile legislation began with the
prohibition of the circumcision of Christian slaves, and the
intermarriage between Jews and Christians, and proceeded already in the
fifth century to the exclusion of the Jews from all civil and political
rights in Christian states. Even our enlightened age has witnessed the
humiliating spectacle of a cruel Judenhetzein Germany and still more in Russia
(1881). But through all changes of fortune God has preserved this
ancient race as a living monument of his justice and his mercy; and he
will undoubtedly assign it an important part in the consummation of his
kingdom at the second coming of Christ.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.14.p30"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

</div>


<div type="x-div3" divTitle="Causes of Roman Persecution" n="15" osisID="iv.II.15">

<p subType="x-head" osisID="iv.II.15.p1">§ 15. Causes of Roman Persecution.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p2"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p3">The policy of the Roman government, the fanaticism of
the superstitious people, and the self-interest of the pagan priests
conspired for the persecution of a religion which threatened to
demolish the tottering fabric of idolatry; and they left no expedients
of legislation, of violence, of craft, and of wickedness untried, to
blot it from the earth.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p4">To glance first at the relation of the Roman state
to the Christian religion.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p5"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.15.p6">Roman Toleration.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p7"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p8">The policy of imperial Rome was in a measure
tolerant. It was repressive, but not preventive. Freedom of thought was
not checked by a censorship, education was left untrammelled to be
arranged between the teacher and the learner. The armies were quartered
on the frontiers as a protection of the empire, not employed at home as
instruments of oppression, and the people were diverted from public
affairs and political discontent by public amusements. The ancient
religions of the conquered races were tolerated as far as they did not
interfere with the interests of the state. The Jews enjoyed special
protection since the time of Julius Caesar.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p9">Now so long as Christianity was regarded by the
Romans as a mere sect of Judaism, it shared the hatred and contempt,
indeed, but also the legal protection bestowed on that ancient national
religion. Providence had so ordered it that Christianity had already
taken root in the leading cities of the empire before, its true
character was understood. Paul had carried it, under the protection of
his Roman citizenship, to the ends of the empire, and the Roman
proconsul at Corinth refused to interfere with his activity on the
ground that it was an internal question of the Jews, which did not
belong to his tribunal. The heathen statesmen and authors, even down to
the age of Trajan, including the historian Tacitus and the younger
Pliny, considered the Christian religion as a vulgar superstition,
hardly worthy of their notice.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p10">But it was far too important a phenomenon, and
made far too rapid progress to be long thus ignored or despised. So
soon as it was understood as a new religion, and as, in fact,
claiming universal validity and acceptance, it was set down as unlawful
and treasonable, a religio illicita; and it was the constant reproach
of the Christians: "You have no right to exist."<note osisID="edn23"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.15.p11"> "Non licet esse
vos." <name osisID="iv.II.15.p11.2">Tertullian</name>, Apol. 4</p></note>2</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p12"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.15.p13">Roman Intolerance.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p14"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p15">We need not be surprised at this position. For
with all its professed and actual tolerance the Roman state was
thoroughly interwoven with heathen idolatry, and made religion a tool
of itspolicy. Ancient history furnishes no example of a state without
some religion and form of worship. Rome makes no exception to the
general rule. "The Romano-Hellenic state religion" (says Mommsen), "and
the Stoic state-philosophy inseparably combined with it were not merely
a convenient instrument for every
government—oligarchy, democracy, or
monarchy—but altogether indispensable, because it was
just as impossible to construct the state wholly without religious
elements as to discover any new state religion adapted to form a
substitute for the old."<note osisID="edn24"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.15.p16"> The History of Rome,
translated by Dickson, vol. IV. P. II. p. 559.</p></note>3</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p17">The piety of Romulus and Numa was believed to have
laid the foundation of the power of Rome. To the favor of the deities
of the republic, the brilliant success of the Roman arms was
attributed. The priests and Vestal virgins were supported out of the
public treasury. The emperor was ex-officio the pontifex maximus, and
even an object of divine worship. The gods were national; and the eagle
of Jupiter Capitolinus moved as a good genius before the
world-conquering legions. <name osisID="iv.II.15.p17.1">Cicero</name> lays down as
a principle of legislation, that no one should be allowed to worship
foreign gods, unless they were recognized by public statute.<note osisID="edn25"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.15.p18"> "Nisi publice
adscitos."</p></note>4 <name osisID="iv.II.15.p18.3">Maecenas</name> counselled Augustus: "Honor the gods
according to the custom of our ancestors, and compel<note osisID="edn26"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.15.p19"> ἀνάγκαζε,
according to Dion Cassius.</p></note>5 others to worship them. Hate and
punish those who bring in strange gods."</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p20">It is true, indeed, that individuals in
Greece and Rome enjoyed an almost unlimited liberty for expressing
sceptical and even impious sentiments in conversation, in books and on
the stage. We need only refer to the works of Aristophanes, Lucian,
Lucretius, Plautus, Terence. But a sharp distinction was made then, as
often since by Christian governments, between liberty of private
thought and conscience, which is inalienable and beyond the reach of
legislation, and between the liberty of public worship, although the
latter is only the legitimate consequence of the former. Besides,
wherever religion is a matter of state-legislation and compulsion,
there is almost invariably a great deal of hypocrisy and infidelity
among the educated classes, however often it may conform outwardly,
from policy, interest or habit, to the forms and legal acquirements of
the established creed.</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p21">The senate and emperor, by special edicts, usually
allowed conquered nations the free practice of their worship even in
Rome; not, however, from regard for the sacred rights of conscience,
but merely from policy, and with the express prohibition of making
proselytes from the state religion; hence severe laws were published
from time to time against transition to Judaism.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p22"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-MsoHeading8" osisID="iv.II.15.p23">Obstacles to the Toleration of Christianity.</p>

<p osisID="iv.II.15.p24"><milestone type="x-br"/>
</p>

<p subType="x-PContinue" osisID="iv.II.15.p25">To Christianity, appearing not as a national
religion, but claiming to be the only true universal one making its
converts among every people and every sect, attracting Greeks and
Romans in much larger numbers than Jews, refusing to compromise with
any form of idolatry, and threatening in fact the very existence of the
Roman state religion, even this limited toleration could not be
granted. The same all-absorbing political interest of Rome dictated
here the opposite course, and <name osisID="iv.II.15.p25.1">Tertullian</name> is
hardly just in changing the Romans with inconsistency for tolerating
the worship of all false gods, from whom they had nothing to fear, and
yet prohibiting the worship of the only true God who is Lord over
all.<note osisID="edn27"><p subType="x-p" osisID="iv.II.15.p26"> Apolog. c. 24 at the
clo