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| Of the Death of the Martyrs Considered as a Sacrifice, and in What Way It Operates to the Benefit of Others. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
36. Of the Death of the Martyrs Considered as a Sacrifice,
and in What Way It Operates to the Benefit of Others.
Akin to this sacrifice are the others of which the
sacrifices of the law are symbols, and another kind of sacrifice also
appears to me to be of the same nature; namely, the shedding of the
blood of the noble martyrs, whom the disciple John saw, for this is not
without significance, standing beside the heavenly altar.
“Who is wise,4964 and he shall
understand these things, prudent, and he shall know them?”
It is a matter of higher speculation to consider even slightly the
rationale of those sacrifices which cleanse those for whom they are
offered. Jephthah’s sacrifice of his daughter should
receive attention; it was by vowing it that he conquered the children
of Ammon, and the victim approved his vow, for when her father
said,4965 “I have opened my mouth unto the Lord
against thee,” she answered, “If thou hast opened thy mouth
unto the Lord against me, do that which thou hast vowed.”
The story suggests that the being must be a very cruel one to whom such
sacrifices are offered for the salvation of men; and we require some
breadth of mind and some ability to solve the difficulties raised
against Providence, to be able to account for such things and to see
that they are mysteries and exceed our human nature. Then we
shall say,4966 “Great are
the judgments of God, and hard to be described; for this cause
untutored souls have gone astray.” Among the Gentiles, too,
it is recorded that many a one, when pestilential disease broke out in
his country, offered himself a victim for the public good. That
this was the case the faithful Clement assumes,4967 on
the faith of the narratives, to whom Paul bears witness when he
says,4968 “With Clement also, and the others, my
fellow-labourers, whose names are in the book of life.” If
there is anything in these narratives that appears incongruous to one
who is minded to carp at mysteries revealed to few, the same difficulty
attaches to the office that was laid on the martyrs, for it was
God’s will that we should rather endure all the dreadful
reproaches connected with confessing Him as God, than escape for a
short time from such sufferings (which men count evil) by allowing
ourselves by our words to conform to the will of the enemies of the
truth. We are, therefore, led to believe that the powers of evil
do suffer defeat by the death of
the holy martyrs; as if their patience, their confession, even unto
death, and their zeal for piety blunted the edge of the onset of evil
powers against the sufferer, and their might being thus dulled and
exhausted, many others of those whom they had conquered raised their
heads and were set free from the weight with which the evil powers
formerly oppressed and injured them. And even the martyrs
themselves are no longer involved in suffering, even though those
agents which formerly wrought ill to others are not exhausted; for he
who has offered such a sacrifice overcomes the power which opposed him,
as I may show by an illustration which is suited to this subject.
He who destroys a poisonous animal, or lulls it to sleep with charms,
or by any means deprives it of its venom, he does good to many who
would otherwise have suffered from that animal had it not been
destroyed, or charmed, or emptied of its venom. Moreover, if one
of those who were formerly bitten should come to know of this, and
should be cured of his malady and look upon the death of that which
injured him, or tread on it, or touch it when dead, or taste a part of
it, then he, who was formerly a sufferer, would owe cure and benefit to
the destroyer of the poisonous animal. In some such way must we
suppose the death of the most holy martyrs to operate, many receiving
benefit from it by an influence we cannot describe.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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