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| The Circumstances related of Polycarp, a Friend of the Apostles. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XIV.—The Circumstances related of Polycarp, a
Friend of the Apostles.
1. At
this time, while Anicetus was at the head of the church of Rome,1112
1112 On
Anicetus, see above, chap. 11, note 18. He was bishop probably from 154
to 165 a.d. | Irenæus relates that Polycarp, who was
still alive, was at Rome,1113
1113 γένεσθαι
ἐπὶ ῾Ρώμης. It is quite commonly said that Polycarp came to Rome
during the episcopate of Anicetus; but our authorities say only that he
was in Rome at that time, and do not specify the date at which he
arrived there. Neither these words, nor the words of Irenæus in
§5 below (ἐπιδηυήσας
τῇ ῾Ρώμη), are to be translated “came to Rome,” as is often
done (e.g. by Crusè, by Roberts and Rambaut, in their translation
of Irenæus, and by Salmon, in the Dict. of Christ. Biog.),
but “was at Rome” (as Closs, Stigloher, Lightfoot, &c.,
correctly render the words). Inasmuch as Polycarp suffered martyrdom in
155 or 156 a.d.(see below, chap. 15, note 2),
he must have left Rome soon after Anticetus’ accession (which
took place probably in 154); and though of course he may have come
thither sometime before that event, still the fact that his stay there
is connected with Anicetus’ episcopate, and his alone, implies
that he went thither either immediately after, or shortly before
Anicetus became bishop. | and that he had a
conference with Anicetus on a question concerning the day of the
paschal feast.1114
1114 On
the paschal controversies of the early Church, see below, Bk. V. chap.
23, note 1. We learn from Bk. V. chap. 24, that though Polycarp and
Anicetus did not reach an agreement on the subject, they nevertheless
remained good friends, and that Polycarp celebrated the eucharist in
Rome at the request of Anicetus. |
2. And the same writer gives
another account of Polycarp which I feel constrained to add to that
which has been already related in regard to him. The account is taken
from the third book of Irenæus’ work Against Heresies, and
is as follows:1115
1115 Irenæus, Adv. Hær. III. 3. 4. |
3. “But Polycarp1116
1116 Eusebius takes his account of Polycarp solely from Irenæus,
and from the epistle of the church of Smyrna, given in the next
chapter. He is mentioned by Irenæus again in his Adv.
Hær. V. 33. 4 (quoted by Eusebius in Bk. III. chap. 39), and
in his epistle to Florinus and to Victor. From the epistle to Florinus
(quoted below in Bk. V. chap. 20), where quite an account of Polycarp
is given, we learn that the latter was Irenæus’ teacher. He
was one of the most celebrated men of the time, not because of his
ability or scholarship, but because he had been a personal friend of
some of the disciples of the Lord, and lived to a great age, when few
if any were still alive that had known the first generation of
Christians. He suffered martyrdom about 155 a.d. (see below, chap. 15, note 2); and as he was at least
eighty-six years old at the time of his death (see the next chap.,
§20), he must have been born as early as 70 a.d. He was a personal disciple of John the apostle, as we
learn from Irenæus’ epistle to Florinus, and was acquainted
also with others that had seen the Lord. That he was at the head of the
church of Smyrna cannot be doubted (cf. Ignatius’ epistle to
him), but Irenæus’ statement that he was appointed bishop of
Smyrna by apostles is probably to be looked upon as a combination of
his own. He reasoned that bishops were the successors of the apostles;
Polycarp was a bishop, and lived in the time of the apostles; and
therefore he must have been appointed by them. The only known writing
of Polycarp’s is his epistle to the Philippians, which is still
extant (see below, note 16). His character is plainly revealed in that
epistle as well as in the accounts given us by Irenæus and by the
church of Smyrna in their epistle. He was a devoutly pious and
simple-minded Christian, burning with intense personal love for his
Master, and yet not at all fanatical like his contemporary Ignatius.
The instances related in this chapter show his intense horror of
heretics, of those whom he believed to be corrupting the doctrine of
Christ, and yet he does not seem to have had the taste or talent to
refute their errors. He simply wished to avoid them as instruments of
Satan. He was pre-eminently a man that lived in the past. His epistle
is full of reminiscences of New Testament thought and language, and his
chief significance to the Christians of the second century was as a
channel of apostolic tradition. He does not compare with Ignatius for
vigor and originality of thought, and yet he was one of the most deeply
venerated characters of the early Church, his noble piety, his relation
to John and other disciples of the Lord, and finally his glorious
martyrdom, contributing to make him such. Upon Polycarp, see especially
Lightfoot’s edition of Ignatius and Polycarp, and the article of
Salmon, in Smith and Wace’s Dict. of Christ.
Biog. | also was not only instructed by the
apostles, and acquainted with many that had seen Christ, but was also
appointed by apostles in Asia bishop of the church of Smyrna.1117
4. We too saw him in our early
youth; for he lived a long time, and died, when a very old man, a
glorious and most illustrious martyr’s death,1118
1118 On
his age and the date of his death, see chap. 15, note 2. A full account
of his martyrdom is given in the epistle of the church of Smyrna,
quoted in the next chapter. | having always taught the things which he
had learned from the apostles, which the Church also hands down, and
which alone are true.1119
1119 Irenæus emphasizes here, as was his wont, the importance of
tradition in determining true doctrine. Compare also Eusebius’
words in chap. 21. |
5. To these things all the
Asiatic churches testify, as do also those who, down to the present
time, have succeeded Polycarp,1120
1120 Of
these successors of Polycarp we know nothing. | who was a much more
trustworthy and certain witness of the truth than Valentinus and
Marcion and the rest of the heretics.1121
He also was in Rome in the time of Anicetus1122
and caused many to turn away from the above-mentioned heretics to the
Church of God, proclaiming that he had received from the apostles this
one and only system of truth which has been transmitted by the
Church.
6. And there are those that
heard from him that John, the disciple of the Lord, going to bathe in
Ephesus and seeing Cerinthus within, ran out of the bath-house without
bathing, crying, ‘Let us flee, lest even the bath fall, because
Cerinthus, the enemy of the truth, is within.’1123
1123 See above, Bk. III. chap. 28, where the same story is
related. |
7. And Polycarp himself, when
Marcion once met him1124
1124 Marcion came to Rome about 135 a.d., but
how long he remained there we do not know. Polycarp’s words show
the great abhorrence in which he was held by the Church. He was
considered by many the most dangerous of all the heretics, for he
propagated his errors and secured many followers among all classes.
Marcion’s conduct in this case is very significant when compared
with that of the Gnostics. He tried everywhere to gain support and to
make friends with the Church, that he might introduce his reforms
within it; while the genuine Gnostics, on the contrary, held themselves
aloof from the Church, in pride and in a feeling of superiority.
Polycarp in his Epistle to the Philippians, chap. 7, shows the same
severity toward false teachers, and even uses the same expression,
“first born of Satan,” perhaps referring to Marcion
himself; but see below, note 16. | and said,
‘Knowest1125
1125 ἐπιγινώσκεις, which is the reading of the great majority of the mss., and is adopted by Schwegler, Laemmer, Harnack,
Lightfoot, and others. Three mss., supported
by Nicephorus, Rufinus, and the Latin version of Irenæus,
read ἐπιγίνωσκε, and this is adopted by Valesius, Heinichen, Stroth,
Closs, and Crusè. | thou us?’
replied, ‘I know the first born of Satan.’ Such caution did
the apostles and their disciples exercise that they might not even
converse with any of those who perverted the truth; as Paul also said,
‘A man that is a heretic, after the first and second
admonition, reject; knowing he that is such is subverted, and sinneth, being
condemned of himself.’1126
8. There is also a very powerful
epistle of Polycarp written to the Philippians,1127
1127 Polycarp’s Epistle to the Philippians is still extant, and
is the only work of Polycarp which we have. (The Greek text is given in
all editions of the apostolic Fathers, and with especially valuable
notes and discussions in Zahn’s Ignatius von Antiochien,
and in Lightfoot’s Ignatius and Polycarp, II. p. 897 sqq.;
an English translation is contained in the latter edition, and also in
the Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. I. p. 31–36.) The date of
its composition it is very difficult to determine. It must have been
written after the death of Ignatius (chap. 9), and yet soon after, as
Polycarp does not seem to know all the circumstances attending that
event (see chap. 13). Its date therefore depends upon the date of the
martyrdom of Ignatius, which is a very difficult question, not yet
fully decided. The attack upon false teachers reminds us of Marcion,
and contains traits which seem to imply that Polycarp had Marcion in
his mind at the time of writing. If this be so, the epistle was written
as late as 135 a.d., which puts the date of
Ignatius’ death much later than the traditional date (on the date
of Ignatius’ death, see above, Bk. III. chap. 36, note 4). The
genuineness of Polycarp’s epistle has been sharply
disputed—chiefly on account of its testimony to the Ignatian
epistles in chap. 13. Others, while acknowledging its genuineness as a
whole, have regarded chap. 13 as an interpolation. But the external
testimony for its genuineness is very strong, beginning with
Irenæus, and the epistle itself is just what we should expect from
such a man as Polycarp. There is no good reason therefore to doubt its
genuineness nor the genuineness of chap. 13, the rejection of which is
quite arbitrary. The genuineness of the whole has been ably defended
both by Zahn and by Lightfoot, and may be regarded as definitely
established. |
from which those that wish to do so, and that are concerned for their
own salvation, may learn the character of his faith and the preaching
of the truth.” Such is the account of Irenæus.
9. But Polycarp, in his
above-mentioned epistle to the Philippians, which is still extant, has
made use of certain testimonies drawn from the First Epistle of
Peter.1128
1128 Polycarp in his epistle makes constant use of the First Epistle of
Peter, with which he was evidently very familiar, though it is
remarkable that he nowhere mentions Peter as its author (cf. Bk. III.
chap. 3, note 1). |
10. And when Antoninus, called
Pius, had completed the twenty-second year of his reign,1129
1129 Antoninus Pius reigned from July 2, 138, to March 7,
161. | Marcus Aurelius Verus, his son, who was
also called Antoninus, succeeded him, together with his brother
Lucius.1130
1130 Both
were adopted sons of Antoninus Pius. See above, chap. 12, note
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