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| Justin the Philosopher preaches the Word of Christ in Rome and suffers Martyrdom. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XVI.—Justin the Philosopher preaches the Word of
Christ in Rome and suffers Martyrdom.
1. About this time1168
1168 That is, during the reign of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus,
161–169 a.d. Inasmuch as Eusebius is
certainly in error in ascribing the death of Polycarp, recorded in the
previous chapter, to the reign of Marcus Aurelius (see note 2 on that
chapter), the fact that he here connects Justin’s death with that
reign furnishes no evidence that it really occurred then; but we have
other good reasons for supposing that it did (see below, note
4). | Justin, who was
mentioned by us just above,1169 after he had
addressed a second work in behalf of our doctrines to the rulers
already named,1170
1170 Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus, whom he mentioned at the close
of chap. 14, and the events of whose reign he is now ostensibly
recording. But in regard to this supposed second apology addressed to
them, see chap. 18, note 3. | was crowned with
divine martyrdom,1171
1171 That Justin died a martyr’s death is the universal tradition
of antiquity, which is crystallized in his name. Irenæus (Adv.
Hær. I. 28. 1) is the first to mention it, but does so
casually, as a fact well known. The only account of his martyrdom which
we have is contained in the Acta Martyrii Justini Philosophi
(Galland. I. 707 sq.), which, although belonging to a later age
(probably the third century), yet bear every evidence of containing a
comparatively truthful account of Justin’s death. According to
these Acts, Justin, with six companions, was brought before Rusticus,
prefect of Rome, and by him condemned to death, upon his refusal to
sacrifice to the gods. The date of his martyrdom is very difficult to
determine. There are two lines of tradition, one of which puts his
death under Antoninus Pius, the other under Marcus Aurelius. The latter
has the most in its favor; and if we are to accept the report of the
Acta Justini (which can be doubted least of all at this point),
his death took place under Rusticus, who, as we know, became prefect of
Rome in 163. Upon the date of Justin’s death, see especially
Holland, in Smith and Wace, III. p. 562 sq. | in consequence of
a plot laid against him by Crescens,1172
1172 Of
this cynic philosopher Crescens we know only what is told us by Justin
and Tatian, and they paint his character in the blackest colors.
Doubtless there was sufficient ground for their accusations; but we
must remember that we have his portrait only from the pen of his
bitterest enemies. In the Acta Crescens is not mentioned in
connection with the death of Justin,—an omission which is hardly
to be explained, except upon the supposition of historical
truthfulness. Eusebius’ report here seems to rest solely upon the
testimony of Tatian (see §§8 and 9, below), but the passage
of Tatian which he cites does not prove his point; it simply proves
that Crescens plotted against Justin; whether his plotting was
successful is not stated, and the contrary seems rather to be implied
(see note 13, below). | a
philosopher who emulated the life and manners of the Cynics, whose name
he bore. After Justin had frequently refuted him in public discussions
he won by his martyrdom the prize of victory, dying in behalf of the
truth which he preached.
2. And he himself, a man most
learned in the truth, in his Apology already referred to1173
1173 Harnack thinks that Eusebius at this point wishes to convey the
false impression that he quotes from the second apology, whereas he
really quotes from what was to him the first, as can be seen from chap.
17. But such conduct upon the part of Eusebius would be quite
inexplicable (at the beginning of the very next chapter, e.g., he
refers to this same apology as the first), and it is far better to
refer the words ἐν τῇ
δεδηλωμένῃ
᾽Απολογί&
139· to chap. 13 sq., where the apology is
quoted repeatedly. | clearly predicts how this was about to
happen to him, although it had not yet occurred.
3. His words are as follows:1174
1174 Justin, Apol. II. 3. | “I, too,1175
1175 κἀγὼ οὖν. In the previous chapter (quoted by Eusebius in the next
chapter) Justin has been speaking of the martyrdom of various
Christians, and now goes on to express his expectation that he, too,
will soon suffer death. |
therefore, expect to be plotted against and put in the stocks1176
1176 ξύλῳ
ἐντιναγῆναι. Compare Acts xvii. 24, and see
Otto’s note on this passage, in his edition of Justin’s
Apology (Corpus Apol. Christ. I. p. 204). He says:
ξύλον
erat truncus foramina habens, quibus pedes
captivorum immitebantur, ut securius in carcere servarentur aut
tormentis vexarentur (“a ξύλον was a block, with holes in which the feet of captives were
put, in order that they might be kept more securely in prison, or might
be afflicted with tortures”). | by some one of those whom I have named,
or perhaps by Crescens, that unphilosophical and vainglorious man. For
the man is not worthy to be called a philosopher who publicly bears
witness against those concerning whom he knows nothing, declaring, for
the sake of captivating and pleasing the multitude, that the Christians
are atheistical and impious.1177
1177 This accusation was very commonly made against the Christians in
the second century. See above, chap. 7, note 20. |
4. Doing this he errs greatly.
For if he assails us without having read the teachings of Christ, he is
thoroughly depraved, and is much worse than the illiterate, who often
guard against discussing and bearing false witness about matters which
they do not understand. And if he has read them and does not understand
the majesty that is in them, or, understanding it, does these things in
order that he may not be suspected of being an adherent, he is far more
base and totally depraved, being enslaved to vulgar applause and
irrational fear.
5. For I would have you know
that when I proposed certain questions of the sort and asked him in
regard to them, I learned and proved that he indeed knows nothing. And
to show that I speak the truth I am ready, if these disputations have
not been reported to you, to discuss the questions again in your
presence. And this indeed would be an act worthy of an
emperor.
6. But if my questions and
his answers
have been made known to you, it is obvious to you that he knows nothing
about our affairs; or if he knows, but does not dare to speak because
of those who hear him, he shows himself to be, as I have already
said,1178 not a philosopher, but a vainglorious
man, who indeed does not even regard that most admirable saying of
Socrates.”1179
1179 This saying of Socrates is given by Justin as follows:
ἀλλ᾽ οὔτι γὲ
πρὸ τῆς
ἀληθείας
τιμητέος
ἀνὴρ, “a man must
not be honored before the truth” (from Plato’s
Republic, Bk. X.). It is hard to say why Eusebius should have
omitted it. Perhaps it was so well known that he did not think it
necessary to repeat it, taking for granted that the connection would
suggest the same to every reader, or it is possible that the omission
is the fault of a copyist, not of Eusebius himself. | These are the
words of Justin.
7. And that he met his death as
he had predicted that he would, in consequence of the machinations of
Crescens, is stated by Tatian,1180
1180 On
Tatian and his writings, see below, chap. 29.
Eusebius has been accused by
Dembowski, Zahn, Harnack, and others of practicing deception at this
point. The passage from Tatian’s Oratio ad Græcos,
which Eusebius appeals to for testimony in regard to Justin’s
death, and which he quotes just below, is not given by him exactly as
it stands in the extant text of the Oratio. In the latter we
read, “He who taught that death should be despised was himself so
greatly in fear of it, that he endeavored to inflict death as if it
were an evil upon Justin, and indeed on me also, because when
preaching he had proved that the philosophers were gluttons and
impostors.” The difference between the two texts consists in the
substitution of the word μεγ€λῳ for
the words καὶ
ἐμὲ ὡς; and it is
claimed that this alteration was intentionally made by Eusebius. As the
text stands in Tatian, the passage is far from proving that
Justin’s death was caused by the machinations of Crescens, for
Tatian puts himself on a level with Justin as the object of these
machinations, and of course since they did not succeed in his case,
there is no reason to suppose that they succeeded in Justin’s
case. It is claimed, therefore, that Justin, realizing this, struck out
the καὶ
ἐμὲ ὡς in order to
permit the reader to gather from the passage that Tatian meant to imply
that the plots of Crescens were successful, and resulted in
Justin’s death. Before accepting this conclusion, however, it may
be well to realize exactly what is involved in it. The change does not
consist merely in the omission of the words καὶ ἐμὲ
ὡς, but in the substitution for them
of the word μεγ€λῳ. It
cannot, therefore, be said that Eusebius only omitted some words,
satisfying his conscience that there was no great harm in that; whoever
made the change, if he did it intentionally, directly falsified the
text, and substituted the other word for the sake of covering up his
alteration; that is, he committed an act of deceit of the worst kind,
and deliberately took steps to conceal his act. Certainly such conduct
is not in accord with Eusebius’ general character, so far as we
can ascertain it from his writings. Even Zahn and Harnack, who accuse
him of intentional deception here, yet speak of his general
conscientiousness, and treat this alteration as one which Eusebius
allowed himself to make while, at the same time, his
“conscientiousness did not permit him even this time to change
truth completely into untruth.” But if he could allow himself to
make so deliberate an alteration, and then cover the change by
inserting another word, there is little cause to speak of
“conscientiousness” in connection with the matter; if he
could do that, his conscience would certainly permit him to make any
false quotations, however great, so long as he thought he could escape
detection. But few would care to accuse Eusebius of possessing such a
character. Certainly if he possessed it, we should find clearer traces
of it than we do in his History, where we have the opportunity
to control a large portion of his statements on an immense variety of
subjects. Moreover, for such a grave act of deception as Eusebius is
supposed to have committed, some adequate ground must have existed. But
what ground was there? The only motive suggested is that he desired to
appear to possess specific knowledge about the manner of Justin’s
death, when in fact he did not possess it. It is not maintained that he
had any larger motive, such as reconciling apparent contradictions in
sacred records, or shedding an added luster upon the Christian
religion, for neither of these purposes has any relation to the
statement in regard to Crescens’ connection with Justin’s
death. Solely then for the sake of producing the impression that he
knew more about Justin’s death than he did, he must have made the
change. But certainly when we realize how frequently Eusebius directly
avows his ignorance on points far more important (to his mind) than
this (e.g., the dates of the Jerusalem bishops, which he might so
easily have invented), and when we consider how sober his history is in
comparison with the accounts of the majority of his contemporaries,
both Pagan and Christian, how few fables he introduces, how seldom he
embellishes the narratives which he finds related in his sources with
imaginary figments of his own brain,—when, in fact, no such
instances can be found elsewhere, although, writing in the age he did,
and for the public for whom he did, he might have invented so many
stories without fear of detection, as his successors during the ancient
and middle ages were seldom loath to do,—when all this is taken
into consideration, we should hesitate long before we accuse Eusebius
of such deceptive conduct as is implied in the intentional alteration
of Tatian’s account at this point. It has been quite the custom
to accuse Eusebius of intentional deviations from the truth here and
there but it must be remembered that he was either honest or dishonest,
and if he ever deliberately and intentionally deviated from the truth,
his general character for truthfulness is gone, unless the deviation
were only in some exceptional case, where the pressure to
misrepresentation was unusually strong, under which circumstances his
reputation for veracity in general might not be seriously impaired. But
the present instance is not such an one, and if he was false here on so
little provocation, why should we think his character such as to
guarantee truthfulness in any place where falsehood might be more
desirable?
The fact is, however, that the
grounds upon which the accusation against Eusebius is based are very
slender. Nothing but the strongest evidence should lead us to conclude
that such a writer as he practiced such wilful deception for reasons
absolutely trivial. But when we realize how little is known of the
actual state of the text of Tatian’s Oratio at the time
Eusebius wrote, we must acknowledge that to base an accusation on a
difference between the text of the History and the extant mss. of the Oratio is at least a little
hasty. An examination of the latest critical edition of Tatian’s
Oratio (that of Schwartz, in Gebhardt, and Harnack’s
Texte und Untersuch. IV. 1) shows us that in a number of
instances the testimony of the mss. of
Eusebius is accepted over against that of the few extant mss. of Tatian. The ms. of Tatian
which Eusebius used was therefore admittedly different at a number of
points from all our existing mss. of Tatian.
It is consequently not at all impossible that the ms. which he used read μεγ€λῳ instead of καὶ
ἐμὲ ὡς. It happens,
indeed, to be a fact that our three mss. of
Tatian all present variations at this very point (one reads
καὶ ἐμὲ
ὡς, another, καὶ ἐμὲ
οἷον, another,
καὶ ἐμὲ
οὗς), showing that the
archetype, whatever it was, either offered difficulties to the
copyists, or else was partially illegible, and hence required
conjectural emendations or additions. It will be noticed that the
closing verb of this sentence is in the singular, so that the mention
of both Justin and Tatian in the beginning of the sentence may well
have seemed to some copyist quite incongruous, and it is not difficult
to suppose that under such circumstances, the text at this point being
in any case obscure or mutilated, such a copyist permitted himself to
make an alteration which was very clever and at the same time did away
with all the trouble. Textual critics will certainly find no difficulty
in such an assumption. The mss. of Tatian are
undoubtedly nearer the original form at this point than those of
Eusebius, but we have no good grounds for supposing that Eusebius did
not follow the ms. which lay before
him.
The question as to
Eusebius’ interpretation of the passage as he found it is quite a
different one. It contains no direct statement that Justin met his
death in consequence of the plots of Crescens; and finding no mention
of such a fact in the Acts of Martyrdom of Justin, we may dismiss it as
unhistorical and refuse to accept Eusebius’ interpretation of
Tatian’s words. To say, however, that Eusebius intentionally
misinterpreted those words is quite unwarranted. He found in
Justin’s work an expressed expectation that he would meet his
death in this way, and he found in Tatian’s work the direct
statement that Crescens did plot Justin’s death as the latter had
predicted he would. There was nothing more natural than to conclude
that Tatian meant to imply that Crescens had succeeded, for why did he
otherwise mention the matter at all, Eusebius might well say, looking
at the matter from his point of view, as an historian interested at
that moment in the fact of Justin’s death. He does undoubtedly
show carelessness and lack of penetration in interpreting the passage
as he does; but if he had been aware of the defect in the evidence he
presents, and had yet wished deceitfully to assert the fact as a fact,
he would certainly have omitted the passage altogether, or he would
have bolstered it up with the statement that other writers confirmed
his conclusion,—a statement which only a thoroughly and genuinely
honest man would have scrupled to make. Finally, to return to the
original charge of falsification of the sources, he realized that the
text of Tatian, with the καὶ ἐμὲ ὡς, did not establish Justin’s death at the instigation
of Crescens, he must have realized at the same time that his altered
text, while it might imply it, certainly did not absolutely prove it,
and hence he would not have left his conclusion, which he stated as a
demonstrated fact, to rest upon so slender a basis, when he might so
easily have adduced any number of oral traditions in confirmation of
it. If he were dishonest enough to alter the text, he would not have
hesitated to state in general terms that the fact is “also
supported by tradition.” We conclude, finally, that he read the
passage as we now find it in the mss. of his
History, and that his interpretation of the passage, while
false, was not intentionally so.
The attacks upon
Eusebius which have been already referred to are to be found in
Dembowski’s Quellen der christlichen Apologetik, I. p. 60;
Zahn’s Tatian’s Diatessaron, p. 275 sq., and
Harnack’s Ueberlieferung der griech. Apologeten, p. 141
sq. Semisch (Justin der Märtyrer, I. 53) takes for granted
that Eusebius followed the text of Tatian which lay before him, but
does not attempt to prove it. | a man who early
in life lectured upon the sciences of the Greeks and won no little fame
in them, and who has left a great many monuments of himself in his
writings. He records this fact in his work against the Greeks, where he
writes as follows:1181
1181 Tatian, Oratio ad Græcos, c. 18. It is quite probable
that Tatian is here appealing, not to a written work of Justin’s,
but to a statement which he had himself heard him make. See
Harnack’s Ueberlieferung der griech. Apologeten, p. 130.
Harnack is undoubtedly correct in maintaining that Tatian’s
Oratio is quite independent of Justin’s Apology and
other writings. | “And that
most admirable Justin declared with truth that the aforesaid persons
were like robbers.”
8. Then, after making some
remarks about the philosophers, he continues as follows:1182 “Crescens, indeed, who made his
nest in the great city, surpassed all in his unnatural lust, and was
wholly devoted to the love of money.
9. And he who taught that death
should be despised, was himself so greatly in fear of it that he
endeavored to inflict death, as if it were a great evil, upon Justin,
because the latter, when preaching the truth, had proved that the
philosophers were gluttons and impostors.” And such was the cause
of Justin’s martyrdom. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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