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| The Persecution under Nero in which Paul and Peter were honored at Rome with Martyrdom in Behalf of Religion. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXV.—The Persecution under Nero in
which Paul and Peter were honored at Rome with Martyrdom in Behalf of
Religion.
1. When
the government of Nero was now firmly established, he began to plunge
into unholy pursuits, and armed himself even against the religion of
the God of the universe.
2. To describe the greatness of
his depravity does not lie within the plan of the present work. As
there are many indeed that have recorded his history in most accurate
narratives,536
536 Tacitus (Ann. XIII.–XVI.), Suetonius (Nero),
and Dion Cassius (LXI.–LXIII.). | every one may at his pleasure learn
from them the coarseness of the man’s extraordinary madness,
under the influence of which, after he had accomplished the destruction
of so many myriads without any reason, he ran into such
blood-guiltiness that he did not spare even his nearest relatives and
dearest friends, but destroyed his mother and his brothers and his
wife,537
537 Nero’s mother, Agrippina the younger, daughter of Germanicus
and of Agrippina the elder, was assassinated at Nero’s command in
60 a.d. in her villa on Lake Lucrine, after an
unsuccessful attempt to drown her in a boat so constructed as to break
to pieces while she was sailing in it on the lake. His younger brother
Britannicus was poisoned by his order at a banquet in 55 a.d. His first wife Octavia was divorced in order that he
might marry Poppæa, the wife of his friend Otho, and was afterward
put to death. Poppæa herself died from the effects of a kick given
her by Nero while she was with child. | with very many others of his own
family as
he would private and public enemies, with various kinds of
deaths.
3. But with all these things
this particular in the catalogue of his crimes was still wanting, that
he was the first of the emperors who showed himself an enemy of the
divine religion.
4. The Roman Tertullian is
likewise a witness of this. He writes as follows:538 “Examine your records. There you
will find that Nero was the first that persecuted this doctrine,539
539 We
learn from Tacitus, Ann. XV. 39, that Nero was suspected to be
the author of the great Roman conflagration, which took place in 64
a.d. (Pliny, H. N. XVII. I, Suetonius,
38, and Dion Cassius, LXII. 18, state directly that he was the author
of it), and that to avert this suspicion from himself he accused the
Christians of the deed, and the terrible Neronian persecution which
Tacitus describes so fully was the result. Gibbon, and in recent times
especially Schiller (Geschichte der Römischen Kaiserzeit unter
der Regierung des Nero, p. 584 sqq.), have maintained that Tacitus
was mistaken in calling this a persecution of Christians, which was
rather a persecution of the Jews as a whole. But we have no reason for
impeaching Tacitus’ accuracy in this case, especially since we
remember that the Jews enjoyed favor with Nero through his wife
Poppæa. What is very significant, Josephus is entirely silent in
regard to a persecution of his countrymen under Nero. We may assume as
probable (with Ewald and Renan) that it was through the suggestion of
the Jews that Nero’s attention was drawn to the Christians, and
he was led to throw the guilt upon them, as a people whose habits would
best give countenance to such a suspicion, and most easily excite the
rage of the populace against them. This was not a persecution of the
Christians in the strict sense, that is, it was not aimed against their
religion as such; and yet it assumed such proportions and was attended
with such horrors that it always lived in the memory of the Church as
the first and one of the most awful of a long line of persecutions
instituted against them by imperial Rome, and it revealed to them the
essential conflict which existed between Rome as it then was and
Christianity. | particularly then when after subduing all
the east, he exercised his cruelty against all at Rome.540
540 The
Greek translator of Tertullian’s Apology, whoever he may
have been (certainly not Eusebius himself; see chap. 2, note 9, above),
being ignorant of the Latin idiom cum maxime, has made very bad
work of this sentence, and has utterly destroyed the sense of the
original, which runs as follows: illic reperietis primum Neronem in
hanc sectam cum maxime Romæ orientem Cæsariano gladio
ferocisse (“There you will find that Nero was the first to
assail with the imperial sword the Christian sect, which was then
especially flourishing in Rome”). The Greek translation
reads: ἐκεῖ
εὑρήσετε
πρῶτον
Νερῶνα τοῦτο
τὸ δόγμα,
ἡνίκα
μ€λιστα ἐν
῾Ρώμῃ τὴν
ἀνατολὴν
πᾶσαν
ὑποτ€ξας
ὠμὸς ἦν εἰς
π€ντας,
διώξοντα, in the rendering of which I have followed Crusè, who has
reproduced the idea of the Greek translator with as much fidelity as
the sentence will allow. The German translators, Stroth and Closs,
render the sentence directly from the original Latin, and thus preserve
the meaning of Tertullian, which is, of course, what the Greek
translator intended to reproduce. I have not, however, felt at liberty
in the present case to follow their example. | We glory in having such a man the leader in
our punishment. For whoever knows him can understand that nothing was
condemned by Nero unless it was something of great
excellence.”
5. Thus publicly announcing
himself as the first among God’s chief enemies, he was led on to
the slaughter of the apostles. It is, therefore, recorded that Paul was
beheaded in Rome itself,541
541 This
tradition, that Paul suffered martyrdom in Rome, is early and
universal, and disputed by no counter-tradition and may be accepted as
the one certain historical fact known about Paul outside of the New
Testament accounts. Clement (Ad. Cor. chap. 5) is the first to
mention the death of Paul, and seems to imply, though he does not
directly state, that his death took place in Rome during the
persecution of Nero. Caius (quoted below, §7), a writer of the
first quarter of the third century, is another witness to his death in
Rome, as is also Dionysius of Corinth (quoted below, §8) of the
second century. Origen (quoted by Euseb. III. 1) states that he was
martyred in Rome under Nero. Tertullian (at the end of the second
century), in his De præscriptione Hær. chap. 36, is
still more distinct, recording that Paul was beheaded in Rome. Eusebius
and Jerome accept this tradition unhesitatingly, and we may do
likewise. As a Roman citizen, we should expect him to meet death by the
sword. | and that Peter
likewise was crucified under Nero.542
542 The
tradition that Peter suffered martyrdom in Rome is as old and as
universal as that in regard to Paul, but owing to a great amount of
falsehood which became mixed with the original tradition by the end of
the second century the whole has been rejected as untrue by some modern
critics, who go so far as to deny that Peter was ever at Rome. (See
especially Lipsius’ Die Quellen der römischen
Petrus-Sage, Kiel, 1872; a summary of his view is given by Jackson
in the Presbyterian Quarterly and Princeton Review, 1876, p. 265
sq. In Lipsius’ latest work upon this subject, Die Acta Pauli
und Petri, 1887, he makes important concessions.) The tradition is,
however, too strong to be set aside, and there is absolutely no trace
of any conflicting tradition. We may therefore assume it as
overwhelmingly probable that Peter was in Rome and suffered martyrdom
there. His martyrdom is plainly referred to in John xxi. 10, though the place
of it is not given. The first extra-biblical witness to it is Clement
of Rome. He also leaves the place of the martyrdom unspecified (Ad
Cor. 5), but he evidently assumes the place as well known, and
indeed it is impossible that the early Church could have known of the
death of Peter and Paul without knowing where they died, and there is
in neither case a single opposing tradition. Ignatius (Ad Rom.
chap. 4) connects Paul and Peter in an especial way with the Roman
Church, which seems plainly to imply that Peter had been in Rome.
Phlegon (supposed to be the Emperor Hadrian writing under the name of a
favorite slave) is said by Origen (Contra Celsum, II. 14) to
have confused Jesus and Peter in his Chronicles. This is very
significant as implying that Peter must have been well known in Rome.
Dionysius, quoted below, distinctly states that Peter labored in Rome,
and Caius is a witness for it. So Irenæus, Clement, Tertullian,
and later Fathers without a dissenting voice. The first to mention
Peter’s death by crucifixion (unless John xxi. 18 be supposed to
imply it) is Tertullian (De Præscrip. Hær. chap. 36),
but he mentions it as a fact already known, and tradition since his
time is so unanimous in regard to it that we may consider it in the
highest degree probable. On the tradition reported by Origen, that
Peter was crucified head downward, see below, Bk. III. chap. 1, where
Origen is quoted by Eusebius. | This account
of Peter and Paul is substantiated by the fact that their names are
preserved in the cemeteries of that place even to the present
day.
6. It is confirmed likewise by
Caius,543
543 The
history of Caius is veiled in obscurity. All that we know of him is
that he was a very learned ecclesiastical writer, who at the beginning
of the third century held a disputation with Proclus in Rome (cf. Bk.
VI. chap. 20, below). The accounts of him given by Jerome, Theodoret,
and Nicephorus are drawn from Eusebius and furnish us no new data.
Photius, however (Bibl. XLVIII.), reports that Caius was said to
have been a presbyter of the Roman Church during the episcopates of
Victor and Zephyrinus, and to have been elected “Bishop of the
Gentiles,” and hence he is commonly spoken of as a presbyter of
the Roman Church, though the tradition rests certainly upon a very
slender foundation, as Photius lived some six hundred years after
Caius, and is the first to mention the fact. Photius also, although
with hesitation, ascribes to Caius a work On the Cause of the
Universe, and one called The Labyrinth, and another
Against the Heresy of Artemon (see below, Bk. V. chap. 28, note
1). The first of these (and by some the last also), is now commonly
ascribed to Hippolytus. Though the second may have been written by
Caius it is no longer extant, and hence all that we have of his
writings are the fragments of the Dialogue with Proclus
preserved by Eusebius in this chapter and in Bk. III. chaps. 28, 31.
The absence of any notice of the personal activity of so distinguished
a writer has led some critics (e.g. Salmon in Smith and Wace, I. p.
386, who refers to Lightfoot, Journal of Philology, I. 98, as
holding the same view) to assume the identity of Caius and Hippolytus,
supposing that Hippolytus in the Dialogue with Proclus styled
himself simply by his prænomen Caius and that thus as the book
fell into the hands of strangers the tradition arose of a writer Caius
who in reality never had a separate existence. This theory is
ingenious, and in many respects plausible, and certainly cannot be
disproved (owing chiefly to our lack of knowledge about Caius), and yet
in the absence of any proof that Hippolytus actually bore the
prænomen Caius it can be regarded as no more than a bare
hypothesis. The two are distinguished by Eusebius and by all the
writers who mention them. On Caius’ attitude toward the
Apocalypse, see Bk. III. chap. 28, note 4; and on his opinion in regard
to the authorship of the Epistle to the Hebrews, see Bk. VI. chap. 20,
and Bk. III. chap. 3, note 17. The fragments of Caius (including
fragments from the Little Labyrinth, mentioned above) are given
with annotations in Routh’s Rel. Sacræ, II.
125–158 and in translation (with the addition of the Muratorian
Fragment, wrongly ascribed to Caius by its discoverer) in the
Ante-Nicene Fathers, V. 599–604. See also the article of
Salmon in Smith and Wace, of Harnack, in Herzog (2d ed.), and
Schaff’s Ch. Hist. II. p. 775 sqq. | a member of the Church,544 who arose545
545 γεγονώς. Crusè translates “born”; but Eusebius cannot
have meant that, for in Bk. VI. chap. 20 he tells us that Caius’
disputation with Proclus was held during the episcopate of Zephyrinus.
He used γεγονώς, therefore, as to indicate that at that time he came into public
notice, as we use the word “arose.” | under
Zephyrinus,546
546 On
Zephyrinus, see below, Bk. V. chap. 28, §7. | bishop of Rome. He, in a published
disputation with Proclus,547
547 This
Proclus probably introduced Montanism into Rome at the beginning of the
third century. According to Pseudo-Tertullian (Adv. omnes
Hær. chap. 7) he was a leader of one division of the
Montanists, the other division being composed of followers of
Æschines. He is probably to be identified with the Proculus
noster, classed by Tertullian, in Adv. Val. chap. 5, with
Justin Martyr, Miltiades, and Irenæus as a successful opponent of
heresy. | the leader of the
Phrygian heresy,548
548 The
sect of the Montanists. Called the “Phrygian heresy,” from
the fact that it took its rise in Phrygia. Upon Montanism, see below,
Bk. IV. chap. 27, and especially Bk. V. chap. 16 sqq. | speaks as follows
concerning the places where the sacred corpses of the aforesaid
apostles are laid:
7. “But549
549 The δὲ here makes it probable that Caius, in reply to certain
claims of Proclus, was asserting over against him the ability of the
Roman church to exhibit the true trophies of the greatest of all the
apostles. And what these claims of Proclus were can perhaps be gathered
from his words, quoted by Eusebius in Bk. III. chap. 31, §4, in
which Philip and his daughters are said to have been buried in
Hierapolis. That these two sentences were closely connected in the
original is quite possible. | I can show the trophies of the apostles.
For if you will go to the Vatican550
550 According to an ancient tradition, Peter was crucified upon the
hill of Janiculum, near the Vatican, where the Church of San Pietro in
Montorio now stands, and the hole in which his cross stood is still
shown to the trustful visitor. A more probable tradition makes the
scene of execution the Vatican hill, where Nero’s circus was, and
where the persecution took place. Baronius makes the whole ridge on the
right bank of the Tiber one hill, and thus reconciles the two
traditions. In the fourth century the remains of Peter were transferred
from the Catacombs of San Sebastiano (where they are said to have been
interred in 258 a.d.) to the Basilica of St.
Peter, which occupied the sight of the present basilica on the
Vatican. | or to the Ostian
way,551
551 Paul
was beheaded, according to tradition, on the Ostian way, at the spot
now occupied by the Abbey of the Three Fountains. The fountains, which
are said to have sprung up at the spots where Paul’s head struck
the ground three times after the decapitation, are still shown, as also
the pillar to which he is supposed to have been bound! In the fourth
century, at the same time that Peter’s remains were transferred
to the Vatican, Paul’s remains are said to have been buried in
the Basilica of St. Paul, which occupied the site now marked by the
church of San Paolo fuori le mura. There is nothing improbable in the
traditions as to the spot where Paul and Peter met their death. They
are as old as the second century; and while they cannot be accepted as
indisputably true (since there is always a tendency to fix the
deathplace of a great man even if it is not known), yet on the other
hand if Peter and Paul were martyred in Rome, it is hardly possible
that the place of their death and burial could have been forgotten by
the Roman church itself within a century and a half. | you will find the trophies of those who laid
the foundations of this church.”552
8. And that they both suffered
martyrdom at the same time is stated by Dionysius, bishop of Corinth,553
553 On
Dionysius of Corinth, see below, Bk. IV. chap. 23. | in his epistle to the Romans,554
554 Another quotation from this epistle is given in Bk. IV. chap. 23.
The fragments are discussed by Routh, Rel. Sac. I. 179
sq. | in the following words: “You have thus
by such an admonition bound together the planting of Peter and of Paul
at Rome and Corinth. For both of them planted and likewise taught us in
our Corinth.555
555 Whatever may be the truth of Dionysius’ report as to
Peter’s martyrdom at Rome, he is almost certainly in error in
speaking as he does of Peter’s work in Corinth. It is difficult,
to be sure, to dispose of so direct and early a tradition, but it is
still more difficult to accept it. The statement that Paul and Peter
together planted the Corinthian church is certainly an error, as we
know that it was Paul’s own church, founded by him alone. The
so-called Cephas party, mentioned in 1 Cor. i., is perhaps
easiest explained by the previous presence and activity of Peter in
Corinth, but this is by no means necessary, and the absence of any
reference to the fact in the two epistles of Paul renders it almost
absolutely impossible. It is barely possible, though by no means
probable, that Peter visited Corinth on his way to Rome (assuming the
Roman journey) and that thus, although the church had already been
founded many years, he became connected in tradition with its early
days, and finally with its origination. But it is more probable that
the tradition is wholly in error and arose, as Neander suggests, partly
from the mention of Peter in 1 Cor. i., partly from the
natural desire to ascribe the origin of this great apostolic church to
the two leading apostles, to whom in like manner the founding of the
Roman church was ascribed. It is significant that this tradition is
recorded only by a Corinthian, who of course had every inducement to
accept such a report, and to repeat it in comparing his own church with
the central church of Christendom. We find no mention of the tradition
in later writers, so far as I am aware. | And they taught together in like manner
in Italy, and suffered martyrdom at the same time.”556
556 κατὰ τὸν
αὐτὸν
καιρόν.
The κατὰ
allows some margin in time and does not necessarily
imply the same day. Dionysius is the first one to connect the deaths of
Peter and Paul chronologically, but later it became quite the custom.
One tradition put their deaths on the same day, one year apart
(Augustine and Prudentius, e.g., are said to support this tradition).
Jerome (de vir. ill. 1) is the first to state explicitly that
they suffered on the same day. Eusebius in his Chron. (Armen.)
puts their martyrdom in 67, Jerome in 68. The Roman Catholic Church
celebrates the death of Peter on the 29th and that of Paul on the 30th
of June, but has no fixed tradition as to the year of the death of
either of them. | I have quoted these things in order that the
truth of the history might be still more confirmed.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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