Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| - HELP
Chapter I.
1. The
first of the martyrs of Palestine was Procopius,2617
2617 The account of Procopius was somewhat fuller in the longer
recension of the Martyrs of Palestine, as can be seen from the
Syriac version (English translation in Cureton, p. 3 sq.). There exists
also a Latin translation of the Acts of St. Procopius, which was
evidently made from that longer recension, and which is printed by
Valesius and also by Cureton (p. 50 sq.), and in English by Crusè
in loco. We are told by the Syriac version that his family was
from Baishan. According to the Latin, he was a native of Ælia
(Jerusalem), but resided in Scythopolis (the Greek name of Baishan).
With the Latin agrees the Syriac version of these Acts, which is
published by Assemani in his Acta SS. Martt. Orient. et
Occident. ed. 1748, Part II. p. 169 sq. (see Cureton, p. 52). We
learn from the longer account that he was a lector, interpreter, and
exorcist in the church, and that he was exceedingly ascetic in his
manner of life. It is clear from this paragraph that Procopius was put
to death, not because he was a Christian, but because he uttered words
apparently treasonable in their import. To call him a Christian martyr
is therefore a misuse of terms. We cannot be sure whether Procopius was
arrested under the terms of the first or under the terms of the second
edict. If in consequence of the first, it may be that he was suspected
of complicity in the plot which Diocletian was endeavoring to crush
out, or that he had interfered with the imperial officers when they
undertook to execute the decree for the destruction of the church
buildings. The fact that he was commanded by the governor to sacrifice
would lead us to think of the first, rather than of the second edict
(see above, Bk. VIII. chap. 6, note 3, and chap. 2, note 8). Still, it
must be admitted that very likely many irregularities occurred in the
methods by which the decrees were executed in the province, and the
command to sacrifice can, therefore, not be claimed as proving that he
was not arrested under the terms of the second edict; and in fact, the
mention of imprisonment as the punishment which he had to expect would
lead us to think of the second edict as at least the immediate occasion
of his arrest. In any case, there is no reason to suppose that his
arrest would have resulted in his death had he not been rash in his
speech. | who, before he had received the trial of
imprisonment, immediately on his first appearance before the
governor’s tribunal, having been ordered to sacrifice to the
so-called gods, declared that he knew only one to whom it was proper to
sacrifice, as he himself wills. But when he was commanded to offer
libations to the four emperors, having quoted a sentence which
displeased them, he was immediately beheaded. The quotation was from
the poet: “The rule of many is not good; let there be one ruler and
one king.” 2618
2618 οὐκ ἀγαθὸν
πολυκοιρανίη
εἷς κοίρανος
žστω,
εἷς
βασιλεύς.
The sentence is from
Homer’s Iliad, Bk. II. vers. 204 and 205. It was a sort of
proverb, like many of Homer’s sayings, and was frequently quoted.
As a consequence the use of it by Procopius does not prove at all his
acquaintance with Homer or Greek literature in general. |
2. It was the seventh2619
2619 The majority of the mss. read
“eighth,” which according to Eusebius’ customary mode
of reckoning the Macedonian months is incorrect. For, as Valesius
remarks, he always synchronizes the Macedonian with the Roman months,
as was commonly done in his time. But the seventh before the Ides of
June is not the eighth, but the seventh of June (or Desius). In fact, a
few good mss. read “seventh”
instead of “eighth,” and I have followed Burton, Schwegler,
and Heinichen in adopting that reading. | day of the month Desius, 2620
2620 Desius was the tenth month of the Macedonian year, and
corresponded to our June (see the table on p. 403, below). | the seventh before the ides of June, 2621
2621 On
the Roman method of reckoning the days of the month, see below, p.
402. | as the Romans reckon, and the fourth day
of the week, when this first example was given at Cæsarea in
Palestine.
3. Afterwards,2622
2622 We may gather from §5, below, that the sufferings to which
Eusebius refers in such general terms in this and the following
paragraphs took place late in the year 303. In fact, from the Syriac
version of the longer recension (Cureton, p. 4) we learn that the
tortures inflicted upon Alphæus and Zacchæus were, in
consequence of the third edict, issued at the approach of the
emperor’s vicennalia, and intended rather as a step toward
amnesty than as a sharpening of the persecution (see above, Bk. VIII.
chap. 5, note 8). This leads us to conclude that all the tortures
mentioned in these paragraphs had the same occasion, and this explains
the eagerness of the judges to set the prisoners free, even if they had
not sacrificed, so long as they might be made to appear to have done
so, and thus the law not be openly violated. Alphæus and
Zacchæus alone suffered death, as we are told in §5, and they
evidently on purely political grounds (see note 10). | in the same city, many rulers of the
country churches readily endured terrible sufferings, and furnished to
the beholders an example of noble conflicts. But others, benumbed in
spirit by terror, were easily weakened at the first onset. Of the rest,
each one endured different forms of torture, as scourgings without
number, and rackings, and tearings of their sides, and insupportable
fetters, by which the hands of some were dislocated.
4. Yet they endured what came
upon them, as in accordance with the inscrutable purposes of God. For
the hands of one were seized, and he was led to the altar, while they
thrust into his right hand the polluted and abominable offering, and he
was dismissed as if he had sacrificed. Another had not even touched it,
yet when others said that he had sacrificed, he went away in silence.
Another, being taken up half dead, was cast aside as if already dead,
and released from his bonds, and counted among the sacrificers. When
another cried out, and testified that he would not obey, he was struck
in the mouth, and silenced by a large band of those who were drawn up
for this purpose, and driven away by force, even though he had not
sacrificed. Of such consequence did they consider it, to seem by any
means to have accomplished their purpose.
5. Therefore, of all this
number, the only ones who were honored with the crown of the holy
martyrs were Alphæus and Zacchæus.2623
2623 We learn from the Syriac version that Zacchæus was a deacon
of the church of Gadara, and that Alphæus belonged to a noble
family of the city of Eleutheropolis, and was a reader and exorcist in
the church of Cæsarea. | After stripes and scrapings and severe
bonds and additional tortures and various other trials, and after
having their feet stretched for a night and day over four holes in the
stocks, 2624
2624 See above, Bk. IV. chap. 16, note 9. | on the seventeenth day of the
month Dius, 2625
2625 The month Dius was the third month of the Macedonian year, and
corresponded with our November (see below, p. 403). | —that is, according to the
Romans, the fifteenth before the Kalends of December,—having
confessed one only God and Christ Jesus as king, 2626
2626 μόνον ἕνα
Θεὸν καὶ
χριστὸν
βασιλέα
᾽Ιησοῦν
ὁμολογησ€ντες Βασιλεύς was the technical term for emperor, and it is plain enough
from this passage that these two men, like Procopius, were beheaded
because they were regarded as guilty of treason, not because of their
religious faith. The instances given in this chapter are very
significant, for they reveal the nature of the persecution during its
earlier months, and throw a clear light back upon the motives which had
led Diocletian to take the step against the Christians which he
did. | as if they had uttered some blasphemy,
they were beheaded like the former martyr. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|