Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Introduction to the Marytrom of Perpetua and Felicitas (Full Script)

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Introduction to the Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas
Post-Apostolic Church

The Passion of Perpetua and Felicitas is an account of the martyrdom of Viva Perpetua, an educated woman of high social standing, and Felicitas (anglicized as Felicity), a female servant, along with their fellow Christians.  It was written in Carthage about AD 210.

The introduction to the work reads,

Among them also was Vivia Perpetua, respectably born, liberally educated, a married woman, having a father, mother, and two brothers....  She also had an infant son at the breast.  She herself was about twenty-two years of age.  From this point onward, she will herself narrate the whole course of her martyrdom, as she left it described by her own hand and with her own mind.  (Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 3, page 699.)

Most of the work was written by Perpetua as she recorded her experiences as a Christian martyr.  Therefore, this is the first Christian work authored by a female that has survived.  The work was finished by an unknown editor.  It might have been Tertullian, who also was in Carthage around the same time.  Or, the editor might have been Pomponius, who was a deacon who ministered to them in their imprisonment.  Or, he might have been one of their jailors who was converted by their testimony and martyrdom.

Perpetua was so completely devoted to the Lord, that nothing in the world would keep her from obeying God.  Her greatest temptation probably came from her father.  Her father came to her multiple times pleading for her to deny God and sacrifice to the gods and to Caesar.  After Perpetua's arrest, her father came to her:

While we were still with the persecutors, my father, for the sake of his affection for me, was persistent in seeking for me to turn away and for me to cast down the faith.  I said, "Father, do you see... this vessel lying here to be a little pitcher or something else?"  He said, "I see it to be so."  I replied to him, "Can it be called by any other name than what it is?"  He said, "No."  "Neither can I call myself anything else that what I am: a Christian."  Then provoked at this saying, my father threw himself upon me, as if he would tear my eyes out [with affection].  But he only distressed me and went away overcome by the devil's arguments."  (Perpetua.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 1, page 669.)

Immediately before her trial, he came to her again:

He said, "My daughter, have pity on my grey hairs.  Have pity on your father, if I am worthy to be called a father by you.  If with these hands I have brought you up to this flower of your age, if I have preferred you to all your brothers, do not deliver me up to the disgrace of men.  Have regard to your brothers, have regard to your mother and your aunt, have regard to your son, who will not be able to live after you.  Lay aside your courage, and do not bring us all to destruction; for none of us will speak in freedom if you should suffer anything."  My father said these things in his affection, kissing my hands, and throwing himself at my feet.  With tears, he did not call me Daughter, but Lady.  I grieved over the grey hairs of my father, that he alone of all my family would not rejoice over my suffering.  I comforted him, saying, "On that torturous platform whatever God wills will happen.  For know that we are not placed in our own power but in that of God."  He departed from me in sorrow.  (Perpetua.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 1, page 700-701.)

Her father came to her a last time:

And when the day of the exhibition drew near, my father was worn with suffering and came to me.  He began to tear out his beard, to throw himself on the earth, to cast himself down on his face, to reproach his years, and to utter such words as might move all creation.  I grieved for his unhappy old age.  (Perpetua.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 1, page 702.)

Perpetua also demonstrated a supernatural devotion to holiness.  While she was in the arena among the wild beasts and soldiers, she was thrown to the ground and drug around the arena in a net by a wild cow.

"[When] she saw that her tunic was torn from her side, she drew it over her as a veil for her middle.  [For she was] more mindful of her modesty than her suffering.  (Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 1, page 705.)

At the end when all the martyrs were receiving their killing blows with the sword, the young gladiator who was assigned to kill Perpetua did not give her a lethal blow.  Instead, he pierced her ribs.  Then Perpetua voluntarily took the young gladiator’s shaking hand and placed his sword upon her own neck.

Many believe that Perpetua and her companions were part of the Montanist sect.  This was a sect of Christianity started by Montanus.  In the preface the editor says,

Thus we both acknowledge and revere, even as we do the prophecies, modern visions as equally promised to us, and consider the other powers of the Holy Spirit as an agency of the Church for which also He was sent, administering all gifts in all, even as the Lord distributed to everyone as well.  [We find it] necessary to collect them in writing, and commemorate them in the reading to God’s glory.  (Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 1, page 699.)

Soon following Perpetua's trial, while she waited for execution, she had a vision in a dream.  She saw her brother, who had died at a very young age of cancer.  Her dead brother was in agony.  Over the next few days, Perpetua prayed for her brother.  On another day, she had another vision in a dream.  She saw her dead brother cleaned up and refreshed.  When she woke, she knew that he was moved away from the place of punishment.

This has been used by some to support the idea of Purgatory or Indulgences, although Perpetua's writing does not explicitly support either of these teachings.  While the ideas of Purgatory and Indulgences are rejected by most of Christianity, praying that God might not remember the sins of the dead is encouraged by most of Christianity.

The godly example of Perpetua is a powerful testimony for the church.  As it says in the preface,

Therefore, what we have heard and handled, we declare also to you, brethren and little children, that you who were concerned in these matters may be reminded of them again to the glory of the Lord.  Perhaps you may know them by [this] report and may have communion with the blessed martyrs, and through them with the Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory and honor, forever and ever.  Amen.  (Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felitcitas.  AD 210.  ANF, vol 1, page 699.)

Friday, September 19, 2014

Tertullian of Carthage (Full Script)

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Tertullian of Carthage
Post-Apostolic Church

Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus, or simply: Tertullian, was an overseer in Carthage and wrote between AD 197 and AD 215.

Tertullian was born to pagan parents and received a classical education in Roman law.  When he was converted around AD 185, he sought to transform his own personality to become truly like Christ.  His wife was also a Christian.

Because of his familiarity with Roman law, many of Tertullian's works are in Latin.  Tertullian is called the father of Latin Christianity, and rightfully so.  [2.3] It was in Carthage, not Rome, that Christians first wrote in Latin.  Tertullian had to translate Greek thought into the Latin language, possibly creating Latin words and phrases that had not existed before.

He was the first major revolutionary Christian thinker.  His writings greatly advanced theology in the church.

Tertullian was very conservative and strict, so he often wrote in a very strong and harsh spirit.  He lived to be an old man, perhaps even to the age of 85.  His most famous works include Apology, The Shows, Against Praxis, and The Veiling of Virgins.

Later in life, perhaps around AD 210, Tertullian joined the Montanists.  This was a schism of Christianity started by Montanus which he called the New Prophecy.

Cyprian was an overseer in Carthage about 50 years after Tertullian.  Jerome wrote,

I have seen a certain old man, Paul of Concordia, [from] a town of Italy.  While he was a very young man, he had been secretary to the blessed Cyprian who was already advanced in age.  He said that he had seen how Cyprian was accustomed never to pass a day without reading [the works of] Tertullian and that he frequently said to him, "Give me the master," meaning Tertullian.  [Tertullian] was presbyter of the church until middle life.  Afterwards, [he was] driven by the envy and abuse of the clergy of the Roman church to lapse into the doctrine of Montanus, and mentions the New Prophecy in many of his [later] books.  (Jerome.  AD 400.  APNF2, vol 3, page 373.)

About Christianity, Tertullian wrote,

Men are made [Christians], not born Christians.  (Tertullian.  AD 197.  ANF, vol 3, page 32.)

The more often we are mown down by you, the more in number we grow.  The blood of Christians is seed.  (Tertullian.  AD 197.  ANF, vol 3, page 55.)

Condemn the truth if you have the heart, but only after you have examined it.  (Tertullian.  AD 197.  ANF, vol 3, page 128.)


We read that "the flesh is weak" and for this reason we soothe ourselves in some cases.  Yet, we also read that "the spirit is strong." ...  Then why do we, too given to excuse ourselves, put forward in our defense the weak part of us and not look at the strong?  Why shouldn't the earthly yield to the heavenly?  If the spirit is stronger than the flesh--because it is of nobler origin, it is our own fault if we follow the weaker.  (Tertullian.  AD 205.  ANF, vol 4, page 41.)

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Clement of Alexandria (Full Script)

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Clement of Alexandria
Post-Apostolic Church

Clement, whose full name was Titus Flavius Clemens, was an overseer in Alexandria, Egypt and wrote around AD 195.

Like Justin Martyr, Clement of Alexandria was raised as a pagan and went on a personal pilgrimage to find truth.  And also like Justin, this led him to Jesus Christ.  Pantaenus, who began a catechetical school--that is, a school for new converts--in Alexandria, was Clement of Alexandria's teacher.  Athenagoras might also have taught Clement.  After Pantaenus left Alexandria in AD 189 to become a missionary in India, Clement took over the catechetical school.  Clement’s students included Origen and Hippolytus of Rome.

Like Justin Martyr and Irenaeus before him, Clement of Alexandria was one of the first writers to write an extensive amount of Christian literature.  Beginning with Clement's writings, the attitudes of the church appear to change.  By the days of Clement of Alexandria, it seems that paganism had shown clear signs of decline.  By the same token, Christianity had become well-known in every corner of the Roman Empire and beyond.  Even though Christianity was still illegal and punishable by death and there were still intense persecutions to come, Clement's writings show some of the first signs that the attitudes of the church moved more away from primitive orthodoxy and more towards institutional orthodoxy.

When the persecutions under Emperor Septimius Severus became intense, Clement fled to Syrian Antioch in AD 202.  He may have died around AD 220.


Clement of Alexandria did much good for the Church.  He was the famous teacher of the catechetical school in Alexandria and helped bring up one of the most intelligent Christians writers in history, Origen.  Clement of Alexandria is notably marked by his extremely kind and loving spirit.