Lecture 8: Forms of Witness—martyrdom and
apologetic
Forms of Witness—Martyrdom and Apologetic
Lecture 8
I
n the last lecture, we discussed the persecutions experienced by
Christians at the hands of both Jews and Gentiles in the first 280 years
of the religion’s existence. The oppression of believers included social
ostracism, the expropriation of property, economic marginalization, exile,
and death. This lecture takes up the forms of witness that evolved in response
to persecution: the tradition of martyrdom and the writing of apologetic
literature. Each in its way was of extraordinary importance in shaping the
Christian vision of the world in the 2nd and 3rd centuries and even beyond.
A Context of Tribulation
• From the perspective of Christianity’s eventual triumph, it is
difficult to imagine just how problematic, even dangerous,
conditions of life were for Christians in the first 280 years of the
religion’s existence.
• As an intentional community that drew members from both Jews
and Gentiles, it was also at odds with both Jews and Gentiles, while
enjoying no natural institutional source of support.
o Christians withdrew from participation in the cultic life
(festivals, processions, meals) that was regarded as essential
for citizenship in the “city of gods and men.” They thereby
marked themselves as aliens to the larger culture that demanded
complete participation in such civic religion.
o After the Jewish War of 67–70, in which Christians refused
to participate, and after the Birkat Ha-minim, which excluded
Christians from the synagogue, the Christian community no
longer enjoyed the protective umbrella of Judaism.
o It lacked legitimacy, approval, or any status. In the eyes of
the philosopher Celsus, who wrote a devastating attack on