Eusebius of Caesarea The imperial edict of recantation, which has been quoted above,
was posted in all
parts of Asia and in the adjoining provinces. After this had been done,
Maximinus, the tyrant in the Easta most impious man, if there ever was one,
and most hostile to the religion of the God of the universebeing by no
means satisfied with its contents,
instead of sending the above-quoted
decree to the governors under him, gave them verbal commands to relax the
war against us. For since he could not in
any other way oppose the decision of his
superiors, keeping the law which had been already issued secret, and taking care that it
might not be made known in the district under
him, he gave an unwritten order to his governors that they should relax the
persecution
against us. They communicated the command to each other in writing. Sabinus,
at least, who was honored with the highest
official rank among them, communicated the will of the emperor to the
provincial governors in a Latin epistle, the translation of which is as
follows:
Since therefore it has come to pass that by
such conduct many have brought themselves into danger, their Majesties, our most powerful masters, the emperors,
in the exalted
nobility of piety, esteeming it foreign to their
Majesties' purpose to bring men into so great
danger for such a cause, have commanded their
devoted servant, myself, to write to thy wisdom,
that if any Christian be found engaging in the
worship of his own people, thou shouldst abstain from molesting and
endangering him, and
shouldst not suppose it necessary to punish any
one on this pretext. For it has been proved by
the experience of so long a time that they can
in no way be persuaded to abandon such
obstinate conduct. Therefore it should be
thy care to write to the curators
and magistrates and district overseers
of every city,
that they may know that it is not necessary for
them to give further attention to this matter. Thereupon the rulers of
the provinces, thinking that the purpose of the things which were written was truly
made known to them, declared the imperial will to the curators and magistrates
and prefects of the various districts
in writing. But they did not limit
themselves to writing, but sought more quickly to accomplish the supposed will
of the emperor in deeds also. Those whom they had imprisoned on account of
their confession of the Deity, they set at liberty, and they released those of
them who had been sent to the mines for punishment; for they erroneously
supposed that this was
the true will of the emperor. And when
these things had thus been done, immediately, like a light shining forth in
a dark night, one could see in every city congregations gathered and
assemblies thronged, and meetings held according to their custom. And every
one of the unbelieving heathen was not a little astonished at these things,
wondering at so marvelous a transformation, and exclaiming that the God of the
Christians was great and alone true.
And some of our people, who had faithfully and bravely sustained the conflict of
persecution, again became frank and bold toward all; but as many as had been
diseased in the faith and had been shaken in their souls by the tempest,
strove eagerly for healing, beseeching and imploring the strong to stretch out
to them a saving hand, and supplicating God to be
merciful unto them. Then also the noble
athletes of religion who had been set free
from their sufferings in the mines returned to their own homes. Happily and
joyfully they passed through every city, full of unspeakable
pleasure and of a boldness which cannot
be expressed in words. Great crowds of
men pursued their journey along the highways and through the market-places, praising God with hymns and psalms. And
you might have seen those who a little while before had been driven in bonds
from their native countries under a most cruel sentence, returning with bright
and joyful faces to their own firesides; so that even they who had formerly
thirsted for our blood, when they saw the unexpected wonder, congratulated us
on what had taken place.
But the tyrant who, as we have said, ruled over the districts of the
Orient, a
thorough hater of the good and an enemy of
every virtuous person, as he was, could no longer
bear this; and indeed he did not permit matters
to go on in this way quite six months.
Devising all possible means of
destroying the peace,
he first attempted to restrain us, under a pretext,
from meeting in the cemeteries.
Then through the agency of some wicked
men he sent an embassy to himself against
us,
inciting tim citizens of Antioch to ask from him as a very great favor
that he would by no means permit any of the Christians to dwell in their
country; and others were secretly induced to do the same thing. The author of
all this in Antioch was Theotecnus,
a violent and wicked man, who was an
impostor, and whose character was foreign to his name.
He appears to have
been the curator
of the city.
After this man had carried on all kinds of war against us and had caused
our people to be diligently hunted up in their retreats, as if they were
unholy thieves, and had devised every sort of slander and accusation against
us, and become the cause of death to vast numbers, he finally erected a statue
of Jupiter Philius
with certain juggleries and magic rites. And after
inventing unholy forms of initiation and ill-omened mysteries in connection
with it, and abominable means of purification,
he exhibited his jugglery,
by oracles which he pretended to utter, even to the emperor; and through a
flattery which was pleasing to the ruler he aroused the demon against the
Christians and said that the god had given command to expel the Christians as
his enemies beyond the confines of the city and the neighboring districts.
The fact that this man, who took the
lead in this matter, had succeeded in his
purpose was an incitement to all the other
officials in the cities under the same government to prepare a similar
memorial.
And
the governors of the provinces perceiving that
this was agreeable to the emperor suggested to
their subjects that they should do the same.
And as the tyrant by a rescript declared
himself well pleased with their measures,
persecution was kindled anew against us. Priests for the images were then
appointed in the cities, and besides them high priests by Maximinus himself.
The latter were taken from among those who were most distinguished in
public life and had gained celebrity in all the offices which they had filled;
and who were imbued, moreover, with great zeal for the service of those whom
they worshiped. Indeed, the extraordinary
superstition of the emperor, to speak in brief,
led all his subjects, both rulers and private citizens, for the sake of
gratifying him, to do everything against us, supposing that they could best
show their gratitude to him for the benefits which they had received from him,
by plotting murder against us and exhibiting toward us any new signs of
malignity.
Having therefore forged Acts of Pilate
and our Saviour full of every kind of blasphemy against Christ, they sent them
with the emperor's approval to the whole of the empire subject to him, with
written commands that they should be openly posted to the view of all in every
place, both in country and city, and that the schoolmasters should give them
to their scholars, instead of their customary lessons,
to be studied and learned by heart. While these things were taking place,
another military commander, whom the Romans call Dux,
seized some infamous
women in the market-place at Damascus in Phoenicia,
and by threatening to
inflict tortures upon them compelled them to make a written declaration that
they had once been Christians and that they were acquainted with their impious
deedsthat in their very churches they committed licentious acts; and they
uttered as many other slanders against our religion as he wished them to.
Having taken down their words in writing, he communicated them to the emperor,
who commanded that these documents also should be published in every place and
city.
Nor long afterward, however, this military commander became his own
murderer
and paid the penalty for his wickedness. But we were obliged again to endure
exile and severe persecutions, and the governors in every province were once
more terribly stirred up against us; so that even some of those illustrious in
the Divine Word were seized and had sentence of death pronounced upon them
without mercy. Three of them in the city of Emesa
in Phoenicia, having
confessed that they were Christians, were thrown as food to the wild beasts.
Among them was a bishop Silvanus,
a very old man, who had filled his
office full forty years. At about the same
time Peter
also, who presided most illustriously over the parishes in
Alexandria, a divine example of a bishop on account of the excellence of his
life and his study of the sacred Scriptures, being seized for no cause and
quite unexpectedly, was, as if by command of Maxi-minus, immediately and
without explanation, beheaded. With him also many other bishops of Egypt
suffered the same fate. And
Lucian,
a presbyter of the parish at Antioch, and a most excellent man
in every respect, temperate in life and famed for his learning in sacred
things, was brought to the city of Nicomedia, where at that time the emperor
happened to be staying, and after delivering before the ruler an apology for
the doctrine which he professed, was committed to prison and
put to death. Such trials were brought
upon us in a brief time by Maximinus, the
enemy of virtue, so that this persecution which was stirred up against us
seemed far more cruel than the former.
The memorials against us
and copies of the imperial edicts issued in
reply to them were engraved and set up on brazen pillars in the midst of the
cities,
a course which had never been followed elsewhere. The children in
the schools had daily in their mouths the names of Jesus and Pilate, and the
Acts which had been forged in wanton insolence.
It appears to me necessary
to insert here this document of Maximinus which was posted on pillars, in
order that there may be made manifest at the same time the boastful and
haughty arrogance of the God-hating man, and the sleepless evil-hating divine
vengeance upon the impious, which followed close upon him, and under whose
pressure he not long afterward took the opposite course in respect to us and
confirmed it by written laws.
The rescript is in the following words:
Copy of a translation of the rescript of Maxi-minus in answer to
the memorials against us, taken from the pillar in Tyre.
"Now at length the feeble power of the human mind has become able to shake
off and to scatter every dark mist of error, which before this besieged the
senses of men, who were more miserable than impious, and enveloped them in
dark and destructive ignorance; and to perceive that it is governed and established by the beneficent providence of the immortal gods. It passes belief how
grateful, how pleasing and how agreeable it is to us, that you have given a
most decided proof of your pious resolution; for even before this it was known
to every one how much regard and reverence you were paying to the immortal
gods, exhibiting not a faith of bare and empty words, but continued and
wonderful exampies of illustrious deeds. Wherefore your city
may justly be called a seat and dwelling of
the immortal gods. At least, it appears by many signs that it
flourishes because of the presence of the celestial gods. Behold, therefore,
your city, regardless of all private advantages, and omitting its former
petitions in its own behalf, when it perceived that the adherents of that
execrable vanity were again beginning to spread, and to start the greatest
conflagrationlike a neglected and extinguished funeral pile when its brands
are rekindled,-immediately resorted to our piety as to a metropolis of all
religiousness, asking some remedy and aid. It is evident that the gods have
given you this saving mind on account of your faith and piety.
"Accordingly that supreme and mightiest Jove, who presides over your
illustrious city, who preserves your ancestral gods, your wives and children,
your hearths and homes from every destructive pest, has infused into your
souls this wholesome resolve; showing and proving how excellent and glorious
and salutary it is to observe with the becoming reverence the worship and
sacred rites of the immortal gods.
For who can be found so ignorant or so
devoid of all understanding as not to perceive that it is due to the kindly
care of the gods that the earth does not refuse the seed sown in it, nor
disappoint the hope of the husbandmen with vain expectation; that impious war
is not inevitably fixed upon earth, and wasted bodies dragged down to death
under the influence of a corrupted atmosphere; that the sea is not swollen and
raised on high by blasts of intemperate winds; that unexpected hurricanes do
not burst forth and stir up the destructive tempest; moreover, that the earth,
the nourisher and mother of all, is not shaken from its lowest depths with a
terrible tremor, and that the mountains upon it do not sink into the opening
chasms. No one is ignorant that all these, and evils still worse than
these, have oftentimes happened hitherto.
And all these misfortunes have taken place
on account of the destructive error of the
empty vanity of those impious men, when it prevailed in their souls, and, we
may almost say,
weighed down the whole world with shame."
After other words he adds: "Let them look
at the standing crops already flourishing
with waving heads in the broad fields, and at the meadows glittering with
plants and flowers, in response to abundant rains and the restored mildness
and softness of the atmosphere.
Finally, let all rejoice that the might of the
most powerful and terrible Mars has been
propitiated by our piety, our sacrifices, and our veneration; and let them on
this account enjoy firm and tranquil peace and quiet; and let as many as have
wholly abandoned that blind error and delusion and have returned to a right
and sound mind rejoice the more, as those who have been rescued from an
unexpected storm or severe disease and are to reap the fruits of I pleasure
for the rest of their life. But if they still persist in their execrable
vanity, let them, as you have desired, be driven far away from your city and
territory, that thus, in accordance with your praiseworthy zeal in this
matter, your city, being freed from every pollution and impiety, may,
according to its native disposition, attend to the sacred rites of the
immortal gods with becoming reverence. But that ye may know how acceptable to
us your request respecting this matter has been, and how ready our mind is to
confer benefits voluntarily, without memorials and petitions, we permit your
devotion to ask whatever great gift ye may desire in return for this your
pious disposition.
And now ask that this may be done and
that ye may receive it; for ye shall obtain
it without delay. This, being granted to your city, shall furnish for all time
an evidence of reverent piety toward the immortal gods, and of the fact that
you have obtained from our benevolence merited prizes for this choice of
yours; and it shall be shown to your children and children's children."
This was published against us in all the
provinces, depriving us of every hope of good,
at least from men; so that, according to that divine utterance, "If it were
possible, even the elect would have stumbled"
at these things.
And now indeed, when the hope of most of us was almost extinct, suddenly
while those who were to execute against us the above decree had in some places
scarcely finished their journey, God, the defender of his own Church,
exhibited his heavenly interposition in our behalf, well-nigh stopping the
tyrant's boasting against us.
The customary rains and showers of the winter season ceased to fall in
their wonted
abundance upon the earth and an unexpected famine made its appearance, and in
addition to this a pestilence, and another severe disease consisting of an
ulcer, which on account of its fiery appearance was appropriately called a
carbuncle.
This, spreading over the whole body, greatly endangered the
lives of those who suffered from it; but as it chiefly attacked the eyes, it
deprived multitudes of men, women, and children of their sight. In addition to
this the tyrant was compelled to go to war with the Armenians, who had been
from ancient times friends and allies of the Romans. As they were also
Christians
and zealous in their piety toward the Deity, the enemy of God
had attempted to compel them to sacrifice to idols and demons, and had thus
made friends foes, and allies enemies. All these things suddenly took place at
one and the same time, and refuted the tyrant's empty vaunt against the Deity.
For he had boasted that, because of his zeal for idols and his hostility
against us, neither famine nor pestilence nor war had happened in his time.
These things, therefore, coming upon him at once and together, furnished a
prelude also of his own
destruction. He himself with his forces
was defeated in the war with the Armenians,
and the rest of the inhabitants of the cities under him were terribly
afflicted with famine and pestilence, so that one measure of wheat
was sold for twenty-five hundred Attic
drachms.
Those who died in the cities
were innumerable, and those who died in
the country and villages were still more. So that the tax lists which formerly
included a great rural population were almost entirely wiped out; nearly all
being speedily destroyed by famine and pestilence. Some, therefore, desired to dispose of their most precious
things to those who were better supplied, in return for the smallest morsel of
food, and others, selling their possessions little by little, fell into the
last extremity of want. Some, chewing wisps of hay and recklessly eating
noxious herbs, undermined and mined their
constitutions. And some of the high-born
women in the cities, driven by want to
shameful extremities, went forth into the market-places to beg, giving
evidence of their former liberal culture by the modesty of their appearance
and the decency of their apparel.
Some, wasted away like ghosts and at the
very point of death, stumbled and tottered
here and there, and too weak to stand fell down in the middle of the streets;
lying stretched out at full length they begged that a small morsel of food
might be given them, and with their last gasp they cried out Hunger! having
strength only for this most painful cry.
But others, who seemed to be better supplied, astonished at the multitude of the
beggars, after giving away large quantities, finally became hard and
relentless, expecting that they themselves also would soon suffer the same
calamities as those who begged. So that in the midst of the market-places and
lanes, dead and naked bodies lay unburied for many days, presenting the most
lamentable spectacle to those that beheld them. Some
also became food for dogs, on which account the survivors began to kill the dogs, lest they should become mad and
should go to. devouring men.
But still worse was the pestilence which
consumed entire houses and families, and
especially those whom the famine was not able to destroy because of their
abundance of food. Thus men of wealth, rulers and governors and multitudes in
office, as if left by the famine on purpose for the pestilence, suffered swift
and speedy death. Every place therefore was full of lamentation; in every lane
and market-place and street there was nothing else to be seen or heard than
tears, with the customary instruments and the voices of the mourners.
In
this way death, waging war with these two weapons, pestilence and famine,
destroyed whole families in a short time, so that one could see two or three
dead bodies carried out at once. Such were the rewards of the boasting of
Maximinus and of the measures of the cities against us.
Then did the evidences of the universal zeal and piety of the Christians
become manifest
to all the heathen. For they alone in the
midst of such ills showed their sympathy
and humanity by their deeds. Every day some continued caring for and burying
the dead, for there were multitudes who had no one to care for them; others
collected in one place those who were afflicted by the famine, throughout the
entire city, and gave bread to them all; so that the thing became noised
abroad among all men, and they glorified the God of the Christians; and,
convinced by the facts themselves, confessed that they alone were truly pious
and
religious. After these things were thus done,
God, the great and celestial defender of the
Christians, having revealed in the events which have been described his anger
and indignation at all men for the great evils which they had brought upon us,
restored to us the bright and gracious sunlight of his providence in our
behalf; so that in the deepest darkness a light of peace shone most
wonderfully upon us from him, and made it manifest to all that God himself has
always been the ruler of our affairs. From time to time indeed he chastens his
people and corrects them by his visitations, but again after sufficient
chastisement he shows mercy and favor to those who hope in him.
Thus when Constantine, whom we have already mentioned
as an emperor, born
of an emperor, a pious son of a most pious and prudent father, and Licinius,
second to him,
-two God-beloved emperors, honored alike for their
intelligence and their pietybeing stirred up against the two most impious
tyrants by God, the absolute Ruler and Saviour of all, engaged in formal war
against them, with God as their ally, Maxentius
was defeated at Rome by
Constantine in a remarkable manner, and the tyrant of the East
did not
long survive him, but met a most shameful death at the hand of Licinius, who
had not yet become insane.
Constantine, who was the superior both in
dignity and imperial rank,
first took compassion upon those who were
oppressed at Rome, and having invoked in prayer the God of heaven,
and his Word, and Jesus Christ himself, the Saviour of all, as his aid,
advanced with his Whole
army,
proposing to restore to the Romans
their ancestral liberty. But Maxentius, putring confidence rather in the arts of sorcery
than in the devotion of his subjects, did not dare to go forth beyond the
gates of the city, but fortified every place and district and town which was
enslaved by him, in the neighborhood of Rome and in all Italy, with an immense
multi-rude of troops and with innumerable bands of soldiers. But the emperor,
relying upon the assistance of God, attacked the first, second, and third army
of the tyrant, and conquered them all; and having advanced through the greater
part of Italy, was already very near Rome.
Then, that he might not be compelled to wage war with the Romans for the
sake of the tyrant, God himself drew the latter, as if bound in chains, some
distance without the gates, and confirmed those threats against the impious
which had been anciently inscribed in sacred booksdisbelieved, indeed, by
most as a myth, but believed by the faithfulconfirmed them, in a word, by
the deed itself to all, both believers and unbelievers, that saw the wonder
with their eyes. Thus, as in the time of
Moses himself and of the ancient Godbeloved race of Hebrews, "he cast Pharaoh's chariots and host into the sea,
and overwhelmed his chosen charioteers in the Red Sea, and covered them with
the flood,"
in the same way Maxentius also with his soldiers and
body-guards "went down into the depths like a stone,"
when he fled before
the power of God which was with Constantine, and passed through the river
which lay in his way, over which he had formed a
bridge with boats, and thus prepared the
means of his own destruction. In regard
to him one might say, "he digged a pit and
opened it and fell into the hole which he had made; his labor shall turn upon
his own head,
and his unrighteousness shall fall upon his
own crown."
Thus, then, the bridge over
the river being broken, the passageway settled down, and immediately the
boats with the men disappeared in the depths, and that most impious one
himself first of all, then the shield-bearers who were with him, as the divine
oracles foretold, "sank like lead in the mighty
waters";
so that those who obtained the
victory from God, if not in words, at least
in deeds, like Moses, the great servant of God, and those who were with him,
fittingly sang as they had sung against the impious tyrant of old, saying,
"Let us sing unto the Lord, for he hath gloriously glorified himself; horse
and rider hath he thrown into the sea; a helper and a protector hath he become
for my salvation;"
and "Who is like unto thee, O Lord; among the gods,
who is like unto thee? glorious in holiness,
marvelous in glory, doing
wonders."
These and the like praises Constantine, by
his very deeds, sang to God, the universal
Ruler, and Author of his victory, as he entered Rome in triumph. Immediately
all the members of the senate and the other most celebrated men, with the
whole Roman people, together with children and women, received him as their
deliverer, their saviour, and their benefactor, with shining eyes and with
their whole souls, with shouts of gladness and unbounded joy.
But he, as one possessed of inborn piety
toward God, did not exult in the shouts, nor
was he elated by the praises; but perceiving that his aid was from God, he
immediately commanded that a trophy of the Saviour's passion be put in the
hand of his own statue. And when he had placed it, with the saving sign of the
cross in its right hand, in the most public place in Rome, he commanded that
the following inscription should be engraved upon it in the
Roman tongue: "By this salutary sign, the
true proof of bravery, I have saved and
freed your city from the yoke of the tyrant and moreover, having set at
liberty both the senate and the people of Rome, I have restored them to their
ancient distinction and splendor."
And after this both Constantine
himself and with him the Emperor Licinius, who had not yet been seized by that
madness into which he later fell,
praising God as the author of all their
blessings, with one will and mind drew up a full and most complete decree in
behalf of the Christians,
and sent an account of the wonderful things
done for them by God, and of the victory over the tyrant, together with a copy
of the decree itself, to Maximinus, who still ruled over the nations of the
East and
pretended friendship toward them. But he,
like a tyrant, was greatly pained by what he
learned; but not wishing to seem to yield to others, nor, on the other hand,
to suppress that which was commanded, for fear of those who enjoined it, as if
on his own authority, he addressed, under compulsion, to the governors under
him this first communication in behalf of the Christians,
falsely
inventing things against himself which had never been done by him.
Copy of a translation of the epistle of the tyrant
Maximinus.
"Jovius Maximinus Augustus to Sabinus.
I
am confident that it is manifest both to thy firmness and to all men that our
masters Diocletian
and Maximianus, our fathers, when they saw
almost all men abandoning the worship of
the gods and attaching themselves to the
party of the Christians, rightly decreed that
all who gave up the worship of those same immortal gods should be recalled by
open chastisement and punishment to the worship of the gods. But when I first
came to the
East under favorable auspices and learned that in some places a great many men
who were able to render public service had been banished by the judges for the
above-mentioned cause, I gave command to each of the judges that henceforth
none of them should treat the provincials with severity, but that they should
rather recall them to the worship of the gods by flattery and exhortations.
Then when, in accordance with my command, these orders were obeyed by the
judges, it came to pass that none of those who lived in the districts of the
East were banished or insulted, but that they were rather brought back to the
worship of the gods by the fact that no severity was employed
toward them. But afterwards, when I went
up last year
under good auspices to Nicomedia and sojourned there,
citizens of the same
city came to me with the images of the gods,
earnestly entreating that such a people should
by no means be permitted to dwell in their
country.
But when I learned that many
men of the same religion dwelt in those regions, I replied that I gladly
thanked them for
their request, but that I perceived that it was
not proffered by all, and that if, therefore, there
were any that persevered in the same superstition, each one had the privilege
of doing as he
pleased, even if he wished to recognize the
worship of the gods.
Nevertheless, I considered it necessary to give a
friendly answer to the inhabitants of Nicomedia and to the other cities which
had so earnestly presented to me the same petition, namely, that no Christians
should dwell in their citiesboth because this same course had been pursued
by all the ancient emperors, and also because it was pleasing to the gods,
through whom all men and the government of the state itself endureand to
confirm the request which they presented in
behalf of the worship of their deity. Therefore, although before this time, special letters have been sent to thy
devotedness, and commands have likewise been given that no harsh measures
should be taken against those provincials who desire to follow such a course,
but that they should be treated mildly and moderatelynevertheless, in order
that they may
not suffer insults or extortions
from the beneficiaries,
or from any
others, I have thought meet to remind thy firmness in this epistle
also
that thou shouldst lead our provincials rather by flatteries and exhortations
to recognize
the care of the gods. Hence, 'if any one
of his own choice should decide to adopt
the worship of the gods, it is fitting that he should be welcomed, but if any
should wish to follow their own religion, do thou leave it in their power.
Wherefore it behooves thy devotedness to observe that which is committed to
thee, and to see that power is given to no one to oppress our provincials with
insults and extortions,
since, as already written, it is fitting to
recall our provincials to the worship of the gods rather by exhortations and
flatteries. But, in order that this command of ours may come to the knowledge
of all our provincials, it is incumbent upon thee to proclaim that which has
been enjoined, in an edict issued by thyself."
Since he was forced to do this by necessity and did not give the command
by his own will, he was not regarded by any one as sincere or trustworthy,
because he had already shown his unstable and deceitful disposition
after his former similar concession. None
of our people, therefore, ventured to hold
meetings or even to appear in public, because his communication did not cover
this, but only commanded to guard against doing us any injury, and did not
give orders that we should hold meetings or build churches or perform any
of our customary acts. And yet Constantine and Licinius, the advocates of
peace and piety, had written him to permit this, and had granted it to all
their subjects by edicts and ordinances.
But this most impious man did
not choose to yield in this matter until, being driven by the divine judgment,
he was at last compelled to do it against his will.
The circumstances which drove him to
this course were the following. Being no
longer able to sustain the magnitude of the government which had been
undeservedly committed to him, in consequence of his want of prudence and
imperial understanding, he managed affairs in a base manner, and with his mind
unreasonably exalted in all things with boastful pride, even toward his
colleagues in the empire who were in every respect his superiors, in birth, in
training, in education, in worth and intelligence, and, greatest of all, in
temperance and piety toward the true God, he began to venture to act
audaciously and to arrogate to himself the first rank.
Becoming mad in his
folly, he broke the treaties which he had made with Licinius
and undertook
an implacable war. Then in a brief time he threw all things into confusion,
and stirred up every city, and having collected his entire force, comprising
an immense number of soldiers, he went forth to battle with him, elated by his
hopes in demons, whom he supposed to be gods, and by the number of his
soldiers. And when he joined battle
he was deprived of the
oversight of God, and the victory was given to Licinius,
who
was then ruling, by the one
and only God of all. First, the army in
which he trusted was destroyed, and as all
his guards abandoned him and left him alone, and fled to the victor, he
secretly divested himself as quickly as possible of the imperial garments,
which did not fitly belong to him, and in a cowardly and ignoble and unmanly
way mingled with the crowd, and then fled, concealing himself in fields and
villages.
But though he was so careful for his safety, he scarcely escaped
the hands of his enemies, revealing by his deeds
that the divine oracles are faithful and true,
in which it is said, "A king is not saved by
a great force, and a giant shall not be saved
by the greatness of his strength; a horse is a
vain thing for safety, nor shall he be delivered
by the greatness of his power. Behold, the eyes
of the Lord are upon them that fear him, upon
them that hope in his mercy, to deliver
their souls from death."
Thus the tyrant, covered with shame, went to his
own
country. And first, in frantic rage, he slew many priests and prophets of the
gods whom he had formerly admired, and whose oracles had incited him to
undertake the war, as sorcerers and impostors, and besides all as betrayers of
his safety. Then having given glory to the God of the Christians and enacted a
most full and complete ordinance in behalf of their liberty,
he was
immediately seized with a mortal disease, and no respite being granted him,
departed this life.
The law enacted by him was as follows:
Copy of the edict of the tyrant in behaIf of
the Christians, translated from the
man tongue.
"The Emperor Caesar Caius Valerius Maximinus, Germanicus, Sarmaticus,
Plus, Felix, Invictus, Augustus. We believe it manifest that no one is
ignorant, but that every man who looks back over the past knows and is
conscious that m every way we care continually for the good of our
provincials, and wish to furnish them with those things which are of especial
advantage to all, and for the common benefit and profit, and whatever
contributes to the public welfare and is agreeable to the views of each. When,
therefore, before this, it became clear to our mind that under pretext of the
command of our parents, the most divine Diocletian and Maximianus, which
enjoined that the meetings of the
Christians should be abolished, many extortions
and spoliations had been
practiced by officials; and that those evils were continually increasing, to
the detriment of our provincials toward whom we are especially anxious to
exercise proper care, and that their possessions were in consequence
perishing, letters were sent last year
to the governors of each province,
in which we decreed that, if any one wished to follow such a practice or to
observe this same religion, he should be permitted without hindrance to pursue
his purpose and should be impeded and prevented by no one, and that all should
have liberty to do without any fear or suspicion that which each preferred.
But even now we cannot help perceiving that some of the judges have mistaken
our commands, and have given our people reason to doubt the meaning of our
ordinances, and have caused them to proceed too reluctantly to the observance
of those religious rites which are pleasing to
them. In order, therefore, that in the future every suspicion of fearful
doubt may be
taken away, we have commanded that this decree
be published, so that it may be clear to all that
whoever wishes to embrace this sect and religion
is permitted to do so by virtue of this grant of
ours; and that each one, as he wishes or as is
pleasing to him, is permitted to practice this religion which he has chosen to
observe according
to his custom. It is also granted them to
build Lord's houses. But that this grant of
ours may be the greater, we have thought
good to decree also that if any houses and lands before this time rightfully
belonged to the Christians, and by the command of our parents fell into the
treasury, or were confiscated by any citywhether they have been sold or
presented to any one as a giftthat all these should be restored to their
original possessors, the Christians, in order that in this also every one may
have knowledge of our piety and care."
These are the words of the tyrant which
were published not quite a year after the
decrees against the Christians engraved by him on pillars.
And by him to
whom a little before we seemed impious wretches and atheists and destroyers of
all life, so that we were not permitted to dwell in any city nor even in
country or desertby him decrees and ordinances were issued in behalf of the
Christians, and they who recently had been destroyed by fire and sword, by
wild beasts and birds of prey, in the presence of the tyrant himself, and had
suffered every species of torture and punishment, and most miserable deaths as
atheists and impious wretches, were now acknowledged by him as possessors of
religion and were permitted to build churches; and the tyrant himself bore
witness and confessed that they had some
rights. And having made such confessions,
as if he had received some benefit on account of them, he suffered perhaps less than he ought to have suffered, and
being smitten by a sudden scourge of God, he perished in the
second campaign of the war. But his end
was not like that of military chieftains who,
while fighting bravely in battle for virtue and friends, often boldly
encounter a glorious death; for like an impious enemy of God, while his army
was still drawn up in the field, remaining at home and concealing himself, he
suffered the punishment which he deserved. For he was smitten with a sudden
scourge of God in his whole body, and harassed by terrible pains and torments,
he fell prostrate on the ground, wasted by hunger, while all his flesh was
dissolved by an invisible and God-sent fire, so that the whole appearance of
his frame was changed, and there was left only a kind of image wasted away by
length of time to a skeleton of dry bones; so that those who were present
could think of his body as nothing else than the tomb of his soul, which was
buried in a body already dead
and completely melted away. And as the heat still more violently consumed
him in the depths of his marrow, his eyes burst forth, and falling from their
sockets left him blind. Thereupon still breathing and making free confession
to the Lord, he invoked death, and at last, after acknowledging that he justly
suffered these things on account of his violence against Christ, he gave up
the ghost.
Thus when Maximinus, who alone had
remained of the enemies of religion
and
had appeared the worst of them all, was put out of the way, the renovation of
the churches from their foundations was begun by the grace of God the Ruler of
all, and the word of Christ. shining unto the glory of the God of the
universe, obtained greater freedom than before,
while the impious enemies of religion were covered with extremest
shame and dishonor. For Maximinus himself, being first pronounced by the
emperors a common enemy, was declared by public proclamations to be a most
impious, execrable, and God-hating tyrant. And of the portraits which had been
set up in every city in honor of him or of his children, some were thrown down
from their places to the ground, and torn in pieces; while the faces of others
were obliterated by daubing them with black paint. And the statues which had
been erected to his honor were likewise overthrown and broken, and lay exposed
to the laughter and sport of those who wished to insult and
abuse them. Then also all the honors of
the other enemies of religion were taken
away, and all those who sided with Maximinus were slain, especially those who
had been honored by him with high offices in reward for their
flattery, and had behaved insolently toward
our doctrine. Such an one was Peucetius,
the dearest of his companions, who had
been honored and rewarded by him above all, who had been consul a second and
third time, and had been appointed by him chief minister;
and Culcianus,
who had likewise advanced through every grade of office, and was also
celebrated for his numberless executions of Christians in Egypt;
and
besides these not a few others, by whose agency especially the tyranny
of Maximinus had been confirmed and extended. And Theotecnus
also
was summoned by justice which by no means overlooked his deeds against the
Christians. For when the statue had been set up by him at Antioch,
he
appeared to be in the happiest state, and was already made a governor by
Maximinus.
But Licinius, coming down to the city of Antioch, made a search for
impostors, and tortured the prophets and priests of the newly erected statue,
asking them for what reason they practiced their deception. They, under the
stress of torture, were unable longer to conceal the matter, and declared that
the whole deceptive mystery had been devised by the art of Theotecnus.
Therefore, after meting out to all of them just judgment, he first put
Theotecnus himself to death, and then his confederates in the imposture, with
the severest possible
tortures. To all these were added also the children
of Maximinus, whom
he had already made sharers in the imperial dignity, by placing their names on
tablets and statues. And the relatives of the tyrant, who before had been
boastful and had in their pride oppressed all men, suffered the same
punishments with those who have been already mentioned, as well as the
extremest disgrace. For they had not received instruction, neither did they
know and understand the exhortation given in the
Holy Word: "Put not your trust in princes, nor in the sons of men, in whom
there
is no salvation; his spirit shall go forth and return to his earth; in that
day all their thoughts perish."
The impious ones having been thus
removed, the government was preserved
firm and undisputed for Constantine and Licinius, to whom it fittingly
belonged. They, having first of all cleansed the world of hostility to the
Divine Being, conscious of the benefits which he had conferred upon them,
showed their love of virtue and of God, and their piety and gratitude to the
Deity, by their ordinance in behalf of the Christians.
Church History
Book IX
The Pretended Relaxation
With continuous and most devoted earnestness their Majesties, our most
divine
masters, the emperors,
formerly directed the minds of all men to follow
the holy and correct course of life, that those also who seemed to live in a
manner foreign to that of the Romans, should render the worship due to the
immortal gods. But the obstinacy and most unconquerable determination of some
went so far that they could neither be turned back from their purpose by the
just reason of the command, nor be intimidated by the impending punishment.
The Subsequent Reverse
The Newly Erected Statue at Antioch
The Memorials against us
The Forged Acts
Those who suffered Martyrdom at this Time
The Decree against us which was engraved on Pillars
The Misfortunes which happened in Connection with these Things, in Famine, Pestilence, and
The Victory of the God-Beloved Emperors
The Overthrow of the Tyrants and the Words, which they uttered before their Death
The Final Destruction of the Enemies of Religion