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In the time of Hadrian it was no longer possible for the Roman government to overlook the great
increase of the Christians and the hostility of the common sort to them. If the governors in the provinces were
willing to let them alone, they could not resist the fanaticism of the heathen community, who looked on the
Christians as atheists. The Jews too, who were settled all over the Roman Empire, were as hostile to the Christians
as the Gentiles were. With the time of Hadrian begin the Christian Apologies, which show plainly what the popular
feeling towards the Christians then was. A rescript of Hadrian to Minucius Fundanus, the Proconsul of Asia, which
stands at the end of Justin's first Apology, instructs the governor that innocent people must not be troubled, and
false accusers must not be allowed to extort money from them; the charges against the Christians must be made in
due form, and no attention must be paid to popular clamors; when Christians were regularly prosecuted and convicted
of illegal acts, they must be punished according to their deserts; and false accusers also must be punished.
Antoninus Pius is said to have published rescripts to the same effect. The terms of Hadrian's rescript seem very
favorable to the Christians; but if we understand it in this sense, that they were only to be punished like other
people for illegal acts, it would have had no meaning, for that could have been done without asking the emperor's
advice. The real purpose of the rescript is that Christians must be punished if they persisted in their belief, and
would not prove their renunciation of it by acknowledging the heathen religion.
In the time of Marcus Antoninus the opposition between the old and the new belief was still
stronger, and the adherents of the heathen religion urged those in authority to a more regular resistance to the
invasions of the Christian faith. Melito in his Apology to Marcus Antoninus represents the Christians of Asia as
persecuted under new imperial orders. Shameless informers, he says, men who were greedy after the property of
others, used these orders as a means of robbing those who were doing no harm. He doubts if a just emperor could
have ordered anything so unjust; and if the last order was really not from the emperor, the Christians entreat him
not to give them up to their enemies. We conclude from this that there were at least imperial rescripts or
constitutions of Marcus Antoninus which were made the foundation of these persecutions. The fact of being a
Christian was now a crime and punished, unless the accused denied their religion. Then come the persecutions at
Smyrna, which some modern critics place in A.D. 167, ten years before the persecution of Lyon. The governors of the
provinces under Marcus Antoninus might have found enough even in Trajan's rescript to warrant them in punishing
Christians, and the fanaticism of the people would drive them to persecution, even if they were unwilling. But
besides the fact of the Christians rejecting all the heathen ceremonies, we must not forget that they plainly
maintained that all the heathen religions were false. The Christians thus declared war against the heathen rites,
and it is hardly necessary to observe that this was a declaration of hostility against the Roman government, which
tolerated all the various forms of superstition that existed in the empire, and could not consistently tolerate
another religion, which declared that all the rest were false and all the splendid ceremonies of the empire only a
worship of devils.
If we had a true ecclesiastical history, we should know how the Roman emperors attempted to check
the new religion; how they enforced their principle of finally punishing Christians, simply as Christians, which
Justin in his Apology affirms that they did, and I have no doubt that he tells the truth; how far popular clamor
and riots went in this matter, and how far many fanatical and ignorant Christians--for there were many
such--contributed to excite the fanaticism on the other side and to embitter the quarrel between the Roman
government and the new religion.
Our extant ecclesiastical histories are manifestly falsified, and what truth they contain is
grossly exaggerated; but the fact is certain that in the time of Marcus Antoninus the heathen populations were in
open hostility to the Christians, and that under Antoninus' rule men were put to death because they were
Christians. Eusebius, in the preface to his fifth book, remarks that in the seventeenth year of Antoninus' reign,
in some parts of the world, the persecution of the Christians became more violent, and that it proceeded from the
populace in the cities; and he adds, in his usual style of exaggeration, that we may infer from what took place in
a single nation that myriads of martyrs were made in the habitable earth. The nation, which he alludes to, is
Gallia; and he then proceeds to give the letter of the churches of Vienna and Lugdunum. It is probable that he has
assigned the true cause of the persecutions, the fanaticism of the populace, and that both governors and emperor
had a great deal of trouble with these disturbances. How far Marcus was cognizant of these cruel proceedings we do
not know, for the historical records of his reign are very defective. He did not make the rule against the
Christians, for Trajan did that; and if we admit that he would have been willing to let the Christians alone, we
cannot affirm that it was in his power, for it would be a great mistake to suppose that Antoninus had the unlimited
authority which some modern sovereigns have had. His power was limited by certain constitutional forms, by the
Senate, and by the precedents of his predecessors. We cannot admit that such a man was an active persecutor, for
there is no evidence that he was, though it is certain that he had no good opinion of the Christians, as appears
from his own words. But he knew nothing of them except their hostility to the Roman religion, and he probably
thought that they were dangerous to the state, notwithstanding the professions false or true of some of the
Apologists. So much I have said, because it would be unfair not to state all that can be urged against a man whom
his contemporaries and subsequent ages venerated as a model of virtue and benevolence. If I admitted the
genuineness of some documents, he would be altogether clear from the charge of even allowing any persecutions; but
as I seek the truth and am sure that they are false, I leave him to bear whatever blame is his due. I add that it
is quite certain that Antoninus did not derive any of his ethical principles from a religion of which he knew
nothing.
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