INTRODUCTORY NOTE TO THE FIRST APOLOGY OF JUSTIN MARTYR.
[a.d. 110-165.] Justin was a Gentile, but
born in Samaria, near Jacob's well. He must have been well educated: he had
traveled extensively, and he seems to have been a person enjoying at least a
competence. After trying all other systems, his elevated tastes and refined
perceptions made him a disciple of Socrates and Plato. So he climbed towards
Christ. As he himself narrates the story of his conversion, it need not be
anticipated here. What Plato was feeling after, he found in Jesus of Nazareth.
The conversion of such a man marks a new era in the gospel history. The
subapostolic age begins with the first Christian author,-the founder of
theological literature. It introduced to mankind, as the mother of true
philosophy, the despised teaching of those Galileans to whom their Master had
said, "Ye are the light of the world."
And this is the epoch which forced this great truth upon the attention of
contemplative minds. It was more than a hundred years since the angels had sung
"Good-will to men; "and that song had now been heard for successive generations,
breaking forth from the lips of sufferers on the cross, among lions, and amid
blazing faggots. Here was a nobler Stoicism that needed interpretation. Not only
choice spirits, despising the herd and boasting of a loftier intellectual
sphere, were its professors; but thousands of men, women, and children,
withdrawing themselves not at all from the ordinary and humble lot of the
people, were inspired by it to live and die heroically and sublimely,-exhibiting
a superiority to revenge and hate entirely unaccountable, praying for their
enemies, and seeking to glorify their God by love to their fellow-men.
And in spite of Gallios and Neros alike, the gospel was dispelling the gross
darkness. Of this, Pliny's letter to Trajan is decisive evidence. Even in Seneca
we detect reflections of the daybreak. Plutarch writes as never a Gentile could
have written until now. Plato is practically surpassed by him in his thoughts
upon the "delays1 of the Divine Justice." Hadrian's address to his soul, in his
dying moments, is a tribute to the new ideas which had been sown in the popular
mind. And now the Antonines, impelled by something in the age, came forward to
reign as "philosophers." At this moment, Justin Martyr confronts them like a
Daniel. The "little stone" smites the imperial image in the face, not yet "in
the toes." He tells the professional philosophers on a throne how false and
hollow is all wisdom that is not meant for all humanity, and that is not capable
of leavening the masses. He exposes the impotency of even Socratic philosophy:
he shows, in contrast, the force that works in the words of Jesus; he points out
their regenerating power. It is the mission of Justin to be a star in the West,
leading its Wise Men to the cradle of Bethlehem.
The writings of Justin are deficient in charms of style; and, for us, there is
something the reverse of attractive in the forms of thought which he had learned
from the philosophers. If Plato had left us nothing but the Timaeus, a Renan
would doubtless have reproached him as of feeble intellectual power. So a
dancing-master might criticize the movements of an athlete, or the writhings of
St. Sebastian shot with arrows. The practical wisdom of Justin using the
rhetoric of his times, and discomfiting false philosophy with its own weapons,
is not appreciated by the fastidious Parisian. But the manly and heroic
pleadings of the man, for a despised people with whom he had boldly identified
himself; the intrepidity with which he defends them before despots, whose mere
caprice might punish him with death; above all, the undaunted spirit with which
he exposes the shame and absurdity of their inveterate superstition and
reproaches the memory of Hadrian whom Antoninus had deified, as he had deified
Antinous of loathsome history, -these are characteristics which every instinct
of the unvitiated soul delights to honour. Justin cannot be refuted by a sneer.
He wore his philosopher's gown after his conversion, as a token that he had
attained the only true philosophy. And seeing, that, after the conflicts and
tests of ages, it is the only philosophy that lasts and lives and triumphs, its
discoverer deserves the homage of mankind. Of the philosophic gown we shall hear
again when we come to Tertullian.
The residue of Justin's history may be found in The Martyrdom and other pages
soon to follow, as well as in the following Introductory Note of the able
translators, Messrs. Dods and Reith:-
Justin Martyr was born in Flavia Neapolis, a city of Samaria, the modern Nablous.
The date of his birth is uncertain, but may be fixed about a.d. 114. His father
and grandfather were probably of Roman origin. Before his conversion to
Christianity he studied in the schools of the philosophers, searching after some
knowledge which should satisfy the cravings of his soul. At last he became
acquainted with Christianity, being at once impressed with the extraordinary
fearlessness which the Christians displayed in the presence of death, and with
the grandeur, stability, and truth of the teachings of the Old Testament. From
this time he acted as an evangelist, taking every opportunity to proclaim the
gospel as the only safe and certain philosophy, the only way to salvation. It is
probable that he traveled much. We know that he was some time in Ephesus, and he
must have lived for a considerable period in Rome. Probably he settled in Rome
as a Christian teacher. While he was there, the philosophers, especially the
Cynics, plotted against him, and he sealed his testimony to the truth by
martyrdom.
The principal facts of Justin's life are gathered from his own writings. There
is little clue to dates. It is agreed on all hands that he lived in the reign of
Antoninus Pius, and the testimony of Eusebius and most credible historians
renders it nearly certain that he suffered martyrdom in the reign of Marcus
Aurelius. The Chronicon Paschale gives as the date 165 a.d.
The writings of Justin Martyr are among the most important that have come down
to us from the second century. He was not the first that wrote an Apology in
behalf of the Christians, but his Apologies are the earliest extant. They are
characterized by intense Christian fervour, and they give us an insight into the
relations existing between heathens and Christians in those days. His other
principal writing, the Dialogue with Trypho, is the first elaborate exposition
of the reasons for regarding Christ as the Messiah of the Old Testament, and the
first systematic attempt to exhibit the false position of the Jews in regard to
Christianity.
Many of Justin's writings have perished. Those works which have come to us
bearing his name have been divided into three classes.
The first class embraces those which are unquestionably genuine, viz. the two
Apologies, and the Dialogue with Trypho. Some critics have urged objections
against Justin's authorship of the Dialogue; but the objections are regarded now
as possessing no weight.
The second class consists of those works which are regarded by some critics as
Justin's, and by others as not his. They are: 1. An Address to the Greeks; 2. A
Hortatory Address to the Greeks; 3. On the Sole Government of God; 4. An Epistle
to Diognetus; 5. Fragments from a work on the Resurrection; 6. And other
Fragments. Whatever difficulty there may be in settling the authorship of these
treatises, there is but one opinion as to their earliness. The latest of them,
in all probability, was not written later than the third century.
The third class consists of those that are unquestionably not the works of
Justin. These are: 1. An Exposition of the True Faith; 2. Replies to the
Orthodox; 3. Christian Questions to Gentiles; 4. Gentile Questions to
Christians; 5. Epistle to Zenas and Serenus; and 6. A Refutation of certain
Doctrines of Aristotle. There is no clue to the date of the two last. There can
be no doubt that the others were written after the Council of Nicaea, though,
immediately after the Reformation, Calvin and others appealed to the first as a
genuine writing of Justin's.
There is a curious question connected with the Apologies of Justin which have
come down to us. Eusebius mentions two Apologies,-one written in the reign of
Antoninus Pius, the other in the reign of Marcus Aurelius. Critics have disputed
much whether we have these two Apologies in those now extant. Some have
maintained, that what is now called the Second Apology was the preface of the
first, and that the second is lost. Others have tried to show, that the so
called Second Apology is the continuation of the first, and that the second is
lost. Others have supposed that the two Apologies which we have are Justin's two
Apologies, but that Eusebius was wrong in affirming that the second was
addressed to Marcus Aurelius; and others maintain, that we have in our two
Apologies the two Apologies mentioned by Eusebius, and that our first is his
first, and our second his second.