Polycrates Bishop of Ephesus.
[a.d. 130-196.] This author comes in as an appendix to the stories of Polycarp
and Irenaeus and good Anicetus, and his writings also bear upon the contrast
presented by the less creditable history of Victor. If, as I suppose, the
appearance of our Lord to St. John on "the Lord's day" was on the Paschal
Sunday, it may at first seem surprising that this Apostle can be claimed by
Polycrates in behalf of the Eastern custom to keep Easter, with the Jews, on the
fourteenth day of the moon. But to the Jews the Apostles became "as Jews" in all
things tolerable, so long as the Temple stood, and while the bishops of
Jerusalem were labouring to identify the Paschal Lamb with their Passover. The
long survival of St. John among Jewish Christians led them to prolong this
usage, no doubt, as sanctioned by his example. He foreknew it would quietly pass
away. The wise and truly Christian spirit of Irenaeus prepared the way for the
ultimate unanimity of the Church in a matter which lies at the base of "the
Christian Sabbath," and of our own observance of the first day of the week as a
weekly Easter. Those who in our own times have revived the observance of the
Jewish Sabbath, show us how much may be said on their side,3 and elucidate the
tenacity of the Easterns in resisting the abolition of the Mosaic ordinance as
to the Paschal, although they agreed to keep it "not with the old leaven."
Our author belonged to a family in which he was the eighth Christian bishop; and
he presided over the church of Ephesus, in which the traditions of St. John were
yet fresh in men's minds at the date of his birth. He had doubtless known
Polycarp, and Irenaeus also. He seems to have presided over a synod of Asiatic
bishops (a.d. 196) which came together to consider this matter of the Paschal
feast. It is surely noteworthy that nobody doubted that it was kept by a
Christian and Apostolic ordinance. So St. Paul argues from its Christian
observance, in his rebuke of the Corinthians.4 They were keeping it "unleavened"
ceremonially, and he urges a spiritual unleavening as more important. The
Christian hallowing of Pentecost connects with the Paschal argument.5 The
Christian Sabbath hinges on these points.
From His Epistle to Victor and the Roman Church Concerning the Day of Keeping
the Passover.1
As for us, then, we scrupulously observe the exact day,2 neither adding nor
taking away. For in Asia great luminaries3 have gone to their rest, who shall
rise again in the day of the coming of the Lord, when He cometh with glory from
heaven and shall raise again all the saints. I speak of Philip, one of the
twelve apostles,4 who is laid to rest at Hierapolis; and his two daughters, who
arrived at old age unmarried;5 his other daughter also, who passed her life6
under the influence of the Holy Spirit, and reposes at Ephesus; John, moreover,
who reclined on the Lord's bosom, and who became a priest wearing the mitre,7
and a witness and a teacher-he rests at Ephesus. Then there is Polycarp, both
bishop and martyr at Smyrna; and Thraseas from Eumenia, both bishop and martyr,
who rests at Smyrna. Why should I speak of Sagaris, bishop and martyr, who rests
at Laodicea? of the blessed Papirius, moreover? and of Melito the eunuch,8 who
performed all his actions under the influence of the Holy Spirit, and lies at
Sardis, awaiting the visitation9 from heaven, when he shall rise again from the
dead? These all kept the passover on the fourteenth. day of the month, in
accordance with the Gospel, without ever deviating from it, but keeping to the
rule of faith.
Moreover I also, Polycrates, who am the least of you all, in accordance with the
tradition of my relatives, some of whom I have succeeded-seven of my relatives
were bishops, and I am the eighth, and my relatives always observed the day when
the people put away10 the leaven-I myself, brethren, I say, who am sixty-five
years old in the Lord, and have fallen in with the brethren in all parts of the
world, and have read through all Holy Scripture, am not frightened at the things
which are said to terrify us. For those who are greater than I have said, "We
ought to obey God rather than men."11 ...
I might also have made mention of the bishops associated with me, whom it was
your own desire to have called together by me, and I called them together: whose
names, if I were to write them down, would amount to a great number. These
bishops, on coming to see me, unworthy as I am,12 signified their united
approval of the letter, knowing that I wore these grey hairs not in vain, but
have always regulated my conduct in obedience to the Lord Jesus.