Video Transcript: Unit 3 Lecture 3
The latter part of the first century saw the church developing more and more along the lines of its structures and its thinking about Jesus. During this time, we have some communications from a group we know as the apostolic fathers. There are a variety of names to be thought of among the apostolic fathers, names such as Hermas the author of The Shepherd, Ignatius who wrote several letters we have as he was being transported to Rome to die in the Coliseum, a man named Barnabas and a bishop we know as Polycarp. We will hear more about Polycarp in the next unit, but for today, we will spend some time with the letters of Ignatius.
The writings of St. Ignatius, bishop of Antioch are among the most inspiring of the Early Church Fathers. Sometime late in the reign of the Emperor Trajan, a persecution broke out in Syria. Ignatius, leader of the Christians in the region's capital city, was apprehended and condemned to die for his faith in the Roman amphitheater. He was chained to a squad of Roman soldiers and marched overland through what is modern Turkey to Troas where he embarked upon a ship that, after various stops, eventually brought him to Italy and martyrdom. Virtually all we know about him comes from seven little letters he wrote while his traveling group was stopped in Smyrna and later in Troas. Five of these letters were written to Churches in the province of Asia that had sent people to encourage him during his journey. One was sent personally to Polycarp, bishop of Symrna, and the other is a moving appeal to the Church of Rome not to try to prevent the carrying out of his death sentence.
Ignatius was the second bishop of Antioch, the place where the followers of Jesus were called Christians for the first time. The importance of Antioch as a center of apostolic Christianity is important to recognise. It was the first center of outreach to the Gentiles (Acts 11:20) and the base from which Paul and Barnabas were sent out on their missionary journeys (Acts 13:2-3; 15: 35-41; 18:22-23). Ignatius is therefore an important testimony to the way in which the teaching of these apostles was remembered by this Church. The letters witness to a common apostolic source of teaching as understood and lived probably only a decade or two after the writing of John's Gospel.
Ignatius speaks to a number of issues that have been disputed among Christians for centuries. Regarding the identity of Jesus Christ, Ignatius could not be more forthright in asserting his divinity. In the course of his seven letters he explicitly calls Jesus "God” (theos) a total of sixteen times .There is no question of him meaning this in a loose or merely honorific sense; Ignatius affirms that Christ is the invisible, Timeless (achronos) one, incapable by nature of suffering, who becomes visible and capable of suffering through his human birth in time (Poly. 3:2). So, two hundred years before the Council of Nicaea, Ignatius teaches that Christ is eternal, above time and all creation, God in the full sense of the term.
Ignatius is equally clear regarding Jesus' true humanity. In his day there existed heretics called "Docetists” who believed Jesus' body to have been a mere vision and his death therefore only an appearance. Against them Ignatius vigorously affirms the material reality of Jesus' human flesh and the truth of his suffering and death (e.g., Symr. 1; Tral 9).
In the course of his defense of Christ's humanity, Ignatius demonstrates the early church's realistic understanding of the Lord's Supper, which he calls "the medicine of immortality” (Eph 20:2). In his mind, a denial of the presence of Jesus at the table flows from a denial of the incarnation. The Docetists, he says, "hold aloof from the Supper and from services of prayer, because they refuse to admit that the Bread is the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ, who suffered for our sins and whom, in his goodness, the Father raised. Consequently those who wrangle and dispute God's gift face death.” (Smyr 7:1). For Ignatius and those to whom he writes, the Eucharist is clearly the center of the Church's life (Eph 13:1) and can be validly celebrated only by the bishop or by one he authorizes (Symr. 8:2). And, in contradiction to various Judaizing movements, Ignatius says (Mag 9:1) that a distinctive mark of Christianity is to cease keeping the Sabbath (Saturday) and instead to observe the Lord's Day (Sunday).
With regard to the nature and structure of the Church, Ignatius is a particularly important witness. He has a strong consciousness that Christians all across the world are united in one universal assembly which he calls "the Catholic Church” which is the earliest instance of this phrase in surviving Christian literature. His letter to the Romans, an important witness to Peter's presence and leadership in Rome (Ro 4:3), acknowledges that the Roman Church ranks "first in love” (Ro, inscr.). For Ignatius and the Asian churches to which he writes, it is taken for granted that each local Christian community is led by a single bishop assisted by a council of presbyters and several deacons. According to Ignatius, "you cannot have a church without these” (Tral. 3:1).
In the materials I have provided for this unit, you will find examples of the letters of Ignatius. You can find more of them in the links provided there. You will find that these are indeed, some inspiring reading when we know that Ignatius is being marched a great distance to get to Rome where he will die in the amphitheater.
Here is part of his letter to the Romans
am writing to all the churches to let it be known that I will gladly die for God if only you do not stand in my way. I plead with you: show me no untimely kindness. Let me be food for the wild beasts, for they are my way to God. I am God's wheat and shall be ground by their teeth so that I may become Christ's pure bread. Pray to Christ for me that the animals will be the means of making me a sacrificial victim for God.
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