St. Ignatius of Antioch
Also called Theophorus (ho Theophoros);
born in Syria, around
the year 50; died at Rome
between 98 and 117.
More than one of the earliest ecclesiastical writers
have given credence, though apparently
without good reason, to the legend that Ignatius
was the child whom the Savior
took up in His arms, as described in Mark 9:35. It is
also believed, and with great probability,
that, with his friend Polycarp,
he was among the auditors of the Apostle
St. John. If we include St.
Peter, Ignatius was the third Bishop of Antioch and the immediate
successor of Evodius (Eusebius, Church History
II.3.22). Theodoret
("Dial. Immutab.",
I, iv, 33a, Paris,
1642) is the authority for the statement that St.
Peter appointed Ignatius to the See
of Antioch. St. John Chrysostom lays
special emphasis on the honor conferred
upon the martyr in
receiving his episcopal
consecration at the
hands of the Apostles themselves ("Hom. in St. Ig.",
IV. 587). Natalis Alexander
quotes Theodoret
to the same effect (III, xii, art. xvi, p. 53).
All the sterling qualities of ideal pastor and a true soldier of Christ
were possessed by the Bishop
of Antioch in a
preeminent degree. Accordingly, when the storm of the persecution of Domitian broke in its
full fury upon the Christians
of Syria, it found
their faithful leader prepared and
watchful. He was unremitting in his vigilance and tireless in his efforts to inspire
hope and to strengthen the weaklings of his
flock against the terrors of the persecution. The
restoration of peace, though it was short-lived, greatly comforted him. But it
was not for himself that he rejoiced, as the one great and ever-present wish of
his chivalrous soul was that he might
receive the fullness of Christian
discipleship through
the medium of martyrdom.
His desire was not to remain long unsatisfied. Associated with the writings of St.
Ignatius is a work called "Martyrium Ignatii", which purports to be an account by
eyewitnesses of the martyrdom
of St. Ignatius and the acts
leading up to it. In this work, which such competent Protestant critics
as Pearson and Ussher regard as genuine, the full history
of that eventful journey from Syria to Rome is faithfully
recorded for the edification of the Church of Antioch. It is certainly
very ancient and is reputed to have been
written by Philo, deacon of Tarsus, and Rheus Agathopus, a Syrian, who accompanied Ignatius
to Rome. It is
generally admitted, even by those who regarded it as authentic,
that this work has been greatly interpolated. Its most reliable form
is that found in the "Martyrium Colbertinum" which closes the mixed recension and is so called because its oldest witness
is the tenth-century Codex Colbertinus (Paris).
According to these Acts, in the ninth
year of his reign, Trajan,
flushed with victory over the Scythians and Dacians, sought to perfect
the universality of his dominion by a species
of religious conquest. He decreed,
therefore, that the Christians
should unite with their pagan
neighbors in the worship of the gods. A
general persecution
was threatened, and death was named as the penalty
for all who refused to offer the prescribed
sacrifice. Instantly
alert to the danger that threatened, Ignatius
availed himself of all the means within his reach to thwart the purpose of the
emperor. The success of his zealous
efforts did not long remain hidden from the Church's persecutors. He was soon
arrested and led before Trajan,
who was then sojourning in Antioch.
Accused by the emperor himself of violating the imperial edict, and of inciting
others to like transgressions, Ignatius
valiantly bore witness
to the faith of Christ. If we may believe the account
given in the "Martyrium", his bearing
before Trajan was
characterized by inspired eloquence, sublime
courage, and even a spirit
of exultation. Incapable of
appreciating the motives that animated him, the emperor ordered him to be put
in chains and taken to Rome,
there to become the food of wild beasts and
a spectacle for the people.
That the trials of this journey to Rome were great we gather
from his letter to the Romans (par. 5):
"From Syria even
to Rome I fight with
wild beasts, by land and sea, by night and by day, being bound amidst ten
leopards, even a company of soldiers, who only grow worse when they are kindly
treated." Despite all this, his journey was a kind of triumph. News of hisfate, his
destination, and his probable itinerary had
gone swiftly before. At several places along the road his fellow-Christians
greeted him with words of comfort and reverential homage. It is probable that
he embarked on his way to Rome
at Seleucia, in Syria, the nearest port
to Antioch, for either
Tarsus in Cilicia, or Attalia in Pamphylia,
and thence, as we gather from his letters, he journeyed overland through Asia Minor. At Laodicea,
on the River Lycus, where a choice of routes
presented itself, his guards selected the more northerly, which brought the
prospective martyr
through Philadelphia and Sardis, and
finally to Smyrna,
where Polycarp, his
fellow-disciple in the school
of St. John, was bishop. The stay at Smyrna, which was a
protracted one, gave the representatives of the various Christian communities in Asia Minor an opportunity
of greeting the illustrious prisoner,
and offering him the homage of the Churches
they represented. From the congregations of
Ephesus,
Magnesia, and Tralles, deputations came to comfort him. To each
of these Christian
communities he addressed letters from Smyrna, exhorting them to
obedience to their respective bishops, and warning them
to avoid the contamination of heresy. These, letters
are redolent with the spirit of Christian charity, apostolic zeal, and pastoral
solicitude. While still there he wrote also to the Christians of Rome, begging them to do
nothing to deprive him of the opportunity of martyrdom.
From Smyrna
his captors took him to Troas,
from which place he dispatched letters to the Christians of Philadelphia and Smyrna, and to Polycarp. Besides these
letters, Ignatius had intended to address
others to the Christian
communities of Asia Minor,
inviting them to give public expression to their sympathy with the brethren in Antioch, but the altered
plans of his guards, necessitating a hurried departure, from Troas, defeated his
purpose, and he was obliged
to content himself with delegating this
office to his friend Polycarp.
At Troas
they took ship for Neapolis. From this place their
journey led them overland through Macedonia and Illyria. The next port of
embarkation was probably Dyrrhachium
(Durazzo). Whether having arrived at the shores of
the Adriatic, he completed his journey by land
or sea, it is impossible to determine. Not long after his arrival in Rome he won his long-coveted
crown of martyrdom in
the Flavian
amphitheater. The relics
of the holy martyr were borne back to
Antioch by the deacon Philo
of Cilicia, and Rheus
Agathopus, a Syrian, and were interred outside the
gates not far from the beautiful suburb of Daphne. They were afterwards removed
by the Emperor Theodosius II to the Tychaeum, or Temple of Fortune which was thenconverted
into a Christian church
under the patronage of the martyr whose relics it sheltered. In
637 they were translated to St. Clement's
at Rome, where they
now rest. The Church
celebrates the feast of St.
Ignatius on 1 February.
The character of St.
Ignatius, as deduced
from his own and the extant writings of his contemporaries, is that of a true athlete of Christ.
The triple honor of apostle,
bishop, and martyr was well merited
by this energetic soldier of the Faith. An
enthusiastic devotion to duty, a passionate love of sacrifice,
and an utter fearlessness in the defense of Christian truth, were his chief
characteristics. Zeal for the spiritual
well-being of those under his charge breathes from every line of his writings.
Ever vigilant lest they be infected by the rampant heresies of those early
days; praying for
them, that their faith
and courage may not be
wanting in the hour of persecution;
constantly exhorting them to unfailing obedience
to their bishops;
teaching them all Catholic
truth; eagerly sighing
for the crown of martyrdom,
that his own blood may fructify in added graces in the souls of his flock, he proves
himself in every sense a true,
pastor of souls, the good
shepherd that lays down his life for his sheep.
Collections
The oldest collection of the writings of St.
Ignatius known to have existed
was that made use of by the historian Eusebius in the first
half of the fourth century, but which unfortunately is no longer extant. It was
made up of the seven letters written byIgnatius
whilst on his way to Rome;
These letters were addressed to the Christians
- of Ephesus (Pros
Ephesious);
- of Magnesia (Magnesieusin);
- of Tralles
(Trallianois);
- of Rome (Pros Romaious);
- of Philadelphia
(Philadelpheusin);
- of Smyrna (Smyrnaiois); and
- to Polycarp
(Pros Polykarpon).
We find these seven mentioned not only by Eusebius (Church History
III.36) but also by St.
Jerome (De viris illust., c. xvi). Of later collections
of Ignatian
letters which have been preserved, the oldest is known as the "long recension". This collection,
the author of which is unknown, dates from the latter part of the fourth
century. It contains the seven genuine and six spurious letters, but even the genuineepistles were
greatly interpolated to lend weight to the personal views of its author. For
this reason they are incapable of bearing witness
to the original form. The spurious letters in this recension
are those that purport to be from Ignatius
- to Mary
of Cassobola
(Pros Marian Kassoboliten);
- to the Tarsians
(Pros tous en tarso);
- to the Philippians
(Pros Philippesious);
- to the Antiochenes (Pros Antiocheis);
- to
Hero a deacon of Antioch (Pros
Erona diakonon Antiocheias).
Associated with the foregoing is
- a
letter from Mary of Cassobola to Ignatius.
It is extremely probable that the interpolation of the
genuine, the addition of the spurious letters, and the union of both in the
long recension was the work of an Apollinarist
of Syria or Egypt, who wrote towards
the beginning of the fifth century. Funk
identifies him with the compiler of the Apostolic
Constitutions, which came out of Syria in the early part
of the same century. Subsequently there was added to this collection
a panegyric on St. Ignatius entitled,
"Laus Heronis".
Though in the original it was probably written in Greek,
it is now extant only in Latin and Coptic
texts. There is also a third recension, designated by
Funk as the "mixed collection".
The time of its origin can be only vaguely
determined as being between that of the collection
known to Eusebius and
the long recension. Besides the seven genuine letters
of Ignatius in their original form, it also
contains the six spurious ones, with the exception of that to the Philippians.
In this collection is also to be found
the "Martyrium Colbertinum".
The Greek original of this recension is contained in a single codex,
the famous Mediceo-Laurentianus manuscript at Florence. This codex
is incomplete, wanting the letter to the Romans,
which, however, is to be found associated with the "Martyrium
Colbertinum" in the Codex
Colbertinus, at Paris. The mixed collection
is regarded as the most reliable of all in determining what was
the authentic text of the genuine Ignatian letters.
There is also an ancient Latin version
which is an unusually exact rendering of the Greek.
Critics are generally inclined to look upon
this version as a translation of some Greek
manuscript of the same
type as that of the Medicean Codex.
This version owes its discovery to Archbishop Ussher, of Ireland, who found it in
two manuscripts in English libraries and published
it in 1644. It was the work of Robert Grosseteste,
a Franciscan friar and Bishop of Lincoln (c.
1250). The original Syriac
version has come down to us in its entirety only in an Armenian translation. It
also contains the seven genuine and six spurious letters. This collection
in the original Syriac
would be invaluable in determining the exact text of Ignatius,
were it in existence, for the reason that
it could not have been later than the fourth or fifth century. The deficiencies
of the Armenian
version are in part supplied by the abridged recension
in the original Syriac.
This abridgment contains the three genuine letters to the Ephesians,
the Romans, and to Polycarp.
The manuscript was
discovered by Cureton in a collection of Syriac manuscripts obtained in
1843 from the monastery
of St. Mary Deipara in the Desert of Nitria. Also
there are three letters extant only in Latin.
Two of the three purport to be from Ignatius
to St. John the Apostle,
and one to the Blessed
Virgin, with her reply to the same. These are probably of Western
origin, dating no further back than the
twelfth century.
The controversy
At intervals during the last several centuries a warm controversy has been
carried on by patrologists
concerning the authenticity of the Ignatian letters. Each particular recension has had its apologists
and its opponents. Each has been favored to the exclusion of all the others,
and all, in turn, have been collectively rejected, especially by the
coreligionists of Calvin.
The reformer himself, in language as violent
as it is uncritical (Institutes, 1-3), repudiates in globo
the letters which so completely discredit his own peculiar views on ecclesiastical government.
The convincing evidence which the letters bear to the Divine origin of Catholic doctrine is not
conducive to predisposing non-Catholic critics
in their favor, in fact, it has added not a little to the heat of the
controversy. In general, Catholic
and Anglican scholars
are ranged on the side of the letters written to the Ephesians,
Magnesians, Trallians, Romans,
Philadelphians, Smyrniots,
and to Polycarp; whilst Presbyterians, as a rule,
and perhaps a priori, repudiate everything claiming Ignatian authorship.
The two letters to the Apostle St.
John and the one to the Blessed Virgin, which exist
only in Latin, are unanimously admitted to
be spurious. The great body of critics
who acknowledge the authenticity of the Ignatian letters restrict their approval to those
mentioned by Eusebius
and St. Jerome. The
six others are not defended by any of the early Fathers.
The majority of those who acknowledge the Ignatian authorship of the seven letters do so
conditionally, rejecting what they consider the obvious interpolations in these
letters. In 1623, whilst the controversy was at its height, Vedelius
gave expression to this latter opinion by publishing at Geneva an edition of the Ignatian letters in which the seven genuine
letters are set apart from the five spurious. In the genuine letters he
indicated what was regarded as interpolations. Thereformer
Dallaeus, at Geneva, in 1666,
published a work entitled "De scriptis quae sub Dionysii Areop.
et Ignatii Antioch.
nominibus circumferuntur", in which (lib. II) he called into question the authenticity
of all seven letters. To this the Anglican Pearson replied
spiritedly in a work called "Vindiciae epistolarum S. Ignatii",
published at Cambridge,
1672. So convincing were the arguments adduced in this scholarly work that for
two hundred years the controversy remained closed in favor of thegenuineness of the
seven letters. The discussion was reopened by Cureton's discovery (1843) of the abridged Syriac version, containing the letters of Ignatius
to the Ephesians, Romans,
and to Polycarp .
In a work entitled "Vindiciae Ignatianae" London, 1846), he defended the position
that only the letters contained in his abridgedSyriac
recension, and in the form
therein contained, were genuine, and that all others were interpolated or forged
outright. This position was vigorously combated by several British
and German critics,
including the Catholics
Denzinger
and Hefele, who
successfully defended the genuineness of
the entire seven epistles. It is now
generally admitted that Cureton's
Syriac version is
only an abbreviation of the original.
While it can hardly be said that there is at present any unanimous agreement
on the subject, the best modern criticism
favors the authenticity of the seven
letters mentioned by Eusebius.
Even such eminent non-Catholic critics as Zahn, Lightfoot, and Harnack hold
this view. Perhaps the best evidence of their authenticity
is to be found in the letter of Polycarp to
the Philippians, which mentions each of
them by name. As an intimate friend of Ignatius,
Polycarp, writing
shortly after the martyr's
death, bears contemporaneous witness to the
authenticity of these letters, unless,
indeed, that of Polycarp itself be regarded as interpolated or forged.
When, furthermore, we take into consideration the passage of Irenaeus
(Adv. Haer., V,
xxviii, 4) found in the original Greek in Eusebius (Church History III.36),
in which he refers to the letter to the Romans.
(iv, I) in the following words: "Just as one of
our brethren said, condemned to the wild beasts
in martyrdom for his faith",
the evidence of authenticity becomes
compelling. The romance of Lucian of Samosata,
"De morte peregrini",
written in 167, bears incontestable evidence that the writer was not only
familiar with the Ignatian
letters, but even made use of them. Harnack, who was
not always so minded, describes these proofs as "testimony
as strong to the genuineness of the epistles
as any that can be conceived of" (Expositor, ser. 3, III, p. 11).
Contents of the letters
It is scarcely possible to exaggerate the importance of the testimony which
the Ignatian
letters offer to the dogmatic character
of Apostolic Christianity. The martyred Bishop of Antioch constitutes a
most important link between the Apostles
and the Fathers of the early Church. Receiving from
the Apostles themselves, whose auditor
he was, not only the substance of revelation, but also
their own inspired interpretation of it;
dwelling, as it were, at the very fountain-head of Gospel
truth, his testimony
must necessarily carry with it the greatest
weight and demand the most serious consideration. Cardinal Newman did not
exaggerate the matter when he said ("The Theology
of the Seven Epistles of St.
Ignatius", in "Historical Sketches", I, London, 1890)
that "the whole system of Catholic doctrine may be
discovered, at least in outline, not to say in parts filled up, in the course
of his seven epistles". Among the many
Catholic doctrines to
be found in the letters are the following:
- the Church was Divinely
established as a visible society, the salvation of souls is its end,
and those who separate themselves from it cut themselves off from God (Philadelphians 3)
- the hierarchy of the Church
was instituted by Christ (Introduction to Philadelphians;
Ephesians 6)
- the threefold character
of the hierarchy
(Magnesians
6)
- the order of the episcopacy superior
by Divine authority to that of the priesthood (Magnesians
6 and 13; Smyrnĉans 8; Trallians
3)
- the unity of the Church
(Trallians
6; Philadelphians
3; Magnesians 13)
- the holiness of the Church (Smyrnĉans,
Ephesians,
Magnesians,
Trallians
and Romans)
- the catholicity
of the Church (Smyrnĉans
8); the infallibility
of the Church (Philadelphians
3; Ephesians
16-17)
- the doctrine of the Eucharist
(Smyrnĉans
8), which word we find for the first time applied to the Blessed Sacrament,
just as in Smyrnĉans 8, we meet for the first time
the phrase "Catholic Church", used to designate all Christians
- the Incarnation (Ephesians 18);
the supernatural virtue of virginity, already
much esteemed and made the subject of a vow (Polycarp 5)
- the religious character of matrimony (Polycarp 5)
- the value of united prayer (Ephesians 13)
- the primacy of the See of Rome (Introduction to Romans
13)
He, moreover, denounces in principle the Protestant doctrine of private judgment
in matters of religion (Philadelphians 3),
The heresy against which he
chiefly inveighs is Docetism. Neither do the Judaizing heresies escape his
vigorous condemnation.
Editions
The four letters found in Latin only
were printed in Paris
in 1495. The common Latin version of eleven
letters, together with a letter of Polycarp
and some reputed works of Dionysius the Areopagite, was printed in Paris, 1498, by Lefèvre
d'Etaples. Another edition of the seven genuine
and six spurious letters, including the one to Mary
of Cassobola, was
edited by Symphorianus Champerius,
of Lyons, Paris, 1516. Valentinus Paceus published a Greek
edition of twelve letters (Dillingen, 1557). A
similar edition was brought out at Zurich, in 1559, by Andrew
Gesner; a Latin
version of the work of John Brunner
accompanied it. Both of these editions made use of the Greek text of the long recension. In 1644 Archbishop Ussher edited the letters ofIgnatius and Polycarp. The common Latin
version, with three of the four Latin
letters, was subjoined. It also contained the Latin
version of eleven letters taken from Ussher's
manuscripts. In 1646 Isaac
Voss published at Amsterdam
an edition from the famous Medicean
Codex at Florence.
Ussher brought out another edition in 1647, entitled "Appendix Ignatiana", which contained the Greek text of the
genuine epistles and the Latin
version of the "Martyrium Ignatii".
In 1672 J.B. Cotelier's
edition appeared at Paris,
containing all the letters, genuine and supposititious, of Ignatius,
with those of the other Apostolic
Fathers. A new edition of this work was printed by Le Clerc
at Antwerp, in 1698.
It was reprinted at Venice,
1765-1767, and at Paris
by Migne
in 1857. The letter to the Romans was
published from the "Martyrium Colbertinum" at Paris, by Ruinart, in 1689. In 1724 Le Clerc
brought out at Amsterdam
a second edition of Cotelier's
"Patres Apostolici",
which contains all the letters, both genuine and spurious, in Greek
and Latin versions. It also includes the
letters of Mary of Cassobola and those purporting to be from the Blessed
Virgin in the "Martyrium Ignatii", the "Vindiciae
Ignatianae" of Pearson, and several
dissertations. The first edition of the Armenian version was
published at Constantinople
in 1783. In 1839 Hefele
edited the Ignatian
letters in a work entitled "Opera Patrum Apostolicorum", which appeared at Tübingen.
Migne
took his text from the third edition of this work (Tübingen,
1847). Bardenhewer designates the following as the
best editions: Zahn, "Ignatii
et Polycarpi epistulae martyria, fragmenta" in "Patr.apostol.
opp. rec.", ed. by de Gebhardt,
Harnack, Zahn, fasc. II, Leipzig, 1876; Funk,
"Opp. Patr.
apostol.", I, Tübingen,
1878, 1887, 1901; Lightfoot, "The Apostolic Fathers", part II,
London, 1885, 1889; an English version of
the letters to be found in Lightfoot's "Apostolic
Fathers", London, 1907, from which are taken all the quotations
of the letters in this article, and to which all citations refer.
About this page
APA citation. O'Connor, J.B. (1910). St. Ignatius of Antioch. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert
Appleton Company. Retrieved October 15, 2009 from New Advent: http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07644a.htm
MLA citation. O'Connor, John Bonaventure. "St. Ignatius of Antioch."
The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Robert
Appleton Company, 1910. 15 Oct. 2009 <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07644a.htm>.
Transcription. This article was transcribed for New Advent by Charles Sweeney,
S.J.
Ecclesiastical approbation.
Nihil Obstat. June 1, 1910.
Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal
Farley, Archbishop of New York.
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