The Harrowing of Hades

This account of Christ’s descent into Hades and his delivering the righteous who were in the bondage of death is taken from the fourth-century Gospel of Nicodemus, which incorporates the older Acts of Pilate. As early as A.D. 150, Justin Martyr describes this work, as does Tertullian about A.D. 197.

“When Christ on the cross gave up his spirit, then, behold, the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom; and the earth quaked, and the rocks were split, and graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised; and coming out of the graves after His resurrection, they went into the holy city and appeared to many.”

“Suddenly there came a voice like thunder and a spiritual shout: ‘Lift up, your gates, O princes, and be lifted up, you everlasting doors, and the King of Glory shall come in!’ And the Lord of Majesty appeared in the form of a man and lightened the eternal darkness and broke the unbreakable bonds, and His everlasting might brought relief to us that sat in the deep darkness of our transgressions and in the shadow of death of our sins… Then the King of Glory in his majesty trampled on death, and laid hold of Prince Satan and delivered him to the power of Hades, and drew Adam to Himself, to His own brightness.

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Something strange is happening

A sermon for the Great and Holy Saturday, attributed to Melito, second-century Bishop of Sardis. This text is preserved as a very ancient homily and is associated with Melito because of its style and emphasis – notably the dramatic dialogue between Christ and Adam; the typological reading of Genesis, and the strong rhetorical parallelism and cosmic imagery. Most characteristic of Melito, in common with his homily On the Passover, is the preaching of Christ’s redeeming decent into Hades, not based on New Testament citations, but on a typological reading of Genesis. In fact only two New Testament texts appear here: The repeated “Arise let us leave this place” echoes John 14:31 but in a very different context; and the aphorism “Awake, you who sleep, and rise from the dead, and Christ will give you light,” which Saint Paul quotes in Ephesians 5:14, as a quotation he expects his audience to know.

Something strange is happening — there is a great silence on earth today, a great silence and stillness. The whole earth keeps silence because the King is asleep. The earth trembled and now is still, because God has fallen asleep in the flesh, and he has raised up all who have slept ever since the world began. God has died in the flesh and hades trembles with fear.

Christ has gone to search for our first parent, Adam, as for a lost sheep. Greatly desiring to visit those who live in darkness and in the shadow of death, he has gone to free from sorrow the captives Adam and Eve, for he is both God and the Son of Eve. The Lord approached them bearing the cross, the weapon that had won him the victory.

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The Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicity

The Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas is a prison diary describing the martyrdom of three catechumens, Saturus, Saturninus and Revocatus, and two young women, Vibia Perpetua and her servant Felicity, who was pregnant at the time of her arrest and gave birth to a girl shortly before her death in the arena. They suffered martyrdom on March 7, 203, in Carthage. During the lifetime of Saint Augustine (†430), the Martyrdom of Perpetua and Felicitas was held in such high esteem in North Africa that the saint had to warn his listeners not to put it on a level with the canonical Scriptures.

Hilarian the governor said to me: “Spare your father’s grey hairs; spare the infancy of the boy. Make sacrifice for the Emperors’ prosperity.”

“I will not,” I answered.

“Are you a Christian?” Hilarian asked.

And I replied, “I am a Christian.”

My father still stood by me to draw me away from my faith, so Hilarian ordered him to be thrown to the ground and beaten with a rod. My aged father’s suffering grieved me as if I myself had been beaten.

Then Hilarian passed sentence on all of us and condemned us to the wild beasts, and we returned to prison in high spirits.

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The Anti-Marcionite prologues to the Gospels

These prologues are short prefaces to the gospels of Mark, Luke and John, written in the 2nd–3rd century. If, as seems clear, they are based in part on the writings of Irenaeus and Hippolytus of Rome, then they can be no earlier than the third century. If a second-century date is correct, then the prologue to Luke is the earliest surviving text to name Luke as the author of the Acts of the Apostles, as well as being the earliest known text to use this specific title.

Indeed Luke was an Antiochene Syrian, a doctor by profession, a disciple of the apostles: later however he followed Paul until his martyrdom, serving the Lord blamelessly. He never had a wife, he never fathered children, and died at the age of eighty-four, full of the Holy Spirit, in Boetia. Therefore, although gospels had already been written – indeed by Matthew in Judea but by Mark in Italy – moved by the Holy Spirit he wrote down this gospel in the region of Achaia, signifying in the preface that the others were written before his, but also that it was of the greatest importance for him to expound with the greatest diligence the whole series of events in his narration for the Greek believers

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The Martyrdom of Polycarp

The letter of the Church in Smyrna to the church in Philomelium, commonly known as “The Martyrdom of Polycarp,” is the oldest account of Christian martyrdom that has come down to us outside of the pages of the New Testament. It is also our earliest testimony to the veneration of the relics of the saints and the annual liturgical celebration of their day of martyrdom. The arrest and death of Polycarp and other companions are recounted by eyewitnesses.

“Swear by the fortune of Caesar; change your mind; say, ‘Away with the atheists!’”

But Polycarp looked with earnest face at the whole crowd of lawless heathen in the arena, and motioned to them with his hand. Then, groaning and looking up to heaven, he said, “Away with the atheists!”

But the proconsul was insistent and said: “Take the oath, and I shall release you. Curse Christ!”

Polycarp said: “Eighty-six years I have served him, and he never did me any wrong. How can I blaspheme my King who saved me?”

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Letter of Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna, to the Philippians

Brief as it is, Polycarp’s letter gives us the measure of the man. He was simple, humble, and direct. There was nothing subtle or pretentious about him. He does not appear to have had much in the way of formal education. His Greek is without style, without the faintest touch of rhetoric, without learned allusion. He is not versed, as he himself admitted, in the Scriptures, i.e., the Old Testament. But he had meditated deeply on Christian writings; his letter is a veritable mosaic of quotation and allusion to them. He shows familiarity with Matthew’s Gospel, the Acts of the Apostles, the letters of Paul, and 1 Peter, and also quotes often from 1 Clement.

I rejoice with you greatly in our Lord Jesus Christ, because the firm root of your faith, famous from the earliest times, still abides and bears fruit for our Lord Jesus Christ, who endured for our sins even to face death, whom God raised up, having loosed the pangs of Hades. In him, though you have not seen him, you believe with joy unspeakable and full of glory – joy that many have longed to experience – knowing that you are saved by grace, not because of works, namely, by the will of God through Jesus Christ. Therefore, girding your loins, serve God in fear and in truth, forsaking empty talkativeness and the erroneous teaching of the crowd, believing on him who raised our Lord Jesus Christ from the dead.

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