The Writings of Justin Martyr
By Justin Martyr and Karen O. Bullock
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The Writings of Justin Martyr - Justin Martyr
INTRODUCTION
About A.D. 100, the apostle John lay dying on the island of Patmos, just off the shoreline from Ephesus, or perhaps in one of the houses of that city. Around the southwestern coastline, and beyond Cyprus to the east, an infant was born to his parents near what was once Shechem, about halfway between Nazareth and Jerusalem. His parents called him Justin, Latin for just,
or righteous.
It would be a fitting name.
What links these two figures on the stage of human history? Their involvement with kingdom work—each contributed enormously to the proclamation of the gospel message. The older man walked with Christ in his youth, was the beloved friend of the God-man Jesus, watched Him die and cared for His mother. John led the church in its glory days after the Resurrection, when believers received the Holy Spirit and went to the ends of the Mediterranean world and beyond with the good news.
John wrote firsthand accounts of Christ's life and work, explaining Him as the logos, or Eternal Expression of God. He suffered for his faith and was sentenced to Patmos for refusing to deny his Lord. John finished well. After his death, his writings were found to be valued by the church and inspired by the living God; his volumes became, in time, part of the canonized Scripture.
The baby Justin grew to adulthood in the area that was once called Samaria and sought to find truth in every corner. He was converted to Christianity in manhood, taught for a time in Ephesus, and moved on to Rome, where he gathered believers around him in a philosophic
school. He published as he taught, recognizing all the while that storm clouds of persecution were building across the Roman Empire's vast reaches. The Christian faith was not legal then, nor was it tolerated. The worship of several gods was instituted as law. Pressure mounted, forcing Christians to recant or die.
About the year 150, Justin knew the time was right to defend Christianity's right to exist. He wrote two treatises demanding a fair hearing for those who followed the teachings of Christ. Refusing to flinch at the probable backlash, he boldly addressed these to the senate and the emperor of Rome himself. In these documents, Justin defended both the right of Christianity to exist and the beliefs held by Christians. Justin is the first Christian apologist after the apostolic era.
CHRISTIAN LITERATURE
For purposes of this study, apologists were writers whose mission was to defend the faith. There were other Christian authors from the early church as well. Generally, the writings of this period are classified into four categories:
Classical Apology
Classical apology has nothing to do with feeling remorse for wrongdoing and seeking restitution. Instead, it is a vigorous and noble work. An apologist gives a formal written or spoken defense or justification of some idea, faith, religion, or philosophy.
Edificatory, or Devotional
(c. 100-150)
Apologetic, or Christianity on the Defense
(150-200)
Polemical, or Christianity on the Attack
(185-225)
Scientific, or Systematic Period
(200-254)
The Devotional period consisted of informal writings of faith. These authors used no pagan philosophy, no attacks against nonbelievers. These were simple, practical, discipleship materials used by the church for training and encouragement in the Christian way. They are important historical documents, showing how the churches of that era practiced their faith.
Writers from this period were generally Church leaders: First Epistle of Clement of Rome to the Corinthian Church (c. 95-97); Epistle of Barnabas (c. 119); Epistle of Ignatius of Antioch (c. 107); Shepherd of Hermas (c. 140); and the anonymously authored Didache (c. 70-120).
The Apologetic period writers were more confrontational in their expression. They were all trained in classical philosophy and used philosophical categories to explain the Christian faith to a pagan world. They were often addressed to the state authorities, defending Christians against false charges. They emphasized the teachings of Christ but undergirded their arguments with Old Testament Scripture.
Marcianus Aristides was the first writer of the period. He wrote his Apology in the 140s. Justin Martyr was the second and best known of the group. His two apologies and Dialogue will be the subject of this study.
The third writer, Tatian, was Justin Martyr's student. Tatian was radically opposed to Hellenism, the Greek culture; and his writings reflect this animosity. His Oration to the Greeks was published about 172, and Diatesseron, the first four-Gospel harmony, around 150-60. After Justin's death, Tatian's teachings veered from the true faith somewhat, and he became suspect by the church.
Other apologists were Athenagoras of Athens, who wrote an apology to Marcus Aurelius about 177, and Theolphilus of Antioch.
Aristides, called a philosopher of Athens, addressed his Apology to Emperor Antonius Pius. Aristides' Apology attacked the gods of the Egyptians and Greeks and criticized Greek morality. Second, the Apology developed the rudiments of natural theology to be used in defense of the Christian faith. Aristides called his readers' attention to the careful design of the world and to the fact of motion. He observed that whatever moves is stronger than what is moved. If we follow the chain of motion back to its source, we encounter the first mover. Aristides identified this first mover and designer of the world as the God who is revealed in Christ.
The Polemical period was a time when Christian thinkers went on the offensive against heresies and heretics. In the context of the time, this was imperative in order to maintain pure doctrine. The Roman Empire was awash in a complex, eclectic mix of mythology, mystery religions, pantheons, and empire gods. The religious culture borrowed elements from Christianity and mixed it with non-Christian beliefs and practices. Confusion often reigned.
Polemicists, therefore, aimed toward eliminating heresy. These third-generation writers, most of whom were born pagans, brought with them a strong understanding of other belief systems. The New Testament was emphasized here, and a greater consensus arose as to what constituted orthodox
Christian thought.
Four writers stand out in this category: Irenaeus of Lyons, Five Books Against Heresies (c. 185); Hippolytus, student of Irenaeus, Refutation of All Heresies (c. 200); Tertullian, first to write in Latin and called Father of Western Theology, Prescription Against the Heretics (c. 197); and Cyprian of Carthage, On the Unity of the Catholic Church (c. 255).
The last of the four periods is the Scientific, whose writers attempted to present Christianity systematically. The first of these was Titus Flavius Clemens, best known as Clement of Alexandria. Clement was born about 150. Some believe he was born in Athens. He came to Alexandria shortly after 200 where he lived until his death in 219.
Tatian was a Syrian who was educated in Greek literature and philosophy. Tatian taught that we can know God from His creation. He developed a doctrine of the logos. After Justin's death, Tatian's teachings veered from the true faith, founding a sect, the Encratites. Tatian became a severe ascetic, denouncing marriage as fornication.
Clement agreed with Justin Martyr on a couple of points: (1) Greek philosophy is a preparation for Christian faith. (2) The Greeks borrowed from the Old Testament, at times distorting what they borrowed. Clement saw Greek philosophy as a tool Christians can use to understand what they believe.
A second theologian of this period, Origen of Alexandria, was born around A.D. 185 and died in 255. Origen's volumes number more than six thousand. He wrote the first systematic theology of the church, called On First Principles, and a combination of polyglot, multicolumn versions of Scripture.
WHY STUDY JUSTIN MARTYR?
Justin Martyr is rightly considered the best of the early church apologists. Many of his writings have survived intact from the period immediately following John's Revelation and, therefore, are critical second-century links to the thought and practices of the New Testament church. Justin is not only a defender, however.
He was also a definer, who articulated theological concepts for the church when there was as yet no accepted canon of Scripture. He strongly influenced how second-century Christians defined key theological terms.
He was a describer, opening the windows of second-century churches to observation. Christian worship and the services connected with the rites of baptism and Communion were described with vivid detail, allowing twenty-first century Christians the opportunity to observe the life and development of the church in the second century.
He was a dialoguer—one who interacted with the world in which he lived. He taught, wrote, and witnessed of Christ, sometimes in unusual ways. His Dialogue with Trypho the Jew is perhaps the first autobiographical account of an interfaith encounter outside of the New Testament writings. Justin shared his personal testimony and argued intelligently from Scripture with a Jewish man concerning matters