Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Justin Martyr
Christian apologist, born at Flavia Neapolis, about A.D. 100, converted to
Christianity about A.D. 130, taught and defended the Christian religion in Asia
Minor and at Rome, where he suffered martyrdom about the year 165. Two
Apologies
bearing his name and his Dialogue with the Jew Tryphon
have come
down to us. Leo XIII had a Mass and an Office composed in his honour and set his
feast for 14 April.
LIFE
Among the Fathers of the second century his life is the best known, and from
the most authentic documents. In both Apologies
and in his Dialogue
he gives
many personal details, e.g. about his studies in philosophy and his conversion;
they are not, however, an autobiography, but are partly idealized, and it is
necessary to distinguish in them between poetry and truth; they furnish us
however with several precious and reliable clues. For his martyrdom we have
documents of undisputed authority. In the first line of his Apology
he calls
himself Justin, the son of Priscos, son of Baccheios, of Flavia Neapolis, in
Palestinian Syria
. Flavia Neapolis, his native town, founded by Vespasian (A.D.
72), was built on the site of a place called Mabortha, or Mamortha, quite near
Sichem (Guérin, Samarie
, I, Paris, 1874, 390-423; Schürer, History of the
Jewish People
, tr., I, Edinburgh, 1885). Its inhabitants were all, or for the
most part, pagans. The names of the father and grandfather of Justin suggest a
pagan origin, and he speaks of himself as uncircumcised (Dialogue, xxviii). The
date of his birth is uncertain, but would seem to fall in the first years of the
second century. He received a good education in philosophy, an account of which
he gives us at the beginning of his Dialogue with the Jew Tryphon
; he placed
himself first under a Stoic, but after some time found that he had learned
nothing about God and that in fact his master had nothing to teach him on the
subject. A Peripatetic whom he then found welcomed him at first but afterwards
demanded a fee from him; this proved that he was not a philosopher. A
Pythagorean refused to teach him anything until he should have learned music,
astronomy, and geometry. Finally a Platonist arrived on the scene and for some
time delighted Justin. This account cannot be taken too literally; the facts
seem to be arranged with a view to showing the weakness of the pagan
philosophies and of contrasting them with the teachings of the Prophets and of
Christ. The main facts, however, may be accepted; the works of Justin seem to
show just such a philosophic development as is here described, Eclectic, but
owing much to Stoicism and more to Platonism. He was still under the charm of
the Platonistic philosophy when, as he walked one day along the seashore, he met
a mysterious old man; the conclusion of their long discussion was that he soul
could not arrive through human knowledge at the idea of God, but that it needed
to be instructed by the Prophets who, inspired by the Holy Ghost, had known God
and could make Him known (Dialogue
, iii, vii; cf. Zahm, Dichtung and Wahrheit
in Justins Dialog mit dem Juden Trypho
in Zeitschr. für Kirchengesch.
, VIII,
1885-1886, 37-66).
The Apologies
throw light on another phase of the conversion of Justin:
When I was a disciple of Plato
, he writes, hearing the accusations made
against the Christians and seeing them intrepid in the face of death and of all
that men fear, I said to myself that it was impossible that they should be
living in evil and in the love of pleasure
(II Apol., xviii, 1). Both accounts
exhibit the two aspects of Christianity that most strongly influenced St. Justin;
in the Apologies
he is moved by its moral beauty (I Apol., xiv), in the
Dialogue
by its truth. His conversion must have taken place at the latest
towards A.D. 130, since St. Justin places during the war of Bar-Cocheba (132-135)
the interview with the Jew Tryphon, related in his Dialogue
. This interview is
evidently not described exactly as it took place, and yet the account cannot be
wholly fictitious. Tryphon, according to Eusebius (Hist. eccl., IV, xviii, 6),
was the best known Jew of that time
, which description the historian may have
borrowed from the introduction to the Dialogue
, now lost. It is possible to
identify in a general way this Tryphon with the Rabbi Tarphon often mentioned in
the Talmud (Schürer, Gesch. d. Jud. Volkes
, 3rd ed., II, 377 seq., 555 seq.,
cf., however, Herford, Christianity in Talmud and Midrash
, London, 1903, 156).
The place of the interview is not definitely told, but Ephesus is clearly enough
indicated; the literary setting lacks neither probability nor life, the chance
meetings under the porticoes, the groups of curious onlookers who stop a while
and then disperse during the inteviews, offer a vivid picture of such
extemporary conferences. St. Justin lived certainly some time at Ephesus; the
Acts of his martyrdom tell us that he went to Rome twice and lived near the
baths of Timothy with a man named Martin
. He taught school there, and in the
aforesaid Acts of his martyrdom we read of several of his disciples who were
condemned with him.
In his second Apology
(iii) Justin says: I, too, expect to be persecuted
and to be crucified by some of those whom I have named, or by Crescens, that
friend of noise and of ostentation.
Indeed Tatian relates (Discourse, xix) that
the Cynic philosopher Crescens did pursue him and Justin; he does not tell us
the result and, moreover, it is not certain that the Discourse
of Tatian was
written after the death of Justin. Eusebius (Hist. eccl., IV, xvi, 7, 8) says
that it was the intrigues of Crescens which brought about the death of Justin;
this is credible, but not certain; Eusebius has apparently no other reason for
affirming it than the two passages cited above from Justin and Tatian. St.
Justin was condemned to death by the prefect, Rusticus, towards A.D. 165, with
six companions, Chariton, Charito, Evelpostos, Pæon, Hierax, and Liberianos. We
still have the authentic account of their martyrdom (Acta SS.
, April, II,
104-19; Otto, Corpus Apologetarum
, III, Jena, 1879, 266-78; P. G., VI,
1565-72). The examination ends as follows:
The Prefect Rusticus says: Approach and sacrifice, all of you, to the gods. Justin says: No one in his right mind gives up piety for impiety. The Prefect Rusticus says: If you do not obey, you will be tortured without mercy. Justin replies: That is our desire, to be tortured for Our Lord, Jesus Christ, and so to be saved, for that will give us salvation and firm confidence at the more terrible universal tribunal of Our Lord and Saviour. And all the martyrs said: Do as you wish; for we are Christians, and we do not sacrifice to idols. The Prefect Rusticus read the sentence: Those who do not wish to sacrifice to the gods and to obey the emperor will be scourged and beheaded according to the laws. The holy martyrs glorifying God betook themselves to the customary place, where they were beheaded and consummated their martyrdom confessing their Saviour.
WORKS
Justin was a voluminous and important writer. He himself mentions a Treatise
against Heresy
(I Apology, xxvi, 8); St. Irenæus (Adv. Hær., IV, vi, 2) quotes
a Treatise against Marcion
which may have been only a part of the preceding
work. Eusebius mentions both (Hist. eccl., IV, xi, 8-10), but does not seem to
have read them himself; a little further on (IV, xviii) he gives the following
list of Justin's works: Discourse in favour of our Faith to Antoninus Pius, to
his sons, and to the Roman Senate
; an Apology
addressed to Marcus Aurelius;
Discourse to the Greeks
; another discourse called A Refutation
; Treatise on
the Divine Monarchy
; a book called The Psalmist
; Treatise on the soul
;
Dialogue against the Jews
, which he had in the city of Ephesus with Tryphon,
the most celebrated Israelite of that time. Eusebius adds that many more of his
books are to be found in the hands of the brethren. Later writers add nothing
certain to this list, itself possibly not altogether reliable. There are extant
but three works of Justin, of which the authenticity is assured: the two
Apologies
and the Dialogue
. They are to be found in two manuscripts: Paris
gr. 450, finished on 11 September, 1364; and Claromont. 82, written in 1571,
actually at Cheltenham, in the possession of M.T.F. Fenwick. The second is only
a copy of the first, which is therefore our sole authority; unfortunately this
manuscript is very imperfect (Harnack, Die Ueberlieferung der griech.
Apologeten
in Texte and Untersuchungen
, I, Leipzig, 1883, i, 73-89;
Archambault, Justin, Dialogue a vec Tryphon
, Paris, 1909, p. xii-xxxviii).
There are many large gaps in this manuscript, thus II Apol., ii, is almost
entirely wanting, but it has been found possible to restore the manuscript text
from a quotation of Eusebius (Hist. eccl., IV, xvii). The Dialogue
was
dedicated to a certain Marcus Pompeius (exli, viii); it must therefore have been
preceded by a dedicatory epistle and probably by an introduction or preface;
both are lacking. In the seventy-fourth chapter a large part must also be
missing, comprising the end of the first book and the beginning of the second
(Zahn, Zeitschr. f. Kirchengesch.
, VIII, 1885, 37 sq., Bardenhewer, Gesch.
der altkirchl. Litter.
, I, Freiburg im Br., 1902, 210). There are other less
important gaps and many faulty transcriptions. There being no other manuscript,
the correction of this one is very difficult; conjectures have been often quite
unhappy, and Krüger, the latest editor of the Apology
, has scarsely done more
than return to the text of the manuscript.
In the manuscript the three works are found in the following order: second
Apology
, first Apology
, the Dialogue
. Dom Maran (Paris, 1742)
re-established the original order, and all other editors have followed him.
There could not be as a matter of fact any doubt as to the proper order of the
Apologies
, the first is quoted in the second (iv, 2; vi, 5; viii, 1). The form
of these references shows that Justin is referring, not to a different work, but
to that which he was then writing (II Apol., ix, 1, cf. vii, 7; I Apol., lxiii,
16, cf. xxxii, 14; lxiii, 4, cf. xxi,1;lxi, 6, cf. lxiv, 2). Moreover, the
second Apology
is evidently not a complete work independent of the first, but
rather an appendix, owing to a new fact that came to the writer's knowledge, and
which he wished to utilize without recasting both works. It has been remarked
that Eusebius often alludes to the second Apology
as the first (Hist. eccl.,
IV, viii, 5; IV, xvii, 1), but the quotations from Justin by Eusebius are too
inexact for us to attach much value to this fact (cf. Hist. eccl., IV, xi, 8;
Bardenhewer, op. cit., 201). Probably Eusebius also erred in making Justin write
one apology under Antoninus (161) and another under Marcus Aurelius. The second
Apology
, known to no other author, doubtless never existed (Bardenhewer, loc.
cit.; Harnack, Chronologie der christl. Litter.
, I, Leipzig, 1897, 275). The
date of the Apology
cannot be determined by its dedication, which is not
certain, but can be established with the aid of the following facts: it is 150
years since the birth of Christ (I, xlvi, 1); Marcion has already spread abroad
his error (I, xxvi, 5); now, according to Epiphanius (Hæres., xlii, 1), he did
not begin to teach until after the death of Hyginus (A.D. 140). The Prefect of
Egypt, Felix (I, xxix, 2), occupied this charge in September, 151, probably from
150 to about 154 (Grenfell-Hunt, Oxyrhinchus Papyri
, II, London, 1899, 163,
175; cf. Harnack, Theol. Literaturzeitung
, XXII, 1897, 77). From all of this
we may conclude that the Apology
was written somewhere between 153 and 155.
The second Apology
, as already said, is an appendix to the first and must have
been written shortly afterwards. The Prefect Urbinus mentioned in it was in
charge from 144 to 160. The Dialogue
is certainly later than the Apology
to
which it refers (Dial.
, cxx, cf. I Apol.
, xxvi); it seems, moreover, from
this same reference that the emperors to whom the Apology
was addressed were
still living when the Dialogue
was written. This places it somewhere before
A.D. 161, the date of the death of Antoninus.
The Apology
and the Dialogue
are difficult to analyse, for Justin's
method of composition is free and capricious, and defies our habitual rules of
logic. The content of the first Apology
(Viel, Justinus des Phil.
Rechtfertigung
, Strasburg, 1894, 58 seq.) is somewhat as follows:
- i-iii: exordium to the emperors: Justin is about to enlighten them and free himself of responsibility, which will now be wholly theirs.
- iv-xii: first part or introduction:
- the anti-Christian procedure is iniquitous: they persecute in the Christians a name only (iv, v);
- Christians are neither Atheists nor criminals (vi, vii);
- they allow themselves to be killed rather than deny their God (viii);
- they refuse to adore idols (ix, xii);
- conclusion (xii).
- xiii-lxvii: Second part (exposition and demonstration of Christianity):
- Christians adore the crucified Christ, as well as God (xiii);
- Christ is their Master; moral precepts (xiv-xvii);
- the future life, judgement, etc. (xviii-xx).
- Christ is the Incarnate Word (xxi-lx);
- comparison with pagan heroes, Hermes, Æsculapius, etc. (xxi-xxii);
- superiority of Christ and of Christianity before Christ (xlvi).
- The similarities that we find in the pagan worship and philosophy come from the devils (liv-lx).
- Description of Christian worship: baptism (lxi);
- the Eucharist (lxv-lxvi);
- Sunday-observance (lxvii).
Second Apology
:
- Recent injustice of the Prefect Urbinus towards the Christians (i-iii).
- Why it is that God permits these evils: Providence, human liberty, last judgement (iv-xii).
The Dialogue
is much longer than the two apologies taken together (Apol.
I and II in P.G., VI, 328-469; Dial.
, ibid., 472-800), the abundance of
exegetical discussions makes any analysis particularly difficult. The following
points are noteworthy:
- i-ix. Introduction: Justin gives the story of his philosophic education and of this conversion. One may know God only through the Holy Ghost; the soul is not immortal by its nature; to know truth it is necessary to study the Prophets.
- x-xxx: On the law. Tryphon reproaches the Christians for not observing the law. Justin replies that according to the Prophets themselves the law should be abrogated, it had only been given to the Jews on account of their hardness. Superiority of the Christian circumcision, necessary even for the Jews. The eternal law laid down by Christ.
- xxxi-cviii: On Christ: His two comings (xxxi sqq.); the law a figure of Christ (xl-xlv); the Divinity and the pre-existence of Christ proved above all by the Old Testament apparitions (theophanies) (lvi-lxii); incarnation and virginal conception (lxv sqq.); the death of Christ foretold (lxxxvi sqq.); His resurrection (cvi sqq.).
- cviii to the end: On the Christians. The conversion of the nations foretold
by the Prophets (cix sqq.); Christians are a holier people than the Jews (cxix
sqq.); the promises were made to them (cxxi); they were prefigured in the Old
Testament (cxxxiv sqq.). The
Dialogue
concludes with wishes for the conversion of the Jews.
Besides these authentic works we possess others under Justin's name that are doubtful or apocryphal.
On the Resurrection
(for its numerous fragments see Otto,Corpus Apolog.
, 2nd ed., III, 210-48 and theSacra Parallela
, Holl,Fragmente vornicänischer Kirchenväter aus den Sacra Parallela
inTexte und Untersuchungen
, new series, V, 2, Leipzig, 1899, 36-49). The treatise from which these fragments are taken was attributed to St. Justin by St. Methodius (early fourth century) and was quoted by St. Irenæus and Tertullian, who do not, however, name the author. The attribution of the fragments to Justin is therefore probable (Harnack,Chronologie
, 508; Bousset,Die Evangeliencitaten Justins
, Göttingen, 1891, 123sq.; archambault,Le témoignage de l'ancienne littérature Chrétienne sur l'authenticité d'un traité sur la resurrection attribué à Justin l'Apologiste
inRevue de Philologie
, XXIX, 1905, 73-93). The chief interest of these fragments consists in the introduction, where is explained with much force the transcendent nature of faith and the proper nature of its motives.A Discourse to the Greeks
(Otto, op. cit., III, 1, 2, 18), an apocryphal tract, dated by Harnack (Sitzungsberichte der k. preuss. Akad. d. Wiss. zu Berlin, 1896, 627-46), about A.D. 180-240. Later it was altered and enlarged in Syriac: text and English translation by Cureton,Spicileg. Syr.
, London, 1855, 38-42, 61-69.Exhortation to the Greeks
(Otto, op. cit., 18-126). The authenticity of this has been defended without success by Widman (Die Echtheit der Mahnrede Justins an die Heiden
, Mainz, 1902); Puech,Sur le logos parainetikos attribué à Justin
inMélanges Weil
, Paris, 1898, 395-406, dates it about 260-300, but most critics say, with more probability, A.D. 180-240 (Gaul,Die Abfassungsverhältnisse der pseudojustinischen Cohortatio ad Græcos
, Potsdam, 1902).On Monarchy
(Otto, op. cit., 126-158), tract of uncertain date, in which are freely quoted Greek poets altered by some Jew.Exposition of the Faith
(Otto, op. cit., IV, 2-66), a dogmatic treatise on the Trinity and the Incarnation preserved in two copies the longer of which seems the more ancient. It is quoted for the first time by Leontius of Byzantium (d. 543) and refers to the Christological discussions of the fifth century; it seems, therefore, to date from the second half of that century.Letter to Zenas and Serenus
(Otto, op. cit., 66-98), attributed by Batiffol inRevue Biblique
, VI, 1896, 114-22, to Sisinnios, the Novatian Bishop of Constantinople about A.D. 400.Answers to the Orthodox.
The Christian's Questions to the Greeks.
The Greek's Questions to the Christians.
Refutation of certain Aristotelean theses
(Otto, op. cit., IV, 100-222; V, 4-366).
The Answers to the Orthodox
was re-edited in a different and more primitive
form by Papadopoulos-Kerameus (St. Petersburg, 1895), from a Constantinople
manuscript which ascribed the work to Theodoret. Though this ascription was
adopted by the editor, it has not been generally accepted. Harnack has studied
profoundly these four books and maintains, not without probability, that they
are the work of Diodorus of Tarsus (Harnack, Diodor von Tarsus., vier
pseudojustinische Schriften als Eigentum Diodors nachgewiesen
in Texte und
Untersuch.
, XII, 4, Leipzig, 1901).
DOCTRINE
Justin and Philosophy
The only pagan quotations to be found in Justin's works are from Homer,
Euripides, Xenophon, Menander, and especially Plato (Otto, II, 593 sq.). His
philosophic development has been well estimated by Purves (The Testimony of
Justin Martyr to early Christianity
, London, 1882, 132): He appears to have
been a man of moderate culture. He was certainly not a genius nor an original
thinker.
A true eclectic, he draws inspiration from different systems,
especially from Stoicism and Platonism. Weizsäcker (Jahrbücher f. Protest.
Theol., XII, 1867, 75) thought he recognized a Peripatetic idea, or inspiration,
in his conception of God as immovable above the heavens (Dial., cxxvii); it is
much more likely an idea borrowed from Alexandrian Judaism, and one which
furnished a very efficacious argument to Justin in his anti-Jewish polemic. In
the Stoics Justin admires especially their ethics (II Apol., viii, 1); he
willingly adopts their theory of a universal conflagration (ekpyrosis). In I
Apol., xx, lx; II, vii, he adopts, but at the same time transforms, their
concept of the seminal Word (logos spermatikos). However, he condemns their
Fatalism (II Apol., vii) and their Atheism (Dial., ii). His sympathies are above
all with Platonism. He likes to compare it with Christanity; apropos of the last
judgment, he remarks, however (I Apol., viii, 4), that according to Plato the
punishment will last a thousand years, whereas according to the Christians it
will be eternal; speaking of creation (I Apol., xx, 4; lix), he says that Plato
borrowed from Moses his theory of formless matter; similarly he compares Plato
and Christianity apropos of human responsibility (I Apol., xliv, 8) and the Word
and the Spirit (I Apol., lx). However, his acquaintance with Plato was
superficial; like his contemporaries (Philo, Plutarch, St. Hippolytus), he found
his chief inspiration in the Timæus. Some historians have pretended that pagan
philosophy entirely dominated Justin's Christianity (Aubé, S. Justin
, Paris,
1861), or at least weakened it (Engelhardt, Das Christentum Justins des
Märtyrers
, Erlangen, 1878). To appreciate fairly this influence it is necessary
to remember that in his Apology
Justin is seeking above all the points of
contact between Hellenism and Christianity. It would certainly be wrong to
conclude from the first Apology
(xxii) that Justin actually likens Christ to
the pagan heroes of semi-heroes, Hermes, Perseus, or Æsculapius; neither can we
conclude from his first Apology
(iv, 8 or vii, 3, 4) that philosophy played
among the Greeks the same role that Christianity did among the barbarians, but
only that their position and their reputation were analogous.
In many passages, however, Justin tries to trace a real bond between
philosophy and Christianity: according to him both the one and the other have a
part in the Logos, partially disseminated among men and wholly manifest in Jesus
Christ (I, v, 4; I, xlvi; II, viii; II, xiii, 5, 6). The idea developed in all
these passages is given in the Stoic form, but this gives to its expression a
greater worth. For the Stoics the seminal Word (logos spermatikos) is the form
of every being; here it is the reason inasmuch as it partakes of God. This
theory of the full participation in the Divine Word (Logos) by the sage has its
full value only in Stoicism (see LOGOS). In Justin thought and expression are
antithetic, and this lends a certain incoherence to the theory; the relation
established between the integral Word, i.e. Jesus Christ, and the partial Word
disseminated in the world, is more specious than profound. Side by side with
this theory, and quite different in its origin and scope, we find in Justin, as
in most of his contemporaries, the conviction that Greek philosophy borrowed
from the Bible: it was by stealing from Moses and the Prophets that Plato and
the other philosophers developed their doctrines (I, xliv, lix, ls). Despite the
obscurities and incoherences of this thought, he affirms clearly and positively
the transcendent character of Christianity: Our doctrine surpasses all human
doctrine because the real Word became Christ who manifested himself for us, body,
word and soul.
(II, Apol., x, 1.) This Divine origin assures Christianity an
absolute truth (II, xiii, 2) and gives to the Christians complete confidence;
they die for Christ's doctrine; no one died for that of Socrates (II, x, 8). The
first chapters of the Dialogue
complete and correct these ideas. In them the
rather complaisant syncretism of the Apology
disappears, and the Christian
thought is stronger.
Justin's chief reproach to the philosophers is their mutual divisions; he
attributes this to the pride of the heads of sects and the servile acquiesence
of their adherents; he also says a little later on (vi): I care neither for
Plato nor for Pythagoras.
From it all he concludes that for the pagans
philosophy is not a serious or profound thing; life does not depend on it, nor
action: Thou art a friend of discourse
, says the old man to him before his
conversion, but not of action nor of truth
(iv). For Platonism he retained a
kindly feeling as for a study dear in childhood or in youth. Yet he attacks it
on two essential points: the relation between God and man, and the nature of the
soul (Dial., iii, vi). Nevertheless he still seems influenced by it in his
conception of the Divine transcendency and the interpretation that he gives to
the aforesaid theophanies.
Justin and Christian Revelation
That which Justin despairs of attaining through philosophy he is now sure of
possessing through Jewish and Christian revelation. He admits that the soul can
naturally comprehend that God is, just as it understands that virtue is
beautiful (Dial., iv) but he denies that the soul without the assistance of the
Holy Ghost can see God or contemplate Him directly through ecstasy, as the
Platonic philosophers contended. And yet this knowledge of God is necessary for
us: We cannot know God as we know music, arithmetic or astronomy
(iii); it is
necessary for us to know God not with an abstract knowledge but as we know any
person with whom we have relations. Thr problem which it seems impossible to
solve is settled by revelation; God has spoken directly to the Prophets, who in
their turn have made Him known to us (viii). It is the first time in Christian
theology that we find so concise an explanation of the difference which
separates Christian revelation from human speculation. It does away with the
confusion that might arise from the theory, taken from the Apology
, of the
partial Logos and the Logos absolute or entire.
The Bible of Justin
A. The Old Testament
For Philo the Bible is bery particularly the Pentateuch (Ryle, Philo and
Holy Scripture
, XVII, London, 1895, 1-282). In keeping with the difference of
his purpose, Justin has other preferences. He quotes the Pentateuch often and
liberally, especially Genesis, Exodus, and Deuteronomy; but he quotes still more
frequently and at greater length the Psalms and the Books of Prophecy - above
all, Isaias. The Books of Wisdom are seldom quoted, the historical books still
less. The books that we never find in his works are Judges, Esdras (except one
passage which is attributed to him by mistake-Dial., lxxii), Tobias, Judith,
Ester, Canticles, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Abdias, Nahum, Habacuc, Sophonias,
Aggeus. It has been noticed, too (St. John Thackeray in Journ. of Theol. Study
,
IV, 1903, 265, n.3), that he never cites the last chapters of Jeremias (apropos
of the first Apology
, xlvii, Otto is wrong in his reference to Jer., 1, 3). Of
these omissions the most noteworthy is that of Wisdom, precisely on account of
the similarity of ideas. It is to be noted, moreover, that this book, surely
used in the New Testament, cited by St. Clement of Rome (xxvii, 5) and later by
St. Irenæus (Eusebius, Hist. eccl., V, xxvi), is never met with in the works of
the apologists (the reference of Otto to Tatian, vii, is inexact). On the other
hand one finds in Justin some apocryphal texts: pseudo-Esdras (Dial., lxxii),
pseudo-Jeremias (ibid.), Ps. xevi (xcv), 10 (Dial., lxxii; I Apol., xli);
sometimes also errors in ascribing quotations: Zacharias for Malachias (Dial.,
xlix), Osee for Zacharias for Malachias (Dial., xiv). For the Biblical text of
Justin, see Swete, Introduction to the Old Testament in Greek
, Cambridge, 1902,
417-24.
B. The New Testament
The testimony of Justin is here of still greater importance, especially for
the Gospels, and has been more often discussed. The historical side of the
question is given by W. Bousset, Die Evangeliencitaten Justins
(Göttingen,
1891), 1-12, and since then, by Baldus, Das Verhältnis Justins des Märt. zu
unseren synopt. Evangelien
(Münster, 1895); Lippelt, Quæ fuerint Justini mart.
apomnemoneumata quaque ratione cum forma Evangeliorum syro-latina cohæserint
(Halle, 1901). The books quoted by Justin are called by him Memoirs of the
Apostles
. This term, otherwise very rare, appears in Justin quite probably as
an analogy with the Memorabilia
of Xenophon (quoted in II Apol.
, xi, 3) and
from a desire to accommodate his language to the habits of mind of his readers.
At any rate it seems that henceforth the word gospels
was in current usage; it
is in Justin that we find it for the first time used in the plural, the
Apostles in their memoirs that are called gospels
(I Apol., lxvi, 3). These
memoirs have authority, not only because they relate the words of Our Lord (as
Bossuet contends, op. cit., 16 seq.), but because, even in their narrative parts,
they are considered as Scripture (Dial., xlix, citing Matt., xvii, 13). This
opinion of Justin is upheld, moreover, by the Church who, in her public service
reads the memoirs of the Apostles as well as the writings of the prophets (I
Apol., lxvii, 3). These memoirs were composed by the Apostles and by those who
followed them (Dial., ciii); he refers in all probability to the four
Evangelists, i.e. to two Apostles and two disciples of Christ (Stanton, New
Testament Canon
in Hastings, Dictionary of the Bible
, III, 535). The authors,
however, are not named: once (Dial., ciii) he mentions the memoirs of Peter
,
but the text is very obscure and uncertain (Bousset, op. cit., 18).
All facts of the life of Christ that Justin takes from these memoirs are
found indeed in our Gospels (Baldus, op. cit., 13 sqq.); he adds to them a few
other and less important facts (I Apol., xxxii; xxxv; Dial., xxxv, xlvii, li,
lxxviii), but he does not assert that he found them in the memoirs. It is quite
probable that Justin used a concordance, or harmony, in which were united the
three synoptic Gospels (Lippelt, op. cit., 14, 94) and it seems that the text of
this concordance resembled in more than one point the so-called Western text of
the Gospels (cf. ibid., 97). Justin's dependence on St. John is indisputably
established by the facts which he takes from Him (I Apol., lxi, 4, 5; Dial.,
lxix, lxxxviii), still more by the very striking similarity in vocabulary and
doctrine. It is certain, however, that Justin does not use the fourth Gospel as
abundantly as he does the others (Purves, op. cit., 233); this may be owing to
the aforesaid concordance, or harmony, of the synoptic Gospels. He seems to use
the apocryphal Gospel of Peter (I Apol., xxxv, 6; cf. Dial., ciii; Revue
Biblique, III, 1894, 531 sqq.; Harnack, Bruchstücke des Evang. des Petrus
,
Leipzig, 1893, 37). His dependence on the Protevangelium of James (Dial.,
lxxviii) doubtful.
Apologetical method
Justin's attitude towards philosophy, described above, reveals at once the
tendency of his polemics; he never exibits the indignation of a Tatian or even
of a Tertullian. To the hideous calumnies spread abroad against the Christians
he sometimes answers, as do the other apologists, by taking the offensive and
attacking pagan morality (I Apol., xxvii; II, xii, 4, 5), but he dislikes to
insist on these calumnies: the interlocutor in the Dialogue
(ix) he is careful
to ignore those who would trouble him with their loud laughter. He has not the
eloquence of Tertullian, and can obtain a hearing only in a small circle of men
capable of understanding reason and of being moved by an idea. His chief
argument, and one calculated to convert this hearers as it had converted him (II
Apol., xii), is the great new fact of Christian morality. He speaks of men and
women who have no fear of death (I Apol., ii, xi, xlv; II, ii; Dial., xxx), who
prefer truth to life (I Apol., ii; II, iv) and are yet ready to await the time
allotted by God (II, iv1); he makes known their devotion to their children (I,
xxvii), their charity even towards their enemies, and their desire to save them
(I Apol., lvii; Dial., cxxxiii), their patience and their prayers in persecution
(Dial., xviii), their love of mankind (Dial., xciii, cx). When he contrasts the
life that they led in paganism with their Christian life (I Apol., xiv), he
expresses the same feeling of deliverance and exaltation as did St. Paul (I Cor.,
vi, II). He is careful, moreover, to emphasize, especially from the Sermon on
the Mount, the moral teaching of Christ so as to show in it the real source of
these new virtues (I Apol., xv-xviii). Throughout his exposé of the new religion
it is Christian chastity and the courage of the martyrs that he most insists
upon.
The rational evidences of Christianity Justin finds especially in the
prophecies; he gives to this argument more than a third of his Apology
(xxx-liii) and almost the entire Dialogue
. When he is disputing with the
pagans he is satisfied with drawing attention to the fact that the books of the
Prophets were long anterior to Christ, guaranteed as to their authenticity by
the Jews themselves, and says that they contain prophecies concerning the life
of Christ and the spread of the Church that can only be explained by a Divine
revelation (I Apol., xxxi). In the Dialogue
, arguing with Jews, he can assume
this revelation which they also recognize, and he can invoke the Scriptures as
sacred oracles. These evidences of the prophecies are for him absolutely certain.
Listen to the texts which I am about to cite; it is not necessary for me to
comment upon them, but only for you to hear them
(Dial., liii; cf. I Apol., xxx,
liii). Nevertheless he recognizes that Christ alone could have given the
explanation of them (I Apol., xxxii; Dial., lxxvi; cv); to understand them the
men and women of his time must have the interior dispositions that make the true
Christian (Dial., cxii), i.e., Divine grace is necessary (Dial., vii, lviii,
xcii, cxix). He also appeals to miracles (Dial., vii; xxxv; lxix; cf. II Apol.,
vi), but with less insistence than to the prophecies.
THEOLOGY
God. Justin's teaching concerning God has been very diversely interpreted,
some seeing in it nothing but a philosophic speculation (Engelhardt, 127 sq.,
237 sqq.), others a truly Christian faith (Flemming, Zur Beurteilung des
Christentums Justins des Märtyrers
, Leipzig, 1893, 70 sqq.; Stählin, Justin
der Märtyrer und sein neuester Beurtheiler
, 34 sqq., Purves, op. cit., 142
sqq.). In reality it is possible to find in it these two tendencies: on one side
the influence of philosophy betrays itself in his concept of the Divine
transcendency, thus God is immovable (I Apol., ix; x, 1; lxiii, 1; etc.); He is
above the heaven, can neither be seen nor enclosed within space (Dial., lvi, lx,
cxxvii); He is called Father, in a philosophic and Platonistic sense, inasmuch
as He is the Creator of the world (I Apol., xlv, 1; lxi, 3; lxv, 3; II Apol., vi,
1, etc.). On the other hand we see the God of the Bible in his all-powerful
(Dial., lxxxiv; I Apol., xix, 6), and merciful God (Dial., lxxxiv; I Apol., xix,
6), and merciful God (Dial., cviii, lv, etc.); if He ordained the Sabbath it was
not that He had need of the homage of the Jews, but that He desired to attach
them to Himself (Dial., xxii); through His mercy He preserved among them a seed
of salvation (lv); through His Divine Providence He has rendered the nations
worthy of their inheritance (cxviiicxxx); He delays the end of the world on
account of the Christians (xxxix; I Apol., xxviii, xlv). And the great duty of
man is to love Him (Dial., xciii).
The Logos
The Word is numerically distinct from the Father (Dial., cxxviii, cxxix; cf.
lvi, lxii). He was born of the very substance of the Father, not that this
substance was divided, but He proceeds from it as one fire does from another at
which it is lit (cxxviii, lxi); this form of production (procession) is compared
also with that of human speech (lxi). The Word (Logos) is therefore the Son:
much more, He alone may properly be called Son (II Apol., vi, 3); He is the
monogenes, the unigenitus (Dial., cv). Elsewhere, however, Justin, like St. Paul,
calls Him the eldest Son, prototokos (I Apol., xxxiii; xlvi; lxiii; Dial.,
lxxxiv, lxxxv, cxxv). The Word is God (I Apol., lxiii; Dial., xxxiv, xxxvi,
xxxvii, lvi, lxiii, lxxvi, lxxxvi, lxxxvii, cxiii, cxv, cxxv, cxxvi, cxviii).
His Divinity, however, seems subordinate, as does the worship which is rendered
to Him (I Apol., vi; cf. lxi, 13; Teder, Justins des Märtyrers Lehre von Jesus
Christus
, Freiburg im Br., 1906, 103-19). The Father engendered Him by a free
and voluntary act (Dial., lxi, c, cxxvii, cxxviii; cf. Teder, op. cit., 104), at
the beginning of all His works (Dial., lxi, lxii, II Apol., vi, 3); in this last
text certain authors thought they distinguished in the Word two states of being,
one intimate, the other outspoken, but this distinction, though found in some
other apologists, is in Justin very doubtful. Through the Word God has made
everything (II Apol., vi; Dial., cxiv). The Word is diffused through all
humanity (I Apol., vi; II, viii; xiii); it was He who appeared to the patriarchs
(I Apol., lxii; lxiii; Dial., lvi, lix, lx etc.). Two influences are plainly
discernible in the aforesaid body of doctrine. It is, of course, to Christian
revelation that Justin owes his concept of the distinct personality of the Word,
His Divinity and Incarnation; but philosophic speculation is responsible for his
unfortunate concepts of the temporal and voluntary generation of the Word, and
for the subordinationism of Justin's theology. It must be recognized, moreover,
that the latter ideas stand out more boldly in the Apology
than in the
Dialogue.
The Holy Ghost occupies the third place in the Trinity (I Apol., vi). He
inspired the prophets (I Apol., vi;xxxi; Dial., vii). He gave seven gifts to
Christ and descended upon Him (Dial., lxxxvii, lxxxviii). For the real
distinction between the Son and the Spirit see Teder, op. cit., 119-23. Justin
insists constantly on the virgin birth (I Apol., xxii; xxxiii; Dial., xliii,
lxxvi, lxxxiv, etc.) and the reality of the flesh of Christ (Dial., xlviii,
xcviii, ciii; cf. II Apol., x, 1). He states that among the Christians there are
some who do not admit the Divinity of Christ but they are a minority; he differs
from them because of the authority of the Prophets (Dial., xlvi); the entire
dialogue, moreover, is devoted to proving this thesis. Christ is the Master
whose doctrine enlightens us (I Apol., xiii, 3; xxiii, 2; xxxii, 2; II, viii, 5;
xiii, 2; Dial., viii, lxxvii, lxxxiii, c, cxiii), also the Redeemer whose blood
saves us (I Apol., lxiii, 10, 16; Dial., xiii, xl, xli, xcv, cvi; cf. Rivière,
Hist. du dogme de la rédemption
, Paris, 1905, 115, and tr., London, 1908). The
rest of Justin's theology is less personal, therefore less interesting. As to
the Eucharist, the baptismal Mass and the Sunday Mass are described in the first
Apology
(lxv-lxvii), with a richness of detail unique for that age. Justin
here explains the dogma of the Real Presence with a wonderful clearness (lxvi,
2): In the same way that through the power of the Word of God Jesus Christ our
Saviour took flesh and blood for our salvation, so the nourishment consecrated
by the prayer formed of the words of Christ … is the flesh and blood of this
incarnate Jesus.
The Dialogue
(cxvii; cf. xli) completes this doctrine by the
idea of a Eucharistic sacrifice as a memorial of the Passion.
The role of St. Justin may be summed up in one word: it is that of a witness. We behold in him one of the highest and purest pagan souls of his time in contact with Christianity, compelled to accept its irrefragable truth, its pure moral teaching, and to admire its superhuman constancy. He is also a witness of the second-century Church which he describes for us in its faith, its life, its worship, at a time when Christianity yet lacked the firm organization that it was soon to develop (see ST. IRENÆUS), but the larger outlines of whose constitution and doctrine are already luminously drawn by Justin. Finally, Justin was a witness for Christ unto death.
PRINCIPAL EDITIONS: - MARAN, S. Patris Nostri Justini philosophi et martyris opera quæ exstant omnia (Paris, 1742), and in P. G.., VI; OTTO, Corpus apologetarum christianorum sæculi secundi, I-V (3rd ed., Jena, 1875-81); Krüger, Die Apologien Justins des Märtyrers (3rd ed., ed., Tübingen, 1904); PAUTIGNY, Justin, Apologies (Paris, 1904); ARCHAMBAULT, Justin, Dialogue avec Tryphon, I (Paris, 1909).
PRINCIPAL STUDIES: - VON ENGELHARDT, Das Christenthum Justins des Märtyrers. Eine Untersuchung über die Anfänge der katholischen Glaubenslehre (Erlangen, 1878); PURVES, The Testimony of Justin Martyr to Early Christianity (lectures delivered on the L.P. Stone Foundation at Princeton Theological Seminary) (London, 1888); TEDER, Justins des Märtyrers Lehre von Jesus Christus, dem Messias und dem menschgewordenen Sohne Gottes (Freiburg im Br., 1906). Works on special points and works of less importance have been mentioned in the course of the article. A more complete bibliography may be found in BARDENHEWER, Gesch. der altkirchl. Litteratur, I (Freiburg im Br., 1902), 240-42.
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