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Early Christian Martyrs

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Friends are friends no matter what, right? (Pause for a few seconds and reflect) then keep on reading.
Well, you sure hope so. You hope that your friends won’t let you down when you need them most. You
depend on them not to reveal your secrets or make fun of you in a mean way.
Friendships can feel really strong and easy to keep in good times. But the test of a friendship happens
when, for some reason, we’re tempted to betray our friends. If we can stick out the temptation, we
know that our friendship is real.
It’s good to remember that faith is a friendship – a close, trusting friendship with God. We’re loved,
supported, and helped by God all day long. We tell him our troubles and our joys. You and God go
through each day together, and he will be with you for the rest of your life. That’s friendship. That’s
faith.
Sometimes you might be tempted to betray that friendship, just a little bit. You might be embarrassed
to admit that you go to church or pray. You might think it wouldn’t be so bad to hurt someone else’s
feelings – just this one time. You might stop reading the Bible or praying at night because you’ve got
other things to do. You’re not the first to feel that way, you know. And you won’t be the last.
In fact, Christians have been tempted to betray their friendship with God ever since the beginning, in
both big and small ways. And just like any friendship, every time we resist the temptation and stay
faithful to that friendship, our faith grows stronger.
For the first three thousand years of Christianity, the followers of Jesus were under great pressure to
betray their friendship with him. They lived in what was known as the Roman Empire, which extended
from northern Africa all the way up to England at that time. For almost the entire period from A.D. 100
to 313, it was illegal to be a Christian in most of the Roman Empire.
That’s right, illegal – against the law. In our country, you can go to court and go to jail for things like
stealing and killing. In the Roman Empire, you would go to jail for those things, too. But you could be
punished by the law if you were friends with Jesus.
How? Every person in the Roman Empire, no matter what their religion, was supposed to honor the
Roman emperor as a god. If they would do that – once a year burn a little incense in front of a statue
and say, “Caesar is god!” – they were okay and could go on home and mind their own business for
another year.
But of course, Christians refused to do this. They knew there was only one God, and to say anything or
anyone else was a god would be a betrayal of their friendship with God. When they stood true and
when they refused to honor false gods or the emperor as a god, the Christians got into trouble. Big
trouble.
They were put in jail – dark, terrible dungeons. They were sent into exile to desolate islands where they
were forced to work in mines. And worst of all, if they were really stubborn and still wouldn’t deny their
friendship with Jesus, they were put to death.
The Leaders of the Roman Empire did this because they really wanted to discourage others from
following Christianity. They also wanted to provide entertainment for the people of the empire. So
when they executed Christians, they often did it in public, in the middle of huge crowds gathered in
arenas. It was, believe it or not, like a big show.
There are many stories of the deaths of Christians that have come down to us over the centuries. These
Christians who died for their faith were – and still are – called “martyrs,” a word that means
“witnesses.” They’re called witnesses because that’s exactly what they were doing through their
deaths: witnessing to their love for God and their friendship with him – their faith. Some of the the
more well-known stories of martyrs from those early years include the following:
St. Agnes
St. Lucy
St. Cecilia
St. Agatha
St Lucy, St. Agnes, St. Agatha, and St. Cecilia were all young women – perhaps in their early teens- who
all suffered terribly for their faith at different times. The stories that have come down to us say that St.
Lucy lost her eyes during her torture, St. Agnes was beheaded, St. Agatha was placed on hot coals, and
St. Cecilia was suffocated and then beheaded.
St. Timothy and St. Maura were married only twenty days when Timothy, who was in charge of the
sacred boos of his Christian community, was ordered to turn them over. He refused, and his wife,
Maura, was brought to the prison to try to convince him to give in. She wouldn’t cooperate, so both
husband and wife were nailed to a wall of the prison, and, so tradition tells us, it took them nine days to
die.
St. Marcellinus was a priest who was imprisoned during the last major Roman persecution, around A.D.
304. While in prison before his execution, he convinced many of the love of Jesus, including his own
jailer.
There are hundreds – thousands – of other martyrs from these years who endured the most terrible
pain. But the strange thing is, the stories that come down to us about their deaths, even those few
stories recorded by the Romans who killed them, tell us that most of these men, women, and children
who were killed for their faith died with peaceful hearts, sometimes even singing hymns as they were
burned or dragged by animals in front of the cheering crowds. Their friendship with God was very, very
deep.
Over the past two thousand years, many Christians have decided to die rather than betray their
friendship with Jesus. Even today, Christians still suffer martyrdom in some countries. All of these brave
– people speak different languages and wear different clothes, but they all have something important in
common: They are best friends with Jesus, and they can’t imagine turning their backs on him, even if it
means suffering.
You probably know how they feel – you can’t imagine turning your back on your own friends. When
you’re tempted to, you probably just have to imagine how rotten you’d feel if you did, and that’s
enough to set you straight.
Well, when you’re tempted to betray your faith – your friendship with God – remember that feeling.
And remember the martyrs of early Christianity. Just imagine if they had all chosen to deny their
friendship with God instead of staying true.
Would anyone else have bothered to even look into friendship with Jesus if the Christians had betrayed
him? Would it seemed worth living for, if it wasn’t worth dying for?
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