On Oct. 17, the Roman Catholic Church remembers the early Church
Father, bishop, and martyr Saint Ignatius of Antioch, whose writings
attest to the sacramental and hierarchical nature of the Church from its
earliest days.
Eastern Catholics and Eastern Orthodox Christians
celebrate his memory on Dec. 20.
In a 2007 general audience on St. Ignatius of Antioch, Pope Benedict
XVI observed that “no Church Father has expressed the longing for union
with Christ and for life in him with the intensity of Ignatius.”
In his
letters, the Pope said, “one feels the freshness of the faith of the
generation which had still known the Apostles. In these letters, the
ardent love of a saint can also be felt.”
Born in Syria in the middle of the first century A.D., Ignatius is
said to have been personally instructed – along with another future
martyr, Saint Polycarp – by the Apostle Saint John.
When Ignatius became
the Bishop of Antioch around the year 70, he assumed leadership of a
local church that was, according to tradition, first led by Saint Peter
before his move to Rome.
Although St. Peter transmitted his Papal primacy to the bishops of
Rome rather than Antioch, the city played an important role in the life
of the early Church. Located in present-day Turkey, it was a chief city
of the Roman Empire, and was also the location where the believers in
Jesus' teachings and his resurrection were first called “Christians.”
Ignatius led the Christians of Antioch during the reign of the Roman
Emperor Domitian, the first of the emperors to proclaim his divinity by
adopting the title “Lord and God.” Subjects who would not give worship
to the emperor under this title could be punished with death. As the
leader of a major Catholic diocese during this period, Ignatius showed
courage and worked to inspire it in others.
After Domitian's murder in the year 96, his successor Nerva reigned
only briefly, and was soon followed by the Emperor Trajan. Under his
rule, Christians were once again liable to death for denying the pagan
state religion and refusing to participate in its rites. It was during
his reign that Ignatius was convicted for his Christian testimony and
sent from Syria to Rome to be put to death.
Escorted by a team of military guards, Ignatius nonetheless managed
to compose seven letters: six to various local churches throughout the
empire (including the Church of Rome), and one to his fellow bishop
Polycarp who would give his own life for Christ several decades later.
Ignatius' letters passionately stressed the importance of Church
unity, the dangers of heresy, and the surpassing importance of the
Eucharist as the “medicine of immortality.” These writings contain the
first surviving written description of the Church as “Catholic,” from
the Greek word indicating both universality and fullness.
One of the most striking features of Ignatius' letters, is his
enthusiastic embrace of martyrdom as a means to union with God and
eternal life. “All the pleasures of the world, and all the kingdoms of
this earth, shall profit me nothing,” he wrote to the Church of Rome.
“It is better for me to die in behalf of Jesus Christ, than to reign
over all the ends of the earth.”
“Now I begin to be a disciple,” the bishop declared. “Let fire and
the cross; let the crowds of wild beasts; let tearings, breakings, and
dislocations of bones; let cutting off of members; let shatterings of
the whole body; and let all the dreadful torments of the devil come upon
me: only let me attain to Jesus Christ.”
St. Ignatius of Antioch bore witness to Christ publicly for the last
time in Rome's Flavian Amphitheater, where he was mauled to death by
lions. “I am the wheat of the Lord,” he had declared, before facing
them.
“I must be ground by the teeth of these beasts to be made the pure
bread of Christ.”
His memory was honored, and his bones venerated, soon
after his death around the year 107.