At one time, a terrible war
broke out against the Churches and spread all over the world like a most
dreadful tyranny, with people being seized from the market place on no other
accusation but that they had become free of delusion and had hastened towards
piety, that they had departed from the religion of the demons, that they had
come to know the true God and worshipped His only-begotten Son. And for what
they should have been crowned and admired and honoured, because of them, those
who embraced the faith were punished and beset with a host of evils.
This was especially true of
those in charge of the Churches. Because the Devil, being evil and terrible in
the matter of plotting such ploys, hoped that if he removed the shepherds, it
would be that much easier to scatter the flocks. But He Who detects the wise in
their cunning, desired to show the Devil that the Churches are not governed by
people, but rather that it is He Himself Who is shepherd of all those who
believe in Him. He allowed this to happen so that the Devil would see that
after the leaders were removed, piety did not decrease, nor did verbal teaching
become silent, but rather increased, and so would learn from the works
themselves that all of our affairs are not merely human but that the root of
our teaching is in the heavens. Also that it is God Who guides the Churches
everywhere, and that if you fight against Him, it is not possible for you to
emerge victorious.
This was not the only evil
worked by the Devil; he also added another, no less great. He did not allow the
bishops to be slaughtered in the towns where they were overseers, but had them
murdered after being taken to a foreign town. He did this so that they would be
bereft of friends and also in the hope that the rigours of the journey would
render them weaker. This is what he did in the case of this blessed man also.
Because from our city [Antioch] he had him hauled off to Rome, taking the
longest route, in the hope that the length of the journey and the great number
of days would weaken his resolve. What the Devil did not know was that
[Ignatios], who had Jesus as companion and fellow-traveller on the long
journey, became even stronger, provided greater proof of the power of God that
was with him and welded the Churches together even more firmly together.
Because people flocked from everywhere to the towns which lay on his route to
fortify God’s athlete and sent him off with plenty of supplies, competing with
him in prayers and supplications.
And the towns and churches
themselves received more than a little comfort, seeing the martyr running
towards death with such great willingness, as much as it was natural for anyone
who had been invited to the heavenly palace. From his works themselves, that is
from his eagerness and great joy, they realized that it was not death towards
which he was hastening, but rather some departure, a transposition and an
elevation to the heavens. And he taught this in every town he passed through,
with his words and deeds. When the Jews had Paul sent to Rome in chains, they
thought they were sending him to his death, but in fact he became a teacher to
the Jews who were living there. The same thing happened in the case of
Ignatios, to a very great extent. Because he became wonderful not only to those
who lived in Rome but also in the intervening cities, convincing them to scorn
the present life, not to take appearances seriously, to desire the things of
the future, to aim at the heavens and not to give any weight to the evils of
this present life.
Teaching them this, then, and
much else besides, with his own works, and instructing them, he walked as it
were like a sun about to rise from the east and hastening to the west, although
even more bright than that. Because the sun travels across the sky, shedding
perceptible light, whereas Ignatios shone back here below, filling souls with
the mental light of his teaching. And, of course, when the sun reaches the
western parts, it hides and night falls immediately, while Ignatios, when he
reached the parts of the west rose even brighter, since he also benefitted
hugely all those he encountered on his journey and, when he reached Rome, he
taught the way of devotion there, too.
This is why God permitted him
to end his life there, so that his death would be instructive to the
inhabitants of the city. By the grace of God you [the people of Antioch] did
not need any such proof at that time, because you were already firmly rooted in
the faith, but the residents of Rome required a great deal of help, because
there was still much impiety there. This is why Peter and Paul, and after them
Ignatios, were all sacrificed there. One reason was that, since the city had
been defiled by the blood offered to idols, it would be purified by the blood
of these martyrs. The other reason was to prove to them in practice the
resurrection of the crucified Christ, persuading the inhabitants of Rome that
it would not be possible to scorn the present life with such happy abandon
unless they were convinced that they would ascend to the crucified Christ and
would see him in the heavens.
Source: http://pemptousia.com
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