23 February 303 A.D. Emperor Diocletian—“Yield or Suffer”
23 February 303 A.D. Emperor Diocletian—“Yield or Suffer”
Graves, Dan. “Yield or Suffer Said
Diocletian.” Christianity.com. May
2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/301-600/yield-or-suffer-said-diocletian-11629633.html. Accessed 18 Jul 2014.
Barbarians menaced the Roman
empire. Emperor Diocletian instituted a number of reforms aimed at saving the
sprawling political entity. He reorganized the provinces and made the army more
mobile while increasing its size. To battle inflation, he issued a new coinage,
established a uniform system of taxation and implemented wage-price controls.
Recognizing that the empire was
too large for a single man to rule, he divided it into four administrative
units. In doing this he raised to power a man who did Christians much harm.
This man, Galerius, instigated by his mother (a die-hard pagan) prodded the
Emperor to persecute the Christians. With their new customs, Christians were a
threat to imperial unity, he said; and their vast, well-knit organization was
the largest non-governmental body ever seen. Surely they could not be trusted:
their loyalty was to King Jesus rather than to Caesar. Diocletian, who for
eighteen years had never lifted a finger against the faith, followed this
wicked advice. The crackdown began on this day, February 23,
303.
The persecutors dragged off church
leaders and tortured them to death, employing the rack, the scourge, slow
fires, crucifixion, and many other barbarities against them. They burned
Christian books and scriptures. Many Christians died deaths of great courage.
Theodotus, for example, after terrible tortures said as he was being led back
to prison, "It is but just that Christians should suffer for Him who
suffered for us all."
Timothy, a deacon in Mauritania,
allowed his eyes to be put out with red hot irons rather than reveal the hiding
place of scriptures. His wife of just three weeks was then brought in and she
attempted to persuade him to recant for love of her. He refused. Growing
stouthearted, she joined him. After horrendous torture, both were crucified.
In the end, it was the church
which won the showdown. All the powers of Rome could not crush its allegiance
to Christ. Even Galerius eventually left off the persecution. In 311, the dying
emperor issued an edict of toleration. Christians had outlasted the might of
the empire. Their resistance to arbitrary power was instrumental in winning the
right to follow their Christian faith.
Bibliography:
Aland, Kurt. Saints and Sinners; men and ideas in the early
church. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1970.
"Diocletian." The Oxford Dictionary of the
Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A. Livingstone.
Oxford, 1997.
Foxe, John. Foxe's Book of Martyrs. Various
editions.
Ridpath. Encylopedia of Universal History. 1890.
Source of the image.
Scannel, T. B. "Diocletian." The Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton, 1914.
Various encyclopedia and internet articles such as
www.roman-emperors.org/dioclet.htm.
Last updated May,
2007.
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