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St. Polycarp
Feastday: February 23
Imagine being able to sit at the feet of the apostles
and hear their stories of life with Jesus from their own lips. Imagine
walking with those who had walked with Jesus, seen him, and touched
him. That was what Polycarp was able to do as a disciple of Saint
John the Evangelist.
But being part of the second generation of Church
leaders had challenges that the first generation could not teach
about. What did you do when those eyewitnesses were gone? How do
you carry on the correct teachings of Jesus? How do you answer new
questions that never came up before?
With the apostles gone, heresies sprang up pretending
to be true teaching, persecution was strong, and controversies arose
over how to celebrate liturgy that Jesus never laid down rules for.
Polycarp, as a holy man and bishop of Smyrna, found
there was only one answer -- to be true to the life of Jesus and
imitate that life. Saint Ignatius of Antioch told Polycarp "your
mind is grounded in God as on an immovable rock."
When faced with heresy, he showed the "candid face"
that Ignatius admired and that imitated Jesus' response to the Pharisees.
Marcion, the leader of the Marcionites who followed a dualistic
heresy, confronted Polycarp and demanded respect by saying, "Recognize
us, Polycarp." Polycarp responded, "I recognize you, yes, I recognize
the son of Satan."
On the other hand when faced with Christian disagreements
he was all forgiveness and respect. One of the controversies of
the time came over the celebration of Easter. The East, where Polycarp
was from, celebrated the Passover as the Passion of Christ followed
by a Eucharist on the following day. The West celebrated Easter
on the Sunday of the week following Passover. When Polycarp went
to Rome to discuss the difference with Pope Anicetus, they could
not agree on this issue. But they found no difference in their Christian
beliefs. And Anicetus asked Polycarp to celebrate the Eucharist
in his own papal chapel.
Polycarp faced persecution the way Christ did. His
own church admired him for following the "gospel model" -- not chasing
after martyrdom as some did, but avoiding it until it was God's
will as Jesus did. They considered it "a sign of love to desire
not to save oneself alone, but to save also all the Christian brothers
and sisters."
One day, during a bloody martyrdom when Christians
were attacked by wild animals in the arena, the crowd became so
mad that they demanded more blood by crying, "Down with the atheists;
let Polycarp be found." (They considered Christians "atheists" because
they didn't believe in their pantheon of gods.) Since Polycarp was
not only known as a leader but as someone holy "even before his
grey hair appeared", this was a horrible demand.
Polycarp was calm but others persuaded him to leave
the city and hide at a nearby farm. He spent his time in prayer
for people he knew and for the Church. During his prayer he saw
a vision of his pillow turned to fire and announced to his friends
that the dream meant he would be burned alive.
As the search closed in, he moved to another farm,
but the police discovered he was there by torturing two boys. He
had a little warning since he was upstairs in the house but he decided
to stay, saying, "God's will be done."
Then he went downstairs, talked to his captors and
fed them a meal. All he asked of them was that they give him an
hour to pray. He spent two hours praying for everyone he had every
known and for the Church, "remembering all who had at any time come
his way -- small folk and great folk, distinguished and undistinguished,
and the whole Catholic Church throughout the world." Many of his
captors started to wonder why they were arresting this holy, eighty-six-year-old
bishop.
But that didn't stop them from taking him into the
arena on the Sabbath. As he entered the arena, the crowd roared
like the animals they cheered. Those around Polycarp heard a voice
from heaven above the crowd, "Be brave, Polycarp, and act like a
man."
The proconsul begged the eighty-six-year-old bishop
to give in because of his age. "Say 'Away with the atheists'" the
proconsul urged. Polycarp calmly turned to the face the crowd, looked
straight at them, and said, "Away with the atheists." The proconsul
continued to plead with him. When he asked Polycarp to swear by
Caesar to save himself, Polycarp answered, "If you imagine that
I will swear by Caesar, you do not know who I am. Let me tell you
plainly, I am a Christian." Finally, when all else failed the proconsul
reminded Polycarp that he would be thrown to the wild animals unless
he changed his mind. Polycarp answered, "Change of mind from better
to worse is not a change allowed to us."
Because of Polycarp's lack of fear, the proconsul
told him he would be burned alive but Polycarp knew that the fire
that burned for an hour was better than eternal fire.
When he was tied up to be burned, Polycarp prayed,
"Lord God Almighty, Father of your beloved and blessed Son Jesus
Christ, through whom we have received knowledge of you, God of angels
and powers, of the whole creation and of the whole race of the righteous
who live in your sight, I bless you, for having made me worthy of
this day and hour, I bless you, because I may have a part, along
with the martyrs, in the chalice of your Christ, to resurrection
in eternal life, resurrection both of soul and body in the incorruptibility
of the Holy Spirit. May I be received today, as a rich and acceptable
sacrifice, among those who are in you presence, as you have prepared
and foretold and fulfilled, God who is faithful and true. For this
and for all benefits I praise you, I bless you, I glorify you, through
the eternal and heavenly High Priest, Jesus Christ, your beloved
Son, through whom be to you with him and the Holy Spirit glory,
now and for all the ages to come. Amen."
The fire was lit as Polycarp said Amen and then the
eyewitnesses who reported said they saw a miracle. The fire burst
up in an arch around Polycarp, the flames surrounding him like sails,
and instead of being burned he seemed to glow like bread baking,
or gold being melted in a furnace. When the captors saw he wasn't
being burned, they stabbed him. The blood that flowed put the fire
out.
The proconsul wouldn't let the Christians have the
body because he was afraid they would worship Polycarp. The witnesses
reported this with scorn for the lack of understanding of Christian
faith: "They did not know that we can never abandon the innocent
Christ who suffered on behalf of sinners for the salvation of those
in this world." After the body was burned, they stole the bones
in order to celebrate the memory of his martyrdom and prepare others
for persecution. The date was about February 23, 156.
In His Footsteps:
When faced with challenges to your Christian life, try a version
of Polycarp's prayer of martyrdom: "Lord God Almighty, Father of
your beloved and blessed Son Jesus Christ, through whom we have
received knowledge of you, God of angels and powers, of the whole
creation and of the whole race of the righteous who live in your
sight, I bless you, for having made me worthy of this day and hour,
I bless you, because I may have a part, along with the martyrs,
in the chalice of your Christ, to resurrection in eternal life,
resurrection both of soul and body in the incorruptibility of the
Holy Spirit. For this and for all benefits I praise you, I bless
you, I glorify you, through the eternal and heavenly High Priest,
Jesus Christ, your beloved Son, through whom be to you with him
and the Holy Spirit glory, now and for all the ages to come. Amen."
Prayer:
Saint Polycarp, sometimes Christ seems so far away from us. Centuries
have passed since he and the apostles walk the earth. Help us to
see that he is close to us always and that we can keep him near
by imitating his life as you did. Amen
©1996 Terry Matz. All Rights Reserved.
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