10. This affection the
Martyrs of Christ contending for the truth did overcome: and it is
no marvel that they despised that whereof they should, when death
was overpast, have no feeling, when they could not by those
tortures, which while alive they did feel, be overcome. God was
able, no doubt, (even as He permitted not the lion when it had
slain the Prophet, to touch his body further, and of a slayer made
it to be a keeper): He was able, I say, to have kept the slain
bodies of His own from the dogs to which they had been flung; He
was able in innumerable ways to have deterred the rage of the men
themselves, that to burn the carcases, to scatter the ashes, they
should not dare: but it was fit that this experience also should
not be lacking to manifold variety of temptations, lest the
fortitude of confession which would not for the saving of the life
of the body give way to the savageness of persecution, should be
tremblingly anxious for the honor of a sepulchre: in a word, lest
faith of resurrection should dread the consuming of the body. It
was fit then, that even these things should be permitted, in order
that, even after these examples of so great horror, the Martyrs,
fervent in confession of Christ, should become witnesses of this
truth also, in which they had learned that they by whom their
bodies should be slain had after that no more that they could do.27342734 Because,
whatever they should do to dead bodies, they would after all do
nothing, seeing that in flesh devoid of all life, neither was it
possible for him to feel aught who had thence departed, nor for Him
to lose aught thereof, Who created the same. But while these things
were doing to the bodies of the slain, albeit the Martyrs, not
frightened by them, did with great fortitude suffer, yet among the
brethren was there exceeding sorrow, because there was given them
no means of paying the last honors to the remains of the Saints,
neither secretly to withdraw any part thereof, (as the same history
testifies,) did the watchings of cruel sentinels permit. So, while
those which had been slain, in the tearing asunder of their limbs,
in the burning up of their bones, in the dispersion of their ashes,
could feel no misery; yet these who had nothing of them that they
could bury, did suffer torture of exceeding grief in pitying them;
because what those did in no sort feel, these in some sort did feel
for them, and where was henceforth for those no more suffering, yet
these did in woful compassion suffer for them.