Chapter XXXI.
Then, after an interval,
Domitian, the son of Vespasian, persecuted the Christians. At this
date, he banished John the Apostle and Evangelist to the island of
Patmos. There he, secret mysteries having been revealed to him, wrote
and published his book of the holy Revelation, which indeed is either
foolishly or impiously not accepted by many. And with no great interval
there then occurred the third persecution under Trajan. But he, when
after torture and racking he found nothing in the Christians worthy of
death or punishment, forbade any further cruelty to be put forth
against them. Then under Adrian the Jews attempted to rebel, and
endeavored to plunder both Syria and Palestine; but on an army being
sent against them, they were subdued. At this time Adrian, thinking
that he would destroy the Christian faith by inflicting an injury upon
the place, set up the images of demons both in the temple and in the
place where the Lord suffered. And because the Christians were thought
principally to consist of Jews (for the church at Jerusalem did not
then have a priest except of the circumcision), he ordered a cohort of
soldiers to keep constant guard in order to prevent all Jews from
approaching to Jerusalem. This, however, rather benefited357357 the Christian faith, because almost all
then believed in Christ as God while continuing358358
in the observance of the law. Undoubtedly that was arranged by the
over-ruling care of the Lord, in order that the slavery of the law
might be taken away from the liberty of the faith and of the church. In
this way, Mark from among the Gentiles was then, first of all, bishop
at Jerusalem. A fourth persecution is reckoned as having taken place
under Adrian, which, however, he afterwards forbade to be carried on,
declaring it to be unjust that any one should be put on his trial
without a charge being specified against him.
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