| Pliny the Younger (61-114 A.D.), nephew and
adopted son of the encyclopaedist, Pliny the Elder, was an advocate,
orator, and politician. Trajan appointed him legate for Bithynia. An
honest and educated man, Pliny published his correspondence; this includes
his letter to Trajan on the subject of Christians and the emperor's reply.
In investigations of Christians I have never taken part; hence I do not
know what is the crime usually punished or investigated, or what
allowances are made ... whether punishment attaches to the mere name apart
from secret crimes, or to the secret crimes connected with the name.
Meantime, this is the course I have taken with those who were accused
before me as Christians. I asked them whether they were Christians, and if
they confessed, I asked them a second and third time with threats of
punishment. If they kept to it, I ordered them for execution; for I held
no question that whatever it was that they admitted, in any case obstinacy
and unbending perversity deserve to be punished. There were others of like
insanity: but as these were Roman citizens, I noted them down to be sent
to Rome... Several distinct cases arose.
As to those who said that they neither were nor ever had been
Christians, I thought it right to let them go, since they recited a prayer
to the gods at my dictation, made supplication with incense and wine to
your statue, which I had ordered to be brought into court for the purpose
together with the images of the gods, and moreover cursed Christ--things
which (so it is said) those who are really Christians cannot be made to
do.
Others said that they had ceased to be Christians, some three years
ago, some a good many years, and a few even twenty. All these too both
worshipped your statue and the images of the gods, and cursed
Christ.
They maintained, however, that the amount of their fault or error had
been this, that it was their habit on a fixed day to assemble before
daylight and recite by turns a form of words to Christ as a god, and that
they bound themselves with an oath, not for any crime, but not to commit
theft or robbery or adultery, nor to break their word, and not to deny a
deposit when demanded. After this was done, their custom was to
depart, and to meet again to take food, but ordinary and harmless food;
and even this (they said) they had given up doing after the issue of my
edict, by which in accordance with your commands I had forbidden the
existence of clubs. On this I considered it the more necessary to find out
from two maidservants who were called deaconesses, and that by torments,
how far this was true; but I discovered nothing else than a perverse and
extravagant superstition.
I therefore adjourned the case and hastened to consult you. The matter
seemed to me worth deliberation, especially on account of the number of
those in danger; for many of all ages and every rank, and also of both
sexes are brought into present or future danger. The contagion of that
superstition has penetrated not the cities only, but the villages and the
country; yet it seems possible to stop it and set it right. At any rate it
is certain enough that the almost deserted temples begin to be resorted
to, that long disused ceremonies of religion are restored ...Pliny
the Younger, Letters 10, 96. |