Chapter
XXXII.
After Adrian, the churches
had peace under the rule of Antoninus Pins. Then the fifth persecution began
under Aurelius, the son of Antoninus. And then, for the first time, martyrdoms
were seen taking place in Gaul, for the religion of God had been accepted
somewhat late beyond the Alps. Then the sixth persecution of the Christians
took place under the emperor Severus. At this time Leonida, the father of
Origen, poured forth his sacred blood in martyrdom. Then, during an interval of
thirty-eight years, the Christians enjoyed peace, except that at the middle of
that time Maximinus persecuted the clerics of some churches. Ere long, under
Decius as emperor, the seventh bloody persecution broke out against the
Christians. Next, Valerian proved himself the eighth enemy of the saints. After
him, with an interval of about fifty years, there arose, under the emperors
Diocletian and Maximian, a most bitter persecution which, for ten continuous
years, wasted the people of God. At this period, almost the whole world was
stained with the sacred blood of the martyrs. In fact, they vied with each
other in rushing upon these glorious struggles, and martyrdom by glorious
deaths was then much more keenly sought after than bishoprics are now attempted
to be got by wicked ambition. Never more than at that time was the world
exhausted by wars, nor did we ever achieve victory with a greater triumph than
when we showed that we could not be conquered by the slaughters of ten long
years. There survive also accounts of the sufferings of the martyrs at that
time which were committed to writing; but I do not think it suitable to subjoin
these lest I should exceed the limits prescribed to this work.
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