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It is from veneration of the early martyrs that the whole great business of the cult us of the saints in the Christian Church derives. Whatever the dignity and importance and interest of the saints whose festivals figure in the various calendars of the Church, those feasts must all, without exception, give place to the anniversary of the martyrs in point of antiquity. Already in the second century the annual commemoration of St Polycarp was celebrated in Smyrna from the time of his passion; from the begining of the third century such commemorations were becoming general.
There is nothing surprising about this. For the first three hundred years of their history Christians lived in an atmosphere of martyrdom, of witness by blood. ersecution was not continuous, and it varied in intensity from time to time and from place to place, but the possibility of being called on to die for the name of the Lord Christ was never far away; and that state of affairs, again at times and in places, has recurred ever since.
1 In the Epistles of St Clement of Rome and St Ignatius of Antioch (Longmans Green, 1950), Ancient Christian Writers series, No. 1.
2 A translation of their acts by Ft Edmund Hill, O.P., was printed in the December 1956 number of THE LIFE OF THE SPIRIT.
3 Persumably to soak up the martyr's blood, and so to be treasured as relics.
4 Among several English versions of this, may I recommend that by W. H. Shewring (Sheed and Ward, 1931). It includes a Latin text.