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tur;" and in another place, "Modicum tantum superest, ut legibus vestris-extincta idololatria pereat funesta contagio." It will not be thought that we quote this author in order to recommend his temper or his judgment, but to show the comparative state of Christianity and of Heathenism at this period. Fifty years afterwards, Jerome represents the decline of Paganism in language which conveys the same idea of its approaching extinction; "Solitudinem patitur et in urbe gentilitas. Dii quondam nationum, cum bubonibus et noctuis, in solis culminibus remanserunt." Jerome here indulges a triumph, natural and allowable in a zealous friend of the cause, but which could only be suggested to his mind by the consent and universality with which he saw the religion received. "But now," says he, "the Passion and Resurrection of Christ are

" ["Although in some regions the dying limbs of idolatry still quiver, yet the matter is in such a state, that this deadly evil should be utterly cut off from all Christian lands."]

["Very little remains undone, that the deadly contagion of idolatry, being suppressed by your laws, may perish."] De Error. Profan. Relig., c. xxi. p. 172, quoted by Lardner, vol. viii. p. 262.

2 ["Even in the city heathenism suffers solitude. Those who were once the gods of the nations have come to dwell on the lonely housetops with the bats and owls."] Jer. ad Lect. ep. 5. 7.

celebrated in the discourses and writings of all nations. I need not mention Jews, Greeks, and Latins. The Indians, Persians, Goths, and Egyptians, philosophize, and firmly believe the immortality of the soul, and future recompenses, which, before, the greatest philosophers had denied, or doubted of, or perplexed with their disputes. The fierceness of Thracians and Seythians is now softened by the gentle sound of the Gospel; and everywhere Christ is all in all."3 Were, therefore, the motives of Constantine's conversion ever so problematical, the easy establishment of Christianity, and the ruin of Heathenism, under him and his immediate successors, is of itself a proof of the progress which Christianity had made in the preceding period. It may be added, also, "that Maxentius, the rival of Constantine, had shown himself friendly to the Christians. Therefore, of those who were contending for worldly power and empire, one actually favoured and flattered them, and another may be suspected to have joined himself to them, partly from consideration of interest; so considerable were they become, under external disadvantages of all sorts."4 This at least is certain, that throughout the whole transaction hitherto,

Jer. ep. 35 ad Heliod.

Lardner, vol. vii. p. 380.

the great seemed to follow, not to lead, the public opinion.

:—

It may help to convey to us some notion of the extent and progress of Christianity, or rather of the character and quality of many early Christians, of their learning and their labours, to notice the number of Christian writers who flourished in these ages. Saint Jerome's catalogue contains sixty-six writers, within the first three centuries, and the first six years of the fourth; and fifty-four between that time and his own, namely, A.D. 392. Jerome introduces his catalogue with the following just remonstrance: "Let those who say the Church has had no philosophers, nor eloquent and learned men, observe who and what they were who founded, established, and adorned it; let them cease to accuse our faith of rusticity, and confess their mistake."5 Of these writers, several, as Justin, Irenæus, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, Origen, Bardesanes, Hippolytus, Eusebius, were voluminous writers. Christian writers abounded particularly about the year 178. Alexander, Bishop of Jerusalem, founded a library in that city, A.D. 212. Pamphilus, the friend of Origen,

Jer. Prol. in Lib. de Scr. Eccl.

founded a library at Cesarea, A.D. 294. Public defences were also set forth, by various advocates of the religion, in the course of its first. three centuries. Within one hundred years after Christ's ascension, Quadratus and Aristides, whose works, except some few fragments of the first, are lost; and, about twenty years afterwards, Justin Martyr, whose works remain, presented apologies for the Christian religion to the Roman emperors: Quadratus and Aristides to Adrian, Justin to Antoninus Pius, and a second to Marcus Antoninus. Melito, Bishop of Sardis, and Apollinaris, Bishop of Hierapolis, and Miltiades, men of great reputation, did the same to Marcus Antoninus twenty years afterwards, and ten years after this, Apollonius, who suffered martyrdom under the emperor Commodus, composed an apology for his faith, which he read in the senate, and which was afterwards published." Fourteen years after the Apology of Apollonius, Tertullian addressed the work which now remains under that name to the governors of provinces in the Roman empire; and, about the same time, Minucius Felix composed a defence of the Christian reli

Euseb. Hist., lib. iv. c. 26. See also Lardner, vol. ii. p. 666.

7 Lardner, vol. ii. p. 687.

gion, which is still extant; and, shortly after the conclusion of this century, copious defences of Christianity were published by Arnobius and Lactantius.

SECTION II.

REFLECTIONS UPON THE PRECEDING ACCOUNT.

IN viewing the progress of Christianity, our first attention is due to the number of converts at Jerusalem, immediately after its Founder's death; because this success was a success at the time, and upon the spot, when and where the chief part of the history had been transacted.

We are, in the next place, called upon to attend to the early establishment of numerous Christian societies in Judea and Galilee; which countries had been the scene of Christ's miracles and ministry, and where the memory of what had passed, and the knowledge of what was alleged, must have yet been fresh and certain.

We are, thirdly, invited to recollect the success of the Apostles and of their companions, at the several places to which they came, both

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