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Erica Galindo
Celebrating Food, Faith and Family
Last edited on: May 2, 2013.

MAY 1, 305 AD, the most powerful man in the world, Emperor Diocletian, stepped down from ruling the Roman Empire.

The Roman government committed ten major persecutions of Christians in the first three centuries, similar to today’s persecution of Christians in atheistic, Communist and Muslims countries where an average of 500 Christians are martyred every day.

When Diocletian lost battles in Persia, his Roman pagan leaders told him it was because they had neglected the Roman gods. Diocletian ordered all military personnel to worship the Roman gods.

Since it had been over a decade since the last persecution, many Christians served in the military, but now they were forced out or into the closet.

With the Christian conscience silenced, Diocletian used the military to force all of Rome to worship pagan gods.

This resulted in the most intolerant, severe persecution of Christians to date, with Diocletian’s military systematically, province by province, arresting church leaders, burning scriptures, destroying churches, cutting out tongues, decapitating and boiling alive.

From Europe to North Africa, thousands were martyred. The faithful cried out in prayer.

Suddenly, Diocletian was struck with a painful intestinal disease and resigned on MAY 1, 305 AD.

Emperor Gelarius continued the persecution, but was also struck with the intestinal disease and died.

Finally, in 313 AD, Emperor Constantine ended the persecution of Christians.

Commenting on Roman persecutions, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan, the Democrat Party’s candidate for President in 1896, 1900, and 1908, with his statue in the U.S. Capitol, stated in his speech, “The Prince of Peace,” (New York Times, September 7, 1913):

“I can imagine that the early Christians who were carried into the Coliseum to make a spectacle for those more savage than the beasts, were entreated by their doubting companions not to endanger their lives. But, kneeling in the center of the arena, they prayed and sang until they were devoured.

How helpless they seemed, and, measured by every human rule, how hopeless was their cause! And yet within a few decades the power which they invoked proved mightier than the legions of the Emperor, and the faith in which they died was triumphant o’er all the land….They were greater conquerors in their death than they could have been had they purchased life.”

Of the Roman Coliseum, President Ronald Reagan stated at the National Prayer Breakfast, February 2, 1984:

“This power of prayer can be illustrated by the story that goes back to the fourth century – the monk [Telemachus] living in a little remote village, spending most of his time in prayer…One day he thought he heard the voice of God telling him to go to Rome…

Weeks and weeks later, he arrived…at a time of a festival in Rome…He followed a crowd into the Coliseum, and then, there in the midst of this great crowd, he saw the gladiators come forth, stand before the Emperor, and say, ‘We who are about to die salute you.’

And he realized they were going to fight to the death for the entertainment of the crowds. He cried out, ‘In the Name of Christ, stop!’ And his voice was lost in the tumult there in the great Colosseum.

And as the games began, he made his way down through the crowd and climbed over the wall and dropped to the floor of the arena. Suddenly the crowds saw this scrawny little figure making his way out to the gladiators and saying, over and over again, ‘In the Name of Christ, stop!’

And they thought it was part of the entertainment, and at first they were amused. But then, when they realized it wasn’t, they grew belligerent and angry. And as he was pleading with the gladiators, ‘In the Name of Christ, stop!’ one of them plunged his sword into his body. And as he fell to the sand of the arena in death, his last words were, ‘In the Name of Christ, stop!’

And suddenly, a strange thing happened. The gladiators stood looking at this tiny form lying in the sand. A silence fell over the Colosseum. And then, someplace up in the upper tiers, an individual made his way to an exit and left, and the others began to follow.

And in the dead silence, everyone left the Colosseum. That was the last battle to the death between gladiators in the Roman Colosseum. Never again did anyone kill or did men kill each other for the entertainment of the crowd.

One tiny voice that could hardly be heard above the tumult. ‘In the Name of Christ, stop!’ It is something we could be saying to each other throughout the world today.”

 

 

 

 

 

William J. Federer is a nationally known speaker, best-selling author, and president of Amerisearch, Inc., a publishing company dedicated to researching America’s noble heritage.

To learn more visit  William Federer

 

 

 

 

 

Featured Image: The Christian Martyrs’ Last Prayer, by Jean-Léon Gérôme (1883).

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