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Peter and Jude

  1. Lesson One
    Overview of 1 Peter
    21 Activities
    |
    1 Assessment
  2. Lesson Two
    Something Old, Something New (1 Peter Review)
    18 Activities
  3. Lesson Three
    2 Peter
    16 Activities
  4. Lesson Four
    Jude
    14 Activities
  5. Lesson Five
    Case Study: Peter (1 and 2 Peter Review)
    18 Activities
  6. Course Wrap-Up
    Course Completion
    1 Activity
    |
    1 Assessment
Lesson 1, Activity 10

In | Martyrdom as a Christian Witness

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It would be difficult to overstate the importance of martyrdom for early Christians. The word “martyr” is actually Greek for “witness.” When the Church was an underground community with secretive rituals and gatherings, the most public displays of Christian faith were often the deaths of believers by persecution. It may be hard for us to comprehend today, but many outsiders would have known Christian faith primarily through the way members died for Christ. 

When Christianity was legalized, believers began gathering publicly in cemeteries, near the graves of those believers who had died for their faith. Graveyard chapels were so important to early Christianity that “the original name for Christian churches was ‘martyries.’” First Peter speaks directly to this trajectory of martyrdom in early Christianity in its focus on righteous and redemptive suffering.  

Quote in second paragraph from: Jon Davies, Death, Burial and Rebirth in the Religions of Antiquity, 1999, p. 193.