Vettius Epagathus
Vettius Epagathus. In the early persecutions,
the Christians felt it to be a gross injustice
that a man should be put to death merely
because he acknowledged himself to be a
Christian, and without any investigation
whether there was anything contrary to
morality or piety in the Christian doctrines
or practices. It not unfrequently happened
[LUCIUS]
that a bystander at a trial would
press on the judge the necessity of such an
investigation, whereupon the magistrate
1007would say, I think you must be a Christian also
yourself, and on the advocate's confessing that
he was, would send him to share the fate of
those whom he had attempted to defend.
This befell Vettius Epagathus, a distinguished
Christian citizen of Lyons in the persecution
of a.d. 177. He came forward as the advocate
of the Christians first apprehended, and in
consequence was himself "taken up unto the
lot of the martyrs." The word "martyr," as
at first used, did not necessarily imply that he
who bore witness for Christ sealed his testimony
by death; and Renan (Marc Aurèle,
p. 307) is of opinion that Vettius had "only
the merits of martyrdom without the reality,"
since no mention is made of Vettius in the
subsequent narration of the sufferings of
Christians tortured in the amphitheatre, and,
what Renan thinks decisive, the epistle of the
churches says of Vettius that "he was and is
a genuine disciple of Christ, following the
Lamb whithersoever he goeth." But the
addition "following the Lamb, etc." indicates
that the "is" does not refer to the life of
Vettius in this world, but rather to that which
he enjoyed in company with Christ. Vettius
was probably a Roman citizen, and as such
was simply beheaded instead of undergoing
the tortures of the amphitheatre.
[G.S.]