Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna, leader of the …

Years: 148 - 159

Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna, leader of the church in Anatolia, and a defender of orthodoxy, opposes Marcion and other gnostic teachers.

He visits Rome in 155 to discuss with its bishop the disputed date for the celebration of Easter; the two agree that the Eastern and Western churches will continue their divergent usages.

Following his return to Smyrna, Polycarp is supposedly arrested, tried, and burned to death, his martyrdom aided and abetted by a mob of Jews and pagans. (The oldest known narrative of a Christian martyr, contained in a letter from the church of Smyrna, recounts his trial and execution. Irenaeus will, some decades hence, assert that Polycarp was a disciple of Saint John, making him a living link between the Apostles and the church of the later second century CE. A letter addressed to Polycarp by the martyred Ignatius of Antioch survives, along with one letter—or perhaps a combination of two—by Polycarp to the Philippians that illuminates early Christian doctrine, organization, and use of Scripture.)

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