Witness the Voice That Defied an Empire
In AD 107, Syrian bishop Ignatius was marched to Rome to face execution. His crime: refusing to deny Christ. His response: seven letters that changed Christian history.
The earliest surviving Christian witness after the apostles.
Ignatius wrote when the New Testament wasn't compiled, when Christians worshiped in secret and died in arenas. His letters preserve authentic second-century Christianity before councils or creeds.
What You'll Discover:
The first description of bishops, presbyters, and deacons (107-110 AD)The earliest use of "catholic church" in Christian literatureExplicit testimony to Real Presence: "the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ"Radical martyrdom theology: "I am God's wheat, ground by beasts to become pure bread"Ignatius wrestled with questions Christians still face: How do we maintain unity? Who has teaching authority? How much should faith cost?
Perfect for understanding:
How Christianity functioned after the apostlesWhat early Christians believed about the EucharistThe shift from charismatic to episcopal leadershipWhat drove people to choose death over compromiseNo jargon. No assumptions. Just clear answers about who Ignatius was, what he wrote, and why it matters.
The grain of wheat fell in 110 AD. The harvest continues.