It was not thus in the days of the Roman Empire. Pagan sports-lovers had become inured to games in which killing was the main purpose. True, the sport of throwing Christians to the wild beasts was cancelled after 313 AD, when the Emperor Constantine decreed legal toleration for Christianity. But another bloody spectator-sport still continued: the gladiatorial games. They were essentially duels to the death in the arena.
The Roman Emperor Honorius, who ruled from 395 to 423 AD, was a Christian, and did much to promote Christianity. But he did not at once take any action regarding this carry-over from bloodthirsty pagan days, the so-called βgamesβ of the gladiators.
One day, however (around 400), a devout monk from the East arrived in Rome. Not much is known about him. His name is usually given as Telemachus, but it was more likely Almachius. Historians doubt whether he was a fact or a fiction or a parable. During his sojourn in the Eternal City, the story goes, he went to a stadium one day to see what these gladiatorial games were all about.
When this gentle Christian ascetic beheld the two current contestants hacking each other to bits as the blood-drunk crowd egged them on, he was horrified. Unwilling to stand it any longer, he rushed down the bleachers, vaulted the arena wall, and, running over to the combatants, tried to separate them before they could do each other further harm. Had not God forbidden man to kill - particularly to entertain a savage mob?
When the mob saw what was happening, they went wild. Not with approval but with fury! Who was this busybody interfering with the fun? They would soon stop his nonsense. The angered spectators surged forward as one many into the arena. Grabbing stones as they went, they pelted the monk until he lay dead where he had come to prevent death.
In the end, however, Almachius triumphed over his executioners and their ilk. News of the tragic event was conveyed to Honorius, and Honorius sided with the victim rather than with his killers. He hailed the monk as a Christian martyr, and in 404 AD he issued a decree forbidding all gladiatorial games forever after.
Related Post
THE SAINTS
- βͺ St. Casimir
- βͺ Saint Remi or Remigius
- βͺ Saint John of God - Confessor, Founder of the Order of Charity
- St. Magdalene of Nagasaki, O.S.A.
- Blessed Magdalene Albrici
- Blessed Lucy Bufalari of Amelia
- Blessed Josephine Mary of Saint Agnes
- St. John Stone, O.S.A.
- Saint John of Sahagun
- Blessed John of Rieti
- Blessed John the Good
- Blessed John and Peter Becchetii of Fabriano
- Blessed Jerome of Recanati
- Blessed John and Peter Becchetii of Fabriano
- Blessed James of Cerqueto, O.S.A.
- Blessed Helen of Udine
- Blessed Gregory Celli
- Blessed Gratia of Kotor
- Blessed Gonzalo of Lagos
- Saint Fulgentius of Ruspe
- Blessed Frederick of Regensburg
- Saint Ezekiel Moreno
- Blessed Clement of Osimo
- Saint Clare of the Cross of Montefalco
- Blessed Christine of Spoleto
No comments:
Post a Comment