St
Stephens..
One of the first deacons and the first
Christian martyr; feast on 26 December. In the Acts of the Apostles the name
of St. Stephen occurs for the first time on the occasion of the appointment
of the first deacons (Acts 6:5). Dissatisfaction concerning the distribution
of alms from the community's fund having arisen in the Church, seven men
were selected and specially ordained by the Apostles to take care of the
temporal relief of the poorer members. Of these seven, Stephen, is the first
mentioned and the best known.
Stephen's life previous to this appointment remains for us almost entirely
in the dark. His name is Greek and suggests he was a Hellenist, i.e., one of
those Jews who had been born in some foreign land and whose native tongue
was Greek; however, according to a fifth century tradition, the name
Stephans was only a Greek equivalent for the Aramaic Kelil (Syr. kelila,
crown), which may be the photometry's original name and was inscribed
on a slab found in his tomb. It seems that Stephen was not a proselyte, for
the fact that Nicolas is the only one of the seven designated as such makes
it almost certain that the others were Jews by birth. That Stephen was a
pupil of Gamaliel is sometimes inferred from his able defense before the
Sanhedrin; but this has not been proved. Neither do we know when and in what
circumstances he became a Christian; it is doubtful whether the
statement of St. Epiphanius (Haer., xx, 4) numbering Stephen among the
seventy disciples is deserving of any credence. His ministry as deacon
appears to have been mostly among the Hellenist converts with whom the
Apostles were at first less familiar; and the fact that the opposition he
met with sprang up in the synagogues of the "Libertines" (probably the
children of Jews taken captive to Rome by Pompey in 63 B. C. and freed hence
the name Libertini), and "of the Cyrenians, and of the Alexandrians, and of
them that were of Cilicia and Asia" shows that he usually preached among the
Hellenist Jews. That he was pre eminently fitted for that work, his
abilities and character, which the author of the Acts dwells upon so
fervently, are the best indication.
The Church had, by selecting him for a
deacon, publicly acknowledged him as a man "of good reputation, full of the
Holy Ghost and wisdom" (Acts 6:3). He was "a man full of faith, and of the
Holy Ghost" (vi, 5), "full of grace and fortitude" (vi, 8); his uncommon
oratorical powers and unimpeachable logic no one was able to resist, so much
so that to his arguments replete with the Divine energy of the Scriptural
authorities God added the weight of "great wonders and signs" (vi, 8). Great
as was the efficacy of "the wisdom and the spirit that spoke" (vi, 10),
still it could not bend the minds of the unwilling; to these the forceful
preacher was fatally soon to become an enemy.
The conflict broke out when the cavillers of the synagogues "of the
Libertines, and of the Cyreneans, and of the Alexandrians, and of them that
were of Cilicia and Asia", who had challenged Stephen to a dispute, came out
completely discomfited (vi, 9 10); wounded pride so inflamed their hatred
that they suborned false witnesses to testify that "they had heard him speak
words of blasphemy against Moses and against God" (vi, 11).
No charge could be more apt to rouse the mob; the anger of the ancients and
the scribes had been already kindled from the first reports of the preaching
of the Apostles. Stephen was arrested, not without some violence it seems
(the Greek word synerpasan implies so much), and dragged before the
Sanhedrin, where he was accused of saying that "Jesus of Nazareth shall
destroy this place [the temple], and shall change the traditions which Moses
delivered unto us" (vi, 12 14). No doubt Stephen had by his language given
some grounds for the accusation; his accusers apparently twisted into the
offensive utterance attributed to him a declaration that "the most
Highdwelleth not in houses made by hands" (vii, 48), some mention of Jesus
foretelling the destruction of the Temple and some inveighing against the
burthensome traditions fencing about the Law, or rather the asseveration so
often repeated by the Apostles that "there is no salvation in any other"
(cf. iv, 12) the Law not excluded but Jesus. However this may be, the
accusation left him unperturbed and "all that sat in the council...saw his
face as if it had been the face of an angel" (vi, 15).Stephen's answer (Acts
7) was a long recital of the mercies of God towards Israel during its long
history and of the ungratefulness by which, throughout, Israel repaid these
mercies. This discourse contained many things unpleasant to Jewish ears; but
the concluding indictment for having betrayed and murdered the Just One
whose coming the Prophets had foretold, provoked the rage of an audience
made up not of judges, but of foes. When Stephen "looking up steadfastly to
heaven, saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God",
and said: "Behold, I see the heavens opened, and the Son of man standing on
the right hand of God" (vii, 55), they ran violently upon him (vii, 56) and
cast him out of the city to stone him to death. Stephen's stoning does not
appear in the narrative of the Acts as a deed of mob violence; it must have
been looked upon by those who took part in it as the carrying out of the
law. According to law (Leviticus 24:14), or at least its usual
interpretation, Stephen had been taken out of the city; custom required that
the person to be stoned be placed on an elevation from whence with his hands
bound he was to be thrown down.
It was most likely while these
preparations were going on that, "falling on his knees, he cried with a loud
voice, saying: "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge" (vii, 59). Meanwhile
the witnesses, whose hands must be first on the person condemned by their
testimony (Deuteronomy 17:7), were laying down their garments at the feet of
Saul, that they might be more ready for the task devolved upon them (vii,
57). The praying martyr was thrown down; and while the witnesses were
thrusting upon him "a stone as much as two men could carry", he was heard to
utter this supreme prayer: "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit" (vii, 58). Little
did all the people present, casting stones upon him, realize that the blood
they shed was the first seed of a harvest that was to cover the world
.The bodies of men stoned to death were to
be buried in a place appointed by the Sanhedrin. Whether in this instance
the Sanhedrin insisted on its right cannot be affirmed; at any rate, "devout
men" -- whether Christians or Jews, we are not told -- "took order for
Stephen's funeral, and made great mourning over him" (vii, 2). For centuries
the location of St. Stephen's tomb was lost sight of, until (415) a certain
priest named Lucian learned by revelation that the sacred body was in Caphar
Gamala, some distance to the north of Jerusalem. The relics were then
exhumed and carried first to the church of Mount Sion, then, in 460, to the
basilica erected by Eudocia outside the Damascus Gate, on the spot where,
according to tradition, the stoning had taken place (the opinion that the
scene of St. Stephen's martyrdom was east of Jerusalem, near the Gate called
since St. Stephen's Gate, is unheard of until the twelfth century). The site
of the Eudocian basilica was identified some twenty years ago, and a new
edifice has been erected on the old foundations by the Dominican Fathers.
The only first hand source of information on the life and death of St.
Stephen is the Acts of the Apostles (6:1-8:2).
More about Saint Stephen
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