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Histoire ecclésiastique
CHAPITRE XII : CEUX QUI ONT RENDU TEMOIGNAGE A CESAREE EN PALESTINE
[1] Dans la susdite persécution, sous Valérien, trois frères s'illustrèrent à Césarée de Palestine par la confession du Christ, ils furent honorés d'un saint martyre et devinrent la proie des bêtes. C'étaient Priscus, Malchus, et le troisième avait nom Alexandre. On dit qu'ils habitaient à la campagne et qu'ils se reprochèrent d'abord réciproquement leur négligence et leur lâcheté, parce qu'ils négligeaient les prix du combat, quand 333 l'heure présente les distribuait à ceux qui brûlaient de l'amour céleste, et qu'ils ne se hâtaient pas de remporter la couronne du martyre ; après avoir ainsi délibéré sur ce sujet, ils s'élancèrent vers Césarée, allèrent au-devant du juge et obtinrent la fin ci-devant mentionnée. On raconte encore qu'en outre de ceux-ci, une femme dans la même persécution et dans la même ville, soutint le même combat ; le bruit court qu'elle était de l'hérésie de Marcion.1
On ne sait rien de plus sur les trois frères martyrs. - Voy. d'autres martyrs marcionites, IV, xv, 40 ; De mart. Pal., x; cf. V, xvi, 20-21 et 12. ↩
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The Church History of Eusebius
Chapter XII.--The Martyrs in Caesarea in Palestine.
During the above-mentioned persecution under Valerian, three men in Caesarea in Palestine, being conspicuous in their confession of Christ, were adorned with divine martyrdom, becoming food for wild beasts. One of them was called Priscus, another Malchus, and the name of the third was Alexander. 1 They say that these men, who lived in the country, acted at first in a cowardly manner, as if they were careless and thoughtless. For when the opportunity was given to those who longed for the prize with heavenly desire, they treated it lightly, lest they should seize the Crown of martyrdom prematurely. But having deliberated on the matter, they hastened to Caesarea, and went before the judge and met the end we have mentioned. They relate that besides these, in the same persecution and the same city, a certain woman endured a similar conflict. But it is reported that she belonged to the sect of Marcion. 2
Of these three men we know only what is told us in this chapter. ↩
Marcionitic martyrs are mentioned by Eusebius in Bk. IV. chap. 15, and in Martyrs of Pal. chap. 10. In H. E. V. 16, it is stated that the Marcionites as well as the Montanists had many martyrs, but that the orthodox Christians did not acknowledge them as Christians, and would not recognize them even when they were martyred together. Of course they were all alike Christians in the eyes of the state, and hence all alike subject to persecution. ↩