Below is the list of famous martyrs and why they died, including a peek into their early life and the legacy they have left behind. 1. St. Stephen, Stoned to Death
The authorities found him after an Englishman who pretended to be his friend turned him over. He was detained in prison for one and a half years and later brought to trial for heresy. He was later condemned and was sentenced to death on October 6, 1536, by strangling, and his body was burned to stake.
M any people have been killed for their faith through the ages. Interestingly, the word we use today to talk about someone who is killed for their beliefs, martyr, is the basic Greek word used in the New Testament which is translated “witness.”
Stephen, Stoned to Death Stoning is among the traditional forms of punishment for grave sin. St. Stephen died in 36 AD in Jerusalem, and was the first to suffer that gruesome fate making him the first Catholic martyr. He was a Hellenistic Jew and he was among the first ordained deacons of the Catholic Church.
A Christian martyr is someone willing to face death rather than deny Jesus Christ or his Gospel.
1. St. Stephen, Stoned to Death. Stoning is among the traditional forms of punishment for grave sin. St. Stephen died in 36 AD in Jerusalem, and was the first to suffer that gruesome fate making him the first Catholic martyr. He was a Hellenistic Jew and he was among the first ordained deacons of the Catholic Church.
Joan of Arc was born on January 6, 1412, to pious parents of the French peasant class in the obscure village of Domremy, near the province of Lorraine. At such a young age, she led the French army to victory, believing she was acting under divine guidance.
The Coptic Church (Oriental Orthodox Christian church based in Egypt, Africa and the Middle East) commemorated his martyrdom every August 29, first day of the Coptic Calendar while Eastern Christianity honors him on June 11 and the Roman Catholic Church on August 24. 8.
The Roman empire began conducting public execution of the members of the Catholic Church at least before the middle of the third century. Below is the list of famous martyrs and why they died, including a peek into their early life and the legacy they have left behind. 1. St.
St. Bartholomew converted Polymers, the king of Armenia, to Christianity. Astyages, the kings’ brother, heard about this and he ordered Bartholomew to be sentenced to death. Because according to John Francis Fenion in Saint Bartholomew, Volume 2 of Catholic Encyclopedia, during this time faith was a great crime.
6. St. Andrew, Crucified to Death. St. Andrew was among the first disciples of Christ. He is the older brother of St. Peter and he was born in the village of Bethsaida on the Sea of Galilee between 5 AD and 10 AD. He worked as a fisherman, along with his brother Simon Peter, before he became a disciple of Jesus.
Stephen is considered one of the first Christian martyrs after Christ himself. Stephen was speaking the truth of Jesus Christ. However, his words offended the listeners. They put together a council that brought false-witness to the things Stephen was saying (Acts 6:11-13).
He was an early reformer living before the time of Luther and Calvin (other well-known reformers of Roman Catholicism). Huss was martyred on July 6, 1415. He refused to recant his position of the charges that were brought against him.
He was executed because of his involvement in the July 20 Plot to kill Adolf Hitler. Bonhoeffer staunchly opposed Hitler’s treatment of the Jews.
Because of his refusal to burn incense to the Roman Emperor he was sentenced to burn at the stake. Tradition says that the flames did not kill him so he was stabbed to death.
On the night of January 7, 2010 a group of eight Egyptian Christians were killed as they left their church after celebrating a Christmas mass in Nag Hammadi, Egypt. The motive behind the massacre is disputed, but it was carried out by militant Islamic believers. It may have been done in retaliation for an alleged crime against a Muslim girl by a Christian man. Even if that was the reason, the retaliation was not targeted at the man who committed the crime but at Christians because of their association through religion.
Polycarp was probably a disciple of the Apostle John who wrote the books of the Gospel of John, the three Epistles of John and the book of Revelation. Polycarp may have been one of the chief people responsible for compiling the New Testament of the Bible that we have today.
Most known for his translation of the Bible into English, William Tyndale was a reformer who stood against many teachings of the Catholic Church and opposed King Henry VIII’s divorce , which was one of the major issues in the Reformation. Tyndale’s English translation of the Bible was the first to draw significantly from the original languages.