← LineageFrom the Fathers for · Tuesday, 11 June 2024

Quote in context

Justin Martyr on truth outside the Church

Justin Martyr · Second Apology 13

Whatever has been said well by anyone belongs to us Christians.

Justin Martyr

Plain English

Justin is arguing that the divine Logos has left traces of truth even among pagan philosophers. Christians can recognize truth without surrendering the gospel.

Why it matters

This became a foundational Christian argument for using philosophy, literature, and learning without treating them as ultimate.

Who said it

Justin Martyr

Justin Martyr

c. 100 – c. 165 · Born in Flavia Neapolis, Samaria · Palestine

Justin is the first Christian who looked at Greek philosophy and said 'this is ours too.' Before him, Christians wrote to other Christians. Justin wrote to the Roman emperor explaining why a man who studied Plato and Stoicism for years became a follower of Jesus. That move — engaging the surrounding intellectual culture rather than just denouncing it — is the founding move of every Christian university, every C.S. Lewis-style apologist, every theologian who takes secular thinkers seriously. He died for the experiment.

Read more about Justin Martyr
Cover of Tertullian's Against Marcion
Daily reading

Book of the day

Against Marcion

Tertullian

A reading pick tied to today's figure, quote, era, or event. The classic Latin attack on Marcion's rejection of the Old Testament and two-god theology.

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Today: Justin Martyr on truth outside the Church — Patristic Lineage