Polycarp of Smyrna
“[B]ishop of the church of Smyrna in Asia Minor and one of the most famous martyrs of the 2nd Century.”1 He was also an apostolic father. He lived from 70 to 160 AD.
[Polycarp’s] Letter to the church in Philippi is, perhaps, the best document from the age of the apostolic fathers for giving us a feeling of what typical, mainstream Christianity was like in this period. Polycarp’s letter was mostly made up of quotations from the New Testament. He warned the Philippians against departing from apostolic doctrine, and especially against the heresy of Docetism. He also exhorted them to live upright Christian lives, admonishing them against the sin of greed and urged on them the duty of submitting to their presbyters.
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1From 2000 Years of Christ’s Power by N. R. Needham.
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