Catholic Western

Church Father

Justin Martyr

"The first Christian philosopher — whose Apologies are the earliest defence of Christianity to the Roman state and the richest second-century source on Eucharistic liturgy"

Born: c. AD 100 · Flavia Neapolis (modern Nablus), Samaria Died: c. AD 165 · Rome (martyrdom by beheading) Layman and philosopher; no episcopal see Feast: 1 June Ante-Nicene
Biography

Who was Justin Martyr?

Why this Father matters to Catholic apologetics: Justin's descriptions of Christian worship are uniquely valuable because they were written for pagan emperors, not for Christians. When he explains the Eucharist in the First Apology, he is not writing internal theology — he is explaining a foreign custom to an uninvested, potentially hostile audience. He had no motive to exaggerate. What he describes is simply what Christians did and believed.
Martyr of the Church
Born
c. AD 100 · Flavia Neapolis (modern Nablus), Samaria
Died
c. AD 165 · Rome (martyrdom by beheading)
See / Role
Layman and philosopher; no episcopal see
Feast Day
1 June
Historical Period
Ante-Nicene

Justin was born c. AD 100 in Samaria to a pagan family. Educated in the philosophical schools of his day — Stoic, Aristotelian, Pythagorean, and finally Platonic — he was converted through an encounter with an old man who directed him to the Hebrew prophets. He moved to Rome and opened a school where he taught philosophy and Christianity side by side. His two Apologies, addressed to Emperor Antoninus Pius and the Senate, are the earliest formal defences of Christianity as a rational religion. He was beheaded c. AD 165 for refusing to sacrifice to the Roman gods.

Contemporaries

Who did Justin Martyr know?

Catholic saint
Emperor / ruler
Heretic / opponent
Pagan critic
Eastern Christian
Unknown
Polycarp of Smyrna
Personal meeting — Justin visited Polycarp in Smyrna
Irenaeus of Lyon
Influence — Irenaeus built on Justin's apologetic method
Tertullian of Carthage
Influence — Tertullian read and engaged with Justin's apologetics
Major Works

Major Works

First Apology
c. AD 155 · Greek
Addressed to Emperor Antoninus Pius. Contains the earliest description of the Sunday Eucharistic liturgy in patristic literature.
Used in 5 verified claims
Dialogue with Trypho
c. AD 155–160 · Greek
A long dialogue with a Jewish teacher presenting Jesus as the Messiah. Contains the clearest second-century statement of the Eucharist as the sacrifice prophesied by Malachi.
Used in 3 verified claims
Key Quotes

Key Quotes

The Real Presence First Apology LXVI · c. AD 155
"We do not receive these as ordinary bread and drink; but just as Jesus Christ our Saviour was made flesh by the word of God, so likewise have we been taught that the food which is blessed by the prayer of His word is the flesh and blood of that Jesus who was made flesh."
Apologetic Significance Justin, explaining Christianity to the Roman emperor, says the Eucharistic food is the flesh and blood of the incarnate Jesus.
The Eucharist as Sacrifice Dialogue with Trypho XLI · c. AD 155
"The offering of fine flour was a type of the bread of the Eucharist... concerning this sacrifice Malachi prophesied: In every place a pure offering shall be offered unto my name."
Apologetic Significance Justin applies Malachi's prophecy of the pure offering in every place directly to the Eucharist.
Apostolic Succession

Where Justin Martyr stands in the chain

Ordination chain from Christ to this Father — and onward to students. Solid links cite named primary sources. Unknown means no ordainer is historically attested. Nodes with a profile are linked.

Christ
The Source
?
Unknown
Unknown ordainer
Justin was a layman — no episcopal ordination. Converted from Platonism c.AD 130. No ordainer attested.
Justin Martyr
This Father
Scripture & Tradition

Passages interpreted

These scripture passages have harmony articles showing how Justin Martyr read them — alongside other Fathers and the councils that defined on the same texts.

John 6:53-56
"So Jesus said to them, "Truly, truly, I say to…"
5 Fathers 2 Councils
Read the full harmony →

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