The Martyrs Eudoxius, Zeno, Macarius and their Companions
received a martyric death for Christ under the emperor Maximian
Galerius, the successor of the emperor Diocletian.
St Eudoxius
held the high position of a military commander in the imperial armies.
He was a Christian, as were his friend Zeno and his house steward
Macarius. After the emperor Diocletian issued an edict that Christians
who refused to offer sacrifice to idols were to be put to death, many
people fled to various lands with their families to avoid torture and
death. At this time St Eudoxius resigned his high position, and with his
wife St Basilissa and all their family abandoned their property and
went into hiding in the region of Armenian Melitene.
The governor
of Melitene sent soldiers to search for Eudoxius. When they found
Eudoxius, he was attired in white garb. Not recognising him, the
soldiers began to question whether a certain military commander Eudoxius
had come into these parts. Not revealing who he was, the saint invited
the soldiers into his home, fed them and gave them lodging for the
night.
St Eudoxius considered his encounter with the soldiers as a
sign from the Lord of his impending death by martyrdom. In the morning,
he disclosed to his guests that he was the one whom they were seeking.
In gratitude for the hospitality, the soldiers offered to conceal from
the authorities that they had found St Eudoxius. However, the saint
would not consent to this.
Setting his affairs in order, he told
his wife not to weep for him, but on the contrary to celebrate the day
of his martyric death. Donning his military garb, he went with the
soldiers to the governor. St Basilissa and his friends Sts Zeno and
Macarius followed after St Eudoxius.
The governor tried to
persuade St Eudoxius to offer sacrifice to the idols and by this
safeguard his life, exalted rank and property. St Eudoxius firmly
refused, denouncing the folly of anyone who would worship soulless
idols. He removed his soldier’s belt, the emblem of his authority, and
threw it in the governor’s face.
Soldiers present at this, secret
Christians, did the same thing, and they numbered more than a thousand
men. The embarrassed governor asked the emperor what he should do. He
was ordered to try the ringleaders and set the others free.
After
prolonged tortures, they led St Eudoxius forth to execution. Following
after her husband, St Basilissa wept, and his friend St Zeno also wept
for the martyr. St Eudoxius again urged his wife not to mourn him, but
rather to rejoice that he was worthy of the crown of martyrdom. He asked
that she bury his body in a place called Amimos.
To his weeping
friend St Zeno St Eudoxius predicted that they would enter the Kingdom
of Heaven at the same time. Emboldened by these words, Zeno loudly
declared himself a Christian, for which he was immediately sentenced to
death.
Later, St Basilissa took her husband’s body without
hindrance, and buried it in the place where he had requested. After
this, they arrested the saint and led her before the governor. Desiring
to share the fate of her husband, she fearlessly denounced both the
governor and his false gods, the idols. The governor, however, saw her
intent and would not torture her, but instead sent her away. As she
left, the saint said to him that God would see her intention to suffer
for her faith and would accept this intent as an accomplished deed.
Seven
days later, St Eudoxius appeared to his wife in a vision and bade her
to inform his friend and house steward Macarius, that both he and St
Zeno awaited the arrival of Macarius. Macarius immediately went to the
governor and declared himself a Christian, for which he was sentenced to
death and beheaded. Many Christians also suffered martyrdom during this
time.
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