Commemorated on August 26
The Martyrs Adrian and Natalia were married in their youth for one
year prior to their martyrdom, and lived in Nicomedia during the time of
the emperor Maximian (305-311). The emperor promised a reward to
whomever would inform on Christians to bring them to trial. Then the
denunciations began, and twenty-three Christians were captured in a cave
near Nicomedia.
They were tortured, urged to worship idols, and
then brought before the Praetor, in order to record their names and
responses. Adrian, the head of the praetorium, watched as these people
suffered with such courage for their faith. Seeing how firmly and
fearlessly they confessed Christ, asked: “What rewards do you expect
from your God for your suffering?” The martyrs replied: “Such rewards as
we are not able to describe, nor can your mind comprehend.” St Adrian
told the scribes, “Write my name down also, for I am a Christian and I
die gladly for Christ God.”
The scribes reported this to the
emperor, who summoned St Adrian and asked: “Really, have you gone mad,
that you want to die? Come, cross out your name from the lists and offer
sacrifice to the gods, asking their forgiveness.”
St Adrian
answered: “I have not lost my mind, but rather have I found it.”
Maximian then ordered Adrian to be thrown into prison. His wife, St
Natalia, knowing that her husband was to suffer for Christ, rejoiced,
since she herself was secretly a Christian.
She hastened to the
prison and encouraged her husband saying: “You are blessed, my lord,
because you have believed in Christ. You have obtained a great treasure.
Do not regret anything earthly, neither beauty, nor youth (Adrian was
then 28 years of age), nor riches. Everything worldly is dust and ashes.
Only faith and good deeds are pleasing to God.”
On the pledge of
the other martyrs, they released St Adrian from prison to tell his wife
about the day of his execution. At first St Natalia thought that he had
renounced Christ and thus had been set free, and she did not want to let
him into the house. The saint persuaded his wife that he had not fled
from martyrdom, but rather had come to give her the news of the day of
his execution.
They tortured St Adrian cruelly. The emperor
advised the saint to have pity on himself and call on the gods, but the
martyr answered: “Let your gods say what blessings they promise me, and
then I shall worship them, but if they cannot do this, then why should I
worship them?” St Natalia did not cease to encourage her husband. She
asked him also to pray to God for her, that they would not force her
into marriage with a pagan after his death.
The executioner
ordered the hands and the legs of the saints to be broken on the anvil.
St Natalia, fearing that her husband would hesitate on seeing the
sufferings of the other martyrs, asked the executioner to begin with
him, and permit her to put his hands and legs on the anvil herself.
They
wanted to burn the bodies of the saints, but a storm arose and the fire
went out. Many of the executioners even were struck by lightning. St
Natalia took the hand of her husband and kept it at home. Soon an army
commander asked the emperor’s approval to wed St Natalia, who was both
young and rich. But she hid herself away in Byzantium. St Adrian
appeared to her in a dream and said that she would soon be at rest in
the Lord. The martyr, worn out by her former sufferings, in fact soon
fell asleep in the Lord.
TROPARION - TONE 4
Your holy martyrs Adrian and Natalia, O Lord, / through their sufferings
have received incorruptible crowns from You, our God. / For having Your
strength, they laid low their adversaries, / and shattered the
powerless boldness of demons. / Through their intercessions, save our
souls!
KONTAKION - TONE 4
Martyr of Christ, Adrian, / you kept the words of your godly and devoted
wife Natalia in your heart. / With her you accepted every kind of
suffering and obtained the crown of victory!
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!):
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