Commemorated on April 13
The Hieromartyr Artemon was born of Christian parents in Laodicea,
Syria in the first half of the third century. From his youth, he
dedicated himself to the service of the Church. The saint served the
Church as a a Reader for sixteen years.
For his zeal in Church
services, Bishop Sisinius ordained him deacon. St Artemon also fulfilled
this service with fervor and diligence for twenty-eight years, then he
was ordained to the priesthood. In this position, St Artemon served the
Church of God for thirty-three years, preaching Christianity among
pagans. When the emperor Diocletian (284-305) began his fierce
persecution against Christians, St Artemon was already old. The emperor
issued an edict ordering Christians to offer sacrifice to idols.
Saint
Sisinius, knowing of the impending arrival of the military commander
Patricius in Laodicea, went with the priest Artemon and other Christians
into the temple of the goddess Artemis. There they smashed and burned
the idols, reducing them all to dust.
Afterwards, St Sisinius and
St Artemon gathered the flock into the church and fervently exhorted
the Christians to remain firm in the Faith and not to fear the threats
of torturers.
When he arrived in Laodicea, Patricius celebrated a
five-day festival in honor of the pagan gods, and then went to the
temple of Artemis to offer sacrifice. He learned who had destroyed the
temple, and went with a detachment of soldiers to the church where the
Christians were praying.
As he approached the church, Patricius
suddenly felt a chill, and then developed a fever, which left him barely
alive. They carried him home and put him to bed. “The Christians have
put a curse on me, and their God torments me,” he said to those about
him. Although Patricius prayed to the idols, they did not relieve his
sufferings. He sent a messenger to St Sisinius and asked for his help,
promising to set up a gold statue of the bishop in the middle of the
city. The saint replied, “Keep your gold, but if you believe in Christ,
He will heal you.”
Patricius was afraid of dying, so he declared
that he believed in Christ, and the affliction left him. But even this
miracle did not affect the obdurate soul of the pagan. Although he did
not touch St Sisinius, he did enforce the imperial edict against other
Christians in the city of Caesarea. Along the way he encountered St
Artemon, who was followed by six wild donkeys and two deer.
When
Patricius asked how he was able to control these wild beasts, St Artemon
replied that he held them with the Word of Christ.
Patricius
learned from the pagans that the old man was the same Artemon who had
destroyed the pagan temple of Artemis. He ordered that Artemon be
arrested and taken to the city of Caesarea. St Artemon went with the
soldiers without fear, but he ordered the animals to go to St Sisinius.
Seeing
the animals Bishop Sisinius asked, “Why have these animals come here?” A
doe received the gift of speech from God and said, “The servant of God
Artemon is being held by the impious Patricius, and is being brought to
Caesarea in chains. He commanded us to come here to give you this news.”
Do not be astonished that the Lord, Who opened the mouth of Balaam’s
ass (Num. 22:28), also permits the doe to speak. The bishop sent Deacon
Phileas to Caesarea to verify this information.
In Caesarea
Patricius brought St Artemon to trial and tried to force him to offer
sacrifice in the temple of Asclepius. In this pagan temple there lived
many poisonous vipers. The pagan priest never opened the doors, nor did
he place the sacrifice before the idol. But St Artemon, calling on the
Name of Jesus Christ, went into the temple and released the snakes. The
pagans fled, but the saint stopped them and killed the snakes by his
breath. One of the pagan priests, Vitalius, believed in Christ and asked
St Artemon to baptize him.
Patricius thought that St Artemon
killed the snakes by sorcery, and again he interrogated and tortured
him. Then the doe which had spoken arrived in Caesarea. The doe lay down
at the feet of the martyr, licking his wounds. By God’s command the doe
spoke again, denouncing the impious pagans. Addressing Patricius, the
doe predicted that he would be seized by two birds of prey, and dropped
into a cauldron of burning pitch. Patricius was enraged because he had
been censured by a wild beast. He commanded his soldiers to shoot the
doe with arrows, but she escaped. Afraid that the miracles performed by
St Artemon would draw more people to him, Patricius gave orders to
execute him.
They filled an enormous cauldron with boiling pitch,
intending to throw the saint into it. Patricius rode up to the cauldron
on horseback to see if the pitch was indeed boiling. Then two angels in
the form of eagles seized Patricius and threw him into the cauldron.
His body was consumed so that not a single bone remained.
Seeing
the miracle, everyone ran away except St Artemon, who blessed and
glorified God. When the saint finished his prayer, a spring of water
issued from the ground. St Artemon baptized the pagan priest Vitalius
and many pagans, who had come to believe in Christ. On the following
morning St Artemon communed the newly-baptized with the Holy Mysteries.
Many
of the baptized were ordained to the diaconate and priesthood, and
Vitalius was made Bishop of Palestine. The hieromartyr Artemon,
instructed by the voice of God, preached the Gospel in Asia Minor. Then
an angel appeared to him and transported him to the place which had been
revealed to him, where he converted many to Christ. Pagans seized the
saint and beheaded him (+ 303).
St Artemon is commemorated on March 24 on the Greek calendar.
TROPARION - TONE 4
By sharing in the ways of the Apostles, / you became a successor to
their throne. / Through the practice of virtue, you found the way to
divine contemplation, O inspired one of God; / by teaching the word of
truth without error, you defended the Faith, / even to the shedding of
your blood. / Hieromartyr Artemon, entreat Christ God to save our souls.
KONTAKION - TONE 4
Made worthy of a sacred confession, / and completing your life as a
martyr, / you were translated to heaven, / receiving from God an
unfading crown. / Therefore we celebrate your holy memory, calling out: /
Remember us, as you stand before Christ, / O wise Hieromartyr Artemon.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, and even 2008!):
A Man Who Did Not Compromise with Sin
-
Sermon on the Feast of Holy Hieromartyr Hilarion (Troitsky), Archbishop of
Verea
Hieromonk Kirill (Popov)
His devotion to the service of God was expressed ...
2 hours ago
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