St Sisinius the deacon suffered at Rome along with the
hieromartyr Marcellinus, Bishop of Rome, the holy deacon Cyriacus; also
Smaragdus, Largus, Apronian, Saturninus, Crescentian, Papias and Maurus
and the holy women martyrs Priscilla, Lucy and the Emperor’s daughter
Artemia during the persecution of Diocletian and Maximian (284-305) and
their successors, Galerius (305-311) and Maxentius (305-312).
The
emperor Maximian, ruler of the Western Roman Empire, deprived all
Christians of military rank and sent them into penal servitude.
A
certain rich Christian, Thrason, sent food and clothing to the prisoners
through the Christians Sisinius, Cyriacus, Smaragdus and Largus.
Marcellus thanked Thrason for his generosity, and ordained Sisinius and
Cyriacus as deacons.
While rendering aid to the captives,
Sisinius and Cyriacus also were arrested and condemned to harsh labor.
They fulfilled not only their own work quota, but worked also for the
dying captive Saturninus. Therefore, Maximian sent Sisinius to
Laodicius, the governor of the district.
They locked the saint in
prison. The head of the prison, Apronian, summoned Sisinius for
interrogation but, seeing his face shine with a heavenly light, he
believed in Christ and was baptized. Later, he went with Sisinius to
Marcellus and received Chrismation. Marcellus served the Liturgy, and
they partook of the Holy Mysteries.
On June 7, Sts Sisinius and
Saturninus were brought before Laodicius in the company of Apronian.
Apronian confessed that he was a Christian, and was beheaded. Sts
Sisinius and Saturninus were thrown into prison. Then Laodicius gave
orders to bring them to a pagan temple to offer sacrifice. Saturninus
said, “If only the Lord would turn the pagan idols into dust!”
At
that very moment the tripods, on which incense burned before the idols,
melted. Seeing this miracle, the soldiers Papias and Maurus confessed
Christ. After prolonged tortures Sisinius and Saturninus were beheaded,
and Papias and Maurus were locked up in prison, where they prayed to
receive illumination by holy Baptism. The Lord fulfilled their desire.
Leaving the prison without being noticed, they received Baptism from
Marcellus and returned to the prison.
At the trial they again
confessed themselves Christians and died under terrible tortures. Their
holy bodies were buried by the priest John and Thrason.
Sts Cyriacus, Smaragdus, Largus and other Christian prisoners continued to languish at hard labor.
Diocletian’s
daughter Artemia suffered from demonic oppression. Having learned that
the prisoner Cyriacus could heal infirmities and cast out devils, the
emperor summoned him to the sick girl. In gratitude for the healing of
his daughter, the emperor freed Cyriacus, Smaragdus and Largus. Soon the
emperor sent Cyriacus to Persia to heal the daughter of the Persian
emperor.
Upon his return to Rome, Cyriacus was arrested on orders
of the emperor Galerius, the son-in-law of Diocletian, who had abdicated
and retired as emperor. Galerius was very annoyed at his predecessor
because his daughter Artemia had converted to Christianity. He gave
orders to drag Cyriacus behind his chariot stripped, bloodied, and in
chains, to be shamed and ridiculed by the crowds.
Marcellus
denounced the emperor openly before everyone for his cruelty toward
innocent Christians. The emperor ordered the holy bishop to be beaten
with rods, and dealt severely with him. Sts Cyriacus, Smaragdus, Largus,
and another prisoner, Crescentian, died under torture. And at this time
the emperor’s daughter Artemia and another twenty-one prisoners were
also executed with Cyriacus.
Marcellus was secretly freed by Roman
clergy. Exhuming the bodies of the holy martyrs Cyriacus, Smaragdus and
Largus, they reburied them on the estates of two Christian women,
Priscilla and Lucy, on the outskirts of Rome, after they had transformed
Lucy’s house into a church.
Ascending the throne, Maxentius gave
orders to destroy the church and turn it into a stockyard, and he
sentenced the holy bishop to herd the cattle. Exhausted by hunger and
cold, and wearied by the tortures of the soldiers, Marcellus became ill
and died in the year 310.
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