The Holy Martyr Sebastian
Commemorated on December 18
The Holy Martyr
Sebastian was born in the city of Narbonum (in Gaul, modernday France), and
he received his education at Mediolanum (now city of Milan in Italy). Under the
co-reigning emperors Diocletian and Maximian (284-305) he occupied the position
of head of the imperial guards. Saint Sebastian was respected for his authority
and with the love of the soldiers and those at court: he was a brave man,
filled with wisdom, his word was honest, his judgement just, insightful in
advice, faithful in his service and in everything entrusted him. But being himself
a secret Christ, he much aided his brethren in the faith. The Christian
brothers Marcellinus and Mark had been locked up in prison, and at first they
firmly confessed the true faith. But under the influence of the tearful
entreaties of the pagan-parents (the father Tranquillinus and mother Marcia),
and also their own wives and children, they wavered in their intent to suffer
for Christ. Saint Sebastian went to the imperial treasurer, at whose house
Marcellinus and Mark were held in confinement, and uttered a rousing speech.
"O ye valiant
warriors of Christ! Cast not away the standards of your victory on account of
womanly tears nor let up upon the enemy cast down beneathe your feet, wherein
he, in regaining strength would again renew the struggle with you. Over every earthly
impulse raise up the glorious banner of your deed. If those, whom ye see
weeping should know that there be another life – bereft of death and ill, in
the which doth reign unceasing bliss, then assuredly they would wish to enter
into it with you, and contemning temporal life, they would instead strive to
receive the eternal. For he that desireth not to be servant of life eternal,
doth indeed perish in this temporal life in vain".
Saint Sebastian thus
persuaded the brothers to go through with their act of martyrdom. His speech
stirred everyone present. They beheld, how the very face of the saint did shine
like that of an angel, and they saw how seven Angels did attire him radiant garb,
and a fair Youth did bless the orator and say: "Always shalt thou be with
Me". The wife of the imperial treasurer Nicostratus, named Zoa, had lost
the ability to speak 6 years previously, and she fell down at the feet of Saint
Sebastian, with her gestures imploring him to heal her. The saint made the Sign
of the Cross over the woman, and she immediately began to speak and she
glorified the Lord Jesus Christ. She said that she had seen an Angel with an
open book, from which Saint Sebastian did read his preaching. Thereupon all
present came to be believers in the Saviour of the world. Nicostratus removed
the chains from Marcellinus and Mark and offered to hide them, but the brothers
refused.
Mark said: "Let
them rend our bodies with cruel torments; they can kill the body, but the soul,
warring for the faith, is not to be conquered by them". Nicostratus and
his wife asked for Baptism. Saint Sebastian advised Nicostratus to arrange matters
such, that Baptism might be made over possibly a large number of people.
Nicostratus then requested the Roman prison-head Claudius to send to him all
the imprisoned. Conversing with the prisoners, Sebastian became convinced that
they were all worthy of Baptism, and he summoned the presbyter Polycarp, who
prepared them for the mystery with a catechetical talk, he instructed them to
fast, having set for evening time the making of the sacrament.
During this while
Claudius informed Nicostratus, that the Roman eparch named Arestius Chromatus
was pressing him for an explanation as to why the prisoners were gathered at
his house. Nicostratus told Claudius about the healing of his wife, and
Claudius in turn led to Saint Sebastian his own sick sons, Symphorian and
Felix. In the evening the priest Polycarp baptised Tranquillinus with his kin
and friends, and Nicostratus and all his family, Claudius and his sons, and
likewise 16 condemned prisoners. The newly-baptised numbered 64 in all.
Appearing before the
eparch Chromatus, Nicostratus told him how Saint Sebastian had converted them
to the Christian faith and healed many from sickness. The words of Nicostratus
persuaded the eparch. He summoned to him Saint Sebastian and the presbyter
Polycarp, being enlightened by them and became a believer in Christ. Together
with Chromatus, his son Tiburtius and all his household accepted holy Baptism.
The number of the newly-enlightened increased to 1400. In consideration of
being a Christian, Chromatus resigned his office of eparch.
During this time the
bishop at Rome was Saint Caius (afterwards Pope of Rome from 283-296, Comm. 11
August). Saint Caius gave blessing to Chromatus to go to his estates in
Southern Italy together with the presbyter Polycarp. Christians unable to
undergo the suffering of martyrdom went with them. The priest Polycarp had been
dispatched for strengthening the newly-converted in the faith and for making
the sacraments. Tiburtius, the son of Chromatus, desired to accept martyrdom
and he remained in Rome with Saint Sebastian. Of those remaining, Saint Caius
ordained Tranquillinus to the dignity of presbyter, his sons Marcellinus and
Mark were ordained deacons, and there remained also Nicostratus, his wife Zoa
and brother Castorius, and Claudius, his son Symphorian and brother Victorinus.
They gathered at the court of the emperor together with a secret Christian, the
dignitary Castulus, but soon the time began for them to suffer for the faith.
The pagans arrested
Saint Zoa first, praying at the grave of the Apostle Peter. At the trial she
bravely confessed her faith in Christ and she died, hung by her hair over
rotting refuse; her body then was thrown into the River Tiber. Appearing in a
vision to Saint Sebastian, she told him about her death. Presbyter
Tranquillinus was the next after her to suffer: pagans pelted him with stones
at the grave of the holy Apostle Peter, and his body was likewise thrown into
the Tiber. Saints Nicostratus, Castorius, Claudius, Victorinus and Symphorian
were seized at the riverbank, when they were pulling out the bodies of the
martyrs. They led them to the eparch, and the saints refused his command to offer
sacrifice to idols. They tied stones to the necks of the martyrs and then
drowned them in the sea. The false-Christian Torquatus betrayed Saint
Tiburtius. But not gaining a renunciation of Christ from him, the trial-court
gave orders to put young Tiburtius on red-hot coals, but the Lord preserved
him: Tiburtius walked through the burning coals, not feeling the heat. The
torturers then beheaded Saint Tiburtius. Unknown Christians then buried the
saint.
Torquatus betrayed
also the holy Deacons Marcellinus and Mark, and the dignitary Saint Castulus.
After torture they threw Castulus into a pit and buried him alive, but
Marcellinus and Mark had their feet nailed to stumps of wood. They stood all
night in prayer, and in the morning they were pierced with spears.
Saint Sebastian was
the final one taken off to torture. The emperor Diocletian personally
interrogated him, and persuading himself of the resoluteness of the holy
martyr, he ordered him taken out beyond the city, tied to a tree and shot with
arrows. The wife of the dignitary Saint Castulus, Irene, went at night in order
to bury Saint Sebastian, but found him alive and took him to her home. Saint
Sebastian soon recovered from his wounds. Christians urged him to leave Rome,
but he refused. Coming nearby a pagan temple, the saint saw the emperors
approaching there and he publicly denounced them for their impiety. Diocletian
gave orders to remove the holy martyr to the Hippodrome (Coliseum) and there
execute him. They killed Saint Sebastian, and cast his body upon the rubbish
heap. The holy martyr appeared to the Christian Saint Lucina (Lucy) in a dream
vision, and bid her take his body and bury it in the catacombs. And thus the
pious Christian buried the body of the saint.
© 1996-2001 by translator Fr. S. Janos.