Saint Callistratus
Commemorated on September 27
Saint Callistratus
was a native of Carthage. An ancestor of Saint Callistratus, Neoscorus, has
served under the emperor Tiberius in Palestine, under the command of the
procurator of Judea Pontius Pilate, and was a witness to the suffering on the
Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, His martyr's death and glorious Resurrection.
The father of the saint was a Christian, and he raised his son in faith and
piety. Also like his father, Saint Callistratus became a soldier and excelled
among his pagan military comrades by good conduct and gentle disposition.
During the nights when everyone slept, he usually stayed up at prayer. One time
a soldier sleeping nearby him heard Saint Callistratus invoking the Name of the
Lord Jesus Christ, and he reported this to the military commander, who in turn
summoned Callistratus, interrogated him and wanted to make him offer sacrifice
to idols. To this the saint answered firmly with a resolute refusal. Then the
military commander gave orders to beat the saint and then, covered with wounds,
to drag him over sharp stones. The beating and the torments did not sway the
firm will and brave endurance of the sufferer. The torturer gave orders to sew
up the saint in a leather sack and drown him in the sea. By Divine Providence
however the sack came upon a sharp rock tearing it, and Saint Callistratus,
supported by dolphins, came to dry land unharmed. Viewing such a miracle, 49
soldiers came to believe in Christ. Then the military commander threw Saint
Callistratus together with the believing soldiers into prison. Before this, all
of them were subjected to innumerable floggings.
In confinement Saint
Callistatus continued to preach the Word of God to the soldiers and he
bolstered their spirits for the martyr's act. Summoned again to the military
commander, the sufferers firmly confessed their faith in Christ, after which
they bound them hand and foot and threw them into a water-dam. But there their
bonds broke, and with bright faces the holy martyrs stood in the water,
rejoicing in their Baptism, which coincided with the act of martyrdom. Over
them were beautiful bright crowns, and all heard a voice: "Be brave,
Callistratus, with thine company, and come rest in the eternal
habitations". At the same time with this, the earth shuddered and an idol
standing not far off fell down and smashed. Beholding this happening, another
135 soldiers also believed in the Lord Jesus Christ. The military commander,
fearing a mutiny in the army, did not set about to judge them, but again
imprisoned Saint Callistratus with the others, where they fervently prayed and
gave thanks to the Creator, for having given them power to endure such
sufferings. At night by order of the military commander they chopped the
martyrs to pieces with swords. Their holy remains were buried by the remaining-alive
135 soldiers, and afterwards on the spot of their sufferings, as Saint
Callistatus had foretold, a church was built.
© 1996-2001 by translator Fr. S. Janos.