Troparion in
Tone 4
Your holy martyr Boniface, O Lord,
Through his sufferings has received an incorruptible crown
from You, our God.
For having Your strength, he laid low his adversaries,
And shattered the powerless boldness of demons.
Through his intercessions, save our souls!
Kontakion in
Tone 4
O wise and triumphant Boniface,
You willingly offered yourself as an unblemished sacrifice
To the one who is about to be born from the Virgin Mary for our sake!
The Holy Martyr
Boniface was the slave of a rich young Roman woman named Aglaida
and he dwelt with her in an iniquitous cohabitation. But they both felt the
sting of conscience and they wanted somehow to be cleansed of their sin. And
the Lord granted them the possibility to wash away their sin with their
blood and to finish their life in repentance.
Aglaida learned
that whoever keeps relics of the holy martyrs in the home and venerates them
receives great help in gaining salvation. Under their influence, sin is
diminished and virtue prevails. She arranged for Boniface to go to the East,
where there was a fierce persecution against Christians, and she asked him
to bring back the relics of some martyr, who would become a guide and
protector for them.
As he was leaving,
Boniface laughed and asked, "My lady, if I do not find any relics, and if I
myself suffer for Christ, will you accept my body with reverence?" Aglaida
scolded him, saying that he was setting off on a sacred mission, but he was
not taking it seriously. Boniface pondered her words, and during the whole
journey he thought that he was unworthy of touching the bodies of the
martyrs.
Arriving at Tarsus
in Cilicia, Boniface left his companions at the inn and proceeded to the
city square, where they were torturing Christians. Struck by the beastly
horrible torments, and seeing the faces of the holy martyrs radiant with the
grace of the Lord, Boniface marveled at their courage. He embraced them and
kissed their feet, asking them to pray that he might be found worthy to
suffer with them.
The judge asked
Boniface who he was. He replied, "I am a Christian," and then refused to
offer sacrifice to idols. They stripped him and hung him upside down,
beating him so hard that the flesh fell from his body, exposing the bone.
They stuck needles under his nails, and finally they poured molten tin down
his throat, but by the power of the Lord he remained unharmed. The people
who witnessed this miracle shouted, "Great is the God of the Christians!"
Then they began to throw stones at the judge, and then they headed for the
pagan temple, in order to cast down the idols.
On the following
morning, when things had quieted down somewhat, the judge directed that the
holy martyr be thrown into a cauldron of boiling tar, but this also caused
the sufferer no harm. An angel come down from Heaven and bedewed him as he
stepped into the cauldron. The tar overflowed the cauldron, splattering and
burning the torturers themselves. St. Boniface was then sentenced to
beheading by the sword. Blood and a milky fluid flowed from his wounds.
Beholding such a miracle, about 550 men believed in Christ.
St. Boniface's
companions, waiting for two days at the inn for him in vain, began searching
for him, thinking that he had gotten drunk somewhere. At first their search
was without success, but finally they came across a man who had been an
eyewitness to the martyr's death. The man also led them to the place where
the decapitated body lay. St. Boniface's companions tearfully begged his
forgiveness for their unseemly thoughts about him. After they ransomed the
martyr's remains, they brought them back to Rome.
On the eve of
their arrival an angel appeared to Aglaida in her sleep and told her to
prepare herself to receive her former slave, now the brother and
fellow-servant of the angels. Aglaida summoned the clergy, and she received
the holy relics with great reverence. Then she built a church on the site of
his grave and dedicated it to the holy martyr. There she enshrined his
relics, glorified by numerous miracles. Having distributed all her wealth to
the poor, she withdrew to a monastery, where she spent fifteen years in
repentance, then fell asleep in the Lord. She was buried beside the Martyr
Boniface. The sins of the one were washed away by his blood, the other was
purified by her tears and asceticism. Both were found worthy to appear
unsullied before our Lord Jesus Christ, Who desires not the death of a
sinner, but that he should turn from his wickedness and live (Ezek. 33:11).
We pray to St.
Boniface for deliverance from drunkenness.