Troparion in
Tone 4
Your holy martyrs, O Lord,
Through their sufferings have received
incorruptible crowns from You, our God.
For having Your strength, they laid low their adversaries,
And shattered the powerless boldness of demons.
Through their intercessions, save our souls!
The Holy Martyr Sebastian was born in the
city of Narbonum in Gaul (modern France), and he received his education at
Mediolanum (now Milan). Under the co-reigning emperors Diocletian and
Maximian (284-305) he occupied the position of head of the imperial guards.
St. Sebastian was respected for his authority, and was loved by 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 to him. He was a secret Christian, not out of
fear, but so that he could provide help to the brethren during the time of
persecution.
The noble
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 their pagan parents (Tranquillinus and Marcia), and
also their own wives and children, they began to waver in their intent to
suffer for Christ. St. Sebastian went to the imperial treasurer, at whose
house Marcellinus and Mark were held in confinement, and addressed the
brothers who were on the verge of yielding to the entreaties of their
family.
"O valiant
warriors of Christ! Do not cast away your everlasting crowns of victory
because of the tears of your relatives. Do not remove your feet from the
necks of your enemies who lie prostrate before you, lest they regain their
strength and attack you more fiercely than before. Raise your banner high
over every earthly attachment. If those whom you see weeping knew that there
is another life where there is neither sickness nor death, where there is
unceasing gladness and everything is beautiful, then assuredly they would
wish to enter it with you. Anyone who fears to exchange this brief earthly
life for the unending joys of the heavenly Kingdom is foolish indeed. For he
who rejects eternity wastes the brief time of his existence, and will be
delivered to everlasting torment in Hades."
Then St. Sebastian
said that if necessary, he would be willing to endure torment and death in
order to show them how to give their lives for Christ.
So St. Sebastian
persuaded the brothers to go through with their act of martyrdom, and his
speech stirred everyone present. They saw how his face shone like that of an
angel, and they saw how seven angels clothed him in a radiant garment, and
heard a fair Youth say: "You shall be with Me always."
Zoe, the wife of
the jailer Nicostratus, had lost her ability to speak six years previously,
and she fell down at the feet of St. Sebastian, by 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 holding an open book in which everything St.
Sebastian said was written. Then all who saw the miracle also came to
believe in the Savior of the world. Nicostratus removed the chains from
Marcellinus and Mark and offered to hide them, but the brothers refused.
Mark said, "Let
them tear the flesh from our bodies with cruel torments. They can kill the
body, but they cannot conquer the soul which contends for the Faith."
Nicostratus and his wife asked for Baptism, and St. Sebastian advised
Nicostratus to serve Christ rather than the Eparch. He also told him to
assemble the prisoners so that those who believed in Christ could be
baptized. Nicostratus then requested his clerk Claudius to send all the
prisoners to his house. Sebastian spoke to them of Christ, and became
convinced that they were all inclined to be baptized. He summoned the priest
Polycarp, who prepared them for the Mystery, instructing them to fast in
preparation for Baptism that evening.
Then Claudius
informed Nicostratus that the Roman eparch Arestius Chromatus wanted to know
why the prisoners were gathered at his house. Nicostratus told Claudius
about the healing of his wife, and Claudius brought his own sick sons,
Symphorian and Felix to St. Sebastian. In the evening the priest Polycarp
baptized Tranquillinus with his relatives and friends, and Nicostratus and
all his family, Claudius and his sons, and also sixteen condemned prisoners.
The newly-baptized numbered 64 in all.
Appearing before
the eparch Chromatus, Nicostratus told him how St. Sebastian had converted
them to Christianity and healed many from sickness. The words of Nicostratus
persuaded the eparch. He summoned St. Sebastian and the presbyter Polycarp,
and was enlightened by them, and became a believer in Christ. Nicostratus
and Chromatus, his son Tiburtius and all his household accepted holy
Baptism. The number of the newly-enlightened increased to 1400. Upon
becoming a Christian, Chromatus resigned his office of eparch.
During this
time the Bishop of Rome was St. Gaius (August
11). He blessed Chromatus to go to his
estates in southern Italy with the priest Polycarp. Christians unable to
endure martyrdom also went with them. Father Polycarp went to strengthen the
newly-converted in the Faith.
Tiburtius, the son
of Chromatus, desired to accept martyrdom and he remained in Rome with St.
Sebastian. Of those remaining, St. Gaius ordained Tranquillinus as a
presbyter, and his sons Marcellinus and Mark were ordained deacons.
Nicostratus, his wife Zoe and brother Castorius, and Claudius, his son
Symphorian and brother Victorinus also remained in Rome. They gathered for
divine services at the court of the emperor together with a secret Christian
named Castulus, but soon the time came for them to suffer for the Faith.
The pagans
arrested St. Zoe first, praying at the grave of the Apostle Peter. At the
trial she bravely confessed her faith in Christ. She died, hung by her hair
over the foul smoke from a great fire of dung. Her body then was thrown into
the River Tiber. Appearing in a vision to St. Sebastian, she told him about
her death.
The priest
Tranquillinus was the next to suffer: pagans pelted him with stones at the
grave of the holy Apostle Peter, and his body was also thrown into the
Tiber.
Sts. Nicostratus,
Castorius, Claudius, Victorinus ,and Symphorian were seized at the
riverbank, when they were searching for the bodies of the martyrs. They were
led 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 St. Tiburtius. When the saint refused to
sacrifice to the idols, the judge ordered Tiburtius to walk barefoot on
red-hot coals, but the Lord preserved him. Tiburtius walked through the
burning coals without feeling the heat. The torturers then beheaded St.
Tiburtius, and his body was buried by unknown Christians.
Torquatus
also betrayed the holy Deacons Marcellinus and Mark, and St. Castulus (March
26). After torture, they threw Castulus
into a pit and buried him alive, but Marcellinus and Mark had their feet
nailed to the same tree stump. They stood all night in prayer, and in the
morning they were stabbed with spears.
St. Sebastian was
the last one to be tortured. The emperor Diocletian personally interrogated
him, and seeing the determination of the holy martyr, he ordered him taken
out of the city, tied to a tree and shot with arrows. Irene, the wife of St.
Castulus, went at night in order to bury St. Sebastian, but found him alive
and took him to her home.
St. Sebastian soon
recovered from his wounds. Christians urged him to leave Rome, but he
refused. Coming near a pagan temple, the saint saw the emperors approaching
and he publicly denounced them for their impiety. Diocletian ordered the
holy martyr to be taken to the Circus Maximus to be executed. They clubbed
St. Sebastian to death, and cast his body into the sewer. The holy martyr
appeared to a pious woman named Lucina in a vision, and told her to take his
body and bury it in the catacombs. This she did with the help of her slaves.
Today his basilica stands on the site of his tomb.