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Our Patron Saints
Saints
Felicity and Perpetua -- (Martyred ca. 203 ad) No saints were more
uniformly honored in the early Christian era than Saints Perpetua and Felicity.
The two women were arrested and imprisoned, along with three other Christians,
in Carthage in 203 A.D. Perpetua was 22-year-old noblewoman with a son a few
months old; Felicity a slave with a child not yet born. Their crime was defying
Emperor Septimus Severus' prohibition of conversions to Christianity. The account of their
martyrdom and courage, The Suffering of Perpetua and Felicity, is one of the
earliest historical accounts of Christianity, and one of the most feminist. Read
in African churches for the next several centuries, it was treated as nearly
equivalent to scripture. (A full English translation appears in Musurillo's The
Acts of the Christian Martyrs [Oxford, 1972]; Butler's unabridged Lives of the
Saints contains lengthy excerpts.) While the five (along with
their instructor in faith) were being held awaiting execution, Perpetua's father
urged his favorite child to save her life and life of her baby by renouncing her
faith. "Father," she answered, "do you see this vessel--waterpot
or whatever it may be? Can it be
called by any other name than what it is?" "No," he replied. "So also I cannot call
myself by any other name than what I am--a Christian." At a trial shortly
thereafter, Perpetua refused to offer a sacrifice for the prosperity of the
emperors. When the court asked, "Are you a Christian?" she answered,
"Yes, I am," thereby condemning herself to death. A few days before the
festival games, at which the martyrs would face wild beasts in the coliseum,
Perpetua had a dream in which she was transformed into a man, and engaged in
unarmed combat with an Egyptian (signifying the devil). "I was lifted up
into the air and began to strike him as one who no longer trod the earth...I
caught hold of his head and he fell upon his face; and I trod on his head,"
she dreamt. The other captives also had visions, which fortified their courage. Felicity, meanwhile, had
been afraid, that she would not suffer with the rest, because Roman law forbade
the execution of pregnant women. In answer to her prayers, her child was born
while she was in prison, and was promptly adopted by a Christian couple. Perpetua had managed to
convert their jailer to Christianity, and so the captives were treated well in
their final days. The prisoners turned their
last meal into an agape, a love feast, and spoke of the joy of their own
sufferings thereby astonishing most witnesses, and converting some. When the day of the Games
arrived, Perpetua and Felicity went to the amphitheater "joyfully as though
they were on their way to heaven," as Perpetua sang a psalm of triumph. The
guards attempted to force the captives to wear robes consecrated to Roman gods,
but Perpetua resisted so fiercely that they were allowed to wear their own
clothes. The three male martyrs threatened the crowd, including the procurator
who had condemned them, with the judgment of God, thereby enraging the crowd. One of the men, Saturnius,
although prepared for martyrdom, was terrified of bears. Saturnius was first
exposed to a wild boar, which turned upon its keeper, and promptly killed him.
Saturnius was then tied up, and exposed to a bear, which refused to come out of
its den. As Saturnius had hoped, he was quickly killed by a single bite from a
leopard. As he died, he said to his newly-converted jailer, "Farewell: keep
the faith and me in mind, and let these things not confound but confirm
you." A wild heifer was sent
against the women. The heifer tossed Perpetua, who got up, straightened her
hair, and helped Felicity regain her feet. Absorbed in ecstasy, Perpetua was
unaware that she had been thrown, and did not believe it until Felicity showed
her the marks on her body. Having survived the
animals, the women were to be executed. They exchanged a final kiss of peace. A
nervous gladiator tried to kill Perpetua, but failed to finish the job until she
guided the knife to her throat. "Perhaps so great a woman...could not else
have been slain except she willed it," the Passion observes. Although the execution in the Coliseum was intended as entertainment, and enjoyed as such by most of the jeering crowd, some of the spectators, inspired by the martyrs' fearlessness, became converts; nor were these spectators the last people who would be encouraged by Perpetua and Felicity, who, even at the cost of their lives, worshipped God and not the state. They are celebrated on March 7.
Saints
Sergius and Bacchus (martyred
ca. 303) Saints Sergius and Bacchus
are ancient Christian martyrs who were tortured to death in Syria because they
refused to attend sacrifices in honor of Jupiter. Recent attention to early
Greek manuscripts has also revealed that they were openly gay men and that they
were erastai, or lovers. These manuscripts are found in various libraries in
Europe and indicate an earlier Christian attitude toward homosexuality. After their arrest, the two
saints were paraded through city streets in women's clothing, treatment that was
meant to humiliate them as officers in the Roman army. They were then separated
and each was tortured. Bacchus died first and appeared that night to Sergius,
who was beginning to lose heart. According to the early manuscripts, Bacchus
told Sergius to persevere, that the delights of heaven were greater than any
suffering, and that part of their reward would be to be re-united in heaven as
lovers. The feast of these saints
is October 7. The inscription at the bottom of the icon is their names in
Arabic. The saints are particularly popular throughout the Mediterranean lands,
in Latin America, and among the Slavs. For nearly a thousand years they were the
official patrons of the Byzantine armies, and Arab nomads continue to revere
them as their special patron saints. (c) 1994 Robert Lentz |
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