Hieromartyr 4th century

Theodoritus of Antioch

died 362

Also known as Theodoret of Antioch · Theodoritus the Presbyter

A presbyter and keeper of the sacred vessels of the cathedral church of Antioch built by Constantine the Great. Under Julian the Apostate he was seized, tortured, and martyred for refusing to surrender the church's treasures.

Feast Day
March 8
Also Mar 3
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Theodoritus, Presbyter of Antioch and Keeper of the Sacred Vessels

Life

Theodoritus of Antioch was a fourth-century presbyter of the cathedral church of Antioch and the keeper of its sacred vessels. He was martyred during the reign of the emperor Julian the Apostate (361-363), when imperial officials moved to close the churches and seize their treasures, and he was put to death for his confession of Christ and his refusal to abandon his ministry.

He is venerated as a hieromartyr, a member of the clergy who died for the faith. His commemoration is kept on March 8, with a feast also recorded on March 3.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 361 Accession of Julian the Apostate After the death of Constantius, Julian became sole emperor and undertook the restoration of paganism, including the closing of churches and confiscation of their treasures.
  2. 362 Seizure of the Antioch cathedral and martyrdom The governor Julian and the official Felix came to Antioch to plunder the cathedral. Theodoritus, keeper of its sacred vessels, was imprisoned, accused of hiding the valuables, tortured, and beheaded.

Contributions & Legacy

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Office and Setting

Theodoritus served as a presbyter and keeper of the sacred vessels of the cathedral church in Antioch. The sources relate that this church had been built and adorned by the emperors Constantine the Great and his son Constantius, and that it was known on account of its splendor as the "Golden Church." As custodian of the sacred vessels, Theodoritus was responsible for the liturgical treasures of the cathedral.

Wikipedia describes him as a Greek-speaking Syrian Christian priest of Antioch, consistent with the city's place as a major center of Eastern Christianity in the fourth century.

Persecution under Julian the Apostate

After the death of the emperor Constantius, Julian the Apostate sought to restore paganism throughout the Roman Empire. According to the accounts, Julian appointed a relative of the same name, his uncle Julian, as governor in the East and at Antioch. This older Julian, himself an apostate from Christianity, was charged with closing the Christian churches and sending the valuables within them to the imperial treasury.

The synaxarion relates that the governor, together with an official named Felix, came to Antioch, placed Theodoritus under guard, and began to plunder the cathedral, profaning the altar and the holy table. A man named Euzoios who protested the sacrilege was killed. Theodoritus was falsely charged with concealing the church's valuables; he denied the charge and openly denounced Julian's apostasy and return to paganism.

Martyrdom

When Theodoritus rebuked the governor for his abandonment of the faith, he was subjected to severe torture, which the accounts say he endured with courage. By tradition he foretold that divine judgment would swiftly fall upon both the governor Julian and the emperor Julian. He was then beheaded. The synaxarion further relates that the soldiers who had tortured him were converted to Christ and afterward drowned.

The OrthodoxWiki and Wikipedia entries record the date of his death as October 22, 362, and report that the prophesied judgment was seen as fulfilled when the governor died of illness and the emperor Julian was killed during his Persian campaign. The cathedral commemoration recorded in the saint's own record is kept on March 8, with March 3 also given.

Relics

Wikipedia reports that his relics were later transferred to Uzes in southern France and enshrined in a cathedral there. This relic-translation is reported only by that source and is not corroborated by the synaxarion entries; the article itself notes that it relies heavily on primary sources.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints