Conversion and Baptism
According to the tradition recorded in the synaxarion, Pontius was born in the third century to a pagan senator named Marcus and his wife Julia. The tradition relates that before his birth a demonic voice in the temple of Jupiter foretold that the boy would destroy Jupiter and his pagan temple; fearing the prophecy, Julia is said to have wished to kill the newborn, but Marcus prevented it.
As a young man, Pontius is said to have overheard Christians singing the words of the psalm, 'the idols of the heathen are silver and gold, the works of men's hands.' Drawn by what he heard, he entered their assembly, where Bishop Pontian of Rome — identified with Pope Pontian (who reigned 230–235) — was leading the services. The bishop instructed him in the Christian faith and baptized him together with his companion Valerian.
Pontius then brought his own father, Marcus, to the faith. Bishop Pontian baptized Marcus along with the entire household, according to the tradition.
Senator and Martyr
When Marcus died, the emperor Alexander Severus (who reigned 222–235) appointed the twenty-year-old Pontius to his father's place in the senate. The tradition relates that he became known for his integrity and sound judgment within the imperial court.
Under the emperor Maximian — Maximinus Thrax, who succeeded Alexander Severus and reigned 235–238 — Pontius achieved martyrdom for his Christian faith, ending his life as a witness to Christ. The chronology of his life thus places his martyrdom within the persecution of 235–238, distinct from the later Valerian persecution (253–259).
Identity and Distinction
The OCA calendar for August 5 lists two separate Pontius commemorations, and the anchor row preserves this distinction. One entry commemorates 'Hieromartyr Fabian, Pope of Rome, and Martyr Pontius'; that Pontius is associated with the conversion of an emperor, the destruction of pagan temples and building of churches, flight to Cimelum after the death of Pope Fabian in 250, and martyrdom by beheading in 257 under the Valerian persecution.
The standalone Martyr Pontius (this entry) is instead the son of the senator Marcus, converted through Bishop Pontian, appointed senator by Alexander Severus, and martyred under Maximian (235–238). The anchor note records a possible overlap between the two figures, but they are kept separate following the source's own listing.
In Western tradition, the martyr of 257 corresponds to Pontius of Cimiez, said to have been born at Rome into a pagan family, to have given away his property and preached the Gospel in the Ubaye valley, and to have been martyred at Cemenelum (modern Nice), where the Abbey of St Pons was later founded. He is venerated in the West on May 14 and is regarded in Catalonia as a patron of herbalists and beekeepers. This figure corresponds to the OCA's Fabian-companion Pontius, not to the standalone Martyr Pontius of this entry.