Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Marcellus Bishop of Apamea

4th century (reposed c. 389)

Also known as Marcellus of Apamea

A Cypriot-born bishop of Apamea in Syria who opposed pagan worship and was killed while working to destroy a pagan temple in 375.

Feast Day
August 14
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Marcellus, Bishop of Apamea

Life

Marcellus was a fourth-century bishop of Apamea in Syria, remembered as a hieromartyr for his death in the course of dismantling the pagan temples of his region during the reign of the emperor Theodosius the Great. Born on the island of Cyprus to a family of standing, he received a fine education and held a high civil office before turning to the service of the Church.

He is best known for the destruction of the great temple of Jupiter (Zeus) at Apamea, an episode preserved in the early Church historians, and for his martyrdom by fire while a further temple was being demolished near Aulona in the Apamea district. His feast is kept on August 14.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 375 Withdrawal to Syria and election as bishop Having held a high civil position and being known for purity of life, mildness, kindness and eloquence, Marcellus left his family and went to Syria to pursue the monastic life. When he came to the city of Apamea, its people elected him their bishop.
  2. 379-395 Destruction of the temple of Jupiter at Apamea With permission from the emperor Theodosius the Great, Marcellus undertook to destroy the temple of Jupiter at Apamea. Its massive stones, clamped with iron and lead, resisted demolition; a workman undermined three of the great columns and propped them with olive wood, but the wood would not burn until Marcellus had water blessed and sprinkled upon it, after which it caught fire, the columns fell, and the temple collapsed.
  3. c. 389 Martyrdom by fire near Aulona While watching from a distance as soldiers demolished another pagan temple near Aulona in the Apamea district, Marcellus was seized by pagans and thrown into a fire, dying as a martyr.
  4. 391 Local synod forbids revenge A local synod forbade the saint's sons from avenging his death, decreeing that it would be wrong to take revenge for such a death and that they should instead give thanks.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Origin and Early Life

According to the synaxarion, Marcellus was born on the island of Cyprus to illustrious parents. He received an excellent education and held a high civil position, and the sources describe him as marked by purity of life, mildness, kindness and eloquence.

In 375 he abandoned his family and worldly station to pursue the monastic life in Syria. Visiting the city of Apamea, he was elected its bishop by the people.

The Destruction of the Temples

The defining work of Marcellus's episcopate, as recorded by the early Church historians Theodoret and Sozomen, was the dismantling of the pagan temples of the Apamea district under the anti-pagan measures of the emperor Theodosius the Great.

The great temple of Jupiter (called the temple of Zeus in the Greek tradition) proved especially difficult to destroy: its huge stones were so firmly laid and clamped together with iron and lead that breaking them apart seemed beyond human strength. A workman undermined three of the massive columns and propped them temporarily with olive wood so that they might be burned, but the wood would not take fire. When this was reported to Marcellus, he had water blessed and commanded that it be sprinkled around the wood; thereupon the wood burned quickly, the columns fell, and the whole temple collapsed in upon itself.

Martyrdom and Aftermath

Marcellus met his death while a further pagan temple was being demolished near Aulona, in the Apamea district. Watching the work from a distance, he was seized by pagans and thrown into a fire, and so died as a hieromartyr.

A local synod afterward forbade the saint's sons from avenging his death, holding that it would be wrong to seek revenge for such a martyrdom and that they should give thanks to God instead.

Veneration

Marcellus is commemorated in the Orthodox Church as a hieromartyr on August 14.

By tradition his blessing and sprinkling of water at the destruction of the temple is associated with the Small Sanctification (Blessing) of Waters, the rite performed at the beginning of each month.

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