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Apolytikion
Thy
Martyr, O Lord, in his courageous contest for Thee received the
prize of the crowns of incorruption and life from Thee, our
immortal God. For since he possessed
Thy strength, he cast down
the tyrants and wholly destroyed the demons' strengthless
presumption. O
Christ God, by his prayers, save our souls, since
Thou
art merciful.
Kontakion
IDevoutly
aflame with godly zeal for Christ thy Lord, and armed with the
strength and power of the precious
Cross, thou didst cast down
headlong thy foes' exalted pride, O Procopius, exalting Christ's
holy Church,
advancing in faith and shedding light on us.
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PROKOPIOS
THE GREAT MARTYR
July 8th
(Του
Αγίου Μεγαλομάρτυρος Προκοπίου)
The Holy Great Martyr Procopius, in the world
Neanius, a native of Jerusalem, lived and suffered during the reign of the
emperor Diocletian (284-305). His father, an eminent Roman by the name of
Christopher, was a Christian, but the mother of the saint, Theodosia, remained a
pagan. He was early deprived of his father, and the young child was raised by
his mother. Having received an excellent secular education, he was introduced to
Diocletian in the very first year of the emperor's accession to the throne, and
he quickly advanced in government service. Towards the year 303, when open
persecution against Christians began, Neanius was sent as a proconsul to
Alexandria with orders to mercilessly persecute the Church of God.
On the way to Egypt, near the Syrian city of Apameia, Neanius had a vision of
the Lord Jesus, similar to the vision of Saul on the road to Damascus. A divine
voice exclaimed, "Neanius, why do you persecute Me?"
Neanius asked, "Who are you, Lord?"
"I am the crucified Jesus, the Son of God."
At that moment a radiant Cross appeared in the air. Neanius felt an
inexpressible joy and spiritual happiness in his heart and he was transformed
from being a persecutor into a zealous follower of Christ. From this point in
time Neanius became favorably disposed towards Christians and fought
victoriously against the barbarians.
The words of the Savior came true for the saint, "A man's foes shall be those of
his own household" (Mt. 10:36). His mother, a pagan herself, went to the emperor
to complain that her son did not worship the ancestral gods. Neanius was
summoned to the procurator Judaeus Justus, where he was solemnly handed the
decree of Diocletian. Having read through the blasphemous directive, Neanius
quietly tore it up before the eyes of everyone. This was a crime, which the
Romans regarded as an "insult to authority." Neanius was held under guard and in
chains sent to Caesarea of Palestine, where the Apostle Paul once languished.
After terrible torments, they threw the saint into a dank prison. That night, a
light shone in the prison, and the Lord Jesus Christ Himself baptized the
suffering confessor, and gave him the name Procopius.
Repeatedly they led St. Procopius to the courtroom, demanding that he renounce
Christ, and they subjected him to more tortures. The stolidity of the martyr and
his fiery faith brought down God's abundant grace on those who witnessed the
execution.
Inspired by the example of Procopius, many of the holy martyr's former guards
and Roman soldiers went beneath the executioner's sword together with their
tribunes Nikostrates and Antiochus. Twelve Christian women received martyr's
crowns, after they came to the gates of the Caesarea Praetorium.
Struck by the great faith and courage of the Christians, and seeing the firmness
of her son in bearing terrible sufferings, Theodosia became repentant and stood
in the line of confessors and was executed. Finally the new procurator, Flavian,
convinced of the futility of the tortures, sentenced the holy Great Martyr
Procopius to beheading by the sword. By night Christians took up his
much-tortured body, and with tears and prayers, they committed it to the earth.
This was the first martyrdom at Caesarea (303).
Source:
OCA
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