|
Main Page |
St. Irene |
Resources
Apolytikion
O Lord Jesus, unto Thee Thy lamb doth
cry with a great voice: O my Bridegroom, Thee I love;
and seeking Thee,
I now contest, and with Thy baptism am crucified
and buried. I suffer for Thy sake, that I may reign with Thee;
for Thy sake I die, that I may live in Thee:
accept me
offered out of longing to Thee as a spotless
sacrifice.
Lord, save our souls through her intercessions,
since
Thou art great in mercy.
|
|
THE HOLY MARTYR MATRONA OF THESSALONIKA
March 27th
Της Αγίας Μάρτυρος Ματρόνης της εν Θεσσαλονίκη
The Holy Martyr
Matrona of Thessalonica suffered in the third or fourth century.
She was a slave of the Jewish woman Pautila (or Pantilla), wife
of one of the military commanders of Thessalonica. Pautila
constantly mocked her slave for her faith in Christ, and tried
to convert her to Judaism. St Matrona, who believed in Christ
from her youth, still prayed to the Savior Christ, and secretly
went to church unbeknownst to her vengeful mistress.
Pautila, learning that St Matrona had been to church, asked,
"Why won't you come to our synagogue, instead of attending the
Christian church?" St Matrona boldly answered, "Because God is
present in the Christian church, but He has departed from the
Jewish synagogue." Pautila went into a rage and mercilessly beat
St Matrona, tied her up, and shut her in a dark closet. In the
morning, Pautila discovered that St Matrona had been freed of
her bonds by an unknown Power.
In a rage Pautila beat the martyr almost to death, then bound
her even more tightly and locked her in the closet. The door was
sealed so that no one could help the sufferer. The holy martyr
remained there for four days without food or water, and when
Pautila opened the door, she again found St Matrona free of her
bonds, and standing at prayer.
Pautila flogged the holy martyr and left the skin hanging in
strips from her body. The fierce woman locked her in the closet
again, where St Matrona gave up her spirit to God.
Pautila had the holy martyr's body thrown from the roof of her
house. Christians took up the much-suffered body of the holy
martyr and buried it. Later, Bishop Alexander of Thessalonica
built a church dedicated to the holy martyr. Her holy relics,
glorified by many miracles, were placed in this church.
The judgment of God soon overtook the evil Pautila. Standing on
the roof at that very place where the body of St Matrona had
been thrown, she stumbled and fell to the pavement. Her body was
smashed, and so she received her just reward for her sin.
Source:
OCA
|
|