- Babylas of Antioch
Infobox Saint
name=Saint Babylas
birth_date=
death_date=253
feast_day=Eastern Orthodox Church andEastern Catholic Church ,September 4
Roman Catholic ,January 24
venerated_in=Eastern Orthodox Church Catholic Church
imagesize=
caption=
birth_place=
death_place=
titles=
beatified_date=
beatified_place=
beatified_by=
canonized_date=
canonized_place=
canonized_by=
attributes=
patronage=
major_shrine=Cremona
suppressed_date=
issues=
prayer=
prayer_attrib=Saint Babylas (died 253). A
patriarch of Antioch (237 - 253), who died in prison during the Decian persecution (according to Eusebius, "Historia ecclesiastica", VI, 39). He asked to be buried in his chains. In theEastern Orthodox Church andEastern Catholic Churches of the Byzantine rite his feast day isSeptember 4 , in theRoman Catholic ,January 24 .John Chrysostom 's homily upon Saint Babylas and the "Acts of the Martyrs" report the following story, that Babylas once refused a visiting emperor, on account of his sins, permission to enter the church and had ordered him to take his place among the penitents. John does not give the name of the emperor; the "Acts" mentionNumerian . It is more likely the contemporaryPhilip the Arab of whom Eusebius ("Historia ecclesiastica", VI, 34) reports that a bishop would not let him enter the gathering of Christians at theEaster vigil. Later legend elaborates on this, stating that Babylas demanded that he do penance for his part in the murder of the youngGordian III before he would allow Philip to celebrate Easter.In 351 the Caesar
Constantius Gallus built a new church in honor of Babylas atDaphne , a suburb of Antioch, and had the remains of the bishop transferred to it. The intention of Gallus in translating the remains of Babylas to Daphne was to neutralize the pagan effects of the temple ofApollo located there, or, as Chrysostom expresses it, to "bring a physician to the sick."According to Chrysostom, when Emperor Julian consulted the oracle of Apollo at the temple in Daphne (362), he received no answer, and was told that it was because of the proximity of the saint. He therefore, had the sarcophagus of the martyr exhumed and taken back to his original place of burial. A few days later, on
October 22 , a mysterious fire broke out in the temple of Apollo, consuming the roof of the building, and the statue of the god, copied fromPhidias ' statue of Zeus at Olympia. Julian, suspecting angry Christians were responsible, ordered the cathedral of Antioch closed, and an investigation into the cause of the fire:Ammianus Marcellinus reports "a frivolous rumor" laid the blame to some candles lit by a worshipper late the previous night (XXII, 13). John Chrysostom claimed a bolt of lightning set the temple on fire. The remains of Babylas were reinterred in a church dedicated to him on the other side of the RiverOrontes . Near the close of his discourse John Chrysostom refers to the erection of the church dedicated to Babylas, and to the zeal of the Bishop Meletius in promoting it, who actually took part in the work with his own hands.The columns and walls of the ruined temple were still pointed out twenty years later. In the Middle Ages, the remains of Babylas are said to have been moved to
Cremona .External links
* [http://ccel.org/fathers2/NPNF1-09/npnf1-09-20.htm Text of St John Chrysostom's homily on Saint Babylas] .
References
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02178c.htm Catholic Encyclopedia 1908]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.