Confession and Persecution
After his long solitude, Theophanes came down from the mountain and began to preach Christ among the pagans, drawing many to Christianity. By tradition this brought him to the attention of the Roman authorities. The synaxarion records that, by order of the emperor Carus and his sons Numerian and Carinus, who reigned in the early 280s, Theophanes was seized and subjected to torture.
He bravely endured his sufferings and was released alive, and is therefore honored as a confessor rather than a martyr. The accounts relate that the witness of his endurance, together with conversions among those who observed him, contributed to his release. He afterward returned to the mountain, where he is said to have lived seventeen more years before dying in peace.