Hieromartyr 1st century

Hieromartyrs Marcellus of Sicily Philagrius of Cyprus, and Pancratius of Taormina

Also known as Marcellus, Bishop of Sicily · Philagrius, Bishop of Cyprus · Pancratius, Bishop of Taormina

Three bishops counted among the disciples of the Apostle Peter, sent to evangelize Sicily and Cyprus, who suffered for preaching the Gospel.

Feast Day
February 9
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyrs Marcellus, Bishop of Sicily, Philagrius, Bishop of Cyprus, and Pancratius, Bishop of Taormina

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Missionary Work

Life

Marcellus, Philagrius, and Pancratius are commemorated together on February 9 as three bishop-martyrs counted among the disciples of the Apostle Peter, who ordained them and sent them to preach the Gospel in the western and eastern Mediterranean. According to the tradition, Marcellus became Bishop of Sicily, Philagrius Bishop of Cyprus, and Pancratius Bishop of Taormina (the ancient Tauromenium) in Sicily. All three labored to spread the Christian faith among the pagans of their regions.

The fullest narrative attaches to Pancratius, whom the tradition describes as a native of Antioch who, as a youth, traveled with his parents to Jerusalem during the earthly ministry of Christ and whose family was afterward baptized. The Apostle Peter is said to have consecrated him bishop of the Sicilian city of Taormina, where he preached the word of Christ. Marcellus, ordained Bishop of Sicily, is said to have converted many of the pagan Greeks of the island, and Philagrius to have endured many trials in his ministry as Bishop of Cyprus.

The accounts of how each met his end diverge in the sources. The synaxarion tradition counts all three as hieromartyrs put to death for their preaching; one Greek recension, however, relates that Marcellus completed his life in peace and that Pancratius was secretly killed, while a Western tradition records that Pancratius died by stoning at the hands of pagan opponents. Pancratius is also commemorated separately on July 9 (and in the West on July 8), reflecting his standing as the first bishop and patron of Taormina.

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Disciples of the Apostle Peter

The common thread uniting the three is their identification as disciples whom the Apostle Peter raised to the episcopate and dispatched to evangelize. The tradition presents their commemoration on a single day as the memorial of a missionary cohort of the apostolic age rather than of men bound by a single place of martyrdom: Sicily, Cyprus, and Taormina mark three distinct fields of labor.

Of Philagrius the surviving notices are the briefest, recording only that he was ordained Bishop of Cyprus, that he taught and preached the name of Christ, and that he passed through many trials and temptations on behalf of the faith before his repose.

Pancratius and Taormina

Pancratius is the most fully developed figure of the three and is venerated as the first bishop of Tauromenium, the modern Taormina, where he became the principal patron of the city. By the tradition he was born at Antioch and, while still young, was brought by his parents to Jerusalem during the ministry of Jesus; the family was subsequently baptized, and Pancratius was set apart by the Apostle Peter for the Sicilian mission.

The manner of his death is reported differently in the surviving accounts, whether by stoning at the hands of pagans or by being secretly killed; both traditions agree that he died for the faith he had planted. His memory is kept on July 9 in the East in addition to the joint February 9 commemoration.

Notes

One commemoration of three named bishop-martyrs, disciples of the Apostle Peter.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org)