Hieromartyr 4th century

Confessor Erasmus Bishop of Formia

died c. 303

Also known as Erasmus of Formia · Saint Elmo

A bishop of Formia in Campania who confessed Christ through fierce tortures during the persecution of Diocletian; in the West he is invoked as St Elmo, patron of sailors.

Feast Day
May 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Erasmus, Bishop of Formia

Life

Erasmus, a bishop of Formia in the Campania region of Italy, is venerated as a confessor and martyr who suffered during the persecution of the emperor Diocletian. In the Western tradition he is widely known as St Elmo — a name that arose as an Italian corruption of Erasmus by way of the form Sant' Ermo — and under that name he became the patron of sailors. He is commemorated in the Orthodox calendar on May 4, while Western usage keeps his feast on June 2.

The surviving accounts of his life are largely legendary, and the synaxarion-style acta preserve few details that can be verified historically. By tradition he abandoned his diocese to escape the persecution and withdrew to Mount Lebanon, where he lived for a number of years in prayer and penance and, the legend relates, was miraculously fed by a raven until an angel directed his return. He is said to have been brought before Diocletian, to have endured fierce tortures, and to have been freed from his chains by angelic aid before continuing to confess Christ.

The most prominent feature of his later legend is the manner of his martyrdom: he is described as being put to death by disembowelment, his intestines wound out upon a windlass. From this account he came to be invoked against abdominal and intestinal afflictions, and in the West he was numbered among the Fourteen Holy Helpers, a group of saints venerated especially as intercessors. The relics of Erasmus were recorded at the cathedral of Formia by Pope Gregory the Great in the sixth century; after the old city of Formiae was destroyed by Saracen raiders in 842, his veneration was transferred to Gaeta, of which he remains a patron.

Contributions & Legacy

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Patron of Sailors and St Elmo's Fire

Erasmus is best known in the West as the patron saint of mariners. By one account he continued preaching even after a thunderbolt struck the ground beside him, so that sailors in danger from sudden storms and lightning came to claim his prayers. The luminous electrical discharges sometimes seen at the mastheads of ships during storms were read as a sign of his protection and came to be called 'Saint Elmo's Fire.'

Alongside his patronage of sailors, the tradition of his disembowelment led to his being invoked against ailments of the abdomen, including colic in children, intestinal complaints, and cramps. He is honored today as a patron of Gaeta, Formia, and Santeramo in Colle.

Notes

Pre-schism Western saint.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints