Character of the Commemoration
The feast distinguishes itself from the commemorations of named martyrs by deliberately leaving its honorees anonymous. Where a synaxarion entry for an individual saint records a name, a place, and a manner of death, this commemoration records only the manner of death — hunger, thirst, freezing, and the sword — and confesses that the names belong to God alone. It thereby gathers into one liturgical act the multitude of Christians who perished in persecutions, captivities, famines, and hardships without leaving a trace in the historical record.
The four named modes of death — starvation, dehydration, exposure to cold, and execution by the blade — stand for the broad range of sufferings endured by Christians who died for their faith. The synaxarion presents these as forms of martyrdom equal in worth to more celebrated passions, since what is honored is not the spectacle of the death but the fidelity of the one who endured it.