Holy apostles Silas, Silvanus, Crescens, Epenetus and Andronicus of the Seventy
The five holy apostles commemorated on this day were among the seventy whom the Lord chose and sent out two by two before his face into every city and place where he was about to come. Silas was a leading man of the church of Jerusalem, named at the apostolic council in Acts 15 as one of the chief brethren, and was sent with Saint Paul on his second missionary journey. He shared in the apostle's imprisonment and beating at Philippi, and laboured with him at Thessalonica, Beroea and Corinth. Tradition relates that he was at length consecrated bishop of Corinth and ended his life in peace.
Silvanus, in some traditions identified with Silas himself, became bishop of Thessalonica, where he reposed after labouring much for the faith. Crescens, named by Saint Paul at the end of his second letter to Timothy, preached in Galatia and afterwards in Gaul, where he was bishop of Vienne and the Lyonnais and suffered martyrdom under the emperor Trajan. Epenetus, called by Paul "the first-fruits of Achaia for Christ" in Romans 16, served as bishop of Carthage. Andronicus, also greeted in Romans 16 as a kinsman of the apostle and "of note among the apostles," became bishop of Pannonia and is honoured separately on 17 May with his fellow worker Junia. The five are commemorated together on 30 July as labourers of the apostolic age.