Holy Martyr Myron the Presbyter of Cyzicus
250
The Holy Martyr Myron was a presbyter in Achaia in Greece and lived in the third century. He suffered for Christ in the year 250 under the emperor Decius. The presbyter was gentle and kind to the people of his flock and a generous benefactor to the poor, but he was also courageous in the defence of his spiritual children when they were threatened.
On the Feast of the Nativity of Christ, while Saint Myron was celebrating the Divine Liturgy, the local governor Antipater entered the church with soldiers in order to arrest the worshippers and subject them to torture for the name of Christ. Saint Myron began to plead with him for his flock, openly accusing the governor of cruelty and impiety. For this fearless witness he was himself seized and delivered up to torture.
The torturers struck his body with iron rods and cast him into a red-hot oven, but the Lord preserved His martyr unharmed, while about one hundred and fifty men standing nearby were scorched by the flames that issued forth. The governor, infuriated by this miracle, ordered Saint Myron to be lashed with leather straps and his skin to be flayed in long strips. Bearing every torment with patience, the saint cast a strip of his own flayed skin into Antipater's face, rebuking his blasphemy.
Crazed with rage, Antipater took up a sword and ran himself through, dying by his own hand. The soldiers then took Saint Myron to the city of Cyzicus on the southern shore of the Propontis, where he was beheaded by the sword and received the crown of martyrdom.