Hieromartyr Babylas, Bishop of Antioch, and the three children with him
Saint Babylas was bishop of the great see of Antioch in Syria from about 237, succeeding Saint Zebinas. His episcopate fell in a time of intermittent persecution under the emperors Maximinus Thrax, Gordian, Philip the Arabian and Decius. He is famous for an act of holy boldness recorded by Eusebius and by Saint John Chrysostom. The Emperor Philip, who had embraced Christianity and was making his way to attend the paschal vigil, was met at the doors of the church by Bishop Babylas, who refused him entrance until he had submitted to the discipline of penance for the murder of the young Emperor Gordian. The emperor humbly accepted, took his place among the penitents, and only afterwards was admitted to the assembly of the faithful. When Decius came to the throne in 249 and unleashed his savage edict requiring sacrifice from every citizen, the holy bishop was seized at Antioch together with three young children whom he was instructing in the faith, named Urbanus, Prilidian and Epolonius, the children of a Christian widow named Christodoula. Babylas openly confessed Christ, and the three boys, despite their tender age, refused to deny the Lord, even when the emperor caressed and threatened them by turns. Babylas was loaded with chains and beheaded, asking that his fetters be buried with him as a sign of his confession. The three children were beheaded after him. Many years later, in the reign of Julian the Apostate, the relics of the holy hieromartyr were transferred to Daphne, near Antioch, where their presence silenced the oracle of Apollo, an event recorded by Saint John Chrysostom in his homilies on the saint.