† Saint of the Day †
(October 29)
✠ St. Narcissus of Jerusalem ✠
Bishop of Jerusalem and Confessor:
Born: 99 AD
Died: 216 AD (Aged 117)
Aelia Capitolina (Jerusalem), Syria
Palaestina
Venerated in:
Roman Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodox Church of Arodon
Feast: October 29
Saint Narcissus of Jerusalem was an
early patriarch of Jerusalem. He is venerated as a saint by both the Western
and Eastern Churches. In the Roman Catholic Church, his feast day is celebrated
on October 29, while in the Eastern Orthodox Church it is celebrated on August
7.
St. Narcissus was born towards the
end of the first century, and he was nearly 80 years old when he was named as
the 30th bishop of Jerusalem.
In 195, he and Theophilus, bishop of
Caesarea in Palestine, presided together over a council of the bishops of
Palestine held at Caesarea around Easter. There it was decreed that the feast
be kept always on a Sunday, and not continue with the Jewish Passover.
The bishop and historian Eusebius
says the following miracle can be attributed to him: One year on Easter-eve the
deacons did not have any oil for the lamps in the church, which was necessary
at the solemn divine office on that day. Narcissus ordered those who had care
of the lamps to bring him some water from the neighboring wells. This being
done, he pronounced a devout prayer over the water. Then he bade them pour it
into the lamps; which they did. The water was immediately converted into oil,
to the great surprise of all the faithful. Some of this miraculous oil was kept
there as a memorial at the time when Eusebius wrote his history.
The veneration of all good men for
this holy bishop, however, could not shelter him from the malice of the wicked.
Three incorrigible sinners, fearing his severity in the observance of ecclesiastical
discipline, accused him of a terrible act. The sinners swore that they were
right, adding the following to their testimony: One wished that he might perish
by fire, another, that he might be struck with leprosy, and the third, that he
might lose his sight if what they alleged was not the truth. Their accusations
were false, however, and soon Divine Retribution called upon them. The first
was burnt in his house along with his whole family by an accidental fire in the
night, the second was struck with universal leprosy and the third, terrified by
these examples, confessed the conspiracy and slander, and by the abundance of
tears which he continually shed for his sins, lost his sight before his death.
Narcissus either could not stand the
shock of the bold calumny or perhaps he made it an excuse for leaving Jerusalem
in order to spend some time in solitude, which had long been his wish. He spent
several years undiscovered in his retreat, where he enjoyed all the happiness
and advantage which a close conversation with God can bestow.
The neighboring bishops appointed a
new pastor for his church until Narcissus returned. Upon his return, the
faithful rejoiced and convinced him to once again undertake the administration
of the diocese, which he did.
As he reached extreme old age, he
made St. Alexander his coadjutor. St. Narcissus continued to serve his flock,
and even other churches, by his assiduous prayers and his earnest exhortations
to unity and concord, as St. Alexander testifies in his letter to the
Arsinoites in Egypt, where he says that Narcissus was at that time about one
hundred and sixteen years old. The Roman Martyrology honors his memory on
October 29th.
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