Hierarch 4th century

Saint Agapitus the Confessor Bishop of Synnada

Also known as Agapitos of Synnada · Agapetus the Wonderworker of Synnada

A monk and later soldier who confessed Christ under Diocletian and Maximian, he became bishop of Synnada in Phrygia and was renowned for healing the sick and working many miracles.

Feast Day
February 18
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Commemorated as

Saint Agapitus the Confessor and Wonderworker, Bishop of Synnada in Phrygia

Come to them for
Healing
Military Service

Life

Agapitus the Confessor was a fourth-century monastic, soldier, and bishop of Synnada in Phrygia, in Asia Minor, remembered as a confessor of the faith and a worker of many miracles. According to the synaxarion he was born in Cappadocia to devout Christian parents and lived during the persecutions of the emperors Diocletian and Maximian. From his youth he was drawn to the monastic life and entered a monastery near Synnada, where he gave himself to fasting and prayer. He is commemorated on February 18.

The tradition relates that Agapitus received from God an abundant gift of wonderworking, ascribing to him more than a hundred miracles. The most famous of these is the slaying, through his prayers, of a great dragon that had been ravaging the region around the monastery and carrying off both people and animals. During the reign of Licinius he was conscripted into military service against his will, and amid the renewed persecution of Christians he witnessed the sufferings of the martyrs Victor, Dorotheos, Theodoulos, and Agrippa. Though he himself was wounded by a spear, by tradition he survived.

When the emperor Constantine the Great learned of his power of healing, he sent an ailing servant to Agapitus, who cured him. Offered rewards in gratitude, the saint asked only to be released from the army and allowed to return to his monastery, a request the emperor granted. After his return, the bishop of Synnada ordained him to the priesthood, and upon that bishop's death the clergy and people unanimously chose Agapitus to succeed him. As bishop he shepherded his flock faithfully, continued to work miracles through his prayers, and at last reposed in peace.

Contributions & Legacy

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Confessor and Soldier

Agapitus is honored as a confessor, one who suffered for Christ during persecution without dying a martyr's death. His confession is bound up with his unwilling military service under Licinius, when, the tradition relates, he stood among Christians being tortured for the faith and was himself wounded by a spear yet preserved alive. The same accounts present his eventual discharge not as a reward sought for its own sake but as a return to the monastic vocation from which he had been taken.

Wonderworker

The synaxarion emphasizes Agapitus as a healer and miracle-worker, attributing to him over a hundred miracles and singling out the destruction of a man-eating dragon near his monastery as a benefit to those who sought his help. His healing of a servant of Constantine the Great brought him to imperial notice; the same gift of healing the sick continued to mark his episcopate at Synnada, and it is for this that he is venerated as a wonderworker alongside his title of confessor.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Feb 18