Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Athenogenes and his Ten Disciples

died c. 303

Also known as Athenogenes of Heracleopolis

A bishop who with his ten disciples confessed Christ at Sebastea and was martyred; to him is ascribed by tradition the ancient evening hymn 'O Gladsome Light.'

Feast Day
July 16
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Athenogenes, Bishop of Pidachthoë, and his Ten Disciples

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Life

Athenogenes was a bishop in Asia Minor who, together with ten of his disciples, was put to death for confessing Christ during the persecution under the emperor Diocletian. The synaxarion places his see at Pidachthoë (also rendered Heracleopolis), a district associated by some accounts with the region south of Neocaesarea, and sets his martyrdom in the city of Sebastea in Cappadocia. He and his disciples are commemorated together on July 16, and his rank in the Church is that of hieromartyr — a bishop who died a martyr's death.

According to the tradition preserved in the lives of the saints, Christianity had spread through the area largely because of Athenogenes' preaching, so that most of the inhabitants of Sebastea were Christians. When the governor Philomachos arranged a great festival in honor of the pagan gods and summoned the citizens to offer sacrifice, the Christians refused. Athenogenes and his ten disciples lived in a small monastery near the city; when soldiers came to seize the bishop they did not find him, and so arrested his disciples instead.

The ten disciples, after enduring severe tortures and continuing to refuse to sacrifice to the idols, were beheaded. The bishop was then taken and tortured, and brought to his own monastery, where he was executed by the sword. The account relates that before his death he heard a voice from heaven repeating to him the promise once given to the penitent thief — "Today you shall be with Me in Paradise" — after which he willingly bent his neck beneath the sword.

By tradition Athenogenes is also associated with the ancient evening hymn "O Gladsome Light" (Phos Hilaron), said to have been a hymn of joy that a martyr Athenogenes left to his disciples. This attribution is traditional rather than securely documented, and some accounts distinguish the bishop of Pidachthoë from a second martyr of the same name credited with the hymn; it is hedged accordingly below.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 303 Martyrdom of the disciples The ten disciples of Athenogenes are tortured and beheaded at Sebastea for refusing to sacrifice to the idols.
  2. c. 303 Martyrdom of Athenogenes The bishop is tortured and put to death by the sword at his own monastery.

Contributions & Legacy

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Martyrdom at Sebastea

The setting of the martyrdom is the persecution of Christians under Diocletian and Maximian, dated by some sources to around the year 303. The governor Philomachos is named as the official who organized the public sacrifice and ordered the seizure of the Christians who refused it. Because Athenogenes was not found at his monastery, his ten disciples were arrested first, tortured, and beheaded for their refusal to sacrifice.

Athenogenes himself was subsequently arrested and subjected to torture before being put to death by the sword at his own monastery. The detail that he heard the Lord's voice promising him Paradise, echoing the words spoken to the thief crucified beside Christ, is a fixed feature of the synaxarion account of his death.

The hymn "O Gladsome Light"

The evening hymn Phos Hilaron — known in English as "O Gladsome Light" or "Hail Gladdening Light" — is among the oldest hymns of the Church still in liturgical use. It was already considered ancient in the fourth century: St. Basil the Great spoke of its singing as a cherished tradition whose author was unknown in his day, and it appears in the Apostolic Constitutions, compiled in the late third or early fourth century.

A long-standing tradition ascribes the hymn to a martyr named Athenogenes, said to have sung or left it to his disciples on the way to his martyrdom; the Roman Martyrology preserves a notice to this effect. Because the hymn is demonstrably older than, or contemporary with, the persecution era, and because the sources do not securely identify which Athenogenes is meant, this attribution is best treated as a pious tradition rather than established authorship. Orthodox liturgical books often instead name St. Sophronius of Jerusalem, who is believed to have later revised the hymn.

A monastery tradition

An account drawn from St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite relates a miracle connected with Athenogenes' monastery: the bishop is said to have blessed a deer and prayed that its offspring would each year offer themselves. By this tradition a deer with one of its fawns would come of their own accord into the church during the Divine Liturgy, at the reading of the Gospel; the deer would present its fawn and then depart alone. The detail belongs to the later hagiographic tradition surrounding the saint.

Notes

Named group commemorated as one.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints