The Conversion of Philemon
The defining episode of the account is the exchange between Apollonios and Philemon. The synaxarion presents Apollonios as a Church Reader who, dreading the tortures threatened against confessors, arranged for Philemon to take his place at the pagan altar by donning his clothing and posing as him. The tradition draws a deliberate symbolism from the disguise: in taking on the Reader's garments, Philemon is described as having been clothed at the same moment in the faith of Christ.
Brought forward to play music or to sacrifice, Philemon instead confessed Christ and, by the account, derided the pagan gods. When it was objected that a Christian must be baptized, the synaxarion relates that rain fell upon him, which astonished the onlookers, so that his confession was sealed as if by baptism.