THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS
S. GORDIUS
(about 320.)
SAINT. GORDIUS was a native of Caesarea, in
Cappadocia, and was a centurion in the army. When Galerius issued his edicts
against the Church in the East (303) Gordius laid aside his office, and
retired into the desert, where he lived in fasting and prayer amongst the wild
beasts. In the desert he spent many years, but his zeal for Christ gave him no
rest. The churches in Caesarea had been destroyed, the clergy scattered, and
many Christians had conformed, rather than lose their lives. It was a heathen
city once more, and such salt as had remained had lost its savour. The spirit
of the Lord stirred in the soul of Gordius, and urged him to return to his
native city, and there play the man for Christ, where so many had fallen away
from the faith.
"One day that the amphitheatre was
crowded to see horse and chariot races in honour of Mars, the god of war, when the
benches were thronged, and Jew and Gentile, and many a Christian also,"
says S. Basil, "was present at the spectacle, and all the slaves were free
to see the sight, and the boys had been given holiday from school for the same
purpose, suddenly, in the race-course, appeared a man in rags, with long beard
and matted locks; his face and arms burned with exposure to the sun, and shrivelled
with long fasting; and he cried aloud, "I am found of them who sought me
not, and to them who asked not after me, have I manifested myself openly."
Every eye was directed upon this
wild-looking man, and when it was discovered who he was, there rose a shout
from Gentile and Christian; the latter cried because they rejoiced to see the
faithful centurion in the midst of them again; the former, because they hated
the truth, and were wrath at the disturbance of the sports.
"Then," continues S.
Basil, "the clamour and tumult became more, and filled the whole
amphitheatre; horses, chariots, and drivers were forgotten. In vain did the
rush of wheels fill the air; none had eyes for anything but Gordius; none had
ears to hear anything but the words of Gordius. The roar of the theatre, like a
wind rushing through the air, drowned the noise of the racing horses. When the
crier had made silence, and all the pipes and trumpets, and other musical
instruments were hushed, Gordius was led before the seat of the governor, who
was present, and was asked, blandly, who he was and whence he came. Then he
related, in order, what was his country, and family, and the rank he had held,
and why he had thrown up his office and fled away. I am returned,' said he, 'to
show openly that I care naught for your edicts, but that I place my hope and
confidence in Jesus Christ alone.' The governor, being exceedingly exasperated
at the interruption in the sports, and the open defiance cast in his face by a
deserter, before the whole city, ordered him at once to be tortured.
"Then," S. Basil proceeds to relate in his graphic style, "the
whole crowd poured from the theatre towards the place of judgment, and all
those who had remained behind in the city ran to see the sight. The city was
deserted. Like a great river, the inhabitants rolled to the place of martyrdom;
mothers of families, noble and ignoble, pushed there; houses were left
unprotected, shops were deserted by the customers, and in the market-place
goods lay here and there neglected. Servants threw up their occupations, and
ran off to see the spectacle, and all the rabble was there to see this man.
Maidens forgot their bashfulness and shame of appearing before men, and sick
people and old men crawled without the walls, that they, too, might share the
sight." The relations of Gordius, in vain, urged him to yield and apologise
for his defiance of the state religion; signing himself with the cross, he
cheerfully underwent the torments of leaded scourges, of the little horse,
fire, and knife, and was finally beheaded.
