(ABOUT
310.)
Patron
of hospitals.
S.
JULIAN was born at Antinoe, in Egypt, of noble parents. The love of God, and
God alone, filled his heart from earliest childhood. At the age of eighteen his
parents required him to marry. This troubled him much, for he had read the
saying of S. Paul, "He that is unmarried careth for the things that
belong to the Lord, how he may please the Lord : but he that is married careth
for the things that are of the world, how he may please his wife." 1 Cor.
VII. 32-33. He besought his parents to allow him to defer giving them a final
answer till he had well considered their proposal during seven days. He now fasted, and watched, and prayed, revealing to God the desire of his heart, to keep his body in virginity, and his soul devoted to God alone. At the end of the seven days he saw Christ in a vision, who said to him, "Fear not, Julian, to take thee a wife, and to fulfil the desire of thy parents. As virgins ye shall serve me, and I shall not be separated from you, and as virgins shall ye enter into my kingdom." Then Julian was filled with great joy, and he considered whom he should choose. Now there was one maiden, Basilissa by name, who was well-known to his parents, and with whom he had been acquainted from childhood, and whom he loved for her whiteness of soul. Therefore he told his father that he consented to marry Basilissa. And she, on her side, was glad to be the wife of Julian, but her timid soul shrank from the cares and responsibilities of marriage, for she was as yet young and fresh to the world.
The marriage took place with all the boisterous merriment and display, usual then as now; and evening approaching, the young bride was led by the maidens, who were her fellows, to the nuptial chamber. Now when Julian entered, there came an odour in the apartment, as of lilies and roses, though the season was mid-winter, and an awe fell on their young hearts. And they put their hands together, and promised to serve God together in purity and fervour, with singleness of heart all their days. Then they were aware of One present in the room, and kneeling down, they fell prostrate, and besought Him to accomplish the good work He had begun in them. And when they looked up, the chamber was full of light, and they saw Jesus and Mary, and an innumerable company of virgin Saints. Then the Lord said, "Thou hast conquered, O Julian, thou hast conquered!" And the Blessed Virgin said, "Blessed art thou, Basilissa, who hast thus sought with single heart the glory
that is eternal."
Then
said Jesus, "My soldiers, who have overcome the wiles of the old serpent,
rise and behold what is prepared for you!" Thereupon came two clothed in
white robes, and girded about the loins with golden zones, having crowns of
flowers in their hands, and they raised them from the ground and showed them an
open book seven times brighter than silver, inscribed with golden letters, and
round about it stood four elders, having vials in their hands of pure gold,
from which ascended diverse odours. And one, answering, said, "In these
four vials your perfection is contained. For out of these daily ascends an
odour of sweet fragrance before the Lord. Therefore, blessed are ye, because ye
have rejected the unsatisfying pleasures of this world to strive after those
which are eternal, which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither bath it
entered into the heart of man to conceive."
Then
Julian looked, and beheld his name, and the name of his wife, Basilissa,
written in the book. And the elder said, " In that book are written the
chaste and the sober, the truthful and the merciful, the humble and gentle,
those whose love is unfeigned, bearing adversities, patient in tribulation, and
those who, for the love of Jesus Christ, have given up father and mother, and
wife and children, and lands, for his sake, lest they should impede the
progress of their souls to perfection, and they who have not hesitated to shed
their blood for his name, in the number of whom you also have merited to be
written."
Then
the vision passed. But Julian and Basilissa spent the night in prayer, and
singing joyful praises to the Lord.
And
when his parents were dead, Julian divided his house and made it into a
hospital, and all his substance he spent in relieving the necessities of the sick and suffering. He ruled over
the portion devoted to the men, and Basilissa, his wife, at the head of a
number of devout virgins, governed the women's department.
Many
men placed themselves under the guidance of S. Julian, and assisted him in his
works of charity, and laboured for the advancement of God's glory, and the salvation
of their own souls. It is from the circumstance of S. Julian having been the
first to establish a hospital for the sick, that he has been called by
distinction Julian the Hospitaller.
After
many years, Basilissa died in peace; her husband Julian survived her. In the
persecution of Diocletian he was seized and subjected to cruel tortures. The
governor, Marcian, ordered him to be dragged, laden with chains, and covered
with wounds, about the city. As the martyr passed the school where Celsus, the
son of the governor, was being instructed, the boys turned out into the street
to see the soldier of Christ go by. Then suddenly the lad exclaimed, "I
see angels accompanying, and extending a glorious crown to him. I believe, I
believe in the God of the Christians!" And throwing away his books, he
fell at the feet of Julian, and kissed his wounds. When the father heard this,
he was filled with ungovernable fury, and believed that the Saint had bewitched
the boy; he ordered them both to be cast into the lowest dungeon, a loathsome
place, where the corrupting carcases of malefactors lay, devoured by maggots.
But God filled this hideous pit with light, and transformed the stench into
fragrant odours, so that the soldiers who kept the prison were filled with
wonder, and believed. That same night, a priest, Antony, who lived with seven
little boys, orphans committed to his care by their parents, summoned by God,
came with these seven children to the prison. An angel went before
them, and at his touch the gates flew open. Then Antony, the priest, baptized Celsus
and the believing soldiers.
On
the morrow the governor, supposing that the night in the pit had cured his son,
sent him to his mother, and the boy, having related to her in order all he had
seen and heard, she believed with her whole heart, and was baptized by the
priest.
The
governor, Marcian, ordered all these converts to death. The soldiers were
executed with the sword, the seven boys were cast into the fire, the rest were
tortured to death.
Relics,
at Morigny, near Etampes, and in the church of S. Basilissa, at Paris.
In
art, S. Julian and S. Basilissa are represented holding the same lily stalk, or
looking on the Book of Life wherein their names are written.