THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS
S. MARCIAN
(ABOUT 476. )
S.
MARCIAN was born at Constantinople; he belonged to a noble Roman family,
related to that of the Emperor Theodosius. From his childhood he served God in
watching, fasting, and prayer. His great compassion for the necessities of the
poor made it impossible for him to refuse relief, when he had anything to give
away.
In
the reign of the Emperor Marcian, Anatolius, the Archbishop, ordained him
priest. His love for the poor manifested itself, not merely in abundant
almsgiving, but also in his making their instruction in the truth his favourite
pursuit. The severity of his morals was made a handle by those who feared the
example of his virtue, as a tacit rebuke of their sloth and avarice, to fasten
on him a suspicion of Novatianism; but his meekness and silence triumphed over this,
and other slanders.
The
patriarch Gennadius conferred on him the dignity of treasurer of the church of
Constantinople. S. Marcian built, or repaired, in a stately manner a great
number of churches. The following incident is related of the dedication of the
church of S. Anastasia, for which he had obtained a site, and which he had
built in spite of numerous impediments. On the day that the church was to be
consecrated, he was on his way to attend the ceremony, when he was accosted in
the street by a very poor man, whose rags scarce held together, and who
implored him, for the love of God, to give him an alms. S. Marcian felt in his bosom,
but found he had no money there. The pauper would take no refusal, and the
compassionate heart of the treasurer was melted at the aspect of his tatters
and emaciation. Quickly he slipped off the tunic he wore under his sacerdotal
vestments, handed it to the beggar, and then hurried on to the new church,
drawing his alb and chasuble about him, to conceal the deficiency of a nether
garment. The church was crowded, the Emperor Leo and the Empress, the senate,
and almost the whole city were present. Marcian was bidden celebrate the Holy
Sacrifice before all, in the new church he had built. So, full of shame, he
began, hoping that the folds of his chasuble would conceal the absence of a
tunic. But all saw him as though clothed beneath his sacerdotal vestments with
a garment as of pure gold, which flashed as he moved. The patriarch Gennadius
was offended, and rebuked him when the liturgy was over, for having worn a private
garment, more splendid than his ecclesiastical vesture, and worthy only of an
emperor. Marcian fell at his feet, and denied that he had worn any such raiment.
Then Gennadius, wroth at his having spoken falsely, as he thought, for he
supposed his eyes could not have been deceived, caught him by the vesture, and
drew it aside, and behold! Marcian was bare of all other garments save his
sacerdotal apparel.
S.
Marcian built also the church of S. Irene, another of S. Isidore, and a
baptistery of magnificent appearance, surrounded with five porches, like that
at Jerusalem. "But this one," says the chronicler, "was greater
than that by the sheep market, for here greater miracles were wrought than
there. To that, an angel descended on one day in the year, and healed but one
at a rime; at this, whenever a servant of the Lord ministers, Christ himself is
present. The healing, moreover, is not but once a year, but daily, and not of bodies
only, but of souls as well."
S.
Marcian's great compassion extended to women of bad character, and despising
the slander and gossip which he might occasion, by visiting them in their
houses, setting only before his eyes the blessedness of plucking these brands
from the burning, he often sought them out in haunts of crime; and if they had
taken up evil courses through poverty only, he found for them honest
occupations, and by his exhortations and tears, and his overflowing charity,
he convinced and persuaded many of these unhappy women, so that they came
openly and did penance, and some he sent pilgrimages to Jerusalem, and some
went into solitude, and recompensed for the past by self-mortification in the
desert.