Today's Synaxarium 29 Tout 1740


The Martyrdom of St. Arbsima (Repsima) the Virgin and Her Sisters the Virgins

On this day, the holy virgins Arbsima (Repsima) and Agatha (Ghana) and their sisters, were martyred during the reign of Emperor Diocletian. This infidel sought out the most beautiful damsel to marry. He sent artists to every country and ordered them to paint a portrait of the most beautiful damsel that their sights fell on and to give him an accurate description of her. When they arrived nearby Rome, they entered a convent for virgins and found Saint Arbsima and none was like her in beauty. They painted a portrait of her and sent it to the Emperor who rejoiced when he saw it. He sent to the kings and governors to invite them to the wedding celebrations. When Arbsima and the virgins knew that, they wept, and left the convent fleeing, entreating the Lord Christ to help them and to keep their virginity. They fled to the country of Armenia, and entered the province over which Tridates was king. There they dwelt in a winery in a deserted garden. They had great trouble in getting their food, so one of them made glass, sold it, and with the money they bought their food. When Diocletian sought for Arbsima, he did not find her. Later on, he heard that she was in the country of Armenia so he sent to Tridates the governor to look for her. When the virgins heard that, they left their shelter and hid themselves in the city. But someone informed about them. Tridates then commanded to bring Arbsima to him and when she refused, they abducted her and brought her to him. When he saw her beauty, he wanted to have her for himself, but she did not let him. He brought her mother to persuade her but instead she besought her to endure patiently. She comforted her, told her that she must not forsake her true Bridegroom, the Lord Jesus Christ, and that she must not defile her virginity. When he knew what her mother had done, he commanded to break her teeth. God gave St. Arbsima power to overcome the governor; she pushed him forcefully and he fell on his back. She left him lying on the floor although he was well known by his might and bravery in war. Ashamed of having been vanquished by a virgin damsel, he ordered to cut off her head. The soldiers came and tied her, tore out her tongue, plucked out her eyes, and then cut her into pieces. When the governor rose up from his fall and regained his senses, he was sorry for killing the saint. He ordered to slay the rest of the virgins. The soldiers pierced the soles of their feet, flayed them, cut them into pieces, and then cast them out. One of them was sick and was lying on a bed, and she cried out to the soldiers so she might join her sisters. So, they cut off her head also and thus, all the virgins received the crown of martyrdom. The soldiers also slew all who had come with them from Rome. After their departure, the governor became mad and the physicians could not help him until Saint Gregory, Bishop of Armenia, came to him and prayed over him. By this he was healed of his affliction and believed in the Lord Christ. He took the bodies of the holy and pure virgins and laid them in a holy place. Their intercession be for us, and Glory be to our God, forever. Amen.

the commemoration of the major feasts of the Lord

The Church arranged to celebrate on the twenty-ninth day of every Coptic month the commemoration of the major feasts of the Lord: the Annunciation, the Nativity, and the Resurrection, during which prayers are prayed in the Faraihi rite, while the readings remain the same as in the catamarus. This celebration does not take place in the months of Toba and Amshir, which symbolize the Law and the Prophets. And because they precede the month of Baramhat, in which the annunciation of the birth of the Lord Jesus took place. May the blessings of these feasts be with us, Amen.

The Martyrdom of St. Febronia

And in it also from the year 446 of the martyrs (750 AD) during the reign of Pope Khail I, the forty-sixth of the Patriarchs of the See of St. Mark, and in the state of Abd al-Malik bin Marwan, who was persecuting Christians, Abu al-Abbas attacked him, so he fled with his soldiers to Upper Egypt, and ordered them to demolish churches and monasteries, killing, looting and looting. . And there was near Akhmim a monastery for nuns with thirty nuns. So the soldiers entered him, and after they looted him, they found a beautiful nun named Febronia among the nuns, so they wanted to take her to present her as a gift to the Sultan. When I heard what they said, I went to their leader and asked for a deadline, and entered her cell and prayed to God crying, asking for salvation. And soon she came out with a trick to them and begged them to leave her to worship her, in return for a favor she would do to them, which she had learned from her ancestors. This beauty was an oil that you could buy, if you anointed any part of the body with it, and swords would not work with it. And in order to convince them, she smeared her neck with oil and asked the commander to make his bravest soldiers hit her with all his might with his sharp sword. As soon as he did that, the chaste virgin's head was separated from her body and she received the crown of martyrdom. As for the soldiers, they were very afraid, and they rushed to leave the monastery, after they had left everything they had looted. Her sisters, the nuns, took her pure body, shrouded it, and buried it with great honor. Blessing of her prayers be with us, Glory be to God forever.