Trial and Martyrdom
By tradition Polycarp was arrested in old age during a persecution and brought before the authorities, where he firmly confessed his faith in Christ and was condemned to be burned alive. The synaxarion relates that the executioners wished to nail him to the stake, but he declared that God would give him the strength to endure the flames without restraint, and so they merely bound him with ropes.
The account continues that the flames encircled the saint without touching him, arching together over his head like a vault. Seeing that the fire did him no harm, his executioners stabbed him with a dagger; so much blood flowed from the wound that it extinguished the flames, after which his body was cremated. The Martyrdom of Polycarp preserves the saying attributed to him, that for eighty-six years he had served Christ, who had done him no wrong, and that he could not now blaspheme his King and Savior.