Hieromartyr 4th century

Hieromartyr Lucian the Presbyter of Antioch

c. 240 – January 7, 312

Also known as Lucian of Antioch

An orphan who gave away his possessions and became a presbyter and biblical scholar at Antioch, suffering martyrdom during persecution.

Feast Day
October 15
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Lucian, Presbyter of Antioch

Life

Lucian of Antioch was a Christian presbyter, theologian, and biblical scholar of the late third and early fourth centuries, remembered both for his learning and for his ascetic manner of life. By tradition an orphan who gave away his possessions, he became distinguished for scholarship at Antioch, where he was ordained presbyter.

He is credited with a critical recension of the text of the Septuagint and of the Greek New Testament, work whose influence spread through Syria, Asia Minor, and Constantinople. He suffered martyrdom at Nicomedia during the persecution under Maximinus Daia (Maximinus), and is commemorated by the Eastern Orthodox Church on October 15.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 240 Birth in Samosata Lucian was born at Samosata in Kommagene, Syria. By tradition he came from noble parents, and accounts describe him as an orphan who gave away his possessions; he received a broad secular and spiritual education, said to have been pursued at Edessa in Mesopotamia.
  2. Late 3rd century Presbyter and scholar at Antioch Distinguished for his learning and ascetic life, Lucian was ordained presbyter at Antioch. He is associated with a school (Didaskaleion) there, and is regarded by some scholars as a founding figure of the School of Antioch. He undertook a critical revision of the text of the Septuagint and the Greek New Testament.
  3. c. 285 Reconciliation under Bishop Cyril Following the deposition of Bishop Paul of Samosata, Lucian fell under suspicion and was, by one account, separated from communion for some thirty-five years before being reconciled to the Church under Bishop Cyril of Antioch.
  4. During the persecution of Maximinus Arrest and transfer to Nicomedia Lucian was arrested at Antioch during the persecution and transferred to Nicomedia. There he was imprisoned for many months, examined more than once, defended his faith ably, and refused to recant despite torture and starvation.
  5. January 7, 312 Martyrdom at Nicomedia Lucian died in prison at Nicomedia. The exact manner of his death is uncertain in the sources, with starvation and beheading among the possibilities reported. His remains were buried at Drepanum in Bithynia, later renamed Helenopolis.

Contributions & Legacy

5 contributions Read Hide

Scholarship and Biblical Recension

Lucian's principal legacy lies in textual scholarship. He is credited with a critical recension of the text of the Septuagint and of the Greek New Testament. According to the tradition, he corrected Hebrew texts of Scripture that had been distorted, supporting himself through his compilations while living ascetically.

His revised manuscripts became widely current in Syria, Asia Minor, and Constantinople, and his recension is later associated with the textual tradition that influenced figures such as John Chrysostom. Some scholars, following Adolf von Harnack, regard him as the first head of the School of Antioch.

St. Jerome, in On Illustrious Men (chapter 77), calls Lucian 'a man of great talent, presbyter of the Church at Antioch,' notes that copies of the Scriptures still bore Lucian's name in his own day, and records that works of his, including a treatise On Faith and short epistles, were then extant.

Suspicion and Reconciliation

After the deposition of Bishop Paul of Samosata, Lucian came under suspicion in connection with that controversy. According to one account he remained separated from communion for roughly thirty-five years before being reconciled to the Church under Bishop Cyril of Antioch, around the year 285.

Relics & Shrines

Lucian was buried at Drepanum in Bithynia. The town was later renamed Helenopolis in honor of Helena, the mother of the Emperor Constantine. According to the sources, Constantine honored Lucian by building a church dedicated to him at Helenopolis and granting the city tax immunity in his memory. The October 15 commemoration is said to coincide with the dedication of a church built over his relics.

Miracles & Traditions

Historically Documented: St. John Chrysostom is recorded as having delivered an encomium in honor of Lucian on the day after the Feast of Theophany, the traditional date of his death.

Traditional Accounts: According to tradition recorded in the synaxarion, on the journey to Nicomedia Lucian's counsel converted forty soldiers to Christianity, all of whom were themselves martyred. While imprisoned he is said to have celebrated the Divine Liturgy using his own chest as an altar, surrounded by fellow Christian prisoners, and to have received Holy Communion on the Feast of Theophany. A later tradition holds that after his death his body was cast into the sea and returned to land by a dolphin. He is sometimes depicted as a bishop in Russian iconography, though he held only the rank of priest.

Feast Days and Commemoration

Lucian's original commemoration fell on January 7, the date of his death. In the Eastern Orthodox calendar the feast was transferred to October 15, after January 7 came to be observed as the Synaxis of St. John the Baptist. He is commemorated on January 7 in the Roman Catholic tradition, and on the Monday after the fifth Sunday after Pentecost in the Armenian tradition.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints