Coptic Synaxarium
The Twenty-Fourth Day of the Blessed Month of Tubah
Tubah 24
Departure of St. Mary the Ascetic (The
Shut-In)
On this day, St. Mary the Ascetic,
the shut-in, departed. Her parents were among the wealthy and noble people
of Alexandria. Several of the sons of the great men in the city asked to
marry her, but she declined. When her parents departed, she distributed
all that they left among the poor, keeping just a modest part for herself.
Then she joined a convent near the City of Alexandria, and wore the monastic
garb. She exerted herself in worship for 15 years, then she put on the
holy "Eskeem" and put on a garb made of hair. After she took the permission
of the abbess, she shut herself in her cell, closed the door, and opened
a small window in it to receive her provisions. She spent 22 years in this
cell, fasting two days at a time. During the holy forty days fast (Lent),
she fasted for three days, and then broke her fast on some pulses moistened
with water. On the 11th day of the month of Tubah, she asked for a little
of the holy water. She washed her hands and feet, then she received the
Holy Communion, and drank from the holy water. She became sick and stayed
in her bed until the 21st of Tubah, when she received the Holy Mysteries
once more. She called upon the abbess and all the sisters, bade them farewell,
and asked them to visit her after three days. On the 24th day of Tubah,
they visited her and found that she had departed in peace. They carried
her to the church, and after praying over her, they placed her with the
bodies of the virgin saints.
May Her prayers be with us. Amen.
Martyrdom of Anba Bisada the Priest
On this day also, St. Bisada
was martyred. His father was from El-Kase and his mother, who was the daughter
of one of the pagan priests, was from Ehreet. She was a believer in the
Lord Christ. When the son of a pagan priest asked her to marry him, she
took flight to El-Kase where she married a farmer, and God gave her a son
whom she called Bisada. They brought him up in the fear of the Lord and
in the keeping of His Commandments. When St. Bisada was twenty years old,
his father departed and left him a great wealth. St. Bisada increased in
the deeds of charity and righteousness. When Emperor Diocletian issued
his decree of worshipping the idols, the saint hid himself in his home,
and continued to worship God. A voice came to him from heaven saying, "Why
are you delaying?" Immediately, he rushed to the governor and confessed
his faith saying, "I am a Christian." The Governor ordered him be tortured
by beating with whips, hitting his head with pins, pulling out his nails,
and dipping his fingers in vinegar and lime. He endured the torture for
several days with great patience, and the Lord Christ healed all his wounds.
St. Bisada performed several
miracles, and the Governor became weary of torturing him; he chained him
and sent him to the Governor of El-Fayyoum. There St. Bisadai raised a
child from the dead. A large stone had fallen on the child while standing
beside a wall. The bishop of the City of El-Fayyoum heard about St. Bisada,
brought him and ordained him a priest. Then he went back to reappear before
the Governor of El-Fayyoum who tortured him, then sent him to Alexandria
where he received the crown of martyrdom. St. Julius El-Akfahsi (who wrote
the biographies of saints) took his body and gave it to his mother who
was present. She returned with the body to her home town, Ehreet, and all
the people of the town received the body of St. Bisada with joy, and buried
him with great honor. They built a church after his name, and the Lord
performed many miracles through his body.
May His prayers be with us and Glory be to our God forever. Amen.