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The Lives of the Saints Volume 1 - St. Patrick's Basilica

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ST. MARK, BISHOP AND CONFESSOR.<br />

www.freecatholicebooks.com<br />

SOME Greeks rank among <strong>the</strong> saints on this day, Mark, bishop <strong>of</strong> Arethusa,<br />

in Syria, in <strong>the</strong> fourth age. When Constantius put to death his uncle,<br />

{676} Julius Constantius, bro<strong>the</strong>r <strong>of</strong> Constantine <strong>the</strong> Great, with his<br />

eldest son; <strong>the</strong> two younger, Gallus and Julian, narrowly escaped <strong>the</strong><br />

sword. In that danger Mark concealed Julian, and secretly supplied him<br />

with necessaries for his subsistence. When Julian became emperor, he<br />

commanded that <strong>the</strong> temples which had been demolished by Christians,<br />

during <strong>the</strong> two preceding reigns, should be rebuilt at <strong>the</strong>ir expense.<br />

Mark had, by <strong>the</strong> authority <strong>of</strong> Constantius, demolished a very magnificent<br />

temple which was held in great veneration by <strong>the</strong> idolaters: he had also<br />

built a church, and converted a great number <strong>of</strong> infidels. Authorized by<br />

<strong>the</strong> law <strong>of</strong> Julian, <strong>the</strong> hea<strong>the</strong>ns <strong>of</strong> Arethusa, when <strong>the</strong>y saw <strong>the</strong>mselves<br />

uppermost, fell on <strong>the</strong> Christians; and Mark, finding that <strong>the</strong>y were<br />

ready to show <strong>the</strong>ir resentment against him in particular, which <strong>the</strong>y had<br />

long concealed, he at first, pursuant to <strong>the</strong> gospel precept, betook<br />

himself to flight to escape <strong>the</strong>ir fury. But understanding that <strong>the</strong>y had<br />

apprehended some <strong>of</strong> his flock instead <strong>of</strong> him, he returned and delivered<br />

himself up to <strong>the</strong> persecutors, to animate o<strong>the</strong>rs in <strong>the</strong> same cause by<br />

his example and instructions. <strong>The</strong>y seized him soon after his return,<br />

dragged him through <strong>the</strong> streets by <strong>the</strong> hair, or any part <strong>the</strong>y could lay<br />

hold <strong>of</strong>, without <strong>the</strong> least compassion for his age, or regard for his<br />

virtue and learning. Having stripped him, and scourged him all over his<br />

body, joining ignominy and insults with cruelty, <strong>the</strong>y threw him into <strong>the</strong><br />

stinking public jakes. Having taken him from <strong>the</strong>nce, <strong>the</strong>y left him to<br />

<strong>the</strong> children, ordering <strong>the</strong>m to prick and pierce him, without mercy, with<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir writing-styles, or steel pencils. <strong>The</strong>y bound his legs with cords<br />

so tight as to cut and bruise his flesh to <strong>the</strong> very bone; <strong>the</strong>y wrung <strong>of</strong>f<br />

his ears with small strong threads; and in this maimed, bloody<br />

condition, <strong>the</strong>y pushed him from one to ano<strong>the</strong>r. After this <strong>the</strong>y rubbed<br />

him over with honey and fat broth; and shutting him up in a kind <strong>of</strong><br />

cage, hung him up in <strong>the</strong> air where <strong>the</strong> sun was most scorching, at<br />

noonday, in <strong>the</strong> midst <strong>of</strong> summer, in order to draw <strong>the</strong> wasps and gnats<br />

upon him, whose stings are exceeding sharp and piercing in those hot<br />

countries. He was so calm in <strong>the</strong> midst <strong>of</strong> his sufferings, that, though<br />

so sorely wounded and covered with flies and wasps, he bantered <strong>the</strong>m as<br />

he hung in <strong>the</strong> air; telling <strong>the</strong>m, that while <strong>the</strong>y were grovelling on <strong>the</strong><br />

earth, he was raised by <strong>the</strong>m towards heaven. <strong>The</strong>y frequently solicited<br />

him to rebuild <strong>the</strong>ir temple, but though <strong>the</strong>y reduced <strong>the</strong>ir demands by<br />

degrees to a trifling sum, he constantly answered, that it would be an<br />

impiety to give <strong>the</strong>m one farthing towards such a work. This indeed would<br />

be to concur to idolatrous worship; but his demolishing <strong>the</strong> temple would<br />

have been against <strong>the</strong> order <strong>of</strong> law and justice, had he done it without<br />

public authority. At length <strong>the</strong> fury <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> people was turned into

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