St. Apollonia
February 5
Traditional: February 9
A holy virgin who suffered Martyrdom in Alexandria during a local
uprising against the Christians previous to the persecution of Decius
about 249). During the festivities commemorative of the first millenary
of the Roman Empire, the agitation of the heathen populace rose to a
great height, and when one of their poets prophesied a calamity, they
committed bloody outrages on the Christians whom the authorities made
no effort to protect. The great Dionysius, then Bishop of Alexandria
(247-265), relates the sufferings of his people in a letter addressed
to Fabius, Bishop of Antioch, long extracts from which is preserved for
us. After describing how two Christians, a man and woman, named
respectively Metras and Quinta, were seized by the seditious mob and
put to death with the most cruel tortures, and how the houses of
several others were completely pillaged, Dionysius continues: "At that
time Apollonia was held in high esteem. These men seized her also and
by repeated blows broke all her teeth. They then erected outside the
city gates a pile of fagots and threatened to burn her alive if she
refused to repeat after them impious words (either a blasphemy against
Christ, or an invocation of the heathen gods). Given, at her own
request, a little freedom, she sprang quickly into the fire and was
burned to death." Apollonia belongs, therefore, to that class of early
Martyrs who did not await the death they were threatened with, but
either to preserve their chastity, or because confronted with the
alternative of renouncing their faith or suffering death, voluntarily
embraced the latter in the form prepared for them. In the honor paid to
her Martyrs the Church made no distinction between these women and
others. St. Augustine touches on this question in the first book of the
"City of God", apropos of suicide (De. Civ. Dei, I, 26); "But, they
say, during the time of persecution certain holy women plunged into the
water with the intention of being swept away by the waves and drowned,
and thus preserve their threatened chastity. Although they quitted life
in this wise, nevertheless they receive high honour as Martyrs in the
Catholic Church and their feasts are observed with great ceremony. This
is a matter on which I dare not pass judgment lightly. For I know not
but that the Church was divinely authorized through trustworthy
revelations to honor thus the memory of these Christians. It may be
that such is the case. May it not be, too, that these acted in such a
manner, not through human caprice but on the command of God, not
erroneously but through obedience, as we must believe in the case of
Samson? When, however, God
gives a command and makes it clearly known, who would account obedience
thereto a crime or condemn such pious devotion and ready service?" The
narrative of Dionysius does not suggest the slightest reproach as to
this act of St. Apollonia; in his eyes she was as much a Martyr as the
others, and as such she was revered in the Alexandrian Church. The
Church celebrates her memory on February 9, and she is popularly
invoked against the toothache because of the torments she had to
endure. She is represented in art with pincers in which a tooth is
held. There was a church dedicated to her at Rome but it no longer
exists. The little square, however, in which it stood is still called
"Piazza Sant' Apollonia".
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