Theodotus, martyr at Ancyra
Theodotus (9), May 18, martyr at Ancyra in Galatia in Diocletian's persecution.
The narrative of his martyrdom is intermingled with that of the Seven Virgins
of Ancyra. Theodotus was a devout dealer in provisions. THEOTECNUS,
the apostate from Christianity, was sent with ample power to enforce conformity
to the imperial edicts, and began by ordering all provisions sold in the market
to be first presented to the gods. This would render them unfit for use in the Holy
Communion. Theodotus supplied the Christians with bread and wine free from pollution.
The persecution waxing hot, he was compelled to fly from Ancyra to a place, distant
some 40 miles, where a cave, through which the Halys flowed, was a refuge for some
fugitive Christians. The narrative shews us how quietly Christians in country districts
pursued their occupations and enjoyed daily worship, while those in the cities were
suffering tortures and death, and is most valuable as illustrating the general condition
of the Christians in Asia Minor during the earlier years of Diocletian's persecution.
In the cave Theodotus found certain brethren who had overturned the altar of Diana,
and were being carried by their relations for judgment to the prefect when Theodotus
had bribed the accusers to let them off. They were delighted to see their deliverer,
and invited him to a meal, of which we have a graphic picture: the fugitives reclining
on the abundant grass, surrounded with trees, wild fruit, and flowers, while grasshoppers,
nightingales, and birds of every kind made music around. In this passage (§ 11)
we find one of the few instances where an early Christian author seems capable of
appreciating the beauty of nature. We then have a glimpse of the religious life
of the time. Before he would eat, Theodotus sent some of their number to summon
the presbyter from the neighbouring village of Malus to dine with them, pray with
them before they started afresh on their journey, and ask a blessing on their food,
for, says the Acts, "the saint never took food unless a presbyter blessed it." The
presbyter, whose name was Fronto, or, according to the Bollandist Papebrochius,
Phorto, was just leaving the church after the midday hour of prayer. The village
dogs attacked the messengers, and the priest ran to drive them away, asked if they
were Christians, and informed them that he had seen them in a vision the night before,
bringing a precious treasure to him. They told him they had the most precious of
treasures with them, the martyr Theodotus, to whom the presbyter at once departed.
During the meal Theodotus suggested the spot as a fit place for a martyrium or receptacle
for relics, and exhorted the priest to build one. When he said he possessed no relics,
Theodotus gave him a ring off his finger in token that he would provide them. He
then returned to Ancyra, which he found greatly disturbed by a violent persecution.
[ANCYRA, SEVEN
MARTYRS
OF.] A writer in the Rev. archéol.
(t. xxviii. p. 303) notes a passage in the Acts of these sufferers (§ 14) as a valuable
illustration of the paganism of Galatia. Theodotus, having rescued the bodies of
the nuns from the lake into which Theotecnus had cast them, prepared to suffer.
He prayed with the brethren, and told them to give his relics to Fronto if he brought
a ring as a token. Then he went to the tribunal, where the priests of Minerva were
demanding his arrest as the leader of the Christian opposition. The Acts now offer
some of the most striking illustrations used by Le Blant in his Actes des Martyrs
(cf. pp. 25, 62, 78, 80). They illustrate every detail of Roman criminal procedure,
especially the offer made to the martyrs of high promotion and imperial favour if
they recanted. Theodotus was offered the high-priesthood of Apollo, now esteemed
the greatest of all the gods, but in vain, till at last the president ordered him
to be beheaded and his body burned. He was executed and his body placed on a pyre,
when suddenly a bright light shone around it, so that no one dared approach. The
president ordered it to be guarded all night, in the place of common execution,
by soldiers whom he had just flogged for suffering the bodies of the nuns to be
carried off. Fronto, who was a farmer, and kept a vineyard where he made wine, came
to Ancyra to sell his wine, bringing the ring of Theodotus with him, and arriving
at the place of execution just when night was falling and the gates of the city
had been closed, found the guard erecting a hut of willow branches wherein to spend
the night. The soldiers invited him to join them, which he did. Discovering what
they were guarding, he made them drunk with his own wine and carried off the martyr's
body, placing it in the spot Theodotus had marked as the site of a martyrium. The
Acts purport to have been written by one Nilus, an eye-witness. They speak of the
chapel erected to the memory of Theodotus, which could only have been done when
peace was restored to the church. They are in Ruinart, Acta Sinc. p. 354,
and translated
980into English as an appendix to Mason's Persecution
of Diocletian.
[G.T.S.]