Saints Nazarius and Celsus
Martyrs
(First century)
Saint
Nazarius, born in Rome, was the son of a pagan military man who held an
important post in the Roman army. His mother, honored by the Church as
Saint Perpetua, was a zealous Christian, instructed by Saint Peter or
his disciples in the most perfect maxims of Christianity. Nazarius at
the age of nine embraced the Faith with so much ardor that he copied in
his own young life all the great virtues he saw in his teachers. He was
baptized by Saint Linus, who would later become Pope. His pagan father
was touched by his son's virtue and seconded his project to go elsewhere
to preach the Gospel. Out of zeal for the salvation of others, Nazarius
therefore left Rome, his native city, and preached the Faith in many
places with a fervor and disinterestedness fitting for a disciple of the
Apostles.
Ten
years later he is known to have been in Milan. He was driven from the
city by the prefect after being whipped, and he left Italy to go to
eastern Gaul or France. There a young boy by the name of Celsus was
brought to him; his mother asked him to teach and baptize her son, and
to take him for his disciple. The child was docile, and Nazarius did so;
and they were never separated. When conversions multiplied, the local
governor was alarmed and the apostle was again arrested, beaten and
tortured. The wife of this governor was a Christian, however, and
succeeded in obtaining liberty for the two young innocents. They were
freed on condition they would not preach at this place any longer.
The
two fervent Christians went to the Alpine villages where only a few
solitary settlers braved the rigors of the climate and the altitude.
They were not rebuffed and went as far as Embrun. There they built a
chapel to the true God, and then continued on to Geneva, and to Treves
where Saint Nazarius was arrested and imprisoned. Celsus followed him in
tears, longing to share his captivity. When after a few days the
prefect ordered them brought before him, they were treated cruelly but
appeared before the magistrate, their faces shining with glory. The
prodigies which followed caused fear in the pagans, and they were
released and told to leave the region.
They
returned to Milan, but were soon arrested there also. When they would
not sacrifice to the gods of the empire, after several tortures in which
God again preserved them, they were sentenced to be beheaded. They
embraced one another in transports of joy and praise to God for this
grace. It was during the reign of Nero, in about the year 56, that these
generous Martyrs added their blood to the treasure of the Christians.
Their
bodies were buried separately in a garden outside the city, where they
were discovered and taken up by Saint Ambrose in 395. In the tomb of
Saint Nazarius, whose decapitated body and head were perfectly
conserved, a vial of the Saint's blood was found as fresh and red as if
it had been spilt that same day. Saint Ambrose conveyed the bodies of
the two martyrs into the new church of the Apostles which he had just
built. A woman was delivered of an evil spirit in their presence. Saint
Ambrose sent some of these relics to Saint Paulinus of Nola, who
received them with great respect as a most valuable gift, as he himself
testifies, and placed them in honor at Nola.
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