
SAINT MARTIN I
Pope and Martyr
(†655)
Pope and Martyr
(†655)
Saint Martin, who occupied the Roman  See from 649 to 655, was a native of Toscany, and became celebrated amid  the clergy of Rome for his learning and his sanctity. When he was  elected Pope, Rome echoed with cries of joy; the clergy, the Senate and  the people gave witness to their great satisfaction, and the emperor  approved this happy choice. He did not disappoint the hopes of the  Church; piety towards God and charity to the poor were his two rules of  life. He repaired churches falling into ruin and restored peace between  divergent factions, but his greatest concern was to maintain in the  Church the precious heritage of the true faith.
For this purpose he assembled in the  Lateran Church a Council of a hundred bishops, which condemned the  principal heads of the eastern Monothelite heresy, again raising its  head. Saint Martin himself sent out an encyclical letter to all  prelates, showing that a spurious Credo circulating in the east was  erroneous, and excommunicating all who followed it. He incurred the  enmity of the Byzantine court and even of two patriarchs, by his  energetic opposition to their errors, and the Exarch of Ravenna,  representing the oriental Emperor Constant II in Italy, went so far as  to endeavor to procure the assassination of the Pope while he stood at  the altar in the Church of Saint Mary Major. The would-be murderer, a  page of the Exarch, was miraculously struck blind, however, and his lord  refused to have any further role in the matter. But the eastern  Emperor’s successor had no such scruples. After having the holy Pontiff  accused of many fabricated misdeeds, he seized Saint Martin — who did  not resist or permit resistance, for fear of bloodshed in Rome — then  had him conveyed to Constantinople on board a vessel bound for that  port. None of his clergy were permitted to accompany him; he was boarded  at night in secret.
After  a three month’s voyage the ship anchored at the island of Naxos in the  Aegean Sea, where the Pope was kept in confinement for a year, then  finally brought in chains to the imperial city in 654, where he was  imprisoned for three months. When he appeared before his judge he was  unable to stand without support; but the pitiless magistrate heard his  accusers and sentenced him to be chained and dragged through the streets  of the city. He bade farewell to his companions in captivity before he  left, banished to the present-day Crimea (the Chersonese in those  days), saying to them when they wept: “Rejoice with me that I  have been found worthy to suffer for the name of Jesus Christ.” There,  where a famine prevailed, he lingered on for four months, abandoned to  sickness and starvation but maintaining perfect serenity, until God  released him by death from his tribulations on the 12th of  November, 655. In a letter he sent from there, which has been conserved,  the Pope wrote: “For this miserable body, the Lord will have care; He  is near. What is there to alarm me? I hope in His mercy, it will not be  long before it terminates my career.”
. Source: Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butler’s Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894).
 
 
 
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