s of this temple remained in the same condition
above twenty years after. The Roman Martyrology, with that of St. Jerom
and others of the West, celebrate the memory of St. Babylas on the 24th
of January, but the Greeks on the 4th of September, together with three
children martyred with him, as St. Chrysostom and others mention. His
body is said to be now at Cremona, brought from the East in the
crusades. St. Babylas is the titular saint of many churches in Italy,
France, and Spain.
Footnotes:
1. [Greek: Touton katexei xristianon honta] Eus. l. 6, c. 3.
2. P. 273.
3. Theodoret l. 3. Hist. c. 6, and de Graecor. Affect. l. 10. Rufin.
Chrys.
4. St. Chrysostom has given us the lamentation of Libanius, the
celebrated heathen sophist, bewailing the silence of Apollo at
Daphne; adding that Julian had delivered him from the neighborhood
of a dead man, which was troublesome to him.
5. Ammianus Marcellinus, a heathen, and Julian's own historian, says b.
2, p. 225, that he caused all the bones of dead men to be taken away
to purify the place.
ST. SURANUS, ABBOT IN UMBRIA,
WHO gave all things, even the herbs out of his garden, to the poor. He
was martyred by the Lombards in the seventh century, and his relics were
famed for miracles.[1]
Footnotes:
1. St. Greg. Dial. l. 4, c. 22.
ST. MACEDONIUS, ANCHORET IN SYRIA.
HE lived forty years on barley moistened in water, till finding his
health impaired, he ate bread, reflecting that it was not lawful for him
to shorten his life to shun labors and conflicts, as he told the mother
of Theodoret; persuading her, when in a bad state of health, to use a
proper food, which he said was physic to her. Theodoret relates many
miraculous cures of sick persons, and of his own mother among them, by
water on which he had made the sign of the cross, and that his own birth
was the effect of his prayers, after his mother had lived childless in
marriage thirteen years.[1] {214} The saint died, ninety years old, and
is named in the Greek menologies. See Theodoret, Hist. Eccles. l. 5, c.
19, and Philotheae, c. 13. St. Chrysost. hom. 17, ad Pop. Antioch.
Footnotes:
1. The great Theodoret was dedicated to God by his parents before he
was born, and was educated in the study of every true branch of
Syriac, Greek, and Hebrew learning. He gave a large estate to the
poor, and entered a monastery near Apamea, but was taken out of it
against his will, a
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