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Sts. Cosmas and Damian, Martyrs
303 A.D.
September 27
Saints Cosmas and Damiam were brothers and born in Arabia but studied the
sciences in Syria and became eminent for their skill in physic. Being Christians and full of that holy
temper of charity in which the spirit of our divine religion consists, they practiced their profession
with great application and wonderful success but never took any gratification or fee, on which account
they are styled by the Greeks Anargyri, that is, without fees, because they took no money. They
lived at AEgae or Egaea in Cilicia and were remarkable both for the love and respect which the people bore
them on account of the good offices which they received from their charity and for their zeal for the
Christian faith, which they took every opportunity their profession gave them to propagate. When the
persecution of Diocletian began to rage, it was impossible for persons of so distinguished a character to
lie concealed. They were therefore apprehended by the order of Lysias, governor of Cilicia, and after
various torments were beheaded for the faith. Their bodies were carried into Syria and buried at Cyrus.
Theodoret, who was bishop of that city in the fifth century, mentions that their relics were then deposited
in a church there which bore their names. He calls them two illustrious champions and valiant combatants
for the faith of Jesus Christ. The emperor Justinian, who began his reign in 527, out of a religious
regard for the treasure of these precious relics, enlarged, embellished, and strongly fortified this city
of Cyrus and, finding a ruinous church at Constantinople built in honor of these martyrs, as is said, in
the reign of Theodosius the Younger, raised a stately edifice in
its place as a monument of his gratitude for the recovery of his health in a dangerous fit of sickness
through their intercession, as Procopius relates. To express his particular devotion to these saints, he
built another church under their names at Constantinople. Marcellinus, in his chronicle, and St.
Gregory of Tours relate several miracles performed by their intercession. Their relics were conveyed to
Rome, where the holy pope St. Felix, great-grandfather to St. Gregory the Great, built a church to their
honor in which these relics are kept with veneration to this day.
These saints regarded it as a great happiness that their profession offered
them perpetual opportunities of affording comfort and relief to the most distressed part of their fellow
creatures. By exerting our charity toward all in acts of benevolence and beneficence, according to our
abilities, and in treating enemies and persecutors with meekness and good offices, we are to approve
ourselves followers of Christ, animated with His spirit. Thus we shall approach nearest in resemblance to
our divine original and show ourselves children of our heavenly Father, who bears with the most grievous
sinners, inviting them to repentance and pardon and showering down His mercies and benefits upon them. He
only then arms himself with His justice against them when they by willful malice forfeit His grace and
obstinately disappoint His gracious love and kindness. His very nature is boundless goodness, and continual
emanations of mercy descend from him upon His creatures. All the scattered perfections and blessings which
are found in them come from this source. In the imitation of the divine goodness, according to our
abilities, at least in the temper of our mind, consists that Christian perfection which, when founded on
the motive of true charity, is the accomplishment of the law. Men engaged in professions instituted for
the service of their neighbor may sanctify their labor or industry if it is actuated by the motive of
charity towards others, even whilst they also have in view the justice which they owe to themselves and
their family, of procuring an honest and necessary subsistence, which is itself often a strict obligation
and no less noble a virtue if it is founded in motives equally pure and perfect.
from Lives of the Saints by Rev. Alban Butler, 1895
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