Martyr 3rd century

Martyrs Theodotus and Rufina of Caesarea

Also known as Parents of Saint Mamas

Christian parents of Saint Mamas, of patrician rank, who were imprisoned for refusing the imperial decree against the faith; Rufina gave birth to Mamas in prison, where both reposed.

Feast Day
September 2
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Theodotus and Rufina of Caesarea in Cappadocia

Life

Theodotus and Rufina were a married Christian couple of the third century, remembered chiefly as the parents of the Martyr Mamas of Caesarea. According to the synaxarion they came from patrician families and were widely honored for their Christian piety. When they refused to obey an imperial decree requiring the worship of the pagan gods, they were arrested and imprisoned at Caesarea in Cappadocia, where both reposed. They are commemorated together with their son on September 2.

By tradition, the couple was first summoned by Alexander, the magistrate of Gangra. Because of Theodotus's noble rank, Alexander sent him on to the governor Faustus in Caesarea of Cappadocia, who imprisoned him on his arrival. Rufina, though she was pregnant at the time, followed her husband and remained with him in prison, where the two suffered for Christ together.

The accounts relate that Theodotus died first in prison, having prayed that the Lord might take him before he could be subjected to torture. Rufina reposed shortly afterward, in sorrow at her husband's death and, by the tradition, soon after giving birth, so that the infant Mamas was left alone in the prison. A pious Christian widow named Ammia (called in some accounts Matrona), warned by an angel, obtained permission to bury the parents and took the child into her own home, raising him as her own.

Contributions & Legacy

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Imprisonment and Repose

The synaxarion presents Theodotus and Rufina as confessors who died in the course of their imprisonment rather than by a formal execution. Theodotus, fearing he could not endure the tortures threatened against him, prayed for a swift death and reposed in the prison; the tradition holds that his prayer was heard. Rufina followed him soon after, having given her son into God's keeping.

Their burial and the rescue of their orphaned child fell to the widow Ammia, remembered as a wealthy and devout Christian who interred the bodies of the two martyrs with honor. The child she rescued, Mamas, would himself be venerated as one of the great martyrs of Cappadocia, so that the family is commemorated together on the same day.

Notes

Named pair kept as one row; distinct from the row for their son, the Martyr Mamas of Caesarea (OS-0120).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints