New Martyr 18th century

Saint John the New Martyr of Bulgaria

1775 – 1784

Also known as John of Bulgaria

Born in Bulgaria in 1775, he refused to renounce Christ and accept Islam, and was put to death for his confession of the faith.

Feast Day
March 5
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Martyr John of Bulgaria

Life

John, the New Martyr of Bulgaria, was born in Bulgaria in 1775, during the period of Ottoman rule over the Balkans and Asia Minor. According to the synaxarion, as a boy he fell in with Muslim companions and was led to renounce Christ and to embrace Islam. He is numbered among the new martyrs of the Ottoman era, and is commemorated on March 5.

By tradition, when he was about sixteen years old John was stricken with remorse over his denial of the faith. He fled to Mount Athos and entered the Great Lavra, where he lived a strict monastic life for three years under the direction of an Elder. His conscience continued to trouble him over his earlier apostasy, and with his Elder's blessing he resolved to confess Christ publicly in the Ottoman capital, accepting that such a confession would cost him his life.

The synaxarion relates that John traveled to Constantinople and entered Hagia Sophia, which had been converted into a mosque. There he made the Sign of the Cross and recited Christian prayers aloud, openly declaring his return to Christ and his rejection of Islam. When he was ordered to renounce Christ, he answered, by the tradition, 'Without Christ, there is no salvation.' He was taken out to the courtyard and beheaded in 1784, at the age of nineteen.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 1775 Birth in Bulgaria John is born in Bulgaria under Ottoman rule.
  2. c. 1781 Repentance and flight to Athos About age sixteen, stricken with remorse over his apostasy, he flees to the Great Lavra on Mount Athos.
  3. 1784 Martyrdom in Constantinople After three years of monastic life, he confesses Christ at Hagia Sophia and is beheaded at age nineteen.

Contributions & Legacy

1 contributions Read Hide

Apostasy and Repentance

The account of John's life is structured around a fall and a return. Sources relate that in boyhood he was drawn by Muslim companions into renouncing Christ, a denial he later regarded as the defining wound of his life. The remorse that overtook him in his teens drove him to seek monastic refuge on Mount Athos, where three years at the Great Lavra prepared him spiritually for the confession he sought.

His decision to return to the capital and confess Christ in a public and provocative manner places him within the distinctive pattern of the Ottoman-era new martyrs, many of whom were former apostates who sought to undo a denial of the faith by an open profession before the authorities, in the knowledge that the penalty was death.

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