Martyr 3rd century

Martyr Marinus the Soldier of Caesarea

3rd century; martyred c. 262

Also known as Marinus of Caesarea

A soldier of Caesarea who, about to be made a centurion, was denounced as a Christian, and choosing the Gospel over the sword was beheaded for Christ.

Feast Day
August 7
Also Dec 16
Draft
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Commemorated as

The Holy Martyr Marinus the Soldier of Caesarea

Come to them for
Military Service

Life

Marinus was a Roman soldier stationed at Caesarea Maritima in Palestine who was about to be appointed to the rank of centurion when a rival claimant to the post accused him of being a Christian, thereby disqualifying him under Roman law. Called before the military tribunal, Marinus was given three hours to reconsider his allegiance. During this interval, Bishop Theoteknus (Theotecnus) of Caesarea led him to the church, placed before him his military sword and a copy of the Gospels, and asked him to choose. Marinus chose the Gospel. He returned to the tribunal, openly confessed his Christian faith, refused to perform the required sacrificial rites, and was immediately beheaded.

The account is preserved by Eusebius of Caesarea in his Historia Ecclesiastica (Book 7, ch. 15-16), making Marinus one of the few pre-Nicene martyrs whose story rests on near-contemporary historical narrative rather than later hagiography alone. He died in approximately AD 262, during the reign of Gallienus. Following the execution, a Roman senator named Astyrius (or Asterius), who was present and who was himself a Christian, carried the martyr's body on his own shoulders and gave it honourable burial. The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates Marinus on 7 August and 16 December.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 262 Promotion to centurion Marinus was a soldier at Caesarea Maritima who was on the point of being promoted to centurion when a rival candidate challenged the appointment, alleging that a Christian could not lawfully receive the honour.
  2. c. 262 Intervention of Bishop Theoteknus Given three hours to reflect, Marinus was met by Bishop Theoteknus, who took him to the church and placed before him a Gospel book and his soldier's sword, bidding him choose. Marinus took up the Gospels without hesitation. The bishop told him to hold fast to God and go in peace.
  3. c. 262 Confession and beheading Returning to the tribunal, Marinus confessed his Christian faith, refused to offer the ritual sacrifice required of a centurion, and was beheaded on the spot.
  4. c. 262 Burial by Astyrius The Roman senator Astyrius, himself a Christian who had come from Rome and was present at the execution, carried the martyr's body on his own shoulders, wrapped it in a costly garment, and gave it a worthy burial.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Historical Sources

Marinus is one of the better-documented pre-Nicene martyrs because Eusebius of Caesarea included his story in the Historia Ecclesiastica, the foundational history of the early Church. Eusebius was writing in the same city where Marinus died and had access to local records and oral tradition. The account in Book 7, chapters 15-16, is notable for including the detail of the bishop's symbolic choice between the sword and the Gospel — a scene that became emblematic in later Christian reflection on the tension between military service and Christian allegiance.

The role of Astyrius is also attested by Eusebius, who notes that Astyrius was a distinguished man of senatorial rank who had recently arrived from Rome and was known to the imperial household. Whether Astyrius was himself subsequently martyred is not established; Eusebius presents him as a venerable figure but does not describe a martyrdom for him.

Veneration

Marinus is commemorated in the Eastern Orthodox Church on 7 August (the Afterfeast of the Transfiguration) and again on 16 December. His feast is observed alongside other martyrs of the pre-Nicene era. Because the account derives from Eusebius rather than from later legendary elaboration, it has been taken as particularly reliable in modern patristic and historical study.

Marinus is venerated as a patron of soldiers who face conflicts between duty and conscience. The image of the sword and the Gospel set before him and his choice of the latter has made him an enduring symbol of the Christian martyr who puts faith above earthly advancement.

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