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Going hunting one day, he found a stag. By the providence of God, a shining Cross appeared among the stag's antlers and the voice of God came to Placidus, telling him to go to a Christian priest and be baptized. Placidus was baptized, along with his wife and two sons. At his baptism, he received the name Efstathios, his wife the name Theopiste and their sons the names Agapius and Theopistus.
After his baptism, Efstathios went back to the very place where the revelation through the stag had occurred, and thanked God on his knees that he had brought him to the truth. At that moment, the voice of God came to him again, foretelling suffering for His name and strengthening him. Then Efstathios secretly left Rome with his family, with the intention of hiding among simple people and serving God in an unknown and humble way.
Arriving in Egypt, he was immediately beset by trials. Some wicked barbarian carried off his wife, and his two sons were seized by wild beasts. But the barbarian quickly came to a bad end, and a herdsman saved the boys from the wild beasts. Efstathios settled in the Egyptian village of Vadisis, and there lived as a village hireling for fifteen years.
After this, the barbarians descended on the Roman Empire, and the Emperor Trajan was sorry that his brave commander Placidus, who had been victorious wherever he had fought, was not with him. The Emperor sent two of his officers to seek the great general throughout the Empire.
By God's providence, these officers, who had been friends of Efstathios, came to this village of Vadisis, found him and took him to the Emperor. Efstathios gathered the army together and defeated the barbarians. On the way back to Rome, Efstathios went and found his wife and sons.
When he arrived in Rome, the Emperor Trajan had died and the Emperor Hadrian was on the throne. When Hadrian summoned Efstathios to offer sacrifice to idols, Efstathios told him that he was a Christian. The Emperor put him to torture, together with his wife and sons. When the wild beasts did them no harm, he threw them into a white-hot metal box. On the third day, they took out their bodies, dead but untouched by the fire.
Thus, this glorious general gave to Caesar that which is Caesar's, and to God that which is God's, and entered into the eternal Kingdom of Christ our God. |