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Home  »  Volume II: February  »  St. Soteris, Virgin and Martyr

Rev. Alban Butler (1711–73). Volume I: January. The Lives of the Saints. 1866.

February 10

St. Soteris, Virgin and Martyr

 
        From St. Ambrose, Exhort. Virginit. c. 12. and l. 3. de Virgin, c. 6. Tillemont, t. 5. p. 259.

Fourth Age.


ST. AMBROSE boasts of this saint as the greatest honour of his family. St. Soteris was descended from a long series of consuls and prefects: but her greatest glory was her despising, for the sake of Christ, birth, riches, great beauty, and all that the world prizes as valuable. She consecrated her virginity to God, and to avoid the dangers her beauty exposed her to, neglected it entirely, and trampled under her feet all the vain ornaments that might set it off. Her virtue prepared her to make a glorious confession of her faith before the persecutors, after the publication of the cruel edicts of Dioclesian and Maximian against the Christians. The impious judge commanded her face to be buffeted. She rejoiced to be treated as her divine Saviour had been, and to have her face all wounded and disfigured by the merciless blows of the executioners. The judge ordered her to be tortured many other ways, but without being able to draw from her one sigh or tear. At length, overcome by her constancy and patience, he commanded her head to be struck off. The ancient martyrologies mention her.
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