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Confessor · 4th century

Confessors Zosimus the Hermit and Athanasius

Commemorated as

The Holy Confessors Zosimus the Hermit and Athanasius the Commentarisius (Jailer)

Early 4th century · A hermit and the jailer who confessed Christ with him

Also known as Zosimus the Hermit · Athanasius the Commentarisius (the jailer)

A hermit arrested under Diocletian, and the prison official Athanasius who, witnessing his steadfastness, confessed Christ and fled with him to the wilderness.

Life

Saints Zosimus and Athanasius are commemorated together on January 4 as confessors of the faith from the time of the persecution under Diocletian, in Cilicia of Asia Minor. Zosimus was a hermit and ascetic who had given himself to prayer, fasting, and solitude; Athanasius was a commentarisius — a prison official, or jailer — whose meeting with Zosimus changed his life.

Arrested during the persecution and brought before the authorities, Zosimus confessed Christ and was subjected to torture, which he endured with remarkable calm and steadfastness. Athanasius, the jailer set over him, was so moved by the constancy of the hermit under suffering that he came to believe and openly confessed Christ himself.

Tradition records that the two then withdrew together into the wilderness, where they passed the remainder of their lives in ascetic stillness and reposed in peace. Because they suffered for the faith yet were not put to death, the Church honors them not as martyrs but as confessors.

Little else is preserved of their origins, families, or the precise circumstances of their deaths; their memory survives chiefly through the synaxaria and the liturgical commemoration that has carried their witness in Orthodox tradition.

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Timeline

  1. Late 3rd c. Zosimus the hermit An ascetic of Cilicia given to solitude and prayer.
  2. Under Diocletian Arrested and tortured Zosimus confesses Christ and endures with calm.
  3. Under Diocletian The jailer believes Athanasius, moved by his constancy, confesses Christ.
  4. After their release Withdrew to the wilderness Living out their lives as ascetics, reposing in peace.
  5. January 4 Commemorated together Honored as confessors of the faith.

Contributions & Legacy

A Note on the Sources

Surviving information is sparse, drawn from the synaxaria and later tradition rather than a contemporary biography, and several details of their lives remain uncertain. The consistent core is that Zosimus the hermit was arrested and tortured under Diocletian, that the jailer Athanasius was converted by his endurance, and that the two withdrew together to the wilderness.

Conversion by Witness

Their account belongs to a frequent pattern in the records of the early martyrs and confessors, in which the steadfastness of the one who suffers converts the very official set to guard or punish him. Zosimus's endurance under torture became the means by which Athanasius came to faith — a witness more persuasive than argument.

Confessors, Not Martyrs

Unlike the martyrs who died under sentence, Zosimus and Athanasius survived their sufferings and lived on in ascetic withdrawal; the Church therefore numbers them among the confessors — those who endured persecution and imprisonment for Christ without being put to death.

Further Reading

Sources
  • Lives of the Saints (Jan 4) — Orthodox Church in America
  • Byzantine Synaxaria and Menologia

Related Saints

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 4