Hierarch 1st century

Cyril of Catania

1st century (Apostolic Age)

Also known as Cyril, Bishop of Catania

A disciple of the Apostle Peter who appointed him Bishop of Catania in Sicily. He was remembered as a wonderworker, including the healing of bitter water through prayer.

Feast Day
March 21
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Cyril, Bishop of Catania, the Wonderworker

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Cyril was, by tradition, a disciple of the Apostle Peter, who appointed him Bishop of Catania in Sicily. The synaxarion records that he was a native of Antioch in Syria, sent to govern the church of Catania in the first generation of the Christian mission.

He is remembered as a wonderworker who guided his flock with piety. The best-known miracle attributed to him is the changing of a bitter spring into sweet, drinkable water through prayer, a sign that the accounts say drew many pagans to the faith. He died in old age and was buried in Sicily, and is commemorated on March 21.

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Life and Ministry

According to the synaxarion, Cyril was born at Antioch in Syria and became a disciple of the Apostle Peter. Peter installed him as Bishop of Catania, a city on the eastern coast of Sicily, placing him among the early bishops who carried the apostolic preaching into the western Mediterranean.

The tradition presents him as a pious and capable shepherd who governed his church wisely, and it relates that the Lord granted him the gift of working wonders. The hymnography for his feast praises him as a rule of faith and an image of humility, exalted through his lowliness and enriched through his poverty.

The miracle most associated with him is the transformation of a bitter spring. By his prayer the bitter water lost its bitterness and became fit to drink, and the accounts say this sign moved many of the pagan inhabitants to embrace Christianity. Cyril is said to have lived to old age and to have been buried in Sicily.

Notes

Originally from Antioch.

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