Saint Menas was probably born in Egypt in the city of Niceous (Nakyus,
near Memphis, though some sources provide that it is further into the Delta)
and there he was martyred during the reign of the Roman Emperor, Diocletian,
probably around 300 AD.
We are told that his mother, Ophemia, was barren. It was
said that when she praying in front of Virgin Mary’s icon, appealing for her
intercession that God may give her a child, she heard a voice saying ‘ amen ‘.
Therefore, when her prayer was answered, and she had a son, she called him
Menas. His father ‘Odexius’, who was employed with the Roman Empire, died when
Menas was young. When he joined the army, he was given a high rank in
recognition of his father’s prominence.
The Greek Acts, published with a Latin translation in
"Analecta Bollaniana", III 258 (Surlus XI 241) tell us that Menas was
a Christian who served under the tribune Firmilian while a soldier.
However, when the army came to Cotyaeus in Phrygia, Menas, on hearing of the
edicts issued against the Christians by Emperors Diocletian and Maximian,
deserted the army in order to escape death and hid in a mountain cave for five
years, where in solitude he served God by fasting vigils and prayer.