05
APRIL
(18 April)
Martyrs
Agathopodos the Deacon, Theodoulos the Reader and those with them
(+c.303)
Martyrs: Fermus and his Sister together with her
Servant;
Zinon;
Claudian the Persian (IV);
Hypomonea;
George in New Ephesus (+1801)
Saint Dydimos of Alexandria
Monastics: Puplios of Egypt (IV);
Theon, Simeon and Forvinus (IV);
Mark of Athens (+400);
Platon (Plato), Confessor of Studite monastery
(+814);
Theodora of Soluneia (+892)
The
Holy Martyrs Agathopodos the Deacon and Theodoulos the Reader
lived in Thessalonika during the reign of the emperor Diocletian
(284-305) and Maximian (284-305) and were among the church clergy:
the holy Deacon Agathopodos was very old, and Saint Theodoulos very
young.
Both
distinguished themselves by righteous life and piety. One tine Saint
Theodoulos saw in his sleep a vision, in which an unknown person
in radiant garb placed in his hand some object. When he awoke, he
then saw in his hand a beautiful ring with the image of the Cross
and he realised, that this was a sign of his future martyrdom. By
the power of the Cross imaged on the ring the saint healed many
of the sick and turned pagans to faith in Christ the Saviour.
When
the emperor Diocletian issued an edict (303) of a persecution against
Christians, many attempted to hide themselves from pursuit, but
Saints Agathopodos and Theodoulos undauntedly continued to proclaim
the Gospel preaching.
The
Thessalonika governor Faustinus, having learned of this, gave orders
to bring them to him for trial. Seeing the youth and excellence
of Saint Theodoulos, Faustinus attempted by flattery to persuade
him to renounce Christianity and return to the decreed offering
of sacrifice. To this the Martyr Theodoulos answered, that he long
since had renounced the error and that he pitied Faustinus, who
by his offer of paganism was condemned himself to eternal death.
The governor offered the martyr a choice: the fortune of life or
immediate death. The saint answered, that certainly he would choose
life, but as life eternal, and that temporal death he feared not.
When
Faustinus lost hope to persuade the Martyr Theodoulos, he began
to talk with Saint Agathopodos. The governor attempted to deceive
him and said, that Saint Theodoulos had already agreed to offer
sacrifice to the gods. But the Martyr Agathopodos did not believe
this. He was convinced, that Saint Theodoulos was prepared to offer
his life for his True God, the Lord Jesus Christ.
Not
having any success, Faustinus commanded to remove the martyrs to
prison. The holy martyrs prayed fervently and boldly preached the
Word of God to the imprisoned, such that many were converted to
Christianity. The head of the prison Eutinios reported about this
to the governor.
Faustinus
again summoned them to trial and again he urged them to renounce
Christ. Before the eyes of Saint Theodoulos they brought forth to
offer sacrifice those, who earlier were Christians, but betrayed
the faith. "Ye have conquered the weak, but strong warriors of Christ
ye in no way wilt see to conquer, even if ye do invent yet greater
torments!" -- exclaimed Saint Theodoulos. The governor commanded
the martyr to produce the Christian books. "Here, my body is given
for torture," -- answered the martyr -- "do with it what thou wish;
torture me in a very fierce manner, but nonetheless I shalt not
hand over the Holy Books for mockery by the impious!"
Faustinus
gave orders to bring Saint Theodoulos to the place of execution,
where an executioner readied a sword in order to cut off his head.
The martyr bravely and with joy cried out: "Glory to Thee, O God,
Father of my Lord Jesus Christ, Who deigned to suffer for us. Here
by His grace I go unto Thee, and with joy I do die for Thee!" Then
Faustinus halted the execution and again locked up the martyrs in
prison. There the holy martyrs prayed fervently and both saw the
same dream. They were sailing in a ship, which during the time of
storm was suffering shipwreck. The waves cast them up upon shore,
arrayed in white radiant raiment. The saints told each other about
the vision, and they gave thanks to God for their impending martyr's
end.
In
the morning, when the martyrs were again brought to Faustinus, they
declared to him: "We -- are Christians and for the Name of Christ
we are prepared to undergo whatever the suffering." Faustinus gave
orders to cast them into the sea. The waves carried Saint Agathodoros
to the rocks, and he loudly exclaimed: "This shalt be for us a second
Baptism, which will wash away our sins, and we shalt come unto Christ
with purity." After him Saint Theodoulos was also cast into the
sea (+303).
The
sea cast on shore the bodies of the saints in radiant garb, without
the ropes and weight-stones. Christians took their holy bodies and
gave them reverent burial.
The
Martyr Fermus died from fire, and his sister with her servant
from the sword.
The
Monk Puplios pursued asceticism in the Egyptian wilderness
during the reign of the emperor Julian the Apostate (361-363). Before
the military campaign against the Persians, the emperor sent a devil
to explore the way for the army to go. The Monk Puplios foresaw
in spirit the intent of the emperor. He stood at prayer with up-raised
hands, praying thus day and night, and blocked the path of the devil.
For ten days the evil spirit waited until the monk concluded his
prayer. Unable to proceed, he returned to the emperor and reported
about his thwarting. In a rage against the Monk Puplios, Julian
the Apostate gave an oath to avenge himself on the saint upon his
return from the campaign. But he did not fulfill his oath, since
he soon perished.
After
the death of Julian, one of his military commanders distributed
his effects and took monastic vows at the hand of the Monk Puplios.
The
Monk Mark was born in Athens. He related about his life to
Abba Serapion, who by the will of God visited him before his death.
In
his youth he had studied philosophy. After the death of his parents,
Saint Mark withdrew into Egypt and settled into a cave of the Thracian
Mount (in Ethiopia). The monk spent ninety-five years in seclusion
and during this while not only did he not see an human face, but
not even a beast or bird. The first thirty years were for the Monk
Mark the most difficult time. Barefoot and bedraggled, he suffered
in winter from the cold, and in summer from the heat. The sparse
wilderness plants served him for food, and sometimes he was reduced
to eat the dust and drink bitter sea-water. Unclean spirits chased
after the Monk Mark, promising to drown him in the sea, or if they
caught hold of him to drag him off down from the mountain, with
shouts of: "Depart from our land! From the beginning of the world
no one amongst mankind hath come hither -- why hast thou dared to
come?"
After
thirty years of tribulation, Divine grace came upon the ascetic.
Angels brought him food, and on his body there grew long hair, which
protected him from the cold and heat. "I beheld," -- said he to
the Monk Serapion -- "the likeness of the Divine paradise and in
it the prophets of God Elias and Enoch, and everything that I sought,
the Lord set forth to me." During the time of his conversation with
Abba Serapion the Monk Mark enquired, how things stood in the world
with the law of Christ, and whether persecutions against Christians
still continued. Hearing, that idol-worship had long since ceased,
the saint rejoiced and asked: "Are there now amidst the world saints
working miracles, as the Lord did speak of in His Gospel: `If ye
have faith even as a grain of mustard seed, ye will say to this
mountain: move hither from there, and it wilt move, and nothing
shalt be impossible for you' (Mt 17:20)." At this moment, as the
saint pronounced these words, the mountain moved from its place
5,000 cubits (approximately 2.5 kilometers) and was shifted nigh
towards the sea. The Monk Mark saw that the mountain had moved,
and he turned to it: "I did not order thee to move from thine place,
but did converse with a brother; wherefore go thou to thine own
place!" After this the mountain actually returned to its own place.
Abba Serapion fell down in fright. The Monk Mark took him up by
the hand and asked: "Hast thou not then seen suchlike miracles in
thy lifetime?" -- "No, father" -- answered Starets Serapion. Then
the Monk Mark wept bitterly and said: "Woe unto the earth, since
upon it live Christians in name only, and not in deeds."
After
this the Monk Mark invited Abba Serapion to a meal. An Angel brought
the food. Abba Serapion said that never had he eaten such tasty
food nor drank such sweet water. "Brother Serapion," -- answered
the Monk Mark -- "didst thou see, what beneficence God doth send
His servants! In all mine days there was sent from God only one
breadloaf and one fish, and now on account of thee He hath doubled
the meal -- and sent us two loaves and two fishes. By suchlike meal
the Lord God hath nourished me during all the course of time after
my first sufferings from evil."
Before
his end, the Monk Mark raised up prayers for the salvation of Christians,
the earth and everything in the world living upon it in the love
of Christ. He gave final instruction s to Abba Serapion to bury
him in the cave and cover over the entrance to it. Abba Serapion
was a witness of how the soul of the one hundred thirty year old
elder -- the Monk Mark, was conveyed to Heaven (+400).
After
the burial of the saint, two Angels in the form of hermits guided
Abba Serapion into the inner wilderness to the great Starets John.
Abba Serapion recounted to the monks of this monastery about the
life and end of the Monk Mark.
The
Monk Platon (Plato) was born in the year 735 into a pious
Christian family of the parents, Sergios and Euphemia. Orphaned
early on, the boy was taken for raising by relatives, who gave him
a fine education. When he grew up he began life on his own. The
saint occupied himself in the first years in the management of his
property, which his parents had left him upon their death. He was
very temperate and hard-working and acquired by his toil great wealth.
But in his heart the monk-to-be blazed with love for Christ. He
gave away all his property, set his servants free and withdrew into
a monastery named "Ensymboleion" near Mount Olympos.
His
prayerful zeal, love of work and geniality won him the love of the
brethren. In his free moments from prayer the monk copied Divine-service
books, and compiled anthologies from the works of the holy fathers.
When the head of the monastery Theoktistos died in 770, the brethren
chose the Monk Platon as hegumen, despite that he was a mere 35
years of age. after the death of the emperor Constantine Kopronymos
(775), the Monk Platon set out to Constantinople. He resigned from
the administration of the Nicomedia metropolitan and in 782 together
with his nephews -- Saints Theodore (+ 826, commemorated 11
November) and Joseph (+ 830, commemorated 26
January), he withdrew to the desolate place of Sokudion. They
built on the mount a church in honour of the holy Apostle John the
Theologian, and founded a monastery, the head of which became the
Monk Platon. When Saint Tarasios together with the empress Irene
convened in Nicea in 787 the Seventh OEcumenical Council, the Monk
Platon took an active part in its work. Being learned and erudite
in Holy Scripture, he successfully unmasked the error in the Iconoclast
heresy and defended the veneration of holy icons. When the Monk
Platon approached old age, he transferred guidance of the monastery
to the Monk Theodore.
In
795 the emperor Constantine VI (78-797) by force compelled his spouse
to accept monasticism and decided to marry with one of his kinswomen,
Theodotia.
Even
though the holy Patriarch Tarasios condemned this marriage, one
of the conspicuous Constantinople priests, Joseph, violated the
prohibition of the Patriarch and celebrated the marriage of the
emperor.
Having
learned of this, the Monks Platon and Theodore excommunicated the
emperor from the Church and dispatched a letter about this to all
the monks. The enraged emperor gave orders to lock up Saint Platon
in prison and to banish the Monk Theodore to Soluneia. Only after
the death of the emperor in 797 did they receive their freedom.
The Monk Theodore settled in Constantinople and became hegumen of
the Studite monastery. The Monk Platon lived as a simple monk at
this monastery under the obedience of his nephew.
When
the new emperor Nicephoros (802-811) on his own returned to the
Church the excommunicated priest Joseph, the Monks Platon and Theodore
again came forward with a denunciation of the unlawful activities
of the emperor. For this the brave confessors were again in 807
subjected to punishment. They were imprisoned for four years. The
Monk Platon was freed from imprisonment in 811 after the death of
the emperor and he returned to the Studite monastery.
He
survived three years more at work and prayer, and expired to the
Lord on Lazarus Saturday at age 79, on 8 April 814. For his fearless
speaking out in defense of holy icons, the Monk Platon received
the title of "confessor."
The
Nun Theodora of Soluneia was born of Christian parents, Anthony
and Chrysantha, living on the island of Aegina. At mature age Saint
Theodora entered into marriage, and soon gave birth to a daughter.
During an invasion of the Saracens (823) the young spouses moved
away to the city of Soluneia [Thessalonika]. Here Saint Theodora
dedicated her daughter to the service of God in a monastery, and
after the death of her husband she also accepted monasticism at
this monastery.
By
works of obedience, fasting and prayer she so pleased God, that
she received the gift of wonderworking and worked miracles not only
during her lifetime, but also upon her death (+892). When the hegumeness
of the monastery died, they wanted to put her grave alongside the
grave of the Nun Theodora. Then the nun, as though alive, pushed
herself beneathe the grave and vacated the spot for her superiour,
showing even after death an example in humility. From her relics
flowed myrh. When the Turks seized Soluneia in 1430, they hacked
apart the holy remains of the Nun Theodora.
Five
Holy Virgin Martyrs are remembered on this day, having died
from the sword on the island of Lesbos. There is also remembrance
of the Terrible Shaking (Earthquake) at Antioch in the year 526.
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