20
APRIL
(03 May)
Monk
Theodore the Trikhinian (IV-IX)
Monk Alexander of Oshevensk (+1479)
Infant-Martyr Gabriel of Bialystok (+1690)
Disciple Zakhaeus, formerly a Publican (I)
Martyress Theodora
Saint Chrysippos, Presbyter of Jerusalem
Saint Stakhios
Sainted Betranes (+c.378) and Theotimos (+c.412),
Bishops of Lesser Skythia
Sainted Gregory, Patriarch of Antioch (+593)
Sainted Anastasias I the Sinaite, Patriarch
of Antioch (+599)
PriestMartyr Anastasias II, Patriarch of
Antioch (+610)
Monk Anastasias, Hegumen of Mount Sinai (+c.695)
Monks Athanasias of Meteoreia (born 1310) and Joasaph his Co-Ascetic
Icons of Mother of God: Cyprus (392) and
Kypeiazheia (992)
The
Monk Theodore the Trikhinian was born into a rich Constantinople
family. In his youth he withdrew into a wilderness monastery in
Thrace and accepted monasticism. The monk was strict in fasting,
and he wore only a coarse prickly hairshirt, which was called a
"trikhinia" ["vlasyanitsa"]. This name also was given to the monastery
in which he pursued asceticism. During his life the monk worked
many miracles and healings. After his death there flowed from his
holy relics a salubrious myrh, which healed many of the sick and
cast out impure spirits.
The
years during which the monk Theodore lived is unknown.
The
Monk Alexander of Oshevensk was born on 17 March
1427, 80 versts from Belozersk in the Vysheozersk region,
several months before the death of the Monk Kirill of Belozersk
(+ 9 July 1427) -- with whom he was bound together by later
spiritual connections for his whole life.
Alexei
(worldly name of the Monk Alexander of Oshevensk) was the fifth
son of the rich landowner Nikifor Osheven and his spouse Fotinia;
he was a long-awaited child and was born through the fervent prayers
of Fotinia. The Mother of God Herself together with the Monk Kirill
of Belozersk appeared to her and promised the birth of a son through
the intercession of the Monk Kirill. Although Alexei was the youngest
son, his parents hoped to see in him their successor and someone
to care for them in their old age. In childhood they taught the
boy his letters and spoke of him as an enterprising landowner. At
18 years of age they sought to marry off the youth. With the permission
of his parents, he went off to pray at the Kirillo-Belozersk monastery
and remained there.
The
hegumen loved the youth for his humility and soon suggested to him
to take monastic vows. But Alexei refused, having decided to test
himself. Having studied Holy Scripture, he served the brethren as
a novice for six years and only then did he accept monastic vows.
During
this time his parents settled in the village of Volosovo -- 30 versts
from Kargopol near the River Onega. Soon Nikifor sought of the Novgorod
boyar Ioann a place for settling near the River Churiuga, which
received the town-name Oshevensk.
The
Monk Alexander asked of the hegumen permission to receive from his
parents their final blessing and forgiveness, so that afterwards
he might go into a solitary life. Not at once did the hegumen give
permission to the young monk. He warned him about the dangers of
wilderness life. But the Monk Alexander feared the ascetic fame
that he had among the brethren, and he requested a second time to
be released from the monastery. Finally, the hegumen gave his blessing.
Greeting
him with joy, the father suggested to the son that he settle at
the River Churiuga and promised to assist in the building of a monastery.
The Monk Alexander took a liking to the place. He set up a cross
as foundation of the future monastery and gave a vow to dwell there
until the end of his life. After this the Monk Alexander returned
to the Kirillo-Belozersk monastery and for some time he did obedience
in the choir, in the kitchen and in the bakery. They ordained him
to the dignity of deacon. Finally, when the Monk Alexander went
to the hegumen for the third time and told him, how a miraculous
voice had called him to organise a monastery, and how he had vowed
to dwell at that place, the hegumen released him -- blessing him
with the icons of the Hodegetria Mother of God and Sainted Nicholas
the Wonderworker.
The
Monk Alexander dedicated the chosen spot with the icons, and received
from his father supervision for building a church, and he himself
set off to the Archbishop of Novgorod Jona (1459-1470). Archbishop
Jona ordained him to the dignity of presbyter and appointed him
hegumen of the monastery. The boyarina Anastasia and her son Yurii
were prepared to offer the monastery the whole district, but the
Monk Alexander accepted the gramota (deed) for only the necessary
ground. The constructed church was dedicated in the name of Sainted
Nicholas. With determination and energy the monk began to work at
organising the monastery. An elder, who had accompanied him from
the Kirillo-Belozersk monastery, was not able to endure the harsh
wilderness life and went back. By little by little brethren gathered.
The monk enacted a strict ustav (rule) of common life, which required
complete silence in temple and at refectory -- when saint-lives
were read, in monk cells there was to be no idleness, and at the
time of fulfilling obediences it was necessary to do the Jesus Prayer
or read psalms. "Brethren -- said the monastic hegumen -- let us
not shirk work nor the way of sorrow. Ye know, that the way of sorrow
leads to the Heavenly Kingdom. Live in mutual love and humility.
God is love, and He loveth the humble".
Many
even from the layfolk came to the monk and put themselves under
his spiritual guidance. Two nephews of the saint accepted monastic
orders at his monastery, who offended one of the brethren -- the
monk Ambrosii. The Monk Alexander gently calmed the religious brother,
but the nephews cooled in their zeal for asceticism and they left
the monastery. Grief over the salvation of his spiritual children
wrecked the health of the monk. He lay down and was not able to
life up his hand nor his head, nor even to utter a word. In such
a state of exhaustion the Monk Alexander prayed to the Monk Kirill,
his patron. The Monk Kirill appeared in a white robe and, signing
the sick man with the sign of the cross, he said: "Grieve not, brother!
I intercede and thou shalt be well. Only forget not thy vow, nor
leave this place. I shall assist thee". Having fallen asleep, the
monk regained his strength and in the morning went to church. To
encourage the brethren he told about the visit of the Monk Kirill.
The monk laboured for 27 years in the monastery founded by him,
and died peacefully on 20 April 1479.
After
the death of the hegumen, the monastery began quickly to go into
decline. But the monk did not cease to care for it. One time, the
monastic attendant Mark had a vision in a dream: the monastery was
full of people; a grey-haired elder in bishop's garb signed with
a cross those working on the building. Another elder, with a long
beard, sprinkled with holy-water; and a third, of moderate stature
and blond hair, censed. A fourth one, a youth, followed after them
at a distance. The third elder -- this was the Monk Alexander Oshevensk
-- explained, that Sainted Nicholas the Wonderworker and the Monk
Kirill of Belozersk assisted him, and the youth standing at the
distance was the cantor Matfei, who was soon vowed under the name
Maxim and chosen hegumen of the monastery, as predicted in the vision
of the Monk Alexander. The monk Maxim was established as hegumen
by the Archbishop of Novgorod Sergei (1483-1485), and he restored
the monastery. He was the monastic head until 1525.
At
the time of building of a new temple in the name of Sainted Nicholas,
during an appearance of the Monk Alexander and at his command --
his relics were found undecayed. His image was then painted in accord
with how he appeared as a monk and in accord with the accounts of
those who knew the elder: the Monk Alexander of Oshevensk was of
moderate stature, with parched face and sunken cheeks, with a small
thin beard, grizzled with blond hairs. He is thus depicted on icons.
Sainted
Betranes and Theotimos were bishops of Lesser Skythia, where
the mouth of the Dunaj (Danube) flows into Thrace. Their diocesan
cathedral was situated in the city of Toma (Kiustendji). They were
Skythians.
The
Church historian Sozomenes gives an account about Sainted Betranes.
When the emperor Valens (364-378) stayed in Toma, he began in church
to urge the saint to enter into communion with Arian heretics. Saint
Betranes boldly answered, that he adhered to the teaching of the
holy Nicean fathers and, in order to avoid bantering, he went off
to another of the city churches. And all the people followed after
him. There remained in the deserted church only the emperor with
his retinue. For such audacity the emperor condemned the saint to
exile, but he feared the grumbling of the crowd and let him go free.
The Skythians loved their archpastor and they cared about him as
a good and saintly man.
Another
historian, Theodorit, writes about the sainted-bishop: "And Betranes,
radiant with every virtue and archpastoral power, governing the
cities of all the Skythians, was enflamed with zeal of spirit and
denounced the heretics for their dogmatic deficiency and their i
niquitous attitude towards the saints. He said with the Divine-inspiration
of David: "I shall speak Thy testimonies before the king and not
be shy" (Ps 18:46).
Sainted
Betranes died, probably soon after the denunciation of emperor Valens.
His commemoration in the "Acts of the Saints" indicates 25 January.
At the II Ecumenical Council in 381 it mentions already the successor
to Sainted Betranes -- the Toma bishop Gerontios, and after him
the cathedra was occupied by Sainted Theotimos.
In
the year 392 Sainted Theotimos was already known to Blessed Jerome
(commemorated 15 June) as a writer
and bishop. Sainted Theotimos participated in the Council of 399,
where Sainted John Chrysostom (commemorated 13
November) examined the acts of the bishop of Ephesus. In the
year 403, when Sainted Epiphanios of Cyprus (+403, commemorated
12 May) insistently demanded
of Saint John Chrysostom and the other bishops to carry out a condemnation
of Origen, Sainted Theotimos wrote: "It is impious to further offend
the dead and to rise up in judgement against the ancients and re-question
their sanction". He took out one of the works of Origen, read from
it and, pointing out that which was read was of good purpose to
the Church, added: "Those who condemn this book, slander also that
which it says here".
Sainted
Theotimos journeyed much throughout his diocese. His Christian love
flowed even upon the Huns -- then as yet unenlightened by the light
of the Gospel. By means of beneficence and gentleness the sainted-bishop
strove to win them over to the true faith. The impressive miracles,
worked by the saint in the Name of Jesus Christ, so astonished the
pagans, that they called him a Roman god.
Once,
when during the time of a journey the saint and his companions were
under the threat of deadly peril from the Huns, the sainted-bishop
began to pray intensely, and all were left invisible to them. Another
time, when a certain Hun tried to catch the saint with a rope, his
hand froze in the air and only then was it released from its invisible
hold, when Sainted Theotimos at the request of other Huns prayed
to God for him.
Sainted
Theotimos kept to a simple form of life: he partook of nourishment
not at this or that time, but only when he experienced hunger or
thirst. Blessed Jerome wrote about him: "Theotimos, Skythian bishop
of Tomum, produced in dialogues in the form of ancient rhetoric
powerfully fine tracts and, as I have heard, he wrote other works".
It is known, that Sainted Theotimos wrote: "About the Teachings
of the Saviour," "Against Idols," a "Commentary on Genesis," a "Commentary
on the Text -- 'I shall bear the Gift unto the Altar'," "About Fasting"
(from the last 4 works the Monk John Damascene makes comparison
in several places in his own parallels).
Sainted
Theotimos died peacefully in about the year 412. His commemoration
in the "Acts of the Saints" is indicated as 20 April.
Sainted
Gregory, Patriarch of Antioch (573-593), was hegumen of
the Pharan monastery, located not far from Mount Sinai. The monk
was distinguished for his fervent faith, merciful and compassionate
to the fallen, and humble and forgiving.
Once,
when Saint Gregory was still an hegumen, he visited a certain wilderness-dweller,
who in a cave sought salvation. The wilderness-dweller greeted him
with honour and washed his feet. When the saint asked why he was
shown such honour, the elder answered, that through Divine-revelation
he saw before himself a future Patriarch. In fact, after the banishment
of Patriarch Anastasias the Sinaite from the Antiochian throne,
Saint Gregory was -- against his own wishes -- raised up upon the
Antiochian Patriarchal throne and, yielding to the will of God,
until his death (+593) he bore with dignity the burden of patriarchal
service.
Sainted
Anastasias I the Sinaite, Patriarch of Antioch, began his
monastic deeds on Mount Sinai, wherefore he was called the Sinaite.
He entered upon the Patriarchal throne in the year 562 during the
reign of the emperor Justinian (527-565).
The
Monophysite heresy was spreading about during this time. The emperor
himself inclined towards the side of the heretics. Sainted Anastasias
was outspoken against the heresy. He distributed a missive throughout
all the churches and daily elucidated in his own temple the Orthodox
teaching about the two natures of the Lord Jesus Christ. All those
questioning or wavering in the faith awaited with hope the words
of the holy Patriarch Anastasias.
Justinian,
angering upon learning of this, wanted to depose Sainted Anastasias
from the Antioch throne, but suddenly he became grievously ill.,
Before his death he made Church penance and composed the beautiful
prayer "Only-begotten Son Word of God," which has entered into the
order of the Divine Liturgy. In it he expressed the Orthodox teaching
about the two natures of the Lord Jesus Christ.
After
Justinian, there came upon the throne emperor Justin the Younger
(565-578), who resumed the persecution against Sainted Anastasias
and in 572 sent him into imprisonment. Returning from exile in 593,
Sainted Anastasias governed the Church for six years and died peacefully
(+ 21 April 599).
In
exile, Saint Anastasias wrote several dogmatic and moral works,
and even rendered into the Greek language the work of Sainted Gregory
Dialogus (+604, commemorated 12 March)
"About Pastoral Service".
Sainted
Anastasias II, Patriarch of Antioch, entered upon the throne
after the holy Patriarch Anastasias I the Sinaite (561-572; 593-599).
He governed the Church for 10 years and was killed in 609 by Jews
-- when emperor Phocas (602-610) issued an edict, forcing all to
accept baptism.
The
Monk Anastasias, hegumen of Mount Sinai, was born at
the end of the VI Century. He received in his youth a fine secular
education, which he completed by the study of theology. In a sermon
on Thomas Sunday the Monk Anastasias wrote: "Having beheld Christ
in the flesh they reckoned Him for a prophet; and we, although we
have not seen him with bodily eyes, but rather from the tips of
our fingers, then still when we were small children and lads, we
recognised in Him God, and learned to confess Him as Lord of the
universe, Creator of the ages, and Radiance of the Glory of the
Father. With such a faith do we hear His Holy Gospel, as though
we behold Christ Himself. When we only but look at an icon depiction
of His Divine likeness, as of Him Himself, we attain to Heaven for
ourselves, and we honour, we worship and fall down".
Already
in his youth the Monk Anastasias had accepted monasticism, and he
later set off to Jerusalem and settled on Mount Sinai. During this
period, the hegumen of Mount Sinai was the Monk John of the Ladder
[Lestvichnik, Climacus] (commemorated 30
March), and afterwards his brother George. After Saint George,
the Monk Anastasias became hegumen, from which they bestowed upon
him the title "Sinaite."
The
Monk Anastasias put much work into the struggle with the Akephaloi
heresy, which was opposed by the decrees of the IV Ecumenical Council
at Chalcedon (451), and which defined the dogma about the union
in the One Person of the Lord Jesus Christ in two natures -- the
D ivine and the human. Spreading the Orthodox faith, the Monk Anastasias
visited Egypt, Arabia and Syria. For the struggle with the Monophysites
he left to his students an epistolary guide in the form of answers
to questions under the title "Guide-book" in 24 chapters . The Monk
Anastasias also had dialogues with heretics which he also wrote
down; these have come down to us in his work "Explanation of the
Sixth Day" (12 book-chapters), Sermons, Instructions, Vitae of certain
ascetics, and Commentaries on many places in Holy Scripture.
The
Monk Anastasias the Sinaite died in deep old age (+c.695).
The
Cypriot Icon of the Mother of God appeared in the year
392 on the island of Cyprus and was situated in a monastery built
on the place of its appearance. The celebration of this icon is
done also on 9 July and on the day of the Descent of the Holy Spirit
upon the apostles.
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