25
APRIL
(05 May)
Disciple
and Evangelist Mark (+63)
Martyr Nikos
Eight Holy Wilderness Fathers
Sainted Macedonias, Patriarch of Constantinople
(+516)
Monk Sylvester [Syl'vestr] of Obnorsk (+1379)
Tsaregrad Icon of the Mother of God (1071)
The
Holy Disciple and Evangelist Mark, named also John-Mark
(Acts 12:12), was a Disciple from among the Seventy, and
was also a nephew of the Disciple Barnabas (commemorated
11 June). He was born
at Jerusalem. The house of his mother Mary adjoined the
Garden of Gethsemane. As Church Tradition relates, on the
night of the Sufferings of Christ on the Cross he followed
after Him, wrapped in a linen winding-cloth, and he fled
from the soldiers catching hold of him (Mk 14:51-52). After
the Ascension of the Lord, the house of his mother Saint
Mary became a place of prayerful gatherings of Christians
and a lodging for certain of the Apostles (Acts 12:12).
Saint
Mark was a very close companion of the Apostles Peter and Paul (commemorated
29 June) and of the Disciple Barnabas.
Saint Mark was at Seleucia together with Paul and Barnabas, and
from there he set off to the island of Cyprus, and he crossed over
the whole of it from East to West. In the city of Paphos Saint Mark
was an eye-witness, of how the Apostle Paul had struck blind the
sorcerer Elymas (Acts 13:6-12).
After
working with the Apostle Paul, Saint Mark returned to Jerusalem,
and then with the Apostle Peter he arrived in Rome, from whence
at the latter's bidding he set out for Egypt, where he became founder
of the Church.
During
the time of the second evangelic journey of the Apostle Paul, Saint
Mark met up with him at Antioch. From there he set out preaching
with the Disciple Barnabas to Cyprus, and then he went off again
to Egypt, where together with the Apostle Peter he founded many
churches, and then also at Babylon. From this city the Apostle Peter
directed an Epistle to the Christians of Asia Minor, in which he
points to Saint Mark as his spiritual son (1 Pet 5:13).
When
the Apostle Paul came in chains to Rome, the Disciple Mark was at
Ephesus, where the cathedra-seat was occupied by Saint Timothy (commemorated
4 January). The Disciple Mark
arrived together with him in Rome. There also he wrote his holy
Gospel (c.62-63).
From
Rome Saint Mark again set off to Egypt. At Alexandria he made the
beginnings of a Christian school, from which later on emerged such
famous fathers and teachers of the Church, as Clement of Alexandria,
Sainted Dionysios (5 October),
Sainted Gregory Thaumatourgos ("Wonderworker", commemorated 5
November), and others. Zealous with the arranging of Church
Divine-services, the holy Disciple Mark compiled the order of Liturgy
for the Alexandrian Christians.
Later
on in preaching the Gospel, Saint Mark also visited the inner regions
of Africa, and he was in Libya at Nektopolis.
During
the time of these journeys, Saint Mark received inspiration of the
Holy Spirit to go again to Alexandria and confront the pagans. There
he visited at the home of the dignitary Ananias, for whom he healed
a crippled hand. The dignitary happily took him in, hearkened with
faith to his narratives, and received Baptism. And following the
example of Ananias, many of the inhabitants of that part of the
city where he lived were baptised after him. This roused the enmity
of the pagans, and they gathered to kill Saint Mark. Having learned
of this, the holy Disciple Mark made Ananias bishop, and the three
Christians: Malchos, Sabinos, and Kerdinos -- presbyters.
The
pagans pounced upon Saint Mark when he was making Divine-services.
They beat him, dragged him through the streets and threw him in
prison. There Saint Mark was granted a vision of the Lord Jesus
Christ, Who strengthened him before his sufferings. On the following
day the angry crowd again dragged the holy disciple through the
streets towards the courtroom, but along the way Saint Mark died
with the words: "Into Thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit."
The
pagans wanted to burn the body of the holy disciple. But when they
lit up the bonfire, everything grew dim, thunder crashed and an
earthquake occurred. The pagans fled in terror, and Christians took
up the body of the holy disciple and buried it in a stone crypt.
This was on 4 April in the year 63. The Church celebrates his memory
on 25 April.
In
the year 310, a church was built over the relics of the holy Disciple
Mark. In the year 820, when the Mahometan Arabs had established
their rule in Egypt and those of this different faith oppressed
the Christian Church, the relics of Saint Mark were transferred
to Venice and placed in the church of his name.
In
the ancient iconographic tradition, which adopted symbols for the
holy Evangelists borrowed from the vision of Saint John the Theologian
(Rev. 4:7), the holy Evangelist Mark is depicted by a lion -- symbolising
the might and royal dignity of Christ (Rev 5:5). Saint Mark wrote
his Gospel for Christians from among the gentile-pagans, since he
emphasises predominantly the words and deeds of the Savior, in which
particularly is manifest His Divine Almightiness. The many particularities
of his account can be explained by his proximity to the holy Apostle
Peter. All the ancient writers testify, that the Gospel of Mark
represents a concise writing-down of the preaching and narratives
of the first-ranked Apostle Peter. One of the central theological
themes in the Gospel of Saint Mark is the theme of the power of
God, doing the humanly impossible, wherein the Lord makes possible
that which of man is impossible. By the efficacy of Christ (Mk 16:20)
and the Holy Spirit (Mk 13:11), His disciples are to go forth into
the world and preach the Gospel to all creatures (Mk 13:10, 16:15).
The
Monk Sylvester [Syl'vestr] of Obnorsk was a disciple
and novice under the Monk Sergei of Radonezh (+1392, commemorated
25 September and 5
July). After completing obedience at the Trinity monastery,
the Monk Sylvester received blessing for wilderness-dwelling.
In
the deep forest at the River Obnora, flowing into the River Kostroma,
he set up at his chosen spot a cross and began to asceticise. For
a long time no one knew about the holy hermit. His cell was by chance
discovered by a peasant who had lost his way. He told the distraught
hermit, how he had come to this place, over which earlier he had
seen luminous rays, and then pillars of cloud. The monk shed tears
of sorrow, that the place of his solitude had been found out. The
pilgrim besought the saint to tell about himself.
The
Monk Sylvester said, that he was already living here no short while,
and that he ate tree bark and roots. At first he became weak without
bread and fell on the ground from his weakness. But then an Angel
appeared to him in the guise of a wondrous man and touched his hand.
From that moment the Monk Sylvester did not experience any distress.
And then the peasant another time, this time deliberately, came
back to the monk and brought him bread and flour for reserve supply.
This
one meeting was sufficient for the exploits of the hermit to become
known to many. Soon peasants began to come to him from the surrounding
though not close settlements. The Monk Sylvester did not refuse
them to build cells alongside him.
When
the brethren had gathered, the monk himself set off to Moscow and
petitioned of Sainted Alexei (1354-1378, commemorated 12
February) blessing for the construction of a temple in honour
of the Resurrection [Voskresenie] of Christ. The sainted-hierarch
entrusted to him an antimins ["antimension" or 'corporal" for the
altar-table, needful for celebrating of Divine Liturgy], and made
him hegumen of the monastery. With the construction of the church
the number of brethren quickly grew, and the monk frequently withdrew
for prayer into the dense forest. This spot received the name "Commanded-Grove,"
since the Monk Sylvester commanded that no trees should be cut there.
In the thick of this grove the monk himself dug out three wells,
and a fourth -- on the side of an hill at the River Obnora. When
the monk returned from his solitude, there usually awaited him around
the monastery a number of people, and each wanted to receive his
blessing and hear his advice.
When
the saint fell into a fatal illness, the brethren, who were distressed
about his going off into solitude, were even more distressed about
the impending end of the saint. "Grieve not over this, my beloved
brethren," the monk said to them in solace, "for in everything is
the will of God. Keep the commandments of the Lord and fear not
in this life to suffer misfortune, so as to receive reward in Heaven.
If indeed I have boldness before the Lord and my deed be pleasing
to Him, then this holy place will not diminish with my departure.
But pray the Lord God and His All-Pure Mother, that ye be delivered
from temptation of evil." The monk died on 25 April 1479 and was
buried towards the right side of the wooden Resurrection church.
There
has been preserved from the year 1645 a record of miracles of the
monk, in which 23 miracles are described. In quite a number the
monk healed from demonic-possession (12 cases) and delirium, and
from eye-afflictions (6 cases). A lesson-teaching miracle occurred
in 1645. The priestmonk Job of the monastery directed peasants to
cut down the interdicted forest-grove for firewood, and for this
he was struck blind. After four weeks he acknowledged his sin, repented
and gave a vow not to act on his own will, but to do everything
on the advice of the brethren. The priestmonk finished out the molieben
in church, after which he was brought up to the reliquary of the
Monk Sylvester, and there he regained his sight.
Sainted
Macedonias, Patriarch of Constantinople, guided his flock
through the years 496-511. He was exiled to Paphlagonia for his
activity opposing the heresy of Eutykhias, under the emperor Anastasias
I (491-518). He died in exile in the year 516. His body was buried
at Tsar'grad (Constantinople) in the church of Saint Kallinikos.
At the funeral service the saint was "re-baptised" [by the heretics].
The
Celebration of the Tsaregrad Icon of the Mother of God
on 25 April is done in honour of a locally venerated icon, situated
at Moscow at the Uspenie church on Malaya Dimitrovka. The depiction
of this image is distinct from that of the Tsaregrad Icon of the
MostHoly Mother of God celebrated on 17
September, although it appears to be a copy from it. (The wonderworking
Tsaregrad Icon appeared in the year 1071, on 25 April).
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