08
August
(21 August)
Sainted
Emelian the Confessor, Bishop of Kyzika
(+ c. 815-820).
Monk
Gregory, Iconographer of Pechersk, in the Nearer Caves (XII).
Monks Zosima and Savvatii, of Solovetsk (Transfer
of Relics, 1566).
Sainted
Myron the Wonderworker, Bishop of Crete (+ c. 350). Martyrs
Eleutherias and Leonides. Monk Gregory the
Sinaite (XIV). Monk Theodore, Hegumen of Orov. Monk Cassian.
Ten Egyptian Ascetics. Two Martyrs of Tyre.
Martyr Stirakios. Monk Moses and the Other Monastic Fathers with
him. Martyr Triandaphilos (+ 1680).
Martyr Anastasias the Bulgarian, suffering at Solunieia-Thessalonika
(+ 1794).
Tolgsk
Icon of the Mother of God (1314).
Sainted
Emelian, Bishop of Kyzika, lived during the reign of the Iconoclast
emperor Leo the Armenian (813-820). He was summoned together with
other bishops to the court of the emperor, who insistently urged
the bishops to refrain from the veneration of holy icons. Saint
Emelian was the first firmly to answer the emperor, that
the question about the veneration of holy icons ought to be discussed
and decided only within the Church by spiritual personages, and
not at the imperial court. In the year 815 he was sent to prison
for the Orthodox faith, where he died as a confessor.
The
Monk Gregory, Iconographer of Pechersk, was a colleague of the
Monk Alypii of Pechersk (Comm. 17 August). In the "Accounts
about the holy iconographers" it says, that he wrote many a
wonderworking icon located throughout the Russian Land. In the 9th
Ode of the Canon of the Service to the Sobor-Assemblage of the Kievo-Pechersk
Monastics, Reposed within the Nearer Caves (Comm. 28 September)
-- the Monk Gregory is termed a "byzantine". This signifies
possibly that he was among the number of iconographers who had come
from Constantinople to Kiev for the embellishing of the Great Church
of the monastery, in honour of the Dormition-Uspenie of the MostHoly
Mother of God.
The
Transfer of the Relics of the Monks Zosima and Savvatii of Solovetsk
occurred on 8 August 1566, on the third day of the altar-feast of
the Solovetsk monastery of the Transfiguration (Preobrazhenie, Metamorphosis)
of the Lord. The relics of the saints were transferred into a chapel
of the Preobrazhensk cathedral, built in their honour.
The
account about the Monk Zosima is located under 17 April; the account
about the Monk Savvatii -- 27 September.
Sainted
Myron, Bishop of Crete, a wonderworker, in his youth was a family
man, and worked at farming. He was known for his goodness, and he
assisted everyone who turned to him for help. One time a thieves
burst in upon his threshing floor, and Saint Myron himself helped
them raise up a sack of grain upon their shoulders. By his generosity
the saint so shamed the thieves, that in future they began to lead
honourable lives. Out of profound respect for the saint, the Cretan
people urged him to accept the dignity of presbyter in his native
city of Raucia, and afterwards they chose him bishop of Crete. Wisely
ruling his flock, Saint Myron received from the Lord the gift of
wonderworking. At the time of a flood on the River Triton, the saint
stopped its flow and went upon it as upon dry land, and then he
sent a man back to the river with his staff with a command for the
river to resume its course. Saint Myron reposed to God at age 100
in about the year 350.
The
Martyrs Eleutherias and Leonides were cast into a fire at a
youthful age during one of the persecutions against Christians.
The
Monk Gregory the Sinaite was born in about the year 1268 in
the seacoast village of Clazomeneia near the city of Smyrna (Asia
Minor), of rich parents. In about the year 1290 he was taken into
captivity by the Hagarites and sent off to Laodicea. After gaining
his freedom, the saint arrived on the island of Cyprus, where he
was tonsured a monk. He set off afterwards to Mount Sinai and there
assumed the great schema. Having fulfilled his obediences of cook
and baker, and then as writer-copyist, surpassing all in reading
and knowledge of Scriptural and patristic books. The strictness
of his life (fasting, vigil, psalmody, standing at prayer) brought
some to astonishment and others to envy. Departing the monastery,
the monk visited Jerusalem. For some time he lived on the island
of Crete, and afterwards he made the rounds on Athos with its monasteries
and ascetics. By such manner he acquired the experience of the monastic
life of many centuries from the ancient monasteries. Only after
this did the Monk Gregory the Sinaite settle himself in a solitary
place for "hesychia" ["mystic quiet" doing the
Jesus Prayer] -- a cell for silence and unhindered pursuit of mental
prayer, combined with hard monastic work.
The
precious legacy of the Monk Gregory is in his precepts about the
inner life, 15 chapters about silence, and 142 chapters about
the commandments, where he says, that "one seeking to comprehend
the commandments without fulfilling them, and through study and
reading to find that which is desired, is like a man imagining a
fantasy in place of truth". The monk is reknown also as a remarkable
writer of song, -- to him is ascribed the "Mete it is in truth"
("Dostoino est vo istinu"), and a canon to the MostHoly
Trinity read at Sunday vigil, and a canon to the holy Cross. In
a canon-book (from the year 1407) of the Monk Kirill (Cyril) of
Belozersk (+ 9 June 1427) is found the "Canon of propitiation
to the Lord Jesus Christ, -- a work of Gregory the Sinaite".
Through his concern for the spreading of monastic deeds, the monk
founded several cells on Athos, and also four laura-monasteries
in Thrace. The Monk Gregory the Sinaite died in the year 1310 (some
historians suggest the year 1346) at his so-called "Concealed"
("Parariseia") monastery, founded in the mountains of
Macedonia for the strict followers of his life.
The
Martyr Triandaphilos, a native of Transmondane Thessalonika,
was beheaded by the Turks at Constantinople in the year 1680 for
his refusal to reject Christ and accept Islam.
The
Tolgsk Icon of the MostHoly Mother of God appeared on 8 August
1314 to the Rostov Sainted-hierarch Prokhor (schema-name Tryphon).
Going about his diocese, the saint visited the Belozersk environs
and set off from there and set off thither nigh along the banks
of the Rivers Sheksna and Volga, to Yaroslavl'. Having stopped with
the approach of night 7 versts distant from Yaroslavl', at the right
bank of the Volga River there flows opposite into it the River Tolga.
At midnight, when everyone was asleep, the saint awoke and saw a
bright light illuminating the surroundings. The light proceeded
from a fiery column on the other bank of the river, to which there
stretched a bridge. Taking up his staff, the saint went across to
the other bank, and having approached the fiery column, he beheld
on it the icon of the MostHoly Mother of God, suspended in the air.
Astonished at the miracle, the saint prayed for a long time, and
when he returned back, he forgot to take his staff.
The
next day, after making matins, when Saint Prokhor was preparing
to continue his journey by boat, they began to search for his staff,
but they were not able to find it anywhere. The saint then remembered,
that he had forgotten his staff on the other bank of the river,
whither he had gone across on the miraculous bridge. He then told
about what had occurred, and sending servants across on a boat to
the other shore, they came back and reported the news, that in the
forest amidst the trees they had seen an icon of the Mother of God,
next to his bishop's staff. The saint quickly crossed over with
all his retinue to the opposite shore, and he recognised the icon
that had appeared to him. Then after fervent prayer in front of
the icon, they cleared the forest at that place, and put down the
foundations of a church. When the people of Yaroslavl' learned of
this, they came out to the indicated spot. By midday the church
was already built, and in the evening the saint consecrated it in
honour of the Entrance ("Vvedenie") into the Temple of
the MostHoly Mother of God, and having installed the icon there
he established a feastday on the day of its appearance. Saint Prokhor
later built near this church the Tolgsk monastery. Sainted Prokhor
died on 7 September 1328.
On
this day also are commemorated 10 Egyptian Ascetics -- having
died at sea, and 2 Tyrian Martyrs -- dragged over the ground.
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