16
AUGUST
(29 August)
After-Feast of Dormition [Uspenie]
Transfer from Edessa to Constantinople of the
Not-Made-by-Hand Image of the Lord Jesus Christ (944)
Martyr Diomedes the Physician (+298)
Monk Cherimon of Egypt (IV)
Martyr Alcibiades
Martyr Memsambios
Monk Heglonos
Monk Joakim of Osogovsk (+c.1115)
Monk Nilos of Hericuseia (+1350)
MonkMartyr Nikodemos of Meteoreia (+1551)
Martyr Stamatios from Boleia (+1680)
GreatMartyr Laurentios the New Apostle (to Tsar'grad, +1686)
Theodorovsk (Feodorovsk) Icon of the Mother
of God (1239)
The
Transfer from Edessa to Constantinople of the Not-Made-by-Hand
Image of our Lord Jesus Christ occurred in the year 944.
Tradition relates, that during the time of the preaching of the
Saviour, Abgar rules in Edessa. He was stricken all over his body
with leprosy. Reports about the great miracles, worked by the Lord,
spread throughout Syria (Mt 4:24) and reached even Abgar. Without
having seen the Saviour, Abgar believed in Him as the Son of God
and wrote a letter with a request to come and heal him. He sent
with this letter to Palestine his own portrait-painter Ananias,
having commissioned him to make a depiction of the Divine Teacher.
Ananias arrived in Jerusalem and caught glimpse of the Lord, surrounded
by people. He was not able to get close to Him because of the large
throng of people, listening to the preaching of the Saviour. Then
he stood on an high-up rock and attempted from afar to render the
image of the Lord Jesus Christ, but this for him turned out in no
wise successful. The Saviour Himself caught sight of him, called
to him by name and gave over to him for Abgar a short letter in
which, having praised the faith of this ruler, He promised to send
His disciple for both healing from leprosy and guidance for salvation.
Then the Lord asked that there be brought Him water and a cloth
(linen, or washcloth). He washed His Face, drying it with the cloth,
and upon it was imprinted His Divine Countenance. Ananias took the
cloth and the letter of the Saviour to Edessa. With reverence Abgar
took the holy thing and he received healing; only a small part of
traces of the terrible affliction remained upon his face until the
arrival of the disciple promised by the Lord. He was the Disciple
from the Seventy Saint Thaddeus (commemorated 21
August), who preached the Gospel and baptised the believer Abgar
and all the people of Edessa. Having inscribed upon the Image Not-Made-by-Hand
the words "O Christ God, let no one hoping on Thee be ashamed thereof,"
Abgar adorned it and placed it in a niche over the city gates.
For
many years the inhabitants kept a pious custom to bow down before
the Image Not-Made-by-Hand, when they went forth from the gates.
But one of the great-grandsons of Abgar, later ruling Edessa, fell
into idolatry. He decided to take down the Image from the city wall.
In a vision the Lord ordered the Edessa bishop to hide His image.
The bishop, coming by night with his clergy, lit a lampada before
it and walled it over with a pottery-board and bricks. Many years
passed, and the people forgot about it. But in the year 545, when
the Persian emperor Chosroes I besieged Edessa and the position
of the city seemed hopeless, the MostHoly Mother of God appeared
to Eulabios and ordered him to secure the Image from the walled-in
niche, and it would save the city from the enemy. Having opened
the niche, the bishop found the Not-Made-by-Hand Image: in front
of it was burning the lampada, and upon the pottery-board, closing
in the niche, was the imaged likeness. After the making of church
procession with the Image Not-Made-by-Hand along the city walls,
the Persian army withdrew.
In
the year 630 Arabs seized hold of Edessa, but they did not hinder
the reverencing of the Image Not-Made-by-Hand, the fame of which
had spread throughout all the East. In the year 944 the emperor
Constantine Porphyrigenitos (912-959) wanted to transfer the Image
to the then capital of Orthodoxy and he paid a ransom for it to
the emir-ruler of the city. With great reverence the Not-Made-by-Hand
Image of the Saviour and that letter, which He had written to Abgar,
were transported by clergy to Constantinople. On 16 August the Image
of the Saviour was placed in the Tharossa church of the MostHoly
Mother of God. About what happened later with the Not-Made-by-Hand
Image there exist several traditions. According to one, crusaders
ran off with it during the time of their rule at Constantinople
(1204-1261), but the ship, on which the sacred thing was taken,
perished in the waters of the Sea of Marmora. According to another
tradition, the Image Not-Made-by-Hand was transported around 1362
to Genoa, where it is preserved in a monastery in honour of the
Apostle Bartholomew. It is known that the Image Not-Made-by-Hand
repeatedly gave from itself exact imprints. One of these -- named
"On Ceramic" -- was imprinted when Ananias hid the image in a wall
on his way to Edessa; another, imprinted on a cloak, wound up in
Gruzia (Georgia). Possibly, the variance of traditions about the
original Image Not-Made-by-Hand derives from the existence of several
exact imprints.
During
the time of the Iconoclast heresy the defenders of Icon-Veneration
[Ikonodoules], having their blood spilt for holy icons, sang the
tropar to the Not-Made-by-Hand Image. In proof of the veracity of
Icon-Veneration, Pope Gregory II (715-731) dispatched a letter to
the Eastern emperor, in which he pointed out the healing of king
Abgar and the sojourn of the Not-Made-by-Hand Image at Edessa as
a commonly known fact. The Image Not-Made-by-Hand was put on the
standards of the Russian army, defending them from the enemy. In
the Russian Orthodox Church it is a pious custom for a believer,
before entering the temple, to read together with other prayers
the tropar of the Not-Made-by-Hand Image of the Saviour.
According
to the Prologue there are four known Not-Made-by-Hand Images of
the Saviour:
- at
Edessa, of king Abgar -- 16 August
- the
Kamulian, -- Sainted Gregory of Nyssa (commemorated 10
January) wrote about its discovery, while according to the
Monk Nikodemos of the Holy Mount (+1809, commemorated 1
July), the Kamulian image appeared in the year 392, but it
had in appearance an image of the Mother of God -- 9
August
- in
the time of emperor Tiberius (578-582), Saint Mary Syncletika
(commemorated 11 August) received
healing from this
- on
ceramic tiles -- 16 August
The
feast in honour of the Transfer of the Image Not-Made-by-Hand, made
together with the After-Feast of the Dormition, they call the third-above
Saviour Image, the "Saviour on Linen Cloth." The particular reverence
of this feast in the Russian Orthodox Church is also expressed in
iconography -- the icon of the Not-Made-by-Hand Image was one of
the most widely distributed.
The
Martyr Diomedes was born in Cilician Tarsus, and by profession
he was a physician, but by belief a Christian, and he treated not
only ills not only of body but also of soul. He enlightened many
pagans with belief in Christ, and baptised them. The Church venerates
him as an healer and summons his name during the making of the Sacrament
of Oil-Anointing the Sick.
Saint
Diomedes traveled much, converting people to the true faith. When
he arrived in the city of Nicea, the emperor Diocletian (284-305)
sent soldiers to arrest him. Along the way from Nicea to Nicomedia,
he got down from the cart so as to pray, and he died. As proof of
carrying out their orders, the soldiers cut off his head, but became
blinded. Diocletian gave orders to take away the head back to the
body. When the soldiers fulfilled the order, their sight was restored
and they believed in Christ.
The
Monk Cherimon asceticised in Egypt in the Skete wilderness-monastery,
either at the end of the IV Century or the beginning years of the
V Century. His name is remembered in the "Lausiaca" of Palladios
and in the alphabetic Paterikon. His cave stood at a distance of
40 stadia from church and 12 stadia from a spring of water. The
saint died at handicraft at more than 100 years of age. The Monk
Cherimon is remembered likewise by the Monk Theodore the Studite
(+11 November 826) within the Lenten Triodion -- in the Service
for Cheesefare Saturday, in the 6th Ode of the Matins canon.
The
MonkMartyr Nikodemos of Meteoreia asceticised in Thessaly,
and suffered in the year 1551.
The
Martyr Stamatios was a native of the city of Boleia [Thessaly].
They slandered him as having accepted Islam, but he bravely confessed
himself a Christian and was beheaded by the sword at Constantinople
in 1680.
The
Monk Joakim of Osogovsk was one of four great hermits
of Bulgaria, having inspired by his ascetic efforts hundreds and
thousands of people to Christian asceticism. He lived in the XI
Century, unknown by anyone, in a cave on the Osogovsk heights. Just
before his death he chanced to encounter two hunters, whom he blessed
for a successful hunt. The demise of the monk followed, as he revealed
in a posthumous vision, "during a great darkness [i.e., an eclipse]
eight years previous," i.e., approximately in the year 1115. A monastery
was afterwards built on the place of his ascetic deeds.
The
Theodorovsk (Feodorovsk) Kostroma Icon of the Mother of God
-- the account about it is located under 14
March.
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