25
August
(7 September)
Apostle
Bartholomew
(Transfer of Relics, VI). Disciple from
the 70, Titus, Bishop of Crete (I). Sainted
Barsis (+ 378) and Eulogios, Bishops of Edessa, and Protogenos,
Bishop of Caria (IV). Sainted Minos, Patriarch
of Tsargrad (536-552). Sainted John the
Cappadocian, Patriarch of Constantinople (VI). Sainted
Epiphanios, Patriarch of Constantinople (+ 535). Saint Syncletia.
The
Transfer of the Relics of the Apostle Bartholomew Was at the
end of the VI Century. His apostolic activity and martyr's end are
remembered by the Church on 11 June. The Apostle Bartholomew
suffered for Christ in Armenian Albano (now Baku) in the year 71,
where also his holy relics were situated. From the relics of the
holy apostles occurred numerous miracles, and many of the unbelieving
were converted to Christ. Under the emperor Anastasios (491-518)
the relics of the Apostle Bartholomew were transferred into the
newly constructed city of Anastasiopolis (or Dareia) and remained
there until the end of the VI Century.
When
the city of Anastasiopolis was captured by the Persian emperor Khozroes,
Christians took up the chest with the relics of the Apostle Bartholomew
and fled with it to the shores of the Black Sea. Having overtaken
them, pagan-priests threw the chest with the relics of the Apostle
Bartholomew into the sea. Together with it, 4 other chests were
thrown into the sea containing the relics of the holy Martyrs Papian,
Lucian, Gregory and Akakios. By the power of God the chests did
not sink into the depths of the sea, but rather accomplished a miraculous
floating upon the waves and reached Italy. The chest with the relics
of the Apostle Bartholomew came to land at the island of Lipari,
and the remaining chests continued their journey and came to land
at various places in Italy. The chest with the relics of the Martyr
Papian halted at Sicily, the Martyr Lucian -- at Messina, the Martyr
Gregory -- at Calabria, and the Martyr Akakios -- at Asculusa. The
arrival of the relics of the holy Apostle Bartholomew was revealed
to the bishop of the island of Lipari -- Agathon, who went with
clergy to the shores of the sea, took up the chest from the waters
and solemnly transferred it to church. From the relics of the Apostle
Bartholomew there flowed out myrh, giving healing for various illness.
The holy relics remained in the church of the island of Lipari until
the middle of the IX Century, when the island was captured by pagans.
Christian merchants took up the holy relics of the Apostle Bartholomew
and transferred them to the city of Beneventum, where they were
received with great veneration and placed in the main church of
the city.
The
Disciple from the 70 Titus was a native of the island of Crete,
the son of an illustrious pagan. In his youthful years he studied
attentively at Hellenistic philosophy and the ancient poets. Preoccupied
by the sciences, Titus led a virtuous life, not devoting himself
to the vices and passions characteristic of the majority of pagans.
He preserved his virginity, as the Priest-martyr Ignatios the God-bearer
(comm. 20 December) testified about him. For such a manner of life
the Lord did not leave him without His help. At age twenty in a
dream Saint Titus heard a voice, suggesting to him to abandon the
Hellenistic wisdom, not providing salvation for his soul, but rather
to seek out that which would save him. After this dream Saint Titus
waited still another year, since it was not actually like a command,
but it guided him to familiarise himself with the teachings of the
prophets of God. The first that he happened to read was the Book
of the Prophet Isaiah. Having opened it to the 47th Chapter, he
was struck by the words, speaking as it were about his own spiritual
condition.
When
news reached Crete about the appearance in Palestine of a Great
Prophet, and about the great miracles worked by Him, the governor
of the island of Crete, an uncle of Titus by birth, sent him there.
This Prophet was the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, incarnated of the
MostHoly Virgin Mary and having come into the world for the redemption
of the race of mankind from its oppression of the original sin.
At Jerusalem Saint Titus beheld the Lord; he heard His preaching
and believed in Him. He was a witness of the suffering on the Cross
and death of the Saviour, His glorious Resurrection and Ascent to
Heaven. On the day of Pentecost the future disciple heard, standing
in the crowd, how the 12 Apostles, -- after the descent upon them
of the Holy Spirit, spoke in various languages among which was the
Cretan language (Acts 2: 11). Saint Titus accepted Baptism from
the Apostle Paul and became his closest disciple. He accompanied
the Apostle Paul on his missionary journeys, time and again he fulfilled
entrusted tasks, was involved in the establishing of new churches,
and was with him in Jerusalem. Saint Titus was numbered among the
70 Disciples and was ordained by the Apostle Paul as bishop of Crete.
Around the year 65, not long before the second imprisonment, the
Apostle Paul dispatched a pastoral epistle to his selected one (Tit.
1-3). When the Apostle Paul was taken like a criminal to Rome to
stand trial before Caesar, Saint Titus for a time left his flock
in Crete and went to Rome to be of service to his spiritual father.
After the death by martyrdom of the Apostle Paul, the Disciple Titus
returned to the chief city of Crete -- Gortyn.
The
Disciple Titus peacefully guided his flock and toiled at enlightening
the pagans with the light of faith in Christ. He was granted by
the Lord the gift of wonderworking. During a time of one of the
pagan feasts in honour of the goddess Diana, Titus preached to a
gathered crowd of pagans. When he saw, that they would not listen
to him, he prayed to the Lord, so that the Lord Himself would show
to the mistaken people the non-entity of idols. By the prayer of
the Disciple Titus, the idol of Diana fell down and shattered before
the eyes of all. Another time the Disciple Titus prayed, that the
Lord would not permit the completion of a temple under construction
raised up to Zeus, and it collapsed. By such miracles the Disciple
Titus brought many to faith in Christ. Having enlightened with the
light of faith the surrounding regions, the Disciple Titus died
peacefully in the extreme old age of 97. At death his face shone
like the sun.
Sainted
Barsis and Eulogios, Bishops of Edessa, and Protogenos the Confessor,
Bishop of Caria, suffered from the Arians in the second half
of the IV Century. The emperor Valentius (364-378), wishing
to propagate the Arian heresy, undertook a fierce persecution against
the Orthodox. In the city of Edessa he banished from the bishop's
throne Saint Barsis, a champion for Orthodoxy, sending him for confinement
to the island of Arad. The Orthodox population there received the
exiled saint with great honour. They banished him farther, to the
Egyptian city of Oxyrinth, but there also was repeated the warm
welcome. Then Saint Barsis was banished to the very frontier of
the imperial realm, to the faraway city of Thenon where, exhausted
by his exiles, he died (+ 378). At Edessa the emperor Valentius
raised up upon the bishop's cathedra an Arian false-bishop by the
name of Lupus, which means wolf, and who both by name and by deed
showed himself to be like a wolf, in scattering the flock of the
sheep of Christ. The Orthodox population of Edessa, both clergy
and laypeople, ceased to attend their church, which had been seized
by the Arians. They gathered together outside the city and celebrated
the Divine-services in an open area.
Having
learned of this, the emperor ordered the eparch Modestus to kill
all the Orthodox, appearing for Divine-services outside the city.
The eparch pitied the city and he informed the Orthodox, that they
should not go to Divine-services. But the believers did contrary:
fervent with the desire to receive a martyr's crown for Christ,
they all as one went to the place where they usually gathered for
prayer. Eparch Modestus, obeying his orders, embarked their with
his armed soldiers. Along the way he saw a woman, who hastened to
Divine-services with her small child, so as not to deprive him of
the martyr's crown. Shaken, eparch Modestus turned around back with
his soldiers. Appearing before the emperor Valentius, he urged him
to cancel the decree about killing all the Orthodox and to extend
it only upon the clergy. They led to the emperor persons of spiritual
rank, and in the lead the eldest presbyter Eulogios. The emperor
urged them to go into church-communion with the pseudo-bishop Lupus,
but none of them agreed. After this in chains they sent 80 men of
clergy rank for confinement in Thrace. Orthodox met them along the
way with great reverence as being confessors, and furnished them
all the necessities. Having learned of this, the emperor gave orders
to divide up the martyrs in pairs, and to spread them out to remote
places.
The
holy presbyters Eulogios and Protogenos were sent to the Thivean
city of Antinea. There by their preaching they converted many idol-worshippers
to Christ and baptised them. When the emperor Valentius perished
and upon the throne entered the holy nobleborn emperor Theodosius
(379-395), the Orthodox confessors remaining alive after the persecution
were returned from exile. The holy presbyters Eulogios and Protogenos
returned to Edessa. On the place of the dead and banished bishop
of Edessa, Saint Barsis, presbyter Eulogios was elevated to bishop,
and the holy presbyter Protogenos was made bishop in the Mesopotamian
city of Caria. Both saints guided their flocks until their death,
which occurred at the end of the IV Century.
Sainted
Minos, Patriarch of Constantinople (536-552), was at first a
presbyter at Constantinople and supervisor there for the homeless-shelter
home of the holy Monk Sampson the Hospitable-to-Strangers during
the reign of Saint Justinian I (527-565). After the removal of the
heretic Anthymos (535-536), the holy presbyter Minos was elevated
upon the Constantinople patriarchal throne as one worthy to be bishop
for his profound virtue and firm confession of Orthodoxy. His ordination
was done by the Pope of Rome Agapitus (535-536) who then at the
time was in Constantinople. During the time of the patriarchate
of Saint Minos there occurred a miracle in Constantinople, widely
known to all the city.
A
certain Hebrew lad went with other children to church and he communed
the Holy Mysteries of Christ. At home he told his father about this.
In a terrible rage he seized the child and threw him into a red-hot
oven (this Hebrew was a glass-blower). He said nothing to his wife.
The mother for three days in tears searched for her son, -- loudly
did she call for him, and finally on the third day he emerged to
her from the red-hot oven. With difficulty she pulled out the child,
who was unharmed. The boy told, that a MostRadiant Lady had there
come to him, and She cooled down the fire and brought water and
food. This incident became known to Saint Minos and the emperor
Justinian I. The boy and his mother received baptism, but the father
of the child became obdurate and did not wish to repent, in spite
of the great miracle to which he was a witness. Then the emperor
handed over for trial as a child-killer and sentenced him to death
by execution. The holy Patriarch Minos ruled the Constantinople
Church for 16 years. During the time of his patriarchate at Constantinople,
the famous temple in honour of Saint Sophia the Wisdom of God was
consecrated. The saint died peacefully in the year 552.
Sainted
John the Cappadocian, Patriarch of Constantinople, occupied
the patriarchal throne from 518-520. The holy Patriarch Photios
(857-867) termed him "an habitation of virtues".
Sainted
Epiphanios, Patriarch of Constantinople, occupied the cathedra
from 520 to 535. He died peacefully in the year 535.
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