10
JANUARY
(23 January)
Sainted
Gregory, Bishop of Nyssa (+395)
Monk Dometian, Bishop of Meletineia (+601)
Monk Marcian the Presbyter (V)
Monk Paul of Komel'sk, or Obnorsk (+1429)
Monk Makarii of Pisemsk (XIV)
Blessed Theozua the Deaconess, Sister of Saint
Gregory of Nyssa (+385)
Monk Ammonios the Hermit
Sainted
Gregory, Bishop of Nyssa, was a younger brother
of Saint Basil the Great (commemorated 1
January). His birth and time of upbringing coincided
with the very heights of the Arian disputes. Having received
an excellent education, he was at one time a teacher of
rhetorical eloquence. In the year 372 he was ordained by
Saint Basil the Great as bishop of the city of Nyssa in
Cappadocia.
Saint
Gregory was an ardent advocate for Orthodoxy, and together with
his brother Saint Basil the great he fought against the Arian heresy.
He suffered persecution by the Arians, by whom he was falsely accused
in the year 376 of improper useage of church property, and thereby
deprived of his cathedra-seat and sent off to Ancyra. In the following
year Saint Gregory was again in absentia deposed by a church-council
of Arian bishops, but he continued to encourage his flock in Orthodoxy,
wandering about from place to place. After the death of the emperor
Valens (378), Saint Gregory was restored to his cathedra-seat and
joyously received by his flock. In the year 379 his brother Saint
Basil the Great died. Only with difficulty did Saint Gregory survive
the loss of his brother and guide. He crafted a funeral oration
to him and completed compilation of Saint Basil's study of the Six
Days of Creation, the so-called "Hexaemeron." This same year Saint
Gregory participated in the Council of Antioch, against heretics
that disdained to honour the immaculate virginity of the Mother
of God, and others at the opposite extreme that worshipped the Mother
of God as Herself being God. He was chosen by the Council for an
examination of churches in Arabia and Palestine to assert the Orthodox
teaching about the MostHoly Mother of God. On his return journey
Saint Gregory visited Jerusalem and the Holy Places.
In
the year 381 Saint Gregory was one of the chief figures of the Second
Ecumenical Council, convened at Constantinople against the heresy
of Macedonias, who incorrectly taught concerning the Holy Spirit.
At this Council, on the initiative of Saint Gregory, was completed
the Nicean Symbol of Faith (i.e. the Creed).
Together
with the other bishops Saint Gregory affirmed Sainted Gregory the
Theologian in the dignity of Archpastor of Constantinople.
In
the year 383 Saint Gregory of Nyssa was a participant in a Council
at Constantinople, where he spoke a sermon about the Divinity of
the Son and the Holy Spirit. In the year 386 he was again at Constantinople,
and to him was entrusted to speak the funeral oration in memory
of the empress Placilla. And again in 394 Saint Gregory was present
in Constantinople at a Local Council, convened for resolving church
matters in Arabia.
Sainted
Gregory of Nyssa was a fiery defender of Orthodox dogmas and a zealous
teacher to his flock, a kind and compassionate father to his spiritual
children, and their intercessor before the courts. He was distinguished
by his magnanimity, patience and love for peace.
Having
reached old age, Saint Gregory of Nyssa died peacefully, soon after
the Constantinople Council. Together with his great contemporaries
-- Saints Basil the Great and Gregory the Theologian -- Saint Gregory
of Nyssa had a significant influence on the Church life of his time.
His sister, Saint Macrina, wrote to him: "Thou art reknown both
in the cities, and gatherings of people, and throughout entire districts;
Churches do send off and summon thee for help." Saint Gregory has
come down in history as one of the most obvious and active Christian
thinkers of the IV Century. Endowed with a profound philosophical
talent, he perceived philosophy but as a means for a deeper penetration
into the authentic meaning of Divine revelation.
Saint
Gregory left behind him many works of dogmatic character, as well
as sermons and discourses.
The
Monk Dometian, Bishop of Meletineia, was born and lived
during the VI Century, during the time of the emperor Justin the
Younger. He was married but early on widowed, thereafter accepting
monasticism and living a strict and holy life. At thirty years of
age he was chosen bishop of the city of Meletineia (Great Armenia).
Wise and zealous in questions of faith, strong in word and deed,
Saint Dometian quickly gained fame as a good and ardent pastor.
More than once he carried out government commissions in Persia to
avoid conflicts with the Greeks. Beloved by everyone, the Monk Dometian
often received rich gifts, which he distributed for the welfare
of the poor. Both during his lifetime and after his death, occurring
in the year 601, Saint Dometian was glorified by God with miracles.
The
Monk Marcian, Presbyter and Steward of the Great Church (in Constantinople),
was born at Rome and in his youth he received a first-rate education
in Constantinople. After the death of his parents, the Monk Marcian
used his rich inheritance on the building, renovation and embellishment
of churches. Thus, he built a church in the name of the holy Martyress
Anastasia, richly adorned it, and had the holy relics of the saint
transferred into it. He built likewise a church of the holy Martyress
Irene. His moral purity and strict ascetic life brought him to the
attention of the patriarch, who ordained the Saint Marcian a presbyter
and appointed him steward of the Great (Patriarchal) Church in Constantinople.
From
his wealth Saint Marcian distributed generous alms, and distinguished
himself by non-covetousness, denying himself in everything. In accord
with the command of the Saviour, he did not even have an extra set
of clothes, as might be necessary should he be drenched in inclement
weather. Having received a gift of wonderworking, the Monk Marcian
healed the sick and cast out devils. Saint Marcian died during the
years 472-474 and was buried at the monastery of Saint John the
ForeRunner at Constantinople.
The
Monk Paul of Komel'sk, a famed student of the Monk Sergei
of Radonezh, was born at Moscow in the year 1317. From his youthful
years he distinguished himself by his piety and kindliness towards
the poor and suffering. His rich parents prepared him for a secular
life, but at twenty-two years of age he secretly left his parental
home and received tonsure at the Nativity monastery on the Volga
(in Yaroslavsk diocese).
From
there Paul transferred to the Holy Trinity monastery to the Monk
Sergei of Radonezh, spending several years with him as a cell-obedient,
in everything obeying the wise guidance of the holy starets (elder).
With the blessing of the Monk Sergei, he settled a way off from
the monastery in a separate cell, where he spent fifteen years as
an hermit. Having asked the blessing of the Monk Sergei to go off
into the wilderness for a quiet and solitary life, the Monk Paul
wandered about for a long while, seeking for himself the place of
solitude. He went much about the wilderness, he spent time with
the Monk Avraamii of Chukhlomsk (commemorated 20
July) and finally, he remained in the Komel'sk forest. At the
Gryazovitsa River, in the hollow of an old linden tree, the monk
made himself a small cell and dwelt there for three years in complete
silence, "not giving his body rest, for which to receive future
rest." Then he moved on to the River Nurma, where he built himself
an hut and dug out a well. He spent his days in vigil and prayer.
Five days out of the week he went without food, and only on Saturday
and Sunday did he partake of some bread and water. The news spread
widely about the hermit, and there begin coming to him those wishing
spiritual guidance of him. Despite his love for the solitary life,
the Monk Paul never refused anyone in spiritual consolation and
guidance. He was visited here also by the Monk Sergei of Nuromsk,
who likewise had sought solitude with the blessing of their teacher
the Monk Sergei of Radonezh, and who likewise passed his ascetic
life in these locales.
With
the blessing of the Monk Sergei and the agreement of Metropolitan
Photii, the Monk Paul in 1414 built the Holy Trinity Church, around
which grew up a monastery, receiving the name of Pavlo-Obnorsk.
Having written for the brethren a strict ustav [monastic rule],
the Monk Paul entrusted the guidance of the new monastery to his
disciple Aleksei, while he himself continued as before to live in
a solitary cell on an hill, meanwhile remaining a responsive and
good counsellor for anyone needing his healing help. The Monk Paul
died at 112 years of age. His final words were: "Brethren, have
love one for another and keep to the rule of the monastic community."
The
Life of the saint was written in about the year 1546, and his glorification
occurred in 1547.
The
Monk Makarii of Pisemsk and Kostroma was a co-ascetic
of the Monk Paul of Obnorsk. He was the founder, in the second half
of the XIV Century, of the Makar'ev Transfiguration wilderness monastery
at the River Pis'ma in the Kostroma outskirts.
Blessed
Theozua the Deaconess was the sister by birth of Saints
Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, and Paul, Bishop of Sebasteia.
She was a virgin and served the Holy Church as a deaconess, caring
for the sick, distributing food to vagrants, raising orphans and
preparing women for holy Baptism. When her brother, Saint Gregory
of Nyssa, was in exile for three years, Saint Theozua was with him
and she shared in all the tribulations of a life of wandering. Saint
Theozua died in the year 385, and Sainted Gregory the Theologian
honoured her memory in an eulogy.
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