04
JULY
(17 July)
Sainted
Andrew, Archbishop of Crete (+c.712-726)
Nun Martha, Mother of Monk Simeon Divnogorets
(+551)
Nobleborn GreatPrince Andrei [Andrew] Bogoliubsky
(+1174)
Monk Evphymii, Suzdal' Wonderworker (Uncovering
of Relics, 1507)
Sainted-Hierarchs: Donatos, Bishop of Lebanon; Michael, Archbishop
of Athens (+1216)
PriestMartyrs: Theodore, Bishop of Cyrenia (+310);
Theophilus
Martyrs Theodotos and Theodotia (+108)
Saints: Theodotos of Lebanon, Asclepiada the Wonderworker
Righteous Menignos
Monk Mark the Confessor
Galatian Icon of the Mother of God
Sainted
Andrew, Archbishop of Crete, was born in the city of Damascus into
a pious Christian family. Up until seven years of age the boy was
mute and did not talk. However, after communing the Holy Mysteries
of Christ he found the gift of speech and began to speak. And from
that time the lad began earnestly to study Holy Scripture and the
discipline of theology.
At
fourteen years of age he went off to Jerusalem and there he accepted
monastic tonsure at the monastery of Saint Sava the Sanctified.
Saint Andrew led a strict and chaste life, he was meek and abstinent,
such that all were amazed at his virtue and reasoning of mind. As
a man of talent and known for his virtuous life, over the passage
of time he came to be numbered amongst the Jerusalem clergy and
was appointed a secretary for the Patriarchate -- a writing clerk.
In the year 680 the locum tenens of the Jerusalem Patriarchate,
Theodore, included archdeacon Andrew amongst the representatives
of the Holy City sent to the Sixth OEcumenical Council, and here
the saint contended against heretical teachings, relying upon his
profound knowledge of Orthodox doctrine. Shortly after the Council
he was summoned back to Constantinople from Jerusalem and he was
appointed archdeacon at the church of Saint Sophia, the Wisdom of
God. During the reign of the emperor Justinian II (685-695) Saint
Andrew was ordained bishop of the city of Gortineia on the island
of Crete. In his new position he shone forth as a true luminary
of the Church, a great hierarch -- a theologian, teacher and hymnographer.
Saint
Andrew wrote many a Divine-service song. He was the originator of
a new liturgical form -- the canon. Of the canons composed by him
the best known is the Great Penitential Canon, including within
its 9 odes the 250 troparia recited during the Great Lent. In the
First Week of Lent at the service of Compline it is read in portions
(thus called "methymony" [trans. note: from the useage in the service
of Compline of the "God is with us", in Slavonic the "S'nami Bog",
or in Greek "Meth' Humon ho Theos", from which derives "methymony"],
and again on Thursday of the Fifth Week at the All-night Vigil during
Matins.
Saint
Andrew of Crete gained reknown with his many praises of the All-Pure
Virgin Mary. To him are likewise ascribed: the Canon for the feast
of the Nativity of Christ, three odes for the Compline-service of
Palm Sunday and also in the first four days of Holy Passion Week,
as well as verses for the feast of the Meeting of the Lord, and
many another church-song. His hynographic tradition was continued
by the churchly great melodists of following ages: Saints John of
Damascus, Cosma of Maium, Joseph the Melodist, Theophan the Written-upon.
There have also been preserved edifying Sermons of Saint Andrew
for certain of the Church feasts.
Church
historians are not of the same opinion as to the date of death of
the saint. One suggests the year 712, while others -- the year 726.
He died on the island of Mytilene, while returning to Crete from
Constantinople, where he had been on churchly business. His relics
were transferred to Constantinople. In the year 1350 the pious Russian
pilgrim Stefan Novgorodets saw the relics at the Constantinople
monastery named for Saint Andrew of Crete.
The Nun Martha, mother of Saint Simeon of the Wondrous-Mount (Divnogorets;
-- his account is located under 24 May), lived during the VI Century
and was a native of Antioch. From her early years she yearned for
monasticism, but her parents persuaded her to marry. Her husband,
John, soon died, and righteous Martha with all her strength devoted
herself to the raising of her son. She was for her son an example
of high Christian temperament: often she visited the temple of God,
attentively and with piety she hearkened to the church services,
and frequently she communed the Holy Mysteries of Christ. Righteous
Martha each night rose up to pray, and her prayers she made with
heartfelt warmth and tears. She particularly venerated the Baptist
of the Lord Saint John the Precursor, who was for her a protector
frequently appearing to her in visions. The Nun Martha was charitable
towards the poor, she fed and clothed them, she visited the convalescent
and she attended to the sick, she buried the dead, and for those
preparing to receive holy Baptism she with her own hands reading
the clothing.
The
Nun Martha was reserved, and no one heard from her a frivolous,
false or vain word, no one saw her angry, nor fighting with anyone
nor bitter. She was a model of chaste and pious life and by her
example she guided many on the pathway to salvation. When her son,
Saint Simeon, had become a reknown ascetic, she in visiting him
urged him not to exalt himself by his efforts, but in everything
to add in an act of thankfulness to God.
It
was made known beforehand to the Nun Martha about her approaching
end: she beheld Angels with candles saying, that they would come
for her in another year's time. The saint was likewise granted visions
of the abode of paradise, and the All-Pure Virgin Herself showed
to her the Heavenly habitation, prepared for the righteous.
The
end of Saint Martha was peaceful (+ 551), and her body was buried
on the Wondrous-Mount, at the place of the ascetic deeds of her
son, the Monk Simeon the Pillar-Dweller.
Holy
Nobleborn Prince Andrew [Andrei] Bogoliubsky (1110-1174),
a grandson of Vladimir Monomakh, was the son of Yurii Dolgoruky
and a Polovetsian princess (in holy Baptism Maria). While still
in his youth he was called "Bogoliubsky" ("God-loving") for the
constantly inherent to him profound attention to prayer, his diligence
for church services and "his adoption of secret prayers to God."
From his grandfather, Vladimir Monomakh, the grandson inherited
great spiritual concentration, love for the Word of God and the
habit of turning to the Scripture in all the circumstances of life.
A brave
warrior [Andrew means "brave"], a participant of the many campaigns
of his military father, more than once in the fray of battle he
was close to death. But each time Divine Providence invisibly saved
the princely man of prayer. Thus for example, on 8 February 1150,
in a battle near Lutsk Saint Andrew was saved from the spear of
an enemy German by a prayer to the GreatMartyr Theodore Stratilates,
whose memory was celebrated that day.
The
chronicles stress together with this the peace-making activity of
Saint Andrew, rare amongst the princes and military commanders of
these harsh times. The combination of military valour with love
for peace and mercy, of great humility with indomitable zeal for
the Church were in the highest degree innate to Prince Andrew. A
responsible master of the land, and a constant co-worker in the
city construction and church building activity of Yurii Dolgoruky,
he built with his father: Moscow (1147), Iur'ev-Pol'sk (1152), Dmitrov
(1154), and he adorned with churches the cities of Rostov, Suzdal',
and Vladimir. In 1162 Saint Andrew could say with satisfaction:
"I have built up white Rus' with cities and settlements, and have
rendered it with much populace."
When
Yurii Dolgoruky became greatprince of Kiev in 1154, he gave his
son as appanage portion Vyshgorod nearby Kiev. But God destined
otherwise. One time by night in the Summer of 1155, the wonderworking
Icon of the Mother of God in the Vyshgorod church was removed. This
icon was written by the holy Evangelist Luke, and in some period
before this had come transferred hither from Tsar'grad [Constantinople],
and afterwards it was given the name, the Vladimir Mother of
God. On this night with the icon in hand, holy Prince Andrew
left Vyshgorod going northwards to the Suzdal' land, secretly and
without the blessing of his father, heedful only to the will of
God.
The
miracle from this holy icon, occurring on the way from Vyshgorod
to Vladimir was recorded by a clergyman of Prince Andrew, "the priest
Mikula" [Nikolai], in his "Reports of Miracles of the Vladimir Icon
of the Mother of God."
Ten
versts before reaching Vladimir, the horse, bearing the icon bound
for Rostov, suddenly stopped. And during the night the Mother of
God appeared to Saint Andrew with scroll in hand and commanded:
"I want not that thou shouldst bear My image to Rostov, but rather
establish it in Vladimir, and upon this place erect thou a stone
church in the name of My Nativity." In memory of this miraculous
event, Saint Andrew commissioned an iconographer to write an icon
of the Mother of God suchlike as the All-Pure Virgin had appeared
to him, and he established feastday for this icon as 18 June. The
icon, named the Bogoliubsk, was afterwards glorified by numerous
miracles.
Upon
the place decreed by the Queen of Heaven, Prince Andrew built (in
1159) the church of the Nativity of the Mother of God. He situated
here also the city of Bogoliubov, which became his constant dwelling
and the place of his martyr's end.
When
his father Yurii Dolgoruky died (+ 15 May 1157), Saint Andrew did
not take up his father's throne at Kiev, but rather remained prince
at Vladimir. During the years 1158-1160 was built the Uspenie [Dormition]
cathedral at Vladimir, and into it was placed the Vladimir Icon
of the Mother of God. In the year 1164 there were erected the
Golden Gates, with the over-gate church of the Placing of the Robe
of the Mother of God, and also the church of the Saviour at the
princely court.
Thirty
churches were built by Prince Andrew during the years of his rule.
The finest of them is the Uspenie cathedral. The richness and splendour
of the church served in spreading Orthodoxy amongst the surrounding
peoples and foreign merchants. All the travellers, whether Latins
or pagans -- Saint Andrew had directed -- were to be led into the
churches built by him and to have pointed out to them "true Christianity."
The chronicler writes: "Both Bulgars, and Jews, and every sort of
common person, beholding the glory of God and churchly adornment,
came to be baptised."
The
conquest of the great Volga journey-way became for Saint Andrew
a fundamental task of his civil service to Russia. The Volga Bulgars
from the time of the campaigns of Svyatoslav (+972) presented a
serious danger for the Russian state. Saint Andrew continued with
the initiative of Svyatoslav.
A shattering
blow was struck against the enemy in 1164, when Russian forces burnt
and destroyed several Bulgar fortresses. Saint Andrew took with
him on this campaign the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God and
a two-sided icon, on which was imaged upon the one side the "Saviour
Not-Wrought-by-Hand" and the "Veneration to the Cross" on the opposite
side. [At the present time both icons are in the Tret'yakov State
Gallery.]
A great
miracle from the holy icons occurred for the Russian army on the
day of the decisive victory over the Bulgars, 1 August 1164. After
the destruction of the Bulgar army, the princes (Andrew, his brother
Yaroslav, his son Izyaslav and others) returned towards the "footmen"
[infantry] standing by the princely standards with the Vladimir
Icon, and they made prostration to the Icon, "bestowing it praise
and song." And then all beheld the blinding rays of light, issuing
from the face of the Mother of God and the Saviour Not-Wrought-by-Hand.
Remaining
in everything a faithful son of the Orthodox Church, vigilant in
belief and canons, Saint Andrew turned to the Patriarch of Tsar'grad
with a filial request to establish a separate metropolitan for north-eastern
Rus'. And with the prince's letter of accord there journeyed to
Byzantium the candidate chosen by the prince -- the Suzdal' archimandrite
Theodore [Feodor]. Patriarch Luke Chrysobergos, however, consented
to consecrate Theodore only as bishop of Vladimir, but not as metropolitan.
Yet at the same time, wanting to uphold the position of Prince Andrew
as the most powerful amongst the rulers of the Russian Land, the
patriarch dignified bishop Theodore with the right to wear the "white
klobuk" [hierarch's headgarb], which in ancient Rus' was a distinctive
sign of churchly autonomy -- a recognition of esteem likewise granted
the archbishop of Novgorod by his white klobuk. Evidently, since
the Russian chronicles speak of bishop Theodore with the title of
"White Klobuk", much later historians sometimes call him "an autocephalous
bishop."
In
the year 1167 Saint Rostislav died at Kiev. He was the twin brother
of Andrew, and had been able to carry out compromise amongst the
complicated political and churchly life of the time. But after this,
there was dispatched from Tsar'grad a new metropolitan, Constantine
II. The new metropolitan demanded that bishop Theodore come before
him for confirmation of position. Saint Andrew again recoursed to
Tsar'grad for affirmation of the autonomous status of the Vladimir
diocese and again he requested a separate metropolitanate. The letter
of reply from patriarch Luke Chrysobergos has been preserved: it
contains a categorical refusal for establishing a new metropolitan,
a demand to accept the expelled bishop Leon, and to submit to the
Kiev metropolitan.
In
fulfilling the duty of this churchly obedience, Saint Andrew urged
bishop Theodore to journey in repentance to Kiev for the restoration
of canonical relations with the metropolitan. The repentance of
bishop Theodore was not accepted. Without investigation by a council,
and in accord with the Byzantine morals of the time, metropolitan
Constantine condemned him to a terrible execution: they cut out
the tongue from Theodore, they cut off his right hand and then they
gouged out his eyes. After this he was drowned by servants of the
metropolitan (by other accounts, he died in prison).
Not
only the churchly, but also the political affairs of Southern Rus'
demanded the decisive response of the Vladimir Great-prince. On
8 March 1169 an army of allied princes with Andrew's son Mstislav
at the head conquered Kiev. The city was devastated and burned,
and the Polovetsians participating in the campaign did not spare
even the churchly treasures. The Russian chronicles viewed this
event as a merited requital: "These misfortunes were for their sins
(the Kievans), especially for the outrage perpetuated by the metropolitan."
In the same year 1169 the prince moved an army against unruly Novgorod,
but they were repulsed by a miracle from the Novgorod Icon of the
Mother of God of the Sign (commemorated 27 November),
which had been carried along the city walls by holy Archbishop John
(+ 1186, commemorated 7 September).
But when the understandable wrath of the greatprince gave way to
mercy, and in peace he summoned the Novgorod people to him, the
blessing of God returned to him: Novgorod accepted the prince appointed
by Saint Andrew.
In
such a manner, towards the end of 1170, Saint Andrew Bogoliubsky
was able to attain the unity of the Russian Land under his rule.
In
the Winter of 1172 he dispatched against the Volga Bulgars a large
army under the command of his son Mstislav. The Russian forces gained
the victory, but their joy was overshadowed by the death of the
valiant Mstislav (+ 28 March 1172).
...
On the night of 30 June 1174 holy Prince Andrew Bogoliubsky accepted
a martyr's death at the hands of traitors in his own household.
The "Tver Chronicle" relates, that Saint Andrew was murdered at
the instigation of his second wife (a Volga Bulgar), who participated
in the conspiracy. At the head of the conspiracy stood her brothers,
the Kuchkovichi: "and they did commit murder in the night, as did
Judas against the Lord." A throng of assassins, twenty men, burst
in upon the court, they killed the few guards and stormed into the
bedchamber of the unarmed prince. The sword of Saint Boris, which
hung constantly over his bed, had been treacherously removed that
night by the steward Anbal. The prince succeeded in shoving down
upon the floor the first of his assailants, whom the conspirators
then mistakenly ran through with their swords. But soon they realised
their mistake: "and then they did perceive the prince, and he fought
much with them, for he was strong, and they did thrust with swords
and sabres, and copious wounds did give him." The forehead of the
holy prince was struck on the side with a spear, while all the remaining
blows from the cowardly assassins were dealt from behind. When the
prince finally fell, they abruptly rushed out of the bedchamber,
taking along their murdered accomplice.
But
the saint was still alive. With his final strength he lowered himself
along the palace stairway, hoping to alert a guard. But his groans
were heard by the assassins, and they turned back. The prince was
able to hide himself in a niche below the stairway and so be bypassed
by them. The conspirators rushed to the bedchamber but did not find
the prince there. "Disaster stands afront us, since the prince is
alive", in terror cried out the assassins. But all around it was
quiet, and no one came to the aid of the suffering prince. Then
the evil-doers again regained their boldness, they lit candles and
followed along the bloody trail to seek out their victim. Prayer
was on the lips of Saint Andrew when the assassins again surrounded
him.
The
Russian Church remembers and venerates its martyrs and makers. A
special place belongs to Saint Andrew Bogoliubsky within it. Having
taken in his hands the wonderworking image of the Vladimir Mother
of God, the holy prince as it were blessed with it both then and
through the centuries the major events of Russian history. In 1395
was the year of the transfer of the Vladimir Icon to Moscow and
the deliverance of the capital from the invasion of Tamerlane (Comm.
26 August); the year 1480 was the salvation of Rus' from the invasion
of khan Akhmat and the ultimate collapse of the Mongol Horde (commemorated
23 June); the year 1521 was the salvation
of Moscow from the invasion of the Crimean khan Makhmet-Girei (commemorated
21 May). Through the prayers of Saint
Andrew, his fondest dreams for the Russian Church came true. In
the year 1300 metropolitan Maksim transferred the All-Russian Metropolitan
seat from Kiev to Vladimir, making the Uspensky sobor [Dormition
cathedral], wherein rest the relics of Saint Andrew, the foremost
cathedral of the Russian Church, and the Vladimir wonderworking
Icon its chief holy object.
Later
on, when the All-Russian churchly centre shifted to Moscow, selections
of the metropolitans and patriarchs of the Russian Church were made
before the Vladimir Icon. In the year 1448 in front of it, a Council
of Russian bishops raised up the first Russian autocephalous metropolitan
-- Sainted Jona. On 5 November 1917, in front of it was made the
selection of His Holiness Patriarch Saint Tikhon -- the first such
after the restoral of the patriarchate in the Russian Church. And
in 1971, on the feastday of the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God,
there took place the enthronation of His Holiness Patriarch Pimen.
The
liturgical activity of Saint Andrew was multi-faceted and fruitful.
In 1162 the Lord granted the holy prince a great solace: in Rostov
there was discovered the relics of Rostov saints -- the Sainted-hierarchs
Isaiah and Leontii. The glorification throughout all the Church
of these Rostov saints took place somewhat later, but Saint Andrew
initiated the beginning of their national veneration. In 1164 the
military forces of Saint Andrew crushed their long-time enemy, the
Volga Bulgars. The victories of the Orthodox nation were marked
by a blossoming of liturgical creativity within the Russian Church.
In this same year of 1164, at the initiative of Saint Andrew, the
Church established the feastday to the All-Merciful Saviour and
the MostHoly Mother of God on 1 August
(venerated by the Russian people as "Saviour of First-Honey"), in
memory of the Baptism of Rus' by holy Equal-to-the-Apostles Vladimir
and in memory of the victory over the Bulgars in 1164. The soon-thereafter
instituted feastday of the Protection [Pokrov] of the Mother of
God on 1 October embodied
in liturgical forms the faith of the holy prince and all the Orthodox
nation -- in the acceptance by the Mother of God of Holy Rus' beneath
Her omophorion. The "Pokrov" of the Mother of God became one of
the most beloved of Russian Church feastdays. The Protection is
a Russian national feastday, unknown to both the Latin West, and
the Greek East. It is a liturgical continuation and creative developement
of theological ideas, inherent to the feast of the Placing of the
Robe of the Mother of God, on 2 July.
The
first church, consecrated to the new feastday, was the Protection
at Nerla (1165), a remarkable monument of Russian Church architecture,
built by the master artisans of Saint Andrew at the head-waters
of the River Nerla, such that the prince could always see it from
a window of his Bogoliubov garret.
Saint
Andrew took an active part in the literary work of the Vladimir
church writers. He participated in the compiling of the Service
of Pokrov (the most ancient copy is on the parchment of a XIV Century
Psalter), and also a preface account about the establishing of the
feastday of the Protection (Great Chet' Minei [Great Reading Meneion]
under month October), as well as a "Discourse on the Protection."
He wrote an "Account about the Victory over the Bulgars and the
Establishing of the Feast of the Saviour in the Year 1164," that
in several of the old manuscripts is entitled thus: "Discourse concerning
the Mercy of God by GreatPrince Andrei Bogoliubsky." The fate of
Bogoliubsky is also noted in the Vladimir Chronicle entry for the
year 1177, completed after the death of the prince by his confessor,
the priest Mikula, who inserted therein his special "Account about
the Murder of Saint Andrew." To Saint Andrew's time belongs also
the final redaction of the "Account about Boris and Gleb," inserted
into the "Uspensk Sbornik" ("Compendium" or "Collected-service Book").
The prince venerated particularly Saint Boris, and his chief household
sacred-treasure was a cap of Saint Boris. The sword of Saint Boris
hung always over his bed. A memorial likewise of prayerful inspiration
of Saint Andrew is "A Prayer," included in the chronicle under the
year 1096 after the "Instructions of Vladimir Monomakh."
The
Uncovering of the Relics of the Monk Evphymii of Suzdal' the
Wonderworker, who died on 1 April 1405, occurred in the
year 1507 during the construction of a new stone church when the
monastery was headed by the hegumen Kirill (later bishop of Rostov).
The incorrupt relics were the source of numerous miracles, and they
were placed in the Transfiguration cathedral of the monastery. In
1511 after its restorations, the church (a rare memorial of XIV
Century architecture) was consecrated in the name of the Monk Evphymii.
The
PriestMartyr Theodore, Bishop of Cyrenia, lived during
the reign of the emperor Diocletian (284-305). Skilled at writing,
and having accomplished great mastery in his beloved task, he transcribed
many a copy of books for the churches. His son by birth Leo denounced
him to the district governor, Dignianus, saying that his father
possessed Christian books and was turning people away from idol-worship,
and instead drawing them to faith in Christ the Saviour. Saint Theodore
was brought to trial. Many Christians followed after him, in which
number were the women Lucy and Hieroa. The holy bishop was ordered
to surrender his books and renounce Christ, but he refused this
demand. They beat him with tin rods. But Saint Theodore was not
intimidated, and with a fiery zeal for the truth he destroyed the
pagan sacrificial offerings. They tortured him for a long while,
they cut out his tongue, and then they threw him in prison, where
he died. Put to death also were the women Lucy and Hieroa and all,
who had accepted holy Baptism from the holy bishop.
The
Galatian Icon of the Mother of God is situated in Galata
(one of the districts of Constantinople), at Pergia (in a tower).
In honour of the holy icon a monastery was formed, which existed
until the XVII Century. An exact copy of the image is located in
Moscow, in the Church of Sainted Tikhon, at the Arbat Gate.
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