05
JULY
(18 July)
Monk
Athanasias of Athos (+ 1000)
Monk Sergei, Hegumen of Radonezh (Uncovering of
Relics, 1422)
Martyrs Anna and Cyrilla (+304)
Basil and the 70 with him
Monk Lampados of Eirenopolis (X)
MonkMartyr Cyprian the New (+1679)
Sainted Stephen, Bishop of Rega
Icon of the Mother of God, named "Oikonomissa" ["Household-Overseer"]
The
Monk Athanasias of Athos, in holy Baptism named Abraham,
was born in the city of Trapezund. He was early left orphaned, and
being raised by a certain good and pious nun, he copied his adoptive
mother in the habits of monastic life, in fasting and in prayer.
Doing his lessons came easily and he soon outpaced his peers in
study.
After
the death of his adoptive mother, Abraham was taken to Constantinople,
to the court of the then Byzantine emperor Romanos the Elder, and
was enrolled as a student under the reknown rhetorician Athanasias.
In a short while the student attained the mastery of skill of his
teacher and he himself became an instructor of youths. Reckoning
as the true life that of fasting and vigilance, Abraham led a life
strict and abstinent, he slept little and then only sitting upon
a stool, and barley bread and water were his nourishment. When his
teacher Athanasias through human weakness became jealous of his
student, blessed Abraham quit his teaching and went away.
During
these days there had arrived at Constantinople the Monk Michael
Maleinos (commemorated 12 July), hegumen
of the Kimineia monastery. Abraham told the hegumen about his life,
and revealed to him his secret desire to become a monk. The holy
elder, discerning in Abraham a chosen vessel of the Holy Spirit,
became fond of him and taught him much in questions of salvation.
One time during their spiritual talks Saint Michael was visited
by his nephew, Nicephoros Phokas, a reknown military officer and
future emperor. The lofty spirit and profound mind of Abraham impressed
Nicephoros, and all his life he regarded the saint with reverent
respect and with love. Abraham was consumed by his zeal for the
monastic life. Having forsaken everything, he went to the Kimineia
monastery and, falling down at the feet of the holy hegumen, he
besought to be received into the monastic form. The hegumen fulfilled
his request with joy and gave him monastic vows with the name Athanasias.
With
long fasts, vigils, bending of the knees, with works night and day
Athanasias soon attained such perfection, that the holy hegumen
blessed him for the exploit of silence in a solitary place not far
from the monastery. Later on, having left Kimineia, he made the
rounds of many a desolate and solitary place, and guided by God,
he came to a place called Melanos, at the very extremity of Athos,
settling far off from the other monastic dwellings. Here the monk
made himself a cell and began to asceticise in works and in prayer,
proceeding from exploit to exploit towards higher monastic attainment.
The
enemy of mankind tried to arouse in Saint Athanasias hatred for
the place chosen by him, and assaulted him with constant suggestions
in thought. The ascetic decided to suffer it out for a year, and
then wherever the Lord should direct him, he would go. On the last
day of this year's length of time, when Saint Athanasias set about
to prayer, an Heavenly Light suddenly shone upon him, filling him
with an indescribable joy, all the thoughts dissipated, and from
his eyes welled up graced tears. From that moment Saint Athanasias
received the gift of tenderness ["umilenie"], and the place of his
solitude he became as strongly fond of as before he had loathed
it. During this time Nicephoros Phokas, having had enough of military
exploits, remembered his vow to become a monk and from his means
he besought the Monk Athanasias to build a monastery, i.e., to build
cells for him and the brethren, and a church where the brethren
could commune the Divine Mysteries of Christ on Sundays.
Tending
to shun cares and worries, Blessed Athanasias at first would not
agree to accept the hateful gold, but seeing the fervent desire
and good intent of Nicephoros, and discerning in this the will of
God, he set about the building of the monastery. He erected a large
church in honour of the holy Prophet and Forerunner of Christ John
the Baptist, and another church at the foot of an hill, in the name
of the MostHoly Virgin Mother of God. Around the church were the
cells, and a wondrous monastery arose on the Holy Mount. In it were
arrayed a refectory, an hospice for the sick and for taking in wanderers,
and other necessary structures.
Brethren
flocked to the monastery from everywhere, not only from Greece,
but also from other lands -- simple people and illustrious dignitaries,
wilderness-dwellers having asceticised long years in the wilderness,
hegumens from many a monastery and hierarchs wanting to become simple
monks in the Athos Laura of Saint Athanasias.
The
saint established at the monastery a life-in-common ["coenobitic"]
monastic-rule on the model of the old Palestinian monasteries. Divine-services
were made with all strictness, and no one made bold to chatter during
the time of service, nor to come late or leave without need from
the church.
The
Heavenly Patroness of Athos, the All-Pure Mother of God Herself,
was graciously disposed towards the saint. Many a time he was granted
to behold Her wondrous eyes. By the sufferance of God there once
occurred such an hunger, that the monks one after the other quit
the Laura. The saint remained all alone and in a moment of weakness
he also considered leaving. Suddenly he beheld a Woman beneathe
an aethereal veil, coming to meet him. "Who art thou and whither
goest?" -- She asked quietly. Saint Athanasias from an innate deference
halted. "I am a monk from here" -- answered Saint Athanasias and
told about himself and his worries. "And on account of a morsel
of dry bread thou would forsake the monastery, which was intended
for glory from generation unto generation? Where is thy faith? T
urn round, and I shalt help thee." "Who art Thou?" -- asked Athanasias.
"I am the Mother of thy Lord" -- She answered and bid Athanasias
to strike his staff upon a stone, such that from the fissure there
shot forth a spring of water, which exists even now, in remembrance
of this miraculous visitation.
The
brethren grew in number, and the construction work at the Laura
continued. The Monk Athanasias, foreseeing the time of his departure
to the Lord, prophesied about his impending end and besought the
brethren not to be troubled over what he foresaw. "For Wisdom disposeth
otherwise than people do judge." The brethren were perplexed and
pondered over the words of the saint. Having bestown on the brethren
his final guidance and comforted all, Saint Athanasias entered his
cell, put on his mantle and holy kukol'-headpiece, which he wore
only on great feasts, and after prolonged prayer he emerged. Alert
and joyful, the holy hegumen went up with six of the brethren to
the top of the church to look over the construction. Suddenly, through
the imperceptible will of God, the top of the church collapsed.
Five of the brethren immediately gave up their spirit to God. The
Monk Athanasias and the architect Daniel, thrown upon the stones,
remained alive. All heard, as the monk called out to the Lord: "Glory
to Thee, O God! Lord, Jesus Christ, help me!" The brethren with
great weeping began to dig out their father from amidst the rubble,
but they found him already dead.
The
Uncovering of the Venerable Relics of the Monk Sergei of Radonezh:
The relics of the Monk Sergei (+1392, commemorated 25
September) were uncovered on 5 July 1422 during a time when
the Monk Nikon (+1426, commemorated 17
November) was hegumen. In the year 1408, when Moscow and its
surroundings suffered invasion by the Tatar horde of Edigei, the
Trinity monastery was devastated and burnt, and the monks headed
by the hegumen Nikon hid themselves in the forests, saving the icons,
sacred vessels, books and other holy things connected with the memory
of the Monk Sergei. In a vision by night on the eve of the Tatar
incursion the Monk Sergei informed his disciple and successor about
the coming tribulations and foretold in consolation, that the vexation
would not be prolonged but rather that the monastery, arising from
the ashes, would flourish and grow even more. Metropolitan Philaret
wrote about this in the "Life of the Monk Sergei": "In semblance
to this, that it suited Christ to suffer, and through the cross
and death to enter into the glory of the Resurrection, so also doth
it become everyone, that wouldst be blest by Christ in the length
of days in glory, to be tested by one's own cross and death." Going
through its own fiery cleansing, the monastery of the Life-Originating
Trinity was resurrected in the length of days, and the Monk Sergei
himself rose up, so that forevermore his holy relics should dwell
within it.
Before
the beginning of construction of the new temple in the Name of the
Life-Originating Trinity upon the spot of the former wooden one
(which was consecrated on 25 September 1412), the Monk Sergei appeared
to a certain pious layman and bid him inform the hegumen and the
brethren: "Why do ye leave me such a while in the grave, covered
over by ground and in the water, constraining my body?" And herewith
during the construction of the cathedral, when they dug the ditches
for the foundations, the undecayed relics of the Monk Sergei were
uncovered and brought up, and all were astonished, that not only
the body, but also the clothing upon him was undecayed, although
round about the grave there actually stood water. Amidst a large
throng of the devout and the clergy, in the presence of the son
of Dimitrii Donskoi -- the prince of Zvenigorod Yurii Dimitrievich
(+1425), the holy relics were brought up from the ground and placed
temporarily in the wooden Trinity church (at this spot is located
now the church of the Descent of the Holy Spirit). With the consecration
in 1426 of the stone Trinity cathedral the relics were transferred
into it, where at present they remain.
All
the threads of the spiritual life of the Russian Church converge
towards the great Radonezh saint and wonderworker, and through all
of Orthodox Rus' the graced life-creating currents extend outwards
from the Trinity monastery founded by him.
Naming
a church for the Holy Trinity within the Russian land began with
holy Equal-to-the-Apostles Ol'ga (+ 969, the account about her is
under 11 July), who erected the first
Trinity temple at Pskov. Afterwards there were erected similar churches
in Great Novgorod and other cities.
The
spiritual contribution of the Monk Sergei in the teaching of theology
about the Holy Trinity is quite significant. The monk had profound
insight into the secret mysteries of theology with the "mental eyes"
of the ascetic -- in prayerful ascent to the Tri-Hypostatic (i.e.
in Three-Persons) God, and in the spiritual experience of communion
with God and God-likeness.
"Co-heirs
of the perfect light and contemplation of the MostHoly and All-Sovereign
Trinity" -- explained Saint Gregory the Theologian -- "are those
which become perfectly co-united in the perfection of the Spirit."
The Monk Sergei knew experientially the mystery of the Life-Originating
Trinity, since in his life he became co-united with God, he became
a communicant to the very life of the Divine Trinity, i.e. he attained
as much as is possible on earth to the measure of "theosis" ["divinisation",
"obozhenie"], becoming a "partaker of the Divine nature" (2Pet 1:4).
"Whoso loveth Me" -- saith the Lord -- "that one wilt keep to My
word; and My Father wilt love him, and We shalt come unto him and
make abode with him" (Jn 14:23). Abba Sergei, in everything observing
the commands of Christ, belongs to the rank of holy saints in the
souls of whom the Holy Trinity "hath made abode"; he fashioned himself
into "an abode of the Holy Trinity", and everyone with whom the
Monk Sergei associated, he elevated and brought into communion unto
the Holy Trinity.
The
Radonezh ascetic, with his disciples and conversants, enriched the
Russian and the OEcumenical Church with a new knowledge and vision
of the Life-Originating Trinity, the Beginning and Source of life,
manifesting Itself unto the world and to mankind in the "Sobornost'"
["Communality"] of the Church, with brotherly unity and the sacrificial
redemptive love of its pastors and children.
In
the spiritually symbolic gathering together of Rus' in unity and
love, the historical effort of the nation became a temple of the
Life-Originating Trinity, erected by the Monk Sergei, "so that by
constant attention to It would be conquered the fright of the hateful
discord of this world."
The
worship of the Holy Trinity, in forms created and bequeathed by
the holy Hegumen of Radonezh Sergei, became one of the most profound
and original of features of Russian ecclesiality. With the Monk
Sergei, in the Life-Originating Trinity there was posited not only
the holy perfection of life eternal, but also an image-model for
human life, a spiritual ideal towards which mankind ought to strive,
since that in the Trinity as "Indivisible" ["Nerazdel'nyi", greek
"Adiairetos"] discord is condemned and "Sobornost'" ["Communality"]
is blest, and in the Trinity as "Inseparable" ["Neslyannyi", "Akhoristos"
-- per Fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon in year 451] coercion
is condemned and freedom blest. In the teaching of the Monk Sergei
about the MostHoly Trinity the Russian nation sensed profoundly
its own catholic and ecumenical vocation, and comprehending the
universal significance of the feastday, the people embellished it
with all the variety and richness of the ancient national custom
and people's verse. All the spiritual experience and spiritual striving
of the Russian Church was embodied in the liturgical creativity
of the feast of the Holy Trinity, of trinitarian church rituals,
icons of the Holy Trinity, and churches and monasteries of this
nomen.
The
theological insight of the Monk Sergei in transformation was rendered
as the wonderworking icon of the Life-Originating Trinity written
by the Monk Andrei (Andrew) of Radonezh, surnamed Rublev (+1430,
commemorated 4 July), a monk-iconographer,
monasticised in the Trinity-Sergiev monastery, and written at the
blessing of the Monk Nikon in praised memory to holy Abba Sergei.
(At the Stoglav Council of 1551 this icon was affirmed as proper
model for all successive church iconographic depiction of the MostHoly
Trinity).
"The
hateful discord", quarrels and commotions of worldly life were surmounted
by the monastic life-in-common, planted by the Monk Sergei throughout
all Rus'. People would not have divisions, quarrels and war, if
human nature, created by the Trinity in the image of the Divine
Tri-Unity, were not distorted and impaired by Originial sin. Overcoming
by his own co-crucifixion with the Saviour the sin of particularity
and separation, repudiating the "my own" and the "myself," and in
accord with the teachings of Saint Basil the Great, the life-in-common
monks restore the First-created unity and sanctity of human nature.
The monastery of the monk Sergei became for the Russian Church the
model for suchlike renewal and rebirth, in it were formed holy monks,
bearing forth thereof features of the true path of Christ to remote
regions. In all their works and actions the Monk Sergei and his
disciples churchified life, giving the people a living example of
its possibility. Not for renouncing the earth, but rather for transfiguring
it, they proclaimed ascent and they themselves ascended unto the
Heavenly.
The
school of the Monk Sergei, through the monasteries founded by him,
his disciples and the disciples of his disciples, embraces all the
vastness of the Russian land and threads its way through all the
remotest history of the Russian Church. One fourth a portion of
all Russian monasteries, the strongholds of faith, piety and enlightenment,
was founded by Abba Sergei or his disciples. The "Hegumen of the
Russian land" was what people called the founder of the Domicile
of the Life-Originating Trinity. The Monks Nikon and Mikhei of Radonezh,
Syl'vester of Obnorsk, Stefan of Makhrisch and Avraam of Chukhlomsk,
Athanasii of Serpukhov and Nikita of Borovsk, Theodore of Simonovsk
and Pherapont of Mozhaisk, Andronik of Moscow and Savva of Storozhevsk,
Dimitrii of Prilutsk and Kirill of Belozersk -- they were all disciples
and conversants of "the wondrous elder", Sergei. Sainted-hierarchs
Alexei and Kiprian -- Metropolitans of Moscow, Dionysii ArchBishop
of Suzdal', and Stephen Bishop of Perm, were associated with him
in spiritual closeness. The Patriarchs of Constantinople Kallistos
and Philotheos dispatched missives to him and sent their blessings.
Through the Monks Nikita and Paphnutii of Borovsk threads a spiritual
legacy to the Monk Joseph of Volotsk and others of his disciples,
and through Kirill of Belozersk -- to Nil Sorsky, to German, Savvatii
and Zosima of Solovetsk.
The
Church venerates also disciples and co-ascetics of the Monk Sergei,
whose memories are not specifically noted within the "Mesyatseslov"
lists of saints under their separate day. We remember, that the
first to arrive for the Monk Sergei at Makovets was the elder Vasilii
the Gaunt ("Sukhoi"), called such because of his incomparable fasting.
Second was the Monk Yakuta, i.e. Yakov (James), of simple peasant
stock, who without a murmur spent long years at the monastery on
errands of drudgery and difficult obedience. Among his other disciples,
there came to the Monk Sergei his fellow countrymen from Radonezh
the Deacon Onisim and son Elisei. When 12 monks had gathered and
the constructed cells were fenced in by an high enclosure, the abba
appointed Deacon Onisim the gate-keeper, since his cell was outermost
from the entrance to the monastery. Under the protective shadow
of the Holy Trinity monastery the Hegumen Mitrophan spent his final
years, -- he it was who formerly had vowed the Monk Sergei into
the angelic form and guided him in monastic efforts. The grave of
dead and soon blest Starets Mitrophan became the first in the monastery
cemetery. In the year 1357 there arrived at the monastery from Smolensk
the Archimandrite Simon, who resigned his venerable position as
head of one of the Smolensk monasteries, to become a simple obedient
of the God-bearing Radonezh hegumen. In recompense for his great
humility, the Lord granted him to share in the miraculous vision
of the Monk Sergei about the future increase of his monastic flock.
With the blessing of the abba, the Blessed elder Isaakii the Silent
took upon himself the deed of prayerful silence; his silence was
more instructive than any words for the monks and those outside.
Only one time after a year of silence did the Monk Isaakii open
his mouth -- to testify, how he had seen an Angel of God serve together
at the altar of the Monk Sergei, in making the Divine Liturgy. An
eyewitness of the grace of the Holy Spirit, co-effectualised for
the Monk Sergei, was also the ecclesiarch Simon, who once saw, how
an heavenly fire came down upon the Holy Mysteries and that the
saint of God "did commune the fire unburningly". The Elder Epiphanii
(+ 1420) was somewhat later, during the time of hegumen Nikon, a
priest of the Sergiev flock. The Church names him Epiphanii the
Wise for his deep learning and great spiritual talents. He is known
as the compiler of the Life of the Monk Sergei and of his conversant
Saint Stephen of Perm in eulogy to them; he wrote also the "Account
of the Life and Repose of GreatPrince Dimitrii Donskoi". The vita
of the Monk Sergei, compiled by Epiphanii 26 years after the death
of the monk, i.e. in 1418, was later reworked by the Monk-hagiographer
Pakhomii the Serb, called the Logothete, who had come from Athos.
To
the monk Sergei, as to an inexhaustible font of spiritual prayer
and grace of the Lord, at all times came in veneration thousands
of the people -- for edification and for prayers, for help and for
healing. And each of those having recourse with faith to his wonderworking
relics he heals and renews, fills with power and with faith, transforms
and guides upwards with his light-bearing spirituality.
But
it was not only spiritual gifts and graced healings bestown to all,
approaching with faith the relics of the Monk Sergei; to him likewise
was given by God the grace to defend against enemies of the Russian
land. The monk by his prayers was with the army of Dimitrii Donskoi
at the Battle of Kulikovo Pole ("Field"), -- he even blessed to
go to the military effort his own monks, Aleksandr Peresvet and
Andrei Oslyab. He directed Ivan the Terrible the place for erection
of the fortress of Sviyazhsk and helped in the victory over Kazan.
During the time of the Polish incursion the Monk Sergei appeared
in a dream to the Nizhni Novgorod citizen Kozma Minin, ordering
him to gather funds and equip an army for the liberation of Moscow
and the Russian realm. And when in 1612 after a molieben to the
Holy Trinity the militia of Minin and Pozharsky moved on towards
Moscow, a propitious breeze fluttered the Orthodox standards, "as
though from the grave of the Wonderworker Sergei himself".
To
the period of the Time of Troubles and the Polish incursion belongs
the heroic "Trinity sitting-tight", when many a monk with the blessing
of the hegumen Saint Dionysii repeated the military holy deed of
the Sergiev disciples Peresvyet and Oslyab. For one and an half
years -- from 23 September 1608 to 12 January 1610 -- the Polish
laid siege to the monastery of the Life-Originating Trinity, hoping
to plunder and destroy this sacred bulwark of Orthodoxy. But by
the intercession of the MostHoly Mother of God and through the prayers
of the Monk Sergei, "with much disgrace" they fled finally from
the walls of the monastery, pursued by Divine wrath, and soon even
their leader Lisovsky perished a cruel death on precisely the Monk
Sergei's day of memory, 25 September 1617. In 1618 the son of the
Polish king, Vladislav, came right up to the walls of the Holy Trinity
monastery. But being powerless against the grace of the Lord guarding
the monastery, he was compelled to conclude a peace-treaty with
Russia at the monastery village of Deulino. After this a church
was erected in the name of the Monk Sergei.
In
the year 1619 the Jerusalem patriarch, Theophanes, visited the Lavra
amidst his journey to Russia. He especially wanted to see those
monks who in time of military danger made bold to put over their
monastic garb the chain-mail coat and with weapon in hand to go
up onto the walls of the holy monastery, warding off the enemy.
The Monk Dionysii the hegumen (+ 1633, the account about him is
under 12 May), in speaking about the defense, presented to the patriarch
more than twenty monks.
The
first of them was Athanasii (Oscherin), very up in years and with
the yellowed greyness of an elder. The patriarch asked him: "Didst
thou go to war and lead soldiers?". The elder answered: "Yes, holy
Vladyko, it was made necessary by bloody tears". -- "What is most
proper for a monk -- prayerful solitude or military exploits before
the people?" Blessed Athanasii, making poklon, answered: "Every
thing and every deed has its own time. Here on my head is a Latin
signature, from a weapon. There are six more memorials of lead in
my body. Sitting in the cell at prayer, could I indeed have found
suchlike inducements towards moaning and groaning? I did all this
not at my own pleasure, but for the blessing of the service of God
sent us". Touched by the wise answer of the humble monk, the patriarch
blessed and hugged him. He blessed also the other soldier-monks
and expressed his admiration to all the brethren of the Lavra of
the Monk Sergei.
The
deed of the monastery, during this grievous Time of Troubles for
all the nation, was recorded by the steward Avraam (Palitsyn) in
"An Account about the Happenings of the Time of Troubles", and also
by the steward Simon Azar'in in two hagiographic collections: "Book
about the Miracles of the Monk Sergei" and the "Life of the Monk
Dionysii of Radonezh". In the year 1650 Simeon Shakhovsky compiled
an akathist to the Monk Sergei, as "valiant voevoda (military-leader)"
of the Russian land, in memory of the deliverance of the Trinity
monastery from the enemy siege. Another akathist in existence to
the Monk Sergei was compiled in the XVIII Century, and its author
is considered to be the Moscow metropolitan, Platon (Levshin, +
1812).
In
the times following, the monastery continued to be an inextinguishable
torch of spiritual life and church enlightenment. From its brethren
one after the other were chosen for service many famed hierarchs
of the Russian Church. In the year 1744, for its service to the
country and the faith, the monastery was entitled a Lavra. In 1742
within its enclosure was established the religious seminary, and
in the year 1814 the Moscow Spiritual Academy was transferred there.
And
at present the Domicile of the Life-Originating Trinity serves as
one of the primary centres of grace of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Here at the promptings of the Holy Spirit are done the acts of the
Local Councils of the Russian Church. At the monastery is a place
of residence of His Holiness the Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus',
which carries upon it the special blessing of the Monk Sergei, in
the established form, "Archimandrite of the Holy Trinity Sergiev
Lavra".
The
fifth of July, the day of the Uncovering of the relics of holy Abba
Sergei, hegumen of the Russian Land -- is a crowded and solemn church
feastday at the monastery.
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