16
July
(29 July)
PriestMartyr
Athenogoras and his Ten Disciples (+c.311)
Martyr Paul and Women-Martyrs Aleutina (Valentina)
and Chionea (+308) Martyrs: Antiochos the Physician (IV);
Maiden Julia (+c.440 or 613);
Faustus;
15,000 Pisidian Martyrs;
Senatorus, Viatorus and Cassiodorus and their mother Dominata
Memory of Holy Fathers of Fourth OEcumenical Council
(451)
Chirsk (Pskovsk) Icon of the Mother of God (1420)
The
PriestMartyr Athenogoras and his Ten Disciples suffered
for Christ during the time of persecution against Christians in
the city of Sebasteia. The governor Philomarkhos made a large festival
in honor of the pagan gods and summoned the Sebasteia citizenry
to offer sacrifice to the idols. But the inhabitants of Sebasteia,
Christian in the majority, refused to participate in the impious
celebration with its offering of sacrifice to idols. Soldiers were
ordered to kill people, and many Christians then accepted a martyr's
crown.
It
came to the governor's attention, that Christianity was being widely
spread about by the graced preaching of Bishop Athenogoras. Orders
were issued to seek out the elder and arrest him. Saint Athenogoras
and ten of his disciples lived not far from the city in a small
monastery. But not finding the bishop there, the soldiers arrested
his disciples. The governor gave orders to slap them into chains
and throw them in prison.
Saint
Athenogoras came then to Sebasteia and began reproaching the judge
that those thrown into prison were guiltless. He was arrested. In
prison, Saint Athenogoras encouraged his spiritual children for
their impending deed. Led forth to trial, all the holy martyrs confessed
themselves Christians and refused to offer sacrifice to idols. After
undergoing fierce tortures, the disciples of the holy bishop were
beheaded. And after the execution of the disciples, the executioners
were ordered to put the elder to the test of torture. Strengthened
by the Lord, Saint Athenogoras underwent the tortures with dignity.
His only request was that he be executed in the monastery.
Taken
to his own monastery, the saint in prayer gave thanks to God, and
he rejoiced in the sufferings that he had undergone for Him. Saint
Athenogoras besought of the Lord the forgiveness of sins of all
those people, who should remember both him and his disciples.
The
Lord granted the saint to hear His Voice before death, announcing
the promise given to the penitent thief: "Today with Me thou shalt
be in paradise." The priestmartyr himself bent his neck beneathe
the sword.
The
Holy Martyrs Paul, Aleutina, and Chionea were from Egypt.
During the time of the persecution against Christians under the
emperor Maximian (305-313), they were taken to Palestine Caesarea.
Without the slightest fear before the governor they confessed themselves
followers of Christ. In the year 308 the sisters Aleutina and Chionea
were burnt, and Paul was beheaded.
The
Holy Martyr Antiochos, a native of Cappadocian Sebasteia,
was the brother by birth of the holy Martyr Platon (commemorated
18 November), and he was a physician.
The pagans learned that he was a Christian, and they brought him
to trial and subjected him to fierce tortures. Thrown into boiling
water, the saint remained unharmed, and given over for devouring
by wild beasts -- he did not suffer with them, for the beasts lay
peacefully at his feet. Through the prayers of the martyr many miracles
were worked and the idolatrous statues crumbled into dust. The pagans
beheaded the Martyr Antiochos. And seeing the guiltless suffering
of the saint, Kyriakos, a participant in the execution, was converted
to Christ. He confessed his faith in front of everyone and likewise
was beheaded (IV). They buried the Martyrs alongside each other.
The
Holy Martyress Julia was born in Carthagena into a Christian
family. While still a maiden she fell into captivity to the Persians.
They carried her off to Syria and sold her into slavery. Fulfilling
the Christian commandments, Saint Julia faithfully served her master,
and she preserved herself in purity, kept the fasts and prayed much
to God.
No
amount of urging by her pagan master could sway her to idol-worship.
On
time the master set off with merchandise for Gaul and took Saint
Julia with him. Along the way the ship stooped over at the island
of Corsica, and the master decided to take part in a pagan festivity,
but Julia remained on the ship. The Corsicans plied the merchant
and his companions with wine, and when they had fallen into a drunken
sleep, they took Julia from the ship. Saint Julia was not afraid
to acknowledge that she was a Christian, and the savage pagans crucified
her on a cross.
An
Angel of the Lord reported about the death of the holy martyress
to the monks of a monastery, situated on a nearby island. The monks
took the body of the saint and buried it in a church in their monastery.
In
about the year 763 the relics of the holy Martyress Julia were transferred
to a women's monastery in the city of Breschia (historians give
conflicting years of the death of the saint: as either the V or
VII Century).
The
Fourth Ecumenical Council, at which 630 bishops participated,
was convened in the year 451 in the city of Chalcedon under the
emperor Marcian (450-457). Still back in the time of the emperor
Theodosius II (408-450), the bishop of Dorileuseia Eusebios in 408
reported to a Council held at Constantinople under the holy Patriarch
Flavian (commemorated 18 February), concerning a
personage of one of the monasteries of the capital, the archimandrite
Eutykhios, who in his undaunted zeal against the soul-destroying
heresy of the Nestorius, went to the opposite extreme and began
to assert that within Jesus Christ the human nature under the hypostatic
union was completely absorbed by the Divine nature, in consequence
of which it lost everything characteristic of human nature, except
but for the visible form; wherein, such that after the union in
Jesus Christ there remained only one nature (the Divine), which
in visible bodily form lived upon the earth, suffered, died, and
was resurrected.
The
Constantinople Council condemned this new false-teaching. But the
heretic Eutykhios had patronage at court, and was in close connection
with the heretic Dioskoros, the successor to Sainted Cyril (commemorated
18 January) upon the patriarchal
cathedra-seat at Alexandria. Eutykhios turned to the emperor with
a complaint against the injustice of the condemnation against him,
and he demanded the judgement of an Ecumenical Council against his
opponents, whom he accused of Nestorianism. Wanting to restore peace
in the Church, Theodosius had decided to convene a Fourth Ecumenical
Council in the year 449 at Ephesus. But this Council became branded
in the chronicles of the Church as the "Robbers Council." Dioskoros,
appointed by the emperor to preside as president of the Council,
ran it like a dictator, making use of threats and outright coercion.
Eutykhios was exonerated, and Saint Flavian condemned. But in the
year 450 the emperor Theodosius died. The new emperor Marcian raised
up onto the throne with him the sister of Theodosius, Pulcheria.
Restoring
peace to the Church was a matter of prime importance. An Ecumenical
Council was convened in the year 451 at Chalcedon. The Patriarch
of Constantinople, Saint Anatolios (commemorated 3
July) presided over the Council. Dioskoros at the first session
was deprived of his place among those present, and at the third
session he was condemned with all his partisans. The Sessions of
the Council were 16 in all. The Chalcedon holy fathers pronounced
anathemas against the heresy of Eutykhios. On the basis of Letters
Saint Cyril of Alexandria and Pope Saint Leo the Great, the fathers
of the Council resolved: "Following the holy fathers, we all with
one accord teach to confess as one and the same the Son, our Lord
Jesus Christ, perfect in Divinity and perfect in humanity, truly
God, truly man, of Whom is a reasoned soul and a body, One in Essence
with the Father through Divinity and that Same-One one-in-essence
with us through humanity, in all things like unto us except for
sin, begotten before the ages from the Father in Divinity, but in
these latter days born for us and our salvation from Mary the Virgin
Mother of God in humanity. This self-same Christ, Son and Lord,
the Only-Begotten, is in two natures perceived without mingling,
without change, without division, without separation [Greek: "asugkhutos,
atreptos, adiairetos, akhoristos"; Slavic: "neslitno, neizmenno,
nerazdel'no, nerazluchno"], such that by conjoining there be not
infringement of the distinctions of the two natures, and by which
is preserved the uniqueness of each nature conjoined in one Person
and One Hypostasis, not split nor separated into two persons, but
rather the One and Self-same Son, the Only-Begotten, the Word of
God, the Lord Jesus Christ, as in antiquity the prophets taught
of Him and as the Lord Jesus Christ Himself taught us, and as the
Creed-Symbol of the fathers has passed down to us."
In
the two final Sessions of the Council, 30 Canon-rules were promulgated
concerning ecclesial hierarchies and disciplines. Beyond this, the
Council affirmed the decrees not only of the three preceding Ecumenical
Councils, but also of the Local Councils of: Ancyra, Neocaesarea,
Gangra, Antioch, and Laodiceia, which had occurred during the IV
Century.
The
Chirsk (Pskovsk) Icon of the Mother of God was initially
situated in the Chirsk village church of Pskov diocese, from whence
its name "Chirsk." On 16 July 1420, during the time of Great-prince
Vasilii Dimitrievich, the archbishop of Novgorod and Pskov Simeon
and the Pskov prince Feodor Aleksandrovich were present in Pskov
during a time of a deadly pestilence: tears trickled down from the
eyes of the Chirsk Icon of the Mother of God. This was reported
to authorities in the city of Pskov. Clergy-servers transported
the wonderworking icon to Pskov. A church procession was made in
meeting the icon. They placed the icon in the cathedral church of
the Holy Trinity.
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