31
July
(13 August)
Prefeast
of the Procession of the Venerable and Life-Creating Cross of the
Lord.
Righteous
Joseph of Arimathea (I).
Righteous
Eudokimos the Cappadocian (IX).
Martyrs:
Julitta (304-305); Gelasios; Anthony and
George; 12 Roman Martyrs. Saint John, Exarch of Bulgaria (IX-X).
Monk Prince Stephen. Sainted Arsenios, Bishop of Ninotsminda (+
1082).
Righteous
Eudokimos, a native of Cappadocia (Asia Minor), lived during
the IX Century during the reign of emperor Theophilos (829-842).
He was the son of the pious Christians Basil and Eudokia, an illustrious
family and known to the emperor. The righteous life of Saint Eudokimos
was totally guided towards pleasing God and service to neighbour.
Having given a vow to remain unmarried and chaste, he avoided conversation
with women and did not look at them; only with his own mother whom
he extremely respected did he carry on edifying conversation. For
his virtuous life the emperor appointed Saint Eudokimos as governor
of the Kharsian district. Fulfilling his duty as a servant of God,
Righteous Eudokimos governed the people justly and with kindness,
he concerned himself over the misfortunate, and about orphans and
widows, and he was a defender of the common people. His personal
Christian exploits which he did in secret, were known only to God.
Eudokimos
pleased God by his blameless life, and the Lord called him at age
33. Laying on his death-bed, Saint Eudokimos gave final instructions
to place him in the grave in those clothes in which he would meet
death. Then he sent everyone out of the room and besought the Lord
in prayer, that no one would see his end, just as no one saw his
secret efforts during life. His attendants buried him as he had
instructed them. Right after the death of Righteous Eudokimos miracles
happened at his grave, many sick people were healed, and the news
about the miracles of healing spread about.
After
18 months the mother of Saint Eudokimos came to venerate the relics,
from Constantinople, whither his parents had settled after the death
of the saint. She gave orders to remove the stone, dig up the ground,
open the grave, and everyone beheld the face of the saint, bright
as though alive, altogether untouched by decay. Great fragrance
came from him. They took up the coffin with the relics from the
earth, and they changed the saint into new clothes. His mother wanted
to take the relics of her son to Constantinople, but the Kharsian
people would not clear a path for their holy one. But after a certain
while the priest-monk Joseph, having lived and served at the grave
of the saint, transported all the relics of Saint Eudokimos to Constantinople.
There they were placed in a silver reliquary in the church of the
MostHoly Mother of God, built by the parents of the saint.
Righteous
Eudokimos is considered in the Russian Church to be one of the special
protectors and intercessors before God of the family hearth.
The
Holy Martyress Julitta lived at Caesarea Cappadocia during the
reign of the emperor Diocletian (284-305). A certain pagan pilfered
all her property, and when Julitta turned for relief to the courts,
her antagonist reported to the judge that she was a Christian. the
judge demanded the saint to renounce Christ, for which he promised
to restore justice and return to her the unlawfully taken property.
Saint Julitta resolutely refused the deceitful conditions, and for
this she was burnt in a bon-fire in the year 304 (or 305). Sainted
Basil the Great devoted his Praiseworthy Discourse to Saint Julitta
70 years after her death as a martyr.
Righteous
Joseph of Arimathea was a secret disciple of our Lord Jesus
Christ. As a member of the Sanhedrin he did not participate in the
"counsel and deed" of the Jews in passing a death sentence
for Jesus Christ. After the Crucifixion and Death of the Saviour
he made bold to go to Pilate and demand of him the Body of the Lord,
to Which he gave burial with the help of Righteous Nicodemus, who
was likewise a secret disciple of the Lord. They took down from
the Cross the Body of the Saviour, wrapped it in a winding-cloth
or plaschanitsa, and placed it in a new-hewn tomb, in which no one
earlier had been buried (this tomb Saint Joseph had prepared previously
for himself) -- in the Garden of Gethsemane, in the presence of
the Mother of God and the holy Myrh-Bearing Women. Having rolled
an heavy stone before the entrance of the tomb, they then departed
(Jn. 19: 37-42; Mt. 27: 57-61; Mk. 15: 43-47; Lk. 24: 50-56).
Saint
Joseph died peacefully in Anglium (England).
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