14
March
(27 March)
Monk
Benedict of Nursia (+543)
Sainted Theognost, Metropolitan of Kiev and All Russia (+1353)
Nobleborn GreatPrince Rostislav-Michael
(+1167)
Sainted Euskhymonos, Bishop of Lampsaka (IX)
Saint Frontina
Martyr Theodosius
Theodorov [Feodorov] Icon of the Mother of
God (1613)
The
Monk Benedict, founder of the western monastic order of the Benedictines,
was born in the Italian city of Nursia in the year 480. At 14 years
of age the saint was sent off by his parents for studies at Rome,
but vexed at the immorality there surrounding him, he decided to
devote himself to a different sort of life. At first Saint Benedict
settled near the church of the holy Apostle Peter in the village
of Effedum, but news about his ascetic life compelled him to go
farther into the mountains. There he encountered the hermit Romanus,
who tonsured him into monasticism and directed him to a remote cave
for a domicile. From time to time the hermit would bring the saint
food. For three years in total solitude the saint waged an harsh
struggle with temptations and conquered them. People soon began
to gather to him, thirsting to live under his guidance. The number
of disciples grew so much, that the saint divided them into twelve
communities. Each community was comprised of twelve monks and was
a separate skete-monastery. And to each skete the saint gave an
hegumen-abbot from among his experienced disciples.
With
the Monk Benedict remained only the new-made monks for instruction.
The
strict monastic-rule, established by Saint Benedict for the monks,
was not taken to heart by everyone, and the monk more than once
became the victim of abuse and vexation.
Finally
he settled in Campagna and on Mount Cassino he founded the Monte
Cassino monastery, which for a long time was a centre of theological
education for the Western Church. At the monastery was created a
remarkable library. And at this monastery the Monk Benedict wrote
his ustav-rule, based on the experience of life of the Eastern wilderness-dwellers
and the precepts of the Monk John Cassian the Roman (commemorated
29 February). The monastic-rule
was accepted afterwards by many of the Western monasteries (by the
year 1595 it had come out in more than 100 editions). The rule prescribed
for monks an absolute renunciation of personal possessions, unconditional
obedience, and constant work. It was considered the duty of older
monks to teach children and to copy out ancient manuscripts. This
helped to preserve many memorable writings, belonging to the first
centuries of Christianity. Every new postulant was required to live
as a novice-obedient over the course of a year, to learn the monastic
rule and to become acclimated to monastic life. Every deed required
a blessing. The head of this common-life monastery is the hegumen-abbot,
having all the fulness of power. He discerns, teaches and explains.
The hegumen solicits the advice of the elders and the experienced
brethren, but he personally makes the decision. The fulfilling of
the monastic-rule is strictly binding for everyone and is regarded
as an important step, nigh to perfection.
Saint
Benedict was vouchsafed of the Lord the gift of foresight and wonderworking.
He healed many by his prayers. The monk foretold his end beforehand.
The
sister of Saint Benedict, Saint Scholastica, likewise became famed
for her strict ascetic life and was ennumerated to the ranks of
the Saints.
Saint
Rostislav-Michael, GreatPrince of Kiev, was the son of the Kiev
GreatPrince Saint Mstislav the Great (+1132, commemorated 14
June), and the brother of holy Prince Vsevolod-Gabriel (+1138,
commemorated 11 February, 22
April, and 27 November). He was
one of the civil and churchly figures of the mid-XII Century.
With
his name is connected the fortification and rise of Smolensk, and
both the Smolensk principality and the Smolensk diocese.
Up
until the XII Century the Smolensk land comprised part of the single
Kievan realm. The beginning of its political separateness ensued
in the year 1125, when holy Prince Mstislav the Great, by way of
an inheritance from his father the Kievan GreatPrince Vladimir Monomakh,
gave off Smolensk into the holdings of his son Rostislav (in Baptism
Michael). Thanks to the work and efforts of Saint Rostislav, the
Smolensk principality, which he ruled for more than 40 years, expanded
and was built up with cities and villages, adorned with churches
and monasteries, and became influential in the all-Russian affairs.
Founded
by Saint Rostislav in the Smolensk lands were the cities of Rostislavl',
Mstislavl', Krichev, Propoisk, and Vasil'ev among others. He was
the first-ancestor of the Smolensk princely dynasty.
In
1136 Saint Rostislav succeeded with the establishing of a separate
Smolensk diocese. Its first bishop was Manuel, installed between
March-May of 1136 by the Kiev metropolitan Michael, with the means
necessary for his needs were assured by an edict of prince Rostislav,
issued in the city of Smolensk. Besides this, on 30 September 1150
in a special decree Saint Rostislav ceded the transfer of Cathedral
Hill at Smolensk to the Smolensk diocese, where there stood the
Uspenie cathedral and other diocesan buildings.
Contemporaries
thought highly of the church construction of prince Rostislav. Even
the sources that are inclined to report nothing moreso about it
note, that "this prince built the Holy Mother of God church at Smolensk."
These words need to be understood not only in the sense of the rebuilding
and expansion under prince Rostislav of the Uspenie cathedral --
originally built by his grandfather, Vladimir Monomakh, in the year
1101, the rebuilt cathedral was consecrated by bishop Manuel on
the feast of Uspenie [Dormition], 15 August 1150. Prince Rostislav
was a "builder of the Church" in a far wider sense: he endowed the
Smolensk Uspenie temple of the Mother of God materially, and transformed
it from being a city cathedral into the ecclesiastical centre of
the vast Smolensk diocese.
Holy
Prince Rostislav was the builder of the Smolensk Kremlin, and of
the Saviour cathedral at the Smyadynsk Borisogleb monastery, founded
on the place of the murder of holy Prince Gleb (+1015, commemorated
5 September). Later on his son
David, possible fulfilling the wishes of his father, transferred
from Kievan Vyshgorod to Smyadyn' the old wooden coffins of Saints
Boris and Gleb, in which their relics reposed until transferred
into stone crypts in the year 1115.
In
the decade of the fifties of the XIIth Century, Saint Rostislav
was drawn into a prolonged struggle for Kiev, which involved representatives
of the two strongest princely lines -- the Ol'govichi and the Monomakhovichi.
Although
the major contender to be greatprince on the Monomakhovichi side
was Rostislav's uncle, Yurii Dolgoruky, Rostislav as the Smolensk
prince was one of the most powerful rulers of the Russian land and
he had a decisive voice in the military and diplomatic wrangling.
For everyone involved in the dispute, Rostislav was simultaneously
a dangerous opponent and a desired ally, and moreover he was deliberately
at the centre of events. This had a providential significance, since
Saint Rostislav distinguished himself among his contemporaries by
his wisdom regarding the civil realm, by his strict sense of justice
and unconditional obedience to elders, and by his deep respect for
the Church and its hierarchy. For some several generations he became
personified as the bearer of the "Russkaya Pravda" ("Russian Righteous-Truth")
and of Russian propriety.
After
the death of his brother Izyaslav (+13 November 1154), Saint Rostislav
for a short while became greatprince of Kiev, but he ruled Kiev
concurrently with his uncle Vyacheslav Vladimirovich. After the
death of this latter figure (the end of the very same year) Rostislav
returned to Smolensk, ceding the Kiev princedom to his other uncle
-- Yurii Dolgoruky -- and he removed himself from active participation
in the bloodshed of the inter-princely disputes. He occupied Kiev
a second time on 12 April 1159 and he then remained greatprince
until his death (+1167), having more than once to defend his paternal
inheritance with sword in hand.
The
years of Saint Rostislav's rule occurred during one of the most
complicated periods in the history of the Russian Church. The elder
brother of Rostislav, Izyaslav Mstislavich, a proponent for the
autocephaly of the Russian Church, chose for metropolitan the erudite
Russian monk Kliment Smolyatich, and gave orders that he should
be made metropolitan by a sobor [council] of Russian bishops, without
previous recourse as formerly to the Constantinople patriarch. This
occurred in the year 1147. The Russian hierarchy basically supported
metropolitan Kliment and prince Izyaslav in their struggle for ecclesiastical
independence from Byzantium, but several bishops headed by Sainted
Nyphont of Novgorod (commemorated 8 April),
did not recognise the autocephalous independence of the Russian
metropolitanate and shunned communion with it, having transformed
their dioceses into a sort of unique "autocephalic" ecclesial districts,
pending the examination of circumstances. The Smolensk bishop Manuel
also followed this course. Saint Rostislav understood the danger,
which lay hidden beneathe the idea of Russian autocephaly for these
times, as aspects threatening the break-up of Rus'. The constant
fighting for Kiev which occurred among the princes would tend towards
a similar "fighting-over" the Kiev metropolitan cathedra-chair amongst
numerous contenders, put forth by either one or another princely
group.
The
premonitions of Saint Rostislav were fully justified. Yurii Dolgoruky,
adhering in loyalty to the Byzantine orientation, occupied Kiev
in the year 1154, and he immediately banished metropolitan Kliment
and petitioned to Tsar'grad for a new metropolitan. This was to
be Sainted Constantine (commemorated 5
June), but he arrived in Rus' only in the year 1156, a mere
half-year before the death of Yurii Dolgoruky (+15 May 1157). And
it was a mere six months later, when on 22 December 1157 Saint Rostislav's
nephew Mstislav Izyaslavich entered the city, and Saint Constanine
in turn was obliged to flee Kiev, while upon the metropolitan cathedra-seat
returned the deposed Kliment Smolyatich. There began a time of Church
disorder -- in Rus' were two different metropolitans. All the hierarchy
and the clergy came under interdict: the Greek-metropolitan suspended
the Russians supporting Kliment, and Kliment suspended all the supporters
of the Greek. To halt the scandal, Saint Rostislav and Mstislav
decided to remove both metropolitans and petition the (Constantinople)
Patriarch to install a new arch-hierarch upon the Russian metropolitan
cathedra-seat.
But
this compromise did not end the matter. Arriving in Kiev in the
autumn of 1161, metropolitan Theodore died in spring of the following
year. Following the example of Saint Andrei Bogoliubsky (commemorated
4 July), who was attempting at
this time to propose for metropolitan his own fellow ascetic bishop
Theodore, Saint Rostislav put forth his own candidate, who turned
out anew to be the much-suffering Kliment Smolyatich.
This
fact, that the greatprince had changed his attitude to metropolitan
Kliment, shows the influence of the Kievo-Pechersk monastery, and
in particular of archimandrite Polykarp. Archimandrite Polykarp,
an observer of the Pechersk traditions (in 1165 he became head of
the monastery), was very close to Saint Rostislav personally.
Saint
Rostislav had the pious custom, on the Saturdays and Sundays of
Great Lent, to invite the hegumen with twelve monks to his own table,
and he himself served them. The prince more than once expressed
the wish to be tonsured a monk at the monastery of Saints Antonii
and Theodosii, and he even gave orders to build him there a cell.
The Pechersk monks, being of tremendous spiritual influence in ancient
Rus', encouraged in the prince thoughts about the independence of
the Russian Church. Moreover, during these years in Rus', there
was suspicion regarding the Orthodoxy of the bishops which came
from among the Greeks, in connection with the notorious "Dispute
about the Fasts" (the "Leontian Heresy"). But the pious intent of
Saint Rostislav to have the blessing of the Constantinople patriarch
for the Russian metropolitan Kliment came to naught. The Greeks
reckoned correctly that this appointment of a metropolitan to the
Kiev cathedra was their most important privilege, which served not
only the ecclesiastical, but also the political interests of the
Byzantine empire. In 1165 at Kiev arrived a new metropolitan --
the Greek John IV -- and Saint Rostislav out of humility and churchly
obedience accepted him. The new metropolitan, like his predecessor,
governed the Russian Church for less than a year (+1166). The Kiev
cathedra-seat was again left vacant, and the greatprince was deprived
of the fatherly counsel and spiritual nourishing in the guise of
a metropolitan. His sole spiritual solace was in recourse to the
hegumen Polykarp and the holy elders of the Kievo-Pchersk monastery
and the Theodorov monastery at Kiev, which had been founded under
his father.
Returning
from a campaign against Novgorod in the spring of 1167, Saint Rostislav
fell ill. When he reached Smolensk, where his son Roman was prince,
kinsmen urged him to remain at Smolensk. But the greatprince gave
orders to convey him to Kiev: "If I die along the way," -- he declared
-- "put me in my father's monastery of Saint Theodore. If God shouldst
heal me, through the prayers of His All-Pure Mother and the Monk
Theodosii, I shall take vows at the Pechersk monastery."
God
did not deign to be fulfilled the ultimate wish of Saint Rostislav
-- to end his life as a monk of the holy monastery. The holy prince
died on the way to Kiev on 14 March 1167. (In other historical sources
the year is indicated as 1168). His body, in accord with his last
wishes, was conveyed to the Kiev Theodosiev monastery.
Saint
Euskhymonos the Confessor, Bishop of Lampsaka, lived in
Asia Minor on the coastal region of the Dardanelles Peninsula, and
was known for his virtuous and ascetic life. He suffered for his
icon-veneration under the iconoclast emperor Theophilos (829-842),
and having been imprisoned, he was sent off and died in exile.
The
Theodorov [Feodorov] - Kostroma Icon of the Mother of God
was written by the Evangelist Luke and is close in iconography to
the Vladmir Icon of the Mother of God.
This
icon received its name from GreatPrince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich (+1246),
the father of Saint Alexander Nevsky, and who received in holy Baptism
the name Theodore (Feodor) -- in honour of Saint Theodore Stratelates.
It was found, according to tradition, by his elder brother, Saint
Yurii Vsevolodovich (+ 1238, commemorated 4
February), in an old wooden chaplet near the old city of Gorodets
-- later on at this spot was built the Gorodetsk Theodorov monastery.
Prince Yaroslav-Theodore became the GreatPrince of Vladimir after
his brother Saint Yurii perished in battle with the Tatar-Mongols
at the Sita River, and subsequently in the year 1239, he solemnly
transferred the relics of his brother from Rostov to the Vladimir
Uspenie [Dormition] cathedral. And with this same icon inherited
from his brother, he blessed his own son, Saint Alexander Nevsky,
who that very year entered into marriage with the daughter of the
Polovetsian prince Briacheslav.
Yaroslav-Theodore
left behind in Russian history a remarkable memory of himself. He
continued with the glorious traditions of his uncle -- Saint Andrei
Bogoliubsky (commemorated 4 July),
and of his father -- Vsevolod III Big-Nest ["Bol'shoe Gnezdo"],
and he was thus connected to almost all of the significant events
in the history of Rus' in the first half of the XIII Century. He
inherited the legacy of Rus', burnt and hacked apart in the years
1237-1238 by the Tatar-Mongols. He raised it up from the ashes,
rebuilt and embellished the cities, the holy monasteries and the
churches. He restored cities along the Volga devastated by the enemy:
Kashin, Uglich, Yaroslavl', Kostroma, Gorodets. The church of Theodore
Stratelates at Kostroma and the Theodorov monastery near Gorodets
were founded by him in honour of his patron saint. For all of eight
years he stood at the helm as greatprince, but during this while
he had to guide the land through a singularly difficult path for
these times -- maintaining a military-political balance with the
Golden Horde to the East, while mounting an active opposition to
Catholic Europe in the West. His closest companion was his son,
Saint Alexander Nevsky, who also continued his governing policy.
The
wonderworking Theodorov Icon of the Mother of God -- with the blessing
of his father -- was constantly with Saint Alexander, and it was
his prayer-icon. After his death -- Saint Alexander Nevsky died
on 14 November 1263 in Gorodets, at the monastery founded by his
father -- the icon was taken by his younger brother Vasilii.
Vasilii
Yaroslavich was the "little-est", that is, he was the youngest (eighth)
son of Yaroslav Vsevolodovich. In 1246 after the death of his father
-- prince Yaroslav was poisoned in the capital city of Mongolia,
Karakorum -- when he was but five years old, he became prince of
the Kostroma appanage-holding -- the least important in the domains
of his father. But in the year 1272 God destined for him to become
GreatPrince of Vladimir. His four years as greatprince (1272-1276)
were filled with the typical for these times princely fratricidal
quarrels. For several years he waged war against Novgorod with an
unruly nephew Dimitrii Alexandrovich. In becoming greatprince, however,
Vasilii did not journey off to Vladimir, but remained under the
protection of the wonderworking icon at Kostroma, regarding this
place more hopeful in case of new outbreaks of strife.
He
had occasion also to defend Rus' against external enemies. In 1272,
during the course of a Tatar incursion, a Russian army came forth
from Kostroma to engage them. On the example of his grandfather,
Saint Andrei Bogoliubsky -- who took with him on military campaigns
the wonderworking Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God -- prince Vasilii
went off into battle with the wonderworking Theodorov Icon. Bright
rays shot out from the holy image, striking the enemy; the Tatars
were routed and expelled from the Russian land.
The
chronicles relate, the GreatPrince Vasilii had an especial love
for the Church and the clergy. After the martyr's death of the Vladimir
bishop Mitrophan during the storming of Vladimir by Tatars on 4
February 1238, the Vladimir diocese had for a long period of years
remained as though widowed. This grieved GreatPrince Vasilii. With
his help in 1274 there was constructed in Vladimir the large Cathedral
church. This was apparently in connection with the consecration
as bishop of Vladimir of Sainted Serapion (+1275, commemorated 12
July) -- who was an hegumen from Pechersk; this was presided
over by Metropolitan Kirill III (+1282) and a sobor-council of Russian
hierarchs. The purpose of the council's actions was quite extensive
-- this was the first Sobor in the Russian Church since the time
of the Mongol invasion. Many a problem and disorder had arisen in
church life, but the Russian Church was just barely beginning to
recover from the woe that had befallen it. A chief task for it was
the rebirth of Russian churchly literacy, and the restoration of
the tradition of the ancient Russian "princely order." Without books
the salvific activity of the Church would be well nigh impossible:
they were needed for the Divine-services, and for preaching, for
cell meditation by monks, and for at-home reading by believers.
With the efforts of Metropolitan Kirill together with the Russian
bishops and monk-scholars, this task -- the most important for the
subsequent Christian enlightenment of Rus', was successfully undertaken.
The Sobor adopted a new redaction of the essential books -- the
fundamental canonical codex of Orthodox churchly life.
In
the year 1276 prince Vasilii finished his life's journey, the most
important steps along the way of which were beneathe the overshadowing
blessing of the Theodorov Icon of the Mother of God. He died at
Kostroma and there also found the place of his final rest. The holy
icon has been from that time in the Kostroma cathedral of Saint
Theodore Stratelates.
Renewed
interest in the Theodorov Icon of the Mother of God and the wide
spreading about of its veneration throughout all Russia is connected
with events of the beginning of the XVII Century -- with the cessation
of the Time of Troubles. In the year 1613 the wonderworking Theodorov
Icon from the Kostroma cathedral was used in blessing the selection
of Mikhail Romanov as the new tsar. In memory of this historic event
there was established under 14 March the general commemoration of
the Theodorovsk Icon of the Mother of God. Numerous copies were
made from the Kostroma Theodorovsk Icon, and one of the first was
commissioned and brought to Moscow by the mother of tsar Mikhail,
the nun Martha. From the second half of the XVII Century, various
copies of the Theodorov Icon received an enlargement with vignettes,
depicting events from the history of the wonderworking icon.
In
the year 1670 the monk-deacon Longin from the Kostroma Ipat'ev monastery
wrote the "Narrative concerning the manifestations and miracles
of the Theodorov Icon of the Mother of God in Kostroma." Not all
the things contained in its information co-incides with things previously
stated, reflecting the people's memory as regarding chronology and
laws.
The
Theodorov Icon is two-sided. On the reverse side is the image of
the holy GreatMartyress Paraskeva, depicted in the splendid attire
of a princess. It is conjectured, that the image of Paraskeva on
the reverse of the icon is connected with the spouse of Saint Alexander
Nevsky.
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