28
MARCH
(10 April)
Monk
Ilarion [Hilary] the New, Hegumen of Pelikition (+c.754)
Monk Stephen the Wonderworker, Hegumen of Trigleion
(+c.815)
MonkMartyr Evstratii of Pechersk, in Nearer
Caves (+1097)
Monk Ilarion of Pskovoezersk and Gdovsk (+1476)
Martyrs: Jonah and Barachis, and with them Zanypha
(Zanyphanes), Lazaros, Marupha (Maruphanes), Narses (Narsynes),
Ilias, Maros (Marinos), Habib, Sibeithos (Sybeiphines) and Sava
of Persia (+c.330)
Martyr Boyan, Prince of Bulgaria (+c.830)
Monk Jona of Klimetsk and Olonetsk (+1534)
Sainted Basil
Sainted John, Bishop of Maglia (+1751, Gruzia)
Saint Spyridon
Saint Basilissa
The
Monk Ilarion (Hilary) the New, Hegumen of Pelikition Monastery,
from the time of his youth devoted himself to the service of God
and spent many years as an hermit. Because of his holy and immaculate
life he was at first granted the dignity of presbyter, and later
on he was made hegumen of the Pelikition monastery (nearby the Dardanelles
Straits). The Monk Ilarion was granted of the Lord gifts of perspicacity
and wonderworking. By the graced power of prayer he brought down
rain during a time of drought, and like the Prophet Elisei [Elijah]
he separated the waters of a river, he rid harmful beasts from the
fields, he filled the nets of fishermen during a time of luckless
fishing, and he did many other miracles. Besides which, he was glorified
by the gift of healing the sick and casting out demons. The monk
suffered in the year 754 on Great Thursday of Holy Week, when the
military-commnander Lakhanodrakon -- in pursuit of icon-venerators,
suddenly descended upon the Pelikition monastery, boldly forcing
his way into the church during the time of Divine-services, disrupting
the service and throwing the Holy Gifts upon the ground. Forty-two
monks were arrested, slapped into chains, dispatched to the Edessa
district and murdered. The remaining monks were dealt horrible mutilations,
they beat them, they scorched their beards with fire, they smeared
their faces with tar and cut off the noses of certain of the confessors.
During the time of this tormenting persecution the Monk Ilarion
died for the veneration of icons.
The
Monk Ilarion left behind spiritual works, in which are contained
profound moral directives about spiritual asceticism. The Monk Joseph
of Volotsk (commemorated 9 September and
18 October) was well acquainted
with the work of the Monk Ilarion, and in his own theological works
he likewise expounded the significance of monastic effort.
The
Monk Stephen the Confessor, Hegumen of Trigleion Monastery,
suffered under the iconoclast emperor Leo the Armenian (813-820).
From the time of his youth the holy ascetic dedicated his life to
God and accepted monastic tonsure. He later became head of the Trigleion
monastery near Constantinople. When persecution again began against
holy icons, the saintly hegumen was summoned to an interrogation,
where they tried to force him to sign to a rejection of icon-veneration.
The Monk Stephen steadfastly refused to betray Orthodoxy and he
boldly denounced the emperor for impiety. They subjected the saint
to cruel torments, after which they sent him off into imprisonment
in the year 815. Weakened and sick, the holy Confessor Stephen soon
died in prison from his sufferings.
The
MonkMartyr Evstratii of Pechersk was born in the XI Century
at Kiev into a wealthy family. At maturity he accepted monastic
tonsure at the Kievo-Pechersk monastery, having given away all his
substance to the poor. The Monk Evstratii humbly underwent obediences
at the monastery, strictly fulfilling the rule of prayer and passing
his days in fasting and vigilance.
In
1096 evstratiithe Polovetsians fell upon Kiev and ravaged the Pechersk
monastery, doing away with many of the monks, but the Monk Evstratii
was taken into captivity, and with thirty monastic labourers and
twenty Kievan people he was sold into slavery to a certain Jew,
living in the city of Korsun. The impious Jew began to urge the
captives to renounce Christ, threatening to kill those that refused
by starving them in their very shackles. But the brave Monk Evstratii
prayerfully encouraged and exhorted his brother Christians with
spiritual guidance: "Brothers! Whoso of us that is baptised and
believeth in Christ, let him not betray the vow, given during Baptism.
Christ hath made us reborn by water and the Spirit, He hath freed
us from the curse of the law by His Blood, and He hath made us heirs
of His Kingdom. If we live -- we shalt live for the Lord; if we
die -- we die in the Lord and at the time of death we shall find
eternal life." Inspired by the words of the monk, the captives preferred
rather to perish from lack of food and drink, than to renounce Christ,
Who is the food and drink of Life Eternal. Exhausted by hunger and
thirst, all fifty captives after some days perished. Only the Monk
Evstratii remained alive, since from his youthful years he was accustomed
to fasting. Languishing with hunger, he still during the course
of fourteen days did not touch food nor water. The impious Jew,
seeing that because of the black-garbed monk his money paid out
for the captives had been lost, decided to take revenge on the holy
monk.
The
Radiant Resurrection of Christ drew nigh, and the Jewish slave-owner
at the time of celebrating the Jewish Passover and having gathered
together his companions, then crucified the Monk Evstratii on a
cross. The cruel tormentors gathered around the crucified saint,
and mocking the passion-bearer offered him to taste of their Passover.
To this the MonkMartyr answered: "The Lord hath now bestown upon
me a great grace. He hath granted me the mercy to suffer for His
Name on a cross after the manner of His Suffering. ..."
Hearing
this, the enraged Jew grabbed a spear and struck with it at the
MonkMartyr Evstratii nailed to the cross. The holy body of the sufferer,
having been taken down from the cross, was thrown into the sea.
Christian believers long searched for the holy relics of the martyr,
but were not able to find them. But through the Providence of God
the incorrupt relics were found in a cave and worked many miracles.
Later on they were transferred to the Nearer Caves of the Kievo-Pechersk
monastery.
The
prediction of the holy Martyr Evstratii, that his blood would be
avenged, was fulfilled immediately after his death. On that day
was promulgated a decree of the Greek emperor to expel from Korsun
all the Jews, depriving them of their property, and to put to death
their elders for the torture of Christians. The Jew, who crucified
the MonkMartyr Evstratii, was hung on a tree, having received just
recompense for his wickedness.
The
Monk Ilarion of Gdovsk and Pskovoezersk ["Pskov-Lake"],
was a disciple of the Monk Evphrosyn of Pskov (commemorated 15
May). In 1460 on the banks of the River Zhelcha, not far from
Gdov, he founded the Ozersk [Lake] Pokrov (Protection of the Mother
of God) monastery. T he monastery was situated on the boundary with
the Livonian Knights order, and the monks constantly suffered the
incursions of the military order. Despite the harsh conditions and
insufficiency of means, the Monk Ilarion maintained an high degree
of reverence at the monastery, and made great efforts to adorn and
build up the monastery.
The
Monk Ilarion reposed on 28 March 1476 and was buried at the north
doors of the iconostas in the church of the Protection of the MostHoly
Mother of God, in the monastery founded by him. Afterwards at the
monastery was built a temple in honour of the Nativity of Christ,
the left chapel of which was dedicated in the name of the founder
of the Gdovsk monastery. The commemoration of the Monk Ilarion of
Gdov is made also on 21 October, on the
day of saint-name in common.
The
Holy Martyrs Jonah and Barachis and the others with them:
The brothers Jonah and Barachis were Christians. They lived in the
village of Yasa in Persia during the time of the emperor Sapor (310-331),
a fierce persecutor of Christians. Having learned that Christians
were being tortured in the city of Baravokh, they set out thence,
and found there in prison the Martyrs Zanyphanes, Lazaros, Maruphanes,
Narsynes, Ilias, Marinos, Habib, Sybeiphines and Sava -- and they
encouraged them to hold on firmly to the Christian faith to the
very end. The holy brothers were arrested and brought to trial before
the Persian princes Masdrath, Siroth and Marmis, who began to urge
them to bow down in worship to the sun, and to fire and water. The
holy martyrs firmly confessed their faith in Christ in front of
them and refused to fulfill the demands of the pagans, for which
reason they were subjected to fierce torments.
Saint
Jonah suffered first. They tied the martyr to a tree and for a long
time they beat him, and then they dragged him along the ice of a
frozen lake, they cut off his fingers and toes, they cut out his
tongue, they peeled the skin from his head, and finally they sawed
his body in half and threw it in a ditch.
For
the holy Martyr Barachis they put red-hot shackles on his wrists,
they poured molten tin in his nose, ears and moth, and they tore
at him, having tied him to a turning wheel. The holy martyr gave
up his spirit to God after they poured boiling tar in his mouth.
The bodies of the holy martyrs Jonah, Barachis and the other brave
passion-bearers were buried by a pious Christian by the name of
Habdisotes.
The
Holy Martyr Boyan, Prince of Bulgaria, suffered for the
faith in Christ in about the year 830. When his pagan brother Malomir
[Vladimir] entered upon the Bulgarian throne, noble prince Boyan
turned to him with a request to set free from imprisonment the Christian
Kinnamon [Kinam], who for a long time was in prison for refusing
to participate in pagan offering of sacrifice under prince Obrit
(Krutogon), the predecessor of prince Malomir.
The
wish of noble prince Boyan was fulfilled and he, seeing the extreme
exhaustion of Kinnamon, asked him what it was that he had so much
suffered. In a lengthy conversation the enlightened Christian explained
to the pagan prince Boyan the mistakenness of paganism and the need
of the Christian faith for salvation. At the end of the amicable
talk he told the prince: "Without Jesus Christ there is no light
for the mind, nor life for the soul. He alone is Teacher of mankind
and our Saviour, having reconciled fallen mankind with the true
righteousness of God by His death. If thou wish not to perish, believe
in the Lord Jesus." Prince Boyan accepted holy Baptism with joy.
The newly-converted prince, having come to Christian piety, was
imbued with sincere love for prayer, fasting and meditation about
God. Malomir, having learned about the conversion of his brother
to Christianity, demanded of him a renunciation of the Christian
faith and his return to paganism. Instead, the holy Prince Boyan
answered: "I despise the pagan idols and I revere Christ, the True
God, and no one can sway me from love for Christ." Malomir, hearing
the answer of his brother, sentenced him to death by execution.
Before his martyr's death the holy confessor-prince prophetically
declared: "The faith for which I now die will spread throughout
all the Bulgarian land. In vain do they hope to stop it by my death.
Temples to the True God wilt be raised up, and the services to Him
will not cease, but the idols and their foul sacrifices will vanish."
And with a final prophetic word he turned to his brother Malomir:
"From thy harshness thou will receive no benefit, and soon death
wilt overtake thee."
The
predictions of the holy martyr, killed by the sword, were first
of all fulfilled over his brother. Malomir soon died, and since
he had no heir, his elder brother Presiyan (836-852) succeeded to
the throne. The son of prince Presiyan -- the holy Equal-to-the-Apostles
Prince Boris, in holy Baptism Michael (commemorated 2
May) -- afterwards baptised the Bulgarian nation. Thus was fulfilled
the prophesy of the holy Martyr Prince Boyan.
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