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Saint
Mary Cleopa (Wife of Cleophas) the Myrrh-Bearer, by
Church tradition was a daughter of Righteous Joseph, Betrothed
to the MostHoly Virgin Mary (Comm.
26 December) from his first marriage, and she was
still very young when the MostHoly Virgin was betrothed
to Righteous Joseph and came into his household. The Holy
Virgin Mary lived together with the daughter of Righteous
Joseph, and they became close like sisters [whence the terminology
in John's Gospel, 19: 25]. Righteous Joseph, upon his return
with the Saviour and the Mother of God from Egypt to Nazareth,
gave his daughter in marriage to his younger brother Cleophas,
wherefore she is called Mary Cleopa, i.e. wife of Cleophas.
The blessed fruition of this marriage was the PriestMartyr
Simeon, Disciple from the Seventy, kinsman of the Lord,
and the Second Bishop of the Jerusalem Church (Comm.
27 April). The memory of Saint Mary Cleopa is celebrated
also on the 3rd Sunday after Pascha, the Sunday of the Holy
Myrh-Bearing Women.
Sainted
Hierarch Michael the Confessor yearned from his youthful
years for the monastic life and was directed by His Holiness
Patriarch Tarasios (784-806) to a monastery, located at
the coast region of the Black Sea. There also entered the
monastery together with him -- Saint Theophylaktos (Comm.
8 March), the future bishop of Nikomedia. At the monastery
both monks proceeded through the efforts of salvation and
soon were glorified by graced gifts from the Lord. Once
during a time of harvest, when the people were weakened
by thirst, by the prayer of the monks an empty metal vessel
was filled with water.
His
Holiness Patriarch Tarasios ordained Saint Michael as bishop
of the city of Synada. Through his holy life and wisdom,
Saint Michael gained the deep love of believers and the
particular notice of the emperors Nicephoros I (802-811)
and Michael I Rangaves (811-813). In the year 787 Saint
Michael was present at the Seventh Ecumenical Council at
Nicea.
When
the Iconoclast heretic Leo the Armenian (813-820) entered
upon the throne, he began to expel Orthodox hierarchs from
their cathedrae-seats, appointing in their place his like-minded
heretics.
Saint
Michael during this time firmly defended Orthodoxy, bravely
opposing the heretics and denouncing their error. Leo the
Armenian brought Saint Michael to trial, but not fearing
torture he answered resolutely: "I venerate the holy
icons of my Saviour Jesus Christ and the All-Pure Virgin,
His Mother, and all the saints, and it is to them I bow
down. Thine decrees about the removal of icons from churches
I shall not fulfill". Leo the Armenian then banished
Saint Michael to imprisonment in the city of Eudokiada,
where the confessor died in about the year 821. The head
of Saint Michael is preserved in the Laura of Saint Athanasias
on Mount Athos, and part of the relics -- are at the Iversk
monastery.
The
Holy MonkMartyr Michael the Black-Robed lived in the
IX Century, and came from the city of Edessa (Mesopotamia)
of Christian parents. He was a zealous disciple of Saint
Theodore of Edessa (Comm.
9 July). Having distributed to the poor the inheritance
left him by his parents, he set off to Jerusalem to venerate
the Holy Places. Jerusalem at the time was in the grips
of the Mahometans. Saint Michael remained in Palestine and
settled in the monastery of Saint Sava. One time he was
sent from the monastery to Jerusalem to sell goods for the
monks. At the marketplace, the eunuch of the Mahometan empress
Seida, having noticed that the monastery goods were both
fine and well-made, took him along to the empress. The young
monk caught the fancy of the empress, who tried to entrap
him in the snare of sin, but her intent proved to be in
vain. Then by order of the enraged Seida they beat the monk
with canes, and then accused him before the emperor of being
an enemy of Mahometanism. Having interrogated the monk,
the emperor began to urge him to accept the Mahometan faith,
but Saint Michael answered: "I implore thee -- either
send me back to the monastery to my instructor, or be baptised
in our Christian faith, or cut off my head, and I shall
then expire to Christ my God". The emperor gave orders
to give the saint a cup with deadly poison, which Saint
Michael drank and remained unharmed, so after this the emperor
gave orders to cut off his head. The death of the martyr
occurred in Jerusalem, but the monks of the monastery of
Saint Sava transported the body of the saint to their Laura
and buried it there with reverence. At the beginning of
the XII Century the relics of the holy martyr were seen
there by Daniel, the hegumen of the Kievo-Pechersk monastery,
in his making of pilgrimage to the Holy Places.
The
Nun Evphrosynia, Hegumeness of Polotsk, was in the world
named Predslava, daughter of prince Georgii Vseslavich.
From her childhood years she was noted for her love of prayer
and book learning. Having rejected a proposal for marriage,
Predslava took monastic vows with the name Evphrosynia.
With the blessing of the Polotsk bishop Ilia, she began
to live near the Sophia cathedral, where she occupied herself
by the copying of books. In about the year 1128 Bishop Ilia
entrusted the nun the task of organising a women's monastery.
Setting out for Sel'tso -- the place of the future monastery,
-- the ascetic took only her holy books -- "all her
possessions". At the newly constructed Saviour-Transfiguration
monastery the saint taught the girls the copying of books,
singing, sewing and other handicrafts. By her zeal in 1161
there was constructed a cathedral, preserved til now. The
Nun Evphrosynia founded also the Bogoroditsk men's monastery,
to which by her request the Constantinople Patriarch Luke
sent a copy of the wonderworking Ephesus Icon of the Mother
of God. Somewhat before her death, the Nun Evphrosynia together
with her nephew David and sister Evpraxia journeyed in pilgrimage
to the Holy Places. Having venerated the holy things at
Tsar'grad, she arrived in Jerusalem, where at the Russian
monastery of the MostHoly Mother of God the Lord granted
her a peaceful end on 24 May 1173. And later on in 1187
the body of the saint was transferred to the Kievo-Pechersk
monastery, and in 1910 the relics were transferred to Polotsk
to the monastery founded by her.
The
Nun Evphrosynia of Polotsk was glorified in the Russian
Church as a patroness of women's monasticism.
Synaxis
of Rostov-Yaroslav Saints: *
The Hierarchs
and Wonderworkers of Rostov:
Bishop Leontius (+ 1073)
Bishop Isaiah (+ 1090)
Bishop Ignatius (+ 1288)
Bishop James (+ 1391)
Bishop Theodore (+ 1394)
Metropolitan Dimitri (+ 1709)
Monk Abraham the Archimandrite (XII)
Monk Irinarch the Hermit (+ 1616)
Nobleborn Prince Basil (+ 1238)
Nobleborn Peter, Tsarevich of Ordynsk (+ 1290)
Blessed Isidor the Repeater, Fool-for-Christ (+ 1474)
Blessed John of the Hair-Shirt (the Merciful), Fool-for-Christ
(+ 1580)
Yaroslav
Wonderworkers:
Nobleborn Princes Basil (+ 1249), Constantine (+ 1257),
Theodore (+ 1299) and his sons David (+ 1321) and Constantine
(XIV)
Pereslavl'
Wonderworkers:
Monk Nikita the Stylite (+ 1186)
Monk Daniel the Archimandrite (+ 1540)
Nobleborn Prince Alexander Nevsky (+ 1263) Nobleborn Prince
Andrew of Smolensk (XV)
Uglich
Wonderworkers:
Monk Paisius (+ 1504)
Monk Cassian (+ 1504)
Monk Ignatius of Lomsk (+ 1591)
Nobleborn Prince Roman (+ 1285)
Nobleborn Tsarevich Dimitri (+ 1591)
Poshekhonsk
Wonderworkers:
Monk Sylvester of Obnorsk (+ 1379)
Monk Sebastian (+ 1542)
MonkMartyr Adrian (+ 1550)
Monk Gennadius of Liubimograd and Kostroma (+ 1565)
(*
The celebration of the Synaxis of the Rostov-Yaroslav Saints
on 23 May was established by resolution of His Holiness
Patriarch Alexei (+ 1970) and the Holy Synod of the Russian
Orthodox Church, on 10 March 1964)
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