09
NOVEMBER
(22 November)
Martyrs
Onesyphoros and Porphyrios (III-IV)
Nun Matrona (+c.492)
Nun Theoktista (+881)
Monk Onisiphor of Pechersk, in Nearer Caves
(+1148)
Martyr Alexander of Soluneia (IV)
Martyr Anthony (V)
Monk John the Short-Statured (Kolobos) (V)
Monastics Evstolia (+ 610)
and Sosipatra (+625)
Monks
Euphymios and Neophytes of Dokhiareia (X) (Athos)
Monk Simeon Metaphrastes (X)
Monk Elladios
Martyrs Christopher, Maura and Timothy
Martyrs Narsa and Artemon
Sainted Agrippinus, Bishop of Neapolis (Naples) (c.200)
Icon of the Mother of God, named "Quickly-Hearing"
(X)
The Holy Martyrs Onesyphoros and Porphyrios suffered during the
time of persecution against Christians by the emperor Diocletian
(284-305). They beat them and burned them with fire. After this,
they tied the saints to wild horses, which dragged them over the
stones, after which the Martyrs Onesyphoros and Porphyrios died.
Believers gathered the lacerated remains of the saints and reverently
buried them.
The
Nun Matrona was born in the city of Pergium Pamphylia (Asia
Minor) in the V Century. They gave her in marriage to a well-off
man named Dometian. When her daughter Theodotia was born, they resettled
in Constantinople. The twenty-five year old Matrona loved to walk
to the temple of God. She spent entire days there, ardently praying
to the Lord and weeping for her sins.
At
the church the saint made the acquaintance of two pious women-elders,
Eugenia and Susanna, who from the time of their youth asceticised
there in work and prayer. Matrona began to imitate the God-pleasing
life of an ascetic, humbling her flesh by abstinence and fasting,
for which she had to endure criticism by her husband. Her soul yearned
for a full renunciation of the world. After long hesitation Saint
Matrona decided to leave her family and besought the Lord to reveal,
whether her intent was pleasing to Him. The Lord heard the prayer
of His servant. Once during a light sleep she had a dream that she
had fled her husband, who was in pursuit of her. The saint concealed
herself in a throng of monks approaching her, and her husband did
not notice her. Matrona accepted this dream as a Divine directive
to enter a men's monastery, where her husband would not guess to
look for her. She gave over her daughter for raising to the woman-elder
Susanna, and having cut her own hair and disguised herself in men's
attire, she went to the monastery of the Monk Bassion (commemorated
10 October). There the Nun
Matrona passed herself off as the eunuch Babylos and was accepted
into the number of the brethren. Apprehensive lest the monks learn
that she was a woman, the saint passed her time in constant quietude
and much work. The brethren marveled at the great virtue of Babylos.
One time the saint with the other monks was working in the monastery
vineyard. The newly-made monk Barnabos noted that her ear-lobe was
pierced and asked about it. "It is necessary, brother, to till the
soil and not watch other people, which is not proper for a monk"
-- answered the saint.
After
a certain while it was revealed in a dream to the Monk Bassion,
the hegumen of the monastery, that the eunuch Babylos -- was a woman.
It was likewise revealed to Blessed Akakios, hegumen of the nearby
Abrahamite monastery. The Monk Bassion summoned Saint Matrona and
strictly demanded an answer, for what purpose she had infiltrated
the monastery, whether to corrupt the monks or shame the monastery.
With tears the saint told the hegumen about all her past life, about
her pursuing husband, hostile to her efforts and prayers, and about
the dream-vision, directing her to go to the men's monastery. Becoming
convinced that her intent was pure and chaste, the Monk Bassion
sent off Saint Matrona to a women's monastery in the city of Emesa.
In this monastery the saint dwelt for many years, inspiring the
sisters by her high monastic achievement. When the hegumeness died,
by the unanimous wish of the nuns the Nun Matrona became head of
the convent.
The
fame about her virtuous activities, and about a miraculous gift
of healing, which she acquired from the Lord, spread far beyond
the walls of the monastery. Dometian also heard about the deeds
of the nun. When Saint Matrona learned that her husband was come
to the monastery and wanted to see her, she secretly went off to
Jerusalem, and then to Mount Sinai, and from there to Beirut, where
she settled in an abandoned pagan temple. The local inhabitants
learned of her reclusion, and began to come to her. The holy ascetic
turned many from their pagan impiety and converted them to Christ.
Women and girls began to settle by the dwelling of the nun and soon
there emerged a new monastery. Having fulfilled the will of God,
revealed to her in a dream, the saint left Beirut and journeyed
to Constantinople where she learned, that her husband had died.
With the blessing of her spiritual father, the Monk Bassion, the
ascetic founded in Constantinople a women's monastery, to which
transferred also sisters from the Beirut convent founded by her.
The Constantinople monastery of the Nun Matrona was known for its
strict monastic rule and the virtuous life of its sisters.
In
extreme old age Saint Matrona was deigned a vision of the coelestial
paradise and the place prepared for her there after 75 years of
monastic work. At the age of one hundred, the Nun Matrona, having
blessed the sisters, quietly expired to the Lord (about the year
492).
The
Nun Theoktista was born on the island of Lezbia (or Lesbos)
in the city of Mithymna (Asia Minor). At an early age she was left
a total orphan, and relatives gave her over for raising to a monastery.
The girl was happy removed from the world of sin, and she liked
the attraction of monastic life, the long Church services, the monastic
obedience, the strict fasting and unceasing prayer. She learned
by heart much of the singing, prayer and psalmody. In the year 846
when she was already 18 years old, with the blessing of the hegumeness,
she set off on the feast of the Resurrection of Christ to a neighbouring
village to visit her sister by birth and she remained there for
overnight. Arabs invaded the settlement by night, and they took
captive all the inhabitants, boarded them on a ship and by morning
they were on the sea.
The
brigands took the captives to the desolate island of Paros so that,
having examined them, they might assign a value to each in conveying
them to the slave-market. The Lord helped the young maiden to flee,
and the Arabs did not catch her. From that time the Nun Theoktista
dwelt on the island for 35 years (+881). An old church in the name
of the MostHoly Mother of God served as her dwelling, and her food
-- was sunflower seeds. All her time she spent in prayer.
One
time a group of hunters landed upon the island. One of them, pursuing
his prey, went far off from the coast into the forest and suddenly
he saw the church. He went into the church so as to offer up a prayer
to the Lord. After the prayer the hunter saw in a dim corner, not
far from the holy altar-table, through thick cobwebs a certain semblance
of an human form. He went closer and heard a voice: "Stay there,
fellow, and come no closer to shame me, since I am a naked woman."
The hunter gave the woman his outer clothing and she came out from
concealment. He beheld a grey-haired woman with worn face, calling
herself Theoktista. With a weak voice she told about her life fully
devoted to God.
Having
finished her story, the saint entreated the hunter, that if only
he happened to come upon this island again, that she should bring
her a particle of the Pre-Sanctified Gifts. During all her time
of living in the wilderness she not once was granted to commune
the Holy Mysteries of Christ. A year later the hunter again arrived
upon the island and brought a small vessel with a particle of the
Holy Mysteries. Saint Theoktista met the Holy Gifts in the church,
fell down to the ground and prayed long with tears. Having gotten
up, she took the vessel and with reverence and in the fear of God
she communed the Body and Blood of Christ. On the following day
the hunter beheld within the church the dead body of the Nun Theoktista.
Having dug a shallow grave, the hunter placed the venerable body
of the nun in it and during this he impudently cut off her hand,
so as to take with him part of the relics of the great saint of
God. All night the ship sailed upon a tempestuous sea, and in the
morning it found itself at the very place from which it began. T
he man then perceived in taking up the relic that this was not pleasing
to God. He returned to the grave and placed the hand with the body
of the saint. After this the ship sailed off unhindered. On the
journey the hunter told his companions about everything that had
happened on the island. Listening to him, they all decided immediately
to return to Paros, so as to venerate together the relics of the
great ascetic, but they could not find her holy body in the grave.
The
Monk Onisiphor of Pechersk pursued asceticism at the Kievo-Pechersk
monastery. He was a presbyter and had the gift of perspicacity.
He died in the year 1148 and was buried in the Nearer Caves alongside
the Monk Spiridon. His memory is also 28 September and on the 2nd
Sunday of Great Lent.
The
Holy Martyr Alexander of Soluneia was arrested by pagans
for confessing the Christian faith. Under the emperor Maximian (305-311)
he not only openly called himself a Christian, but in answer to
the demand to offer sacrifice to the gods, he overturned the idolatrous
sacrifice in indignation. The emperor gave orders to behead the
saint. When the execution was done, the emperor and the executioner
saw how an Heavenly Angel came forth bearing up to the heavens the
soul of the holy Martyr Alexander. The emperor permitted Christians
to bury the body of the saint with honour in the city of Soluneia,
which they did with joy.
The
Holy Martyr Anthony, a Syrian, lived during the V Century
and was a stone-mason. With the blessing of the bishop of the Syrian
city of Apameia, he began to construct a church in the Name of the
Holy Trinity. Pagan townspeople, having learned of this, rushed
by night into his house and murdered him with a sword.
The
Monk John the Short-Statured (Kolobos) asceticised in the
Egyptian wilderness in the V Century in the monastery of the Monk
Pimen the Great (commemorated 27
August). From the name of this monastery, monastic wilderness
monasteries began to be called "sketes," in which monks pursued
asceticism in strict solitude and silence. The Monk John was a gentle,
humble and work-loving monk. It was to this monastery that the young
John came with his brother Daniel. At first John asceticised without
spiritual guidance, but the Lord brought him to his senses, in that
strict ascetic deeds need to be done under the observation of an
elder [starets] experienced in the spiritual life. One time the
Monk John told his brother that he did not want to be concerned
about clothing and food, and that he wished to live like the Angels.
Having removed his clothing, he went out from the cell. At night
it was very cold, and the scantily-clad John soon began to tap on
the door of the cell. Daniel did not immediately remind his brother
the saying that an Angel is not concerned about its body. The Monk
John realised, that he relied too much on himself and bitterly he
wept. After being brought to his senses the Monk John went to the
Monk Pimen, known for his firm and steadfast will, and having asked
guidance, he promised to be obedient in all things. Testing the
patience of the young monk, Saint Pimen gave him an unusual obedience.
For three years the Monk John carried water and poured it on a dried-up
tree, and it became covered with leaves and gave abundant fruit,
and was given the name "the tree of obedience." The Monk John afterwards
himself became a guide of many people on the way of salvation, among
which were the Monk Arsenios the Great (commemorated 8
May) and Blessed Taisia (commemorated 10
May).
Saint
John was the author of the Life of the Monk Paisias the Great (commemorated
19 June).
Saint
Evstolia, a native of Rome, came to Constantinople and entered
one of the women's monasteries. The virtuous and strict monastic
life of the blessed saint gained her the love and respect of the
sisters. Not only monastics, but also many laypeople came to her
for advice and consolation.
Saint
Sosipatra, daughter of the emperor Maurice (582-602), being
inclined towards monasticism, met the Nun Evstolia at Blakhernai,
in the church in honour of the MostHoly Mother of God. After conversation
with the saint, Sosipatra finally decided to leave the world and
give her will over altogether to her guide, the Nun Evstolia. In
the palace building, which the pious emperor bestowed upon his daughter,
there gradually emerged a monastery, known for its strict monastic
rule.
Saint
Evstolia died in the year 610, and Saint Sosipatra in the year 625.
The
Monks Euphymios and Neophytes of Dokhiareia, an uncle and
his nephew, belonged to the highest Byzantine aristocracy. The Monk
Euphymios, while still in the world, merited honour to be the friend
of the Monk Athanasias of Athos (commemorated 5
July), and he afterwards became a novice and disciple of the
great ascetic. For his sincere love of the brethren, gentleness
and his particular zeal in the ascetic life, Saint Athanasias granted
the monk the duty of steward [dokhiar or economos], which the Monk
Euphymios fulfilled as though entrusted on him by God Himself.
Saint
Euphymios settled with several of the monks in the locale of Daphnos,
where he founded a monastery in the name of Saint Nicholas, and
called by him Dokhiareia in memory of his obedience. Guiding his
own younger brethren, the Monk Euphymios taught the necessity of
attention towards self, to all the stirrings of the soul, explaining
that the struggle of Christians -- according to the Apostle Paul,
is not "against flesh and blood, but against principalities, and
against powers, and against the world-rulers of darkness of this
age" (Eph 6:12). The peaceful ascetic life of the monks was disturbed
by the Saracens. The monk led all the brethren into the forest.
Returning, they found the monastery wrecked to its very foundations.
The Monk Euphymios did not lose heart, and the monastery was rebuilt
again. The Monk Neophytes in the world was a companion of the emperor
Nicephoros Phocas (963-969). Upon the death of his parents he came
to Athos, where he took vows in the monastery of his uncle the Monk
Euphymios. Before his death, the Monk Euphymios transferred the
running of the monastery to his nephew. Under the spiritual guidance
of the Monk Neophytes the small monastery grew into a Laura. Having
proposed to the emperor Nicephoros to become an endower (contributor)
of the monastery, the Monk Neophytes enlarged the monastery to the
present Dokhiareia dimensions. The Monk Neophytes was deigned to
be chosen "proton" (heading the "protatum" -- the council of elders
of the Holy Mountain) and for many years he laboured there. After
taking leave of the protatum in his declining years, the monk returned
to the Dokhiareia monastery, where peacefully he expired to the
Lord (X).
The
Icon of the Mother of God, named "Quickly-Hearing" -- an ancient
wonderworking image, is located on Holy Mount Athos at the Dokhiareia
monastery. The monastery tradition suggests that its time of writing
belongs to the X Century, during the time of the monastery head
Saint Neophytes (commemorated this same day).
In the year 1664 the kitchener Nilos, coming at night to the kitchen
with a burning torch, heard a voice from the image of the Mother
of God raised up over the door, summoning him in future not to walk
here and not to soot the icon. The monk thought that this was a
prank of some one of the brethren; he disregarded the warning and
continued to walk into the kitchen with the sooty torch. Suddenly
he fell blind. With fervent repentance the Monk Nilos prayed before
the icon of the Mother of God, begging forgiveness. And again he
heard the wondrous voice, proclaiming forgiveness and return of
sight and a command to announce to all the brethren: "From this
time this My icon shalt be name Quickly-Hearing, since quickly to
all hastening to it shalt appear mercy and fulfillment of entreaty".
The MostHoly Mother of God did then fulfill and now fulfills Her
promise -- quick help and consolation manifest for all who with
faith hasten unto Her.
In
Russia copies of the wonderworking Athonite image "Quickly-Hearing"
were always availed to with great love and veneration. Many of them
were glorified by miracles. In particular, instances were noted
of healing from the sickness of plague and demonic-possession.
In
the year 1938 the Athos Dokhiareia monastery presented to the Russian
Spiritual Mission at Jerusalem a copy of the wonderworking Icon
of the Mother of God "Quickly-Hearing."
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