26
SEPTEMBER
(9 October)
Repose of the Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the
Theologian (early II Century)
Monk Ephrem of Perekomsk, Novgorod (+1492)
Martyr Hero
Righteous Gedeon [Gideon], an Israelite Judge (+1307 BC)
The
Holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian was the
son of Zebedee and Salomia -- a daughter of Saint Joseph the Betrothed.
Together at the same time with his elder brother James, he was called
by our Lord Jesus Christ to be numbered amongst His Apostles, which
took place at Lake Gennesareth (i.e. the Sea of Galilee). Leaving
behind their father, both brothers followed the Lord.
The
Apostle John was especially beloved by the Saviour for his sacrificial
love and his virginal purity. After his calling, the Apostle John
did not part from the Lord, and he was one of the three apostles,
who were particularly close to Him. Saint John the Theologian was
present when the Lord resuscitated to life the daughter of Jairus,
and he was a witness to the Transfiguration of the Lord on Mount
Tabor. During the time of the Last Supper, he reclined next to the
Lord, and at a gesture from the Apostle Peter, he pressed nigh to
the bosom of the Saviour and asked the name of the betrayer. The
Apostle John followed after the Lord, when they led Him bound from
the Garden of Gethsemane to the court of the iniquitous high-priests
Annas and Caiphas. He was there in the courtyard of the high-priest
during the interrogations of his Divine Teacher and he resolutely
followed after him on the way of the Cross, grieving with all his
heart. At the foot of the Cross he went together with the Mother
of God and heard addressed to Her from atop the Cross the words
of the Crucified Lord: "Woman, behold Thy son" and to him "Behold
thy Mother" (Jn 19:26-27). And from that moment the Apostle John,
like a loving son, concerned himself over the MostHoly Virgin Mary,
and he served Her until Her Dormition ["Falling-Asleep" or "Uspenie"],
never leaving Jerusalem. After the Dormition of the Mother of God
the Apostle John, in accord with the lot that had befallen him,
set off to Ephesus and other cities of Asia Minor to preach the
Gospel, taking with him his own disciple Prokhoros. They set off
upon their on a ship, which floundered during the time of a terrible
tempest. All the travellers were cast up upon dry ground, and only
the Apostle John remained in the depths of the sea. Prokhoros wept
bitterly, bereft of his spiritual father and guide, and he went
on towards Ephesus alone. On the fourteenth day of his journey he
stood at the shore of the sea and beheld, that the waves had cast
ashore a man. Going up to him, he recognised the Apostle John, whom
the Lord had preserved alive for fourteen days in the deeps of the
sea. Teacher and student set off to Ephesus, where the Apostle John
preached incessantly to the pagans about Christ. His preaching was
accompanied by numerous and great miracles, such that the number
of believers increased with each day. During this time there had
begun a persecution against Christians under the emperor Nero (56-68).
They took away the Apostle John for trial at Rome. The Apostle John
was sentenced to death for his confession of faith in the Lord Jesus
Christ, but the Lord preserved His chosen one. The apostle drank
out of a cup prepared for him with deadly poison but he remained
alive, and later he emerged unharmed from a cauldron of boiling
oil, into which he had been thrown on orders from the torturer.
After this, they sent the Apostle John off to imprisonment to the
island of Patmos, where he spent many years. Proceeding along on
his way to the place of exile, the Apostle John worked many miracles.
On the island of Patmos, his preaching accompanied by miracles attracted
to him all the inhabitants of the island, and he enlightened them
with the light of the Gospel. He cast out many a devil from the
pagan-idol temples, and he healed a great multitude of the sick.
Sorcerer-magicians with diverse demonic powers showed great hostility
to the preaching of the holy apostle. He gave especial fright to
the chief sorcerer of them all, named Kinops, who boasted that they
would destroy the apostle. But the great John -- the Son of Thunder,
as the Lord Himself had named him, and by the grace of God acting
through him -- destroyed all the demonic artifices to which Kinops
resorted, and the haughty sorcerer perished exhausted in the depths
of the sea.
The
Apostle John withdrew with his disciple Prokhoros to a desolate
height, where he imposed upon himself a three-day fast. During the
time of the Apostle John's prayer the earth quaked and thunder boomed.
Prokhoros in fright fell to the ground. The Apostle John lifted
him up and bid him to write down, that which he was to speak. "I
am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, saith the
Lord, Which is and Which was and Which is to come, the Almighty"
(Rev 1:8) -- proclaimed the Spirit of God through the Apostle John.
Thus in about the year 67 was written the Book of Revelation ["Otkrovenie",
known also as the "Apocalypse"] of the holy Apostle John the Theologian.
In this Book was a revealing of the tribulations of the Church and
of the end of the world.
After
his prolonged exile, the Apostle John received his freedom and returned
to Ephesus, where he continued with his activity, instructing Christians
to guard against false-teachers and their false-teachings. In about
the year 95, the Apostle John wrote his Gospel at Ephesus. He called
for all Christians to love the Lord and one another, and by this
to fulfill the commands of Christ. The Church entitles Saint John
the "Apostle of Love", since he constantly taught, that without
love man cannot come nigh to God. In his three Epistles, written
by the Apostle John, he speaks about the significance of love for
God and for neighbour. Already in his old age, and having learned
of a youth who had strayed from the true path to begin following
the leader of a band of robbers, the Apostle John went out into
the wilderness to seek him. Catching sight of the holy elder, the
culprit tried to hide himself, but the Apostle John ran after him
and besought him to stop, and promising to take the sins of the
youth upon himself, if only he should but repent and not bring ruination
upon his soul. Shaken by the intense love of the holy elder, the
youth actually did repent and turn his life around.
The
holy Apostle John died at more than an hundred years old. he far
out-lived the other remaining eye-witnesses of the Lord, and for
a long time he remained the sole remaining eye-witness of the earthly
paths of the Saviour.
When
it became time for the departure of the Apostle John, he withdrew
out beyond the city-limits of Ephesus, being together with the families
of his disciples. He bid them prepare for him a cross-shaped grave,
in which he lay, telling his disciples that they should cover him
over with the soil. The students with tears kissed their beloved
teacher, but not wanting to be disobedient, they fulfilled his bidding.
They covered the face of the saint with a cloth and filled in the
grave. Learning of this, other students of the Apostle John came
to the place of his burial, but opening the grave they found it
empty.
Each
year from the grave of the holy Apostle John on 8 May there came
forth a fine ash-dust, which believers gathered up and were healed
of sicknesses by it. Therefore the Church celebrates the memory
of the holy Apostle John the Theologian still even also on 8
May.
The
Lord bestowed on His beloved disciple John and John's brother James
the name "Sons of Thunder" -- as an awesome messenger in its cleansing
power of the heavenly fire. And precisely by this the Saviour pointed
out the flaming, fiery, sacrificial character of Christian love
-- the preacher of which was the Apostle John the Theologian. The
eagle -- symbol of the lofty soaring of his theological thought
-- is the iconographic symbol of the Evangelist John the Theologian.
The appellation "Theologian" is bestown by Holy Church only to Saint
John among the immediate Disciples and Apostles of Christ, as being
the seer of the mysteried Judgements of God.
The
Monk Ephrem of Perekomsk, Novgorod, was born on 20 September
1412 in the city of Kashin. In Holy Baptism he was named Evstaphii.
His parents, Stefan and Anna, lived not far from the Kashinsk women's
monastery named in honour of the Uspenie [Dormition of the MostHoly
Mother of God]. Drawn towards the solitary life, Evstaphii while
still in his early years left his parental home and settled in the
Kalyazinsk monastery in the Name of the MostHoly Trinity. His parents
wanted their son to return home, but he himself in turn persuaded
them to leave the world and accept monasticism. They also afterwards
finished their earthly paths living as hermits. Having been at his
monastery for three years, Evstaphii through a miraculous revelation
transferred over to the monastery of the Monk Savva of Vishersk
(commemorated 1 October),
and it was there in 1437 that he accepted tonsure with the name
Ephrem. While in the monastery, the Monk Ephrem received a revelation
from the Lord, commanding him to withdraw to a desolate place. Having
received the blessing of the Monk Savva, in 1450 he went over to
Lake Il'men, at the mouth of the River Verenda, and on the banks
of the River Cherna he built a cell. After a certain while to the
Monk Ephrem there came the elder Foma [Thomas] with two monks, and
they settled not far from his cell. And from that time also there
began to gather other hermits to the new monastery. At their request
the Monk Ephrem received the dignity of priest at Novgorod from
Sainted Evphymii (+1458, commemorated 11
March).
Returning
from Novgorod, the Monk Ephrem built a church in honor of the Theophany
[Bogoyavlenie] of the Lord on an island, situated at the mouth of
the River Verenda. To secure a ready supply of water for the monastery,
the monk dug out a canal to Lake Il'men, from which the monastery
received its name "Perekopsk" or "Perekomsk" (from "pere-kopat'"
meaning "to dig through"). Later on the Monk Ephrem built a stone
church in the name of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker. Unable to
find sufficient skilled builders, he dispatched several monks to
Great-prince Vasilii Ioannovich with a request for sending stone-workers,
after which in 1466 the construction of the temple was completed.
The
Monk Ephrem reposed on 26 September 1492 and was buried at the church
of Saint Nicholas. In 1509 because of frequent floodings that threatened
the monastery with ruin, it was transferred to another location
at the shore of Lake Il'men. The Monk Ephrem appeared to the hegumen
Roman and pointed to the site of Klinkovo for situating anew the
monastery. On the place of the burial of the monk was built a chapel,
since all the monastery churches were in ruins. On 16 May 1545 the
relics of the Monk Ephrem were transferred over to the new monastery
site. On this day at the monastery is an annual celebration of the
memory of the Monk Ephrem of Perekomsk, confirmed ultimately after
the glorification of the holy ascetic at the Sobor (Council) of
1549. (The Commemoration of the Transfer of Relics of the Monk Ephrem
of Perekomsk is celebrated 16
May).
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