17
February
(02 March / 01 March in Leap Years)
GreatMartyr
Theodore of Tyre (+c.306)
PriestMartyr Ermogen, Patriarch of Moscow and
All Russia, WonderWorker (+1612)
Monk Feodor [Theodore] the Silent of Pechersk
Lavra, in Farther Caves (XIII)
Righteous Mariam, Sister of the Apostle Philip
(I)
Uncovering of Relics of Martyr Menos Kallikelados
(867-889)
Sainted Auxivius, Bishop of Cypriot Solunum
(+102)
Martyr Theodore of Byzantium (+1795)
Monk Theodosii [Feodosii] the Bulgarian (+1362)
and his disciple Roman Holy Emperor Marcian (+457)
17 Martyrs in Syria
Saint Papias
Saint Porphyrios
The
Holy Martyr Theodore of Tyre was a soldier in the
city of Alasium of the Pontine district (northeast province
of Asia Minor, stretching alongside the coast of the Pontus
Euxine, i.e. the Black Sea), under the command of a certain
Brincus. They commanded him to offer sacrifice to idols.
Saint Theodore firmly and in a loud voice confessed his
faith in Christ the Saviour. The commander gave him several
days to think it over, during which time Saint Theodore
prayed intensely. They charged him with setting afire a
pagan temple and threw him into prison for death by starvation.
The Lord Jesus Christ appeared to him there, comforting
and encouraging him. Brought again to the governor, Saint
Theodore yet once more boldly and fearlessly confessed his
faith, for which he was subjected to new torments and condemned
to burning. The martyr Theodore without hesitation climbed
onto the bon-fire and with prayer and laudation gave up
his holy soul to God.
This
occurred in about the year 306 under the Roman emperor Gallerius
(305-311). Unharmed by the fire, the body of Saint Theodore was
buried in the city of Eukhaitakheia, not far from Amasium. His relics
were afterwards transferred to Tsar'grad, to a church dedicated
to his name. His head is situated in Italy, in the city of Gaeto.
Later
on, 50 years after the martyr's death of Saint Theodore, the emperor
Julian the Apostate (361-363), wanting to commit an outrage upon
the christians, commanded the city-commander of Constantinople during
the first week of Great Lent to sprinkle all the food provisions
in the market-places with the blood of idol-sacrifices. Saint Theodore,
having appeared in a dream to archbishop Eudoxios, ordered him to
inform all the christians that no one should buy anything at the
market-places, but rather to eat cooked wheat with honey -- kolivo
[kut'ya or sochivo]. In memory of this occurrence the Orthodox
Church annually makes celebration of the holy GreatMartyr Theodore
of Tyre on Saturday of the first week of Great Lent. On the eve
of Saturday, on Friday, in the Divine Liturgy of the Pre-Sanctified
Gifts after the amvon prayer there is read the molieben-kanon to
the holy GreatMartyr Theodore, compiled by the monk John Damascene.
After this, kolivo is blessed and distributed to the faithful. The
celebration to the GreatMartyr Theodore on Saturday of the first
week of Great Lent was set by the Patriarch of Constantinople Nektarios
(381-397).
The
PriestMartyr Ermogen, Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus',
was descended from the Don Cossacks. In the testimony of
the Patriarch himself, he was priest in the city of Kazan
at a church, near the Kazan bazaar, in the name of Sainted
Nicholas (commemorated 6
December and 9 May).
Soon he became a monk and from 1582 was archimandrite of
the Saviour-Transfiguration monastery at Kazan. On 13 May
1589 he was ordained bishop and became the first Kazan metropolitan.
During
the service of His Holiness the Patriarch at Kazan there occurred
the appearance and discovery of the Wonder-Working Kazan Icon of
the Mother of God in the year 1579. Being then still only a priest,
but with the blessing of the then Kazan archbishop Jeremii, he carried
the newly-appeared icon from the place of its discovery to the Church
of Saint Nicholas. Having remarkable literary talent, the saint
himself in 1594 compiled an account about the appearance of the
wonderworking icon and the miracles accomplished through it. In
1591 the saint gathered newly-baptised Tatars into the cathedral
church and during the course of several days instructed them in
the faith.
In
1592 there was the transfer of relics of Sainted German, the second
archbishop of Kazan (commemorated 25
September, 6 November,
and 23 June), who had died at Moscow
on 6 November 1567 during the time of a pestilential plague, and
buried in Saint Nicholas Church. With the blessing of Patriarch
Job (1589-1605), Saint Ermogen made the re-burial at the Sviyazhsk
Uspenie monastery. On 9 January 1592 Saint Ermogen directed a letter
to Patriarch Job, in which he stated that at Kazan there was celebrated
no particular remembrance of the Orthodox soldiers, who gave their
life for the Faith and Fatherland beneathe Kazan, and he petitioned
to establish an assigned day of memory. At the same time he reported
about three martyrs who had suffered at Kazan for their faith in
Christ -- one of which was a Russian by the name of John (commemorated
24 January) born at Nizhny
Novgorod and captured by the Tatars, while the other two -- Stephen
and Peter (commemorated 24 March)
-- were newly-converted Tatars. The saint expressed regret that
these martyrs were not inserted into the synodikon read on the Sunday
of Orthodoxy, and that memory eternal was not sung for them. In
answer to Saint Ermogen, the Patriarch issued an ukaz [decree] of
25 February, which decreed: -- "for all the Orthodox soldiers, killed
at Kazan and the Kazan surroundings, to celebrate at Kazan and throughout
all the Kazan metropolitanate a panikhida on the Saturday following
the [1 October] feastday of Pokrov / Protection
of the MostHoly Mother of God, and to inscribe them in the great
synodikon read on the Sunday of Orthodoxy," and ordered to inscribe
in the synodikon also the three Kazan martyrs, entrusting to Saint
Ermogen to set the day of their memory. Saint Ermogen circulated
the Patriarchal ukaz throughout his diocese, adding, that in all
the churches and monasteries they should celebrate liturgy and panikhida
for the three Kazan martyrs and should remember them also at litya
and liturgy on 24 January.
Saint Ermogen displayed zeal in the faith and firmness in the observance
of church traditions, and he concerned himself with the enlightening
of Kazan Tatars by the faith of Christ.
In
1595, with the active participation of the saint there occurred
the discovery and opening of the relics of the Kazan Wonderworkers:
Sainted Gurii, the first archbishop of Kazan (commemorated 4
October, 5 December, 20
June), and Sainted Varsonophii bishop of Tver' (commemorated
4 October, 11
April). Tsar Feodor Ioannovich (1584-1598) had given orders
to erect at the Kazan Saviour-Transfiguration monastery a new stone
church on the place of the first one, wherein the saints were buried.
When the graves of the saints were discovered, Saint Ermogen came
with a gathering of clergy, he commanded the graves to be opened
and, having beheld the undecayed relics and garb of the saints,
he notified the Patriarch and the tsar. With the blessing of Patriarch
Job and by order of the tsar, the relics of the newly-appeared wonderworkers
were placed in the new church. Saint Ermogen himself compiled the
lives of Sainted-hierarchs Gurii and Varsonophii.
Having
been deigned the arch-pastoral position -- metropolitan Ermogen
was chosen to the arch-hierarchical cathedra [chair], and on 3 July
1606 he was elevated to the assemblage [sobor] of sainted-hierarchs
upon the Patriarchal throne at Moscow Uspensky [Dormition] cathedral.
Metropolitan Isidor handed the Patriarch the staff of Sainted-hierarch
Peter, Moscow WonderWorker (commemorated 5
October, 21 December, 24
August), and the tsar gave as a gift to the new Patriarch a
panagia, embellished with precious stones, a white klobuk and staff.
In the ancient manner Patriarch Ermogen made his entrance upon a
donkey.
The
activity of Patriarch Ermogen co-incided with a difficult period
for the Russian state -- the incursion of the imposter the False-Dimitrii
and the Polish king Sigismund III. The arch-hierarch devoted all
his powers to the service of the Church and the Fatherland. Patriarch
Ermogen was not alone in this exploit: his self-sacrificing fellow-countrymen
copied his example and assisted him. With an especial inspiration
His Holiness the Patriarch stood up against the traitors and enemies
of the Fatherland, who wanted to install Uniatism and Western Catholicism
in Russia and to wipe out Orthodoxy, while enslaving the Russian
nation. When the imposter arrived at Moscow and settled himself
at Tushino, Patriarch Ermogen dispatched two missives to the Russian
traitors. In one of them he wrote: "...You have forgotten the vows
of our Orthodox faith, in which we are born, baptised, nourished
and raised, ye have violated the oath and the kissing of the cross
to stand to the death for the house of the MostHoly Mother of God
and for the Moscow realm, but have fallen for your false would-be
tsarlet ... My soul aches, my heart is sickened, all within me agonises,
and all my frame doth shudder; I weep and with sobbing I lament:
have mercy, have mercy, brethren and children, on your own souls
and your parents departed and living ... Consider, how our Fatherland
is devastated and plundered by foreigners, who offer insult to the
holy icons and churches, and how innocent blood is spilled, crying
out to God. Think, against whom do ye take up arms: is it not against
God, Who hath created you? Is it not against your own brothers?
Do ye not devastate your own Fatherland?... I adjure you in the
Name of God, give up your undertaking, there is yet time, that ye
perish not at the end". In the second gramota [document] the Arch-hierarch
appeals: "For the sake of God, come to your senses and turn round,
gladden your parents, your wifes and children; and we stand to pray
God for you..."
Soon
the righteous judgement of God was realised upon the Tushino thief:
a sad and inglorious fate befell him just as it did his predecessor
[another false-Dimitrii] -- he was killed by his own close associates
on 11 December 1610. But Moscow continued to remain in peril, since
in it were situated the Poles and traitor-boyars, having made betrayal
to Sigismund III. The gramoti [documents] dispatched by Patriarch
Ermogen throughout the cities and villages, exhorted the Russian
nation to liberate Moscow from the enemies and to choose a lawful
Russian tsar. The Muscovites raised up a rebellion, in answer to
which the Poles burned the city, and shut themselves up within the
Kremlin. Together with Russian traitors they forcefully seized hold
of Patriarch Ermogen from the patriarchal throne and imprisoned
him in the Chudov monastery under guard. On Bright Monday in 1611
the Russian militia approached Moscow and began the seige of the
Kremlin, which continued for several months. Besieged within the
Kremlin, the Poles many a time sent messengers to the Patriarch
with the demand that he order the Russian militia to leave the city,
threatening for refusal a death by execution. The saint firmly replied:
"What are your threats to me? Only God do I fear. If all of you,
Lithuanian people, go from the Moscow realm , I shall bless the
Russian militia to go from Moscow, but if ye remain here, I shall
bless all to stand against you and to die for the Orthodox faith."
While still in prison, the Priest-martyr Ermogen turned with a final
missive to the Russian nation, blessing the liberating army against
the invaders. The Russian commanders could not come to an agreement
over a way to take the Kremlin and free their Arch-hierarch. He
languished more than nine months in dreadful confinement, and on
17 February 1612 he died a martyr's death from starvation.
The
liberation of Russia, for which Saint Ermogen stood with such indestructible
valour, was successfully concluded by the Russian nation. The body
of the Priest-martyr Ermogen was buried in the Chudov monastery,
but in 1654 was transferred to the Moscow Uspenie cathedral. The
glorification of Patriarch Ermogen into the rank of Sainted-hierarchs
occurred on 12 May 1913.
The
Monk Feodor [Theodore] the Silent of Pechersk chose the exploit
of silence, so as to dwell constantly in thought of God and to safeguard
himself in temptation even in word. He was glorified by the Lord
with a gift of wonderworking. His memory is celebrated also on 28
August.
Righteous
Mariam -- the sister of the holy Apostle from the 12 Philip
(commemorated 14 November), made
a vow of virginity and became companion of her brother Philip and
the holy Apostle Bartholomew (commemorated 11
June), actively assisting them in their apostolic work. The
Church historian Nikephoros Kallistos gives an account about their
successful preaching in the Phrygian city of Hieropolis, where they
were arrested and locked up in prison. They subjected the Apostle
Philip to death, hung on a cross, but Saint Mariam and the Apostle
Bartholomew were set free. The Apostle Bartholomew set out to preach
the Gospel in India. Saint Mariam, having taken up the body of the
holy Apostle Philip, preached the Gospel at Likaion (Asia Minor).
She died peacefully there.
The
Holy Martyr Menos Kallikelades [Krasno-rechivii, i.e.
Fine-Speaking], an Anthenian, died a martyr together
with Saints Hermogenes and Eugraphos in about the year 313
(commemorated 10 December).
During the time of the Constantinople emperor Basilios the
Macedonian (867-886), by command of the saint himself who
had appeared in a dream to a certain pious man -- his relics
were discovered by the military commander Marcian.
Sainted
Auxivius was born at Rome in a rich family. He was raised together
with his brother Tempstagoras. From an early age he displayed remarkable
talents. In the schools of Rome he easily learned the secular sciences.
His parents wanted to marry off their son. Having learned of this,
the youth secretly departed Rome and set off to the East. Having
arrived upon the island of Cyprus, he settled in the environs of
Limnitis, not far from the city of Solunum. By the Prescience [Fore-knowing]
of God he encountered the holy Disciple and Evangelist Mark (commemorated
27 September, 30
October, 4 January, 25
April), preaching the Word of God at Cyprus. The Disciple Mark
established Auxivius as bishop in the city of Solunum, and himself
set off for preaching to Alexandria.
Saint
Auxivius went towards the western gates of the city and settled
near the pagan temple of Zeus. Gradually he converted to Christianity
the local pagan-priest and other idol-worshippers. One time Saint
Heraklides came to Saint Auxivius. He had been made a bishop in
Cyprus earlier by the Disciple Mark, and he consulted with Saint
Auxivius to openly preach the Gospel of Christ. One day Saint Auxivius
arrived at the market-square and began to preach to the people about
Christ. Many, seeing the miracles and the signs worked by the saint,
believed in Christ. Among the converted were many people from the
surrounding villages. One man, by the name of Auxinios, remained
with Saint Auxivius and assisted him in service to the end of his
days.
After
a certain while there came from Rome the brother of Saint Auxivius,
Tempstagoras. He was baptised together with his wife, accepted the
presbyteral dignity and served in one of the churches. Sainted Auxivius
guided his diocese for 50 years and died peacefully in the year
102, leaving upon the cathedra [chair] his disciple Auxinios.
The
Holy Martyr Theodore the Byzantine was a native of the settlement
Neokhoreia near Constantinople. In childhood they seduced him into
Mahometanism. For his return to the Christian faith he was hung
by the Turks in the city of Mytilene in 1795.
The
Monks Theodosii [Feodosii] the Bulgarian and his Disciple Roman:
The monk Theodosii began his exploit in the city of Viddino, at
the Nikolaev monastery. After the death of the hegumen Job he settled
not far from Tirnovo, then the capital city of Bulgaria, at the
Svyatogorsk monastery of the MostHoly Mother of God in search of
a spiritual guide. He left the Holy Mount (Svyatogorsk) monastery
and for a long while went about from monastery to monastery. Finally,
he learned about the wilderness-monastery termed "Concealed" where
in pursuit of asceticism the monk Gregory the Sinaite (commemorated
8 August) had moved from Athos. The
monk Theodosii found in him an experienced guide of the contemplative
life. The monk Gregory taught: "Before death we lay in hades; whosoever
does not recognise sincerely that he is a sinner, that the beasts
and cattle are more pure -- that one is more wicked than the demons,
in having become their obedient slave."
The
wilderness monastery of the monk Gregory the Sinaite suffered often
from robbers. The abba sent the monk Theodosii to the emperor Alexander
with a request for defense of the monastery. The pious Bulgarian
tsar, at the request of the ascetic, provided him greater means
to wall in the monastery by strong walls with towers, and made secure
the monastery with grounds and cattle. During the time of his final
journey to Tirnovo with an errand of the abba to the tsar, a nobleman
turned to the monk Theodosii with a request to take him along to
the monastery. The holy ascetic brought him to the monk Gregory
the Sinaite. This was Roman -- becoming the sincere and beloved
disciple of the monk Theodosii. After the death of the monk Gregory
the Sinaite, the monk Theodosii refused to accept being head of
the monastery, and together with his disciple Roman he set off from
the monastery for solitary efforts. They founded a monastery on
an hill round about Tirnovo, afterwards called Theodosiev. The monk
Theeodosii was famous as a zealous defender of Orthodoxy against
the many heresies then appearing, especially the Bogomils, Judaisers
and Messalians. Their false teachings were especially pernicious.
The Patriarch and the tsar rendered great help to the monk Theodosii
in the struggle with the heretics. In addition to this, the holy
ascetic translated Greek writings into the Slavonic language. In
1360 he became grievously ill. Wishing to meet with his friend the
monk Kallistos, he set off to him at Tsar'grad, entrusting the guidance
of the monastery to his disciple Roman.
On
17 February 1362 the monk Theodosii died at Tsar'grad. His disciple
the monk Roman became head of the monastery founded by him.
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