20
FEBRUARY
(05 March / Leap-Years 04 March)
Sainted
Leo, Bishop of Catania (+c.780)
MonkMartyr Kornilii of Pskovo-Pechersk (+1570)
Monk Agathon of Pechersk, in Farther Caves (XIII-XIV)
PriestMartyr Sadok, Bishop of Persia, and with
him 128 Martyrs (+342-344)
Monk Agathon, Pope of Rome (+682)
Monk Plotinos
Sainted Kindeos, Bishop of Pisidia
Monk Eutropios
Martyrs Ammios and Amphylos
Monk Isidor of Alexandria
Sainted
Leo was bishop of the city of Catania, in Sicily. He was
famed for his benevolence and charity, and his Christian love for
the poor and the vagrant. The Lord granted him the gifts of healing
of various illnesses, and also wonderworking. During the time when
Saint Leo was bishop in Catania, there lived a certain sorcerer
magician named Heliodorus, who impressed people with his fake miracles.
This fellow was originally a Christian, but then he secretly rejected
Christ and became a servant of the devil. Saint Leo often urged
Heliodorus to be done with his wicked deeds and return to God, but
in vain. One time Heliodorus got so impudent that, having entered
into the church where the bishop was celebrating Divine-services,
he by his sorcery sowed confusion and temptation there, trying to
create a disturbance. Seeing the people beset by devils under the
sorcerous spell, Saint Leo realised, that the time of gentle persuasions
had passed. He calmly emerged from the altar and, grabbing the magician
by the neck with his omophorion, he led him out of the church into
the city-square. There he forced Heliodorus to own up to all his
wicked deeds; he commanded a bon-fire be built, and without flinching
he jumped together with the sorcerer into the fire, while having
on his omophorion. Thus they stood in the fire, until Heliodorus
got burnt, while by the power of God Saint Leo remained unharmed.
This miracle while still during his lifetime brought Saint Leo reknown.
When he died, at his grave a woman with issue of blood received
healing. The body of the saint was placed in a church of the holy
Martyress Lucy, which he himself had built, and later on his relics
were transferred into a church of Sainted Martin the Merciful, Bishop
of Tours (commemorated 12 October).
The
MonkMartyr Kornilii of Pskovo-Pechersk was born
in the year 1501 at Pskov into the boyar-noble family of
Stefan and Maria. In order to give their son an education,
his parents sent him to the Pskov Mirozh monastery, where
he worked under the guidance of an elder: he made candles,
chopped wood, studied his letters, transcription and adornment
of books, and also iconography. Having finished his studies,
Kornilii returned to his parental home with the resolve
to become a monk.
One
time the government clerk Misiur Munekhin took Kornilii with him
to the Pskovo-Pechersk monastery set amidst the woods, and which
then was in more miserable a condition than any other Pskov churchyard.
The beauty of nature there, and the calm of services in the cave
church produced so very strong an impression on Kornilii, that he
left his parental home forever and accepted monastic tonsure at
the Pskovo-Pechersk monastery.
In
1529, at age 28, the Monk Kornilii was elevated to hegumen and became
head of the monastery. While he was hegumen, the Pskovo-Pechersk
monastery reached the height of its prime. The number of brethren
increased from 15 to 200 men. This number of residents was not exceeded
under any other subsequent head of the monastery.
The
activity of the Monk Kornilii extended far beyond the bounds of
the monastery: he disseminated Orthodoxy amongst the Esti [Aesti])
and Saeti people living around the monastery, he built churches,
hospices, homes for orphans and those in need. During the time of
a terrible plague in the Pskov region the Monk Kornilii walked through
the plague-infested villages to give communion to the living and
to sing burial-service at the circular pits with the dead.
During
the time of the Livonian war the Monk Kornilii preached Christianity
in the occupied cities, built churches there, by hand distributed
generous aid from the monastery storerooms to the Esti and Livonians
suffering during the time of war; at the monastery he selflessly
doctored and fed the injured and the maimed, preserved the killed
within the caves and inscribed their names in the monastery synodikon-record
for eternal remembrance.
In
the year 1560, on the feast of the Uspenie [(Dormition] of the Mother
of God, the Monk Kornilii sent by way of blessing for the Russian
armies, besieging the city of Thellin, a prosphora and holy water.
On that very day the Germans surrendered the city. In 1570 at the
establishing of a cathedra-see in Livonian Yur'ev, there was appointed
as bishop of Yur'ev and Vel'yansk (i.e., Thellin) a certain hegumen
Kornilii. Some have identified him with the Monk Kornilii, but this
does not correspond with actual events. The Monk Kornilii was a
great expert and lover of books -- at the monastery was gathered
quite solid a collection of books. In 1531 came out his work entitled,
"An Account Concerning the Origin of the Pechersk Monastery." In
the mid-XVI Century the Pskovo-Pechersk monastery took over from
the Spaso-Eleaszarov monastery the tradition of chronicle-keeping.
At the start of the chronicles was put accounts of the first two
Pskov chronicles in rough-draft continuation from 1547 to 1567.
Besides this, Hegumen Kornilii left behind a great monastery Synodikon
for remembrance of deceased brothers and benefactors of the monastery,
and he began to maintain the "Stern-side Book" ["Kormovaya kniga",
i.e., the ship-stern is the back-side (sic) the sense of
"looking back in remembrance"] from the year 1588; he compiled also
a "Description of the Monastery" and a "Description of the Miracles
of the Pechersk Icon of the Mother of God."
The
Monk Kornilii expanded and beautified the monastery, he dug out
further the monastery caves, he transported the wooden church named
for the Forty Martyrs of Sebasteia beyond the monastery enclosure
to the entryway monastery gate, and on its site in the year 1541
he built a church in the name of the Annunciation of the MostHoly
Mother of God, and in 1559 he constructed a church in honour of
the Protection-Pokrov of the MostHoly Mother of God.
The
Pechersk monastery, risen up on the frontier of the Russian state,
was not only a luminary of Orthodoxy, but also a bulwark against
the external enemies of Russia.
In
the years 1558-1565 the Monk Kornilii erected round about the monastery
a massive stone wall, and over the holy gates in accord with his
plan he built a stone church in the name of Saint Nicholas, entrusting
to him the guarding of the monastery. Within the temple was set
a wooden sculpted image of "Nikola the Warrior."
In
the chronicle, compiled by the monk-deacon Pitirim, was thus recorded
about the martyr's death of the Monk Kornilii: "This worthy-blest
hegumen Kornilii ... was as hegumen 41 years and 2 months; by his
fast-keeping and holy life not only as a monk was he an image unto
salvation ... in these times being then in the Russian land evil
sufferance of much unrest, and finally, from this perishable life
the earthly tsar did dispatch him unto the Heavenly Tsar unto eternal
habitation, in the year 1570 on the 20th day of February, in his
69th year from birth." (This information is on the ceramic plate
-- from the ceramics covering the mouth of the tomb of the Monk
Kornilii).
In
the ancient manuscripts of the Trinity-Sergiev Lavra it was written,
that when Hegumen Kornilii came out the monastery gates with a cross
to meet the tsar, tsar Ivan the Terrible, angered by a false slander,
with his own hand cut off his head, but then immediately repented
of his deed and, taking up the body, in his own hands he carried
it into the monastery. The pathway made scarlet by the blood of
the Monk Kornilii, along which the tsar carried his body to the
Uspenie-Dormition church, became called the "Bloody Path." Evidence
of the tsar's repenting his deed was the generous recompense to
the Pskovo-Pechersk monastery, made by him after the death of the
Monk Kornilii. The name of the Hegumen Kornilii was inscribed in
the tsar's remembrance-synodikon.
The
body of the Monk Kornilii was set into the wall of "the cave formed
by God," wherein it passed 120 years without corruption. In the
year 1690 Markell, metropolitan of Pskov and Izborsk, had the relics
transferred from the cave to the Uspenie-Dormition cathedral church
and placed in a new crypt in the wall.
On
17 December 1872 the relics of the Monk Kornilii were transferred
from the former tomb into a copper-silver reliquary, and in 1892
-- into a new reliquary. It is presumed, that the service to the
monk-martyr was compiled for the day of the Uncovering of the Relics,
in the year 1690.
The
Monk Agathon of Pechersk was a great fast-keeper, and
he healed the sick by a laying-on of his hands upon them, he likewise
possessed a gift of prophecy and foretold the time of his own death.
His memory is celebrated also with the Sobor-Assembly of the Monks
of the Farther Caves on 28 August.
The
PriestMartyr Sadok, Bishop of Persia, and with him 128 Martyrs
-- suffered in Persia under the emperor Sapor II. Saint Sadok was
successor of the PriestMartyr Simeon (commemorated 17
April). One time he had a dream, in which Saint Simeon foretold
him of his own impending martyr's death. Standing in great glory
atop a ladder reaching up to Heaven, Saint Simeon said: "Ascend
up to me, Sadok, and be not afraid -- I yesterday ascended, and
thou today wilt ascend." Soon the emperor Sapor, renewing the persecution
against Christians, gave orders to arrest Saint Sadok, together
with his clergy and flock. In all there were 128 arrested, including
9 virgins. They were thrown into prison, where over a duration of
five months they were cruelly tortured, amidst demands that they
renounce the Christian faith and instead worship the sun and fire.
The holy martyrs bravely answered: "We are Christians and give worship
to the One God." They were sentenced to beheading by the sword.
The
Monk Agathon, Pope of Rome, was the descendant of a rich
family and of pious Christian parents, who provided him an excellent
education. After their death Saint Agathon distributed away his
inheritance to the poor and accepted monasticism. His virtuous life
did not remain concealed from people. In the year 679 he was elevated
to head the Roman Church, and he remained upon his cathedra-chair
until his demise (+682).
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