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MYSTAGOGY

MYSTAGOGY
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J.Sanidopoulos
This weblog offers insights and analysis on various matters of life and thought from a 21st century Orthodox Christian perspective, among other things.
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Tuesday, April 20, 2010

On the Translation of Liturgical Texts (Part 1 of 4)


[The following text was written in January of 1981 regarding the translation of liturgical texts from their original Greek to Modern Greek. The issue was a hot topic then, but even more so in recent weeks when the Holy Synod of the Church of Greece officially condemned the translating of liturgical texts into Modern Greek. For those outside Greece however, the following text illuminates the essential core behind this controversial issue encountered throughout the world and how one should form their views even in societies where translation becomes a necessity, with much care and sensitivity. - J.S.]

by Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos of Nafpaktos and Agios Vlasios

Lately there has been much talk by both clergy and lay people about the translation of the liturgical texts, and we have examples of some people who are actually doing this work. Contemporary Greeks, being permeated with the passion to change everything, even enter into the place of worship with passion, claiming that it is difficult to truly participate in divine worship when we are obligated to hear the "incomprehensible" hymns that are chanted in the Church. They also claim that liturgical reform is necessary. Also, they add that one of the primary tasks of the Church is to take care of this part of ecclesiastical life.

This issue is very serious and sensitive. We do not believe that these few lines written here will cover it all, nor that the things that are written here are free of weaknesses, but we will try to present our thoughts clearly and succinctly.

We will not examine the issue from the view that the Greek language today is under cruel and "inhuman" pressure. Nor will we examine the case that most revolutionaries, who want our separation from the past, want to "destroy" our language because of this, separating life from tradition, thereby destroying it. For life is life because it is connected with tradition. As biological life is passed on from generation to generation, so also in a similar fashion the cultural life of people is passed from generation to generation. And if life is separated from the past, it becomes dead. We wanted without commentary to lay down the following thought: "From 1958 until today, they will try with three successive educational reforms (which are openly expressed for the interests of foreign embassies in Athens) to extremely reduce the so-called classical education, subordinating Education to the demands of technology."[1] We know well that language is one of the primary concerns of education reform.

We put aside these issues to emphasize some other points.

First. The Church brings about the transformation of space, time and the entire world. The transformation of the whole world takes place in the sacramental life of the Church by the energies of the All-Holy Spirit. The Church receives the whole world and transforms it. This is clearly seen in the case of man. Through the Mysteries [Sacraments], man escapes his irrationality, death and insipid non-existence, and he enters into life. He becomes a member of the Body of Christ and receives the gifts of the All-Holy Spirit. The whole person (spirit, body, nous, desire, will) is assumed by the Church and deified. Nicholas Cabasilas clearly says that man with Holy Baptism receives new birth; with Holy Chrismation movement; with the Divine Eucharist life; and with Noetic Prayer, as with the whole struggle of purification and asceticism, he puts Christ in his nous and will. In this way, he lives in Christ, which means restoration to true life. Specifically, in his book The Life In Christ, he writes: "This is the work of baptism: the remission of our sins, the reconciliation of man with God, the becoming of man like God, the opening of the eye of the soul, the tasting of the divine radiance, the universe speaking and preparing us for the future life." The work of the Mystery of Chrismation "transmits the energies of the Good Spirit; and the myrrh puts in him the Lord Jesus, who is the Savior of all people, the Hope of all good, and in our transformation with the Holy Spirit, brings us to the Father." With the Divine Eucharist, we acquire true life: "After the chrism, we come to the table, which is the ultimate purpose of life...from this we receive the resurrected Christ, and not only the gifts of the Spirit which we are entitled to receive, but the Benefactor Himself."[2] Thus, all our senses become the senses of the Body of Christ.

This transformation takes place in all creation, as well as in all the social institutions of man. In the Church, everything is transformed, is sanctified. Through the Holy Spirit, the wheat becomes the Body of Christ, and the wine becomes the Blood of Christ; the oil becomes Holy Oil; the myrrh becomes Holy Chrismation; the water becomes Holy Water, while the candle and the incense become Prayer.

Therefore, the Church's task is not to follow the changes in society nor to adjust Her preaching and pastoral activity, but to change and transform man, the world and life. Her ultimate criterion should not simply be to accommodate society and adjust Herself, because this is called Secularism, but it should be the transformation of people and life through the Holy Spirit. The Church must not be influenced by other factors (psychological, social, etc.), but with the Holy Spirit to receive the world and to offer it as a gift to God. The comment of Archimandrite Irenaios Deledemos is truly correct: "The Fathers did not conform to the condition of the world. They did not secularize the Church, but they themselves created new conditions for the encounter of Christianity with every era. Their work was creative and not an imitation of the work of the world. The Fathers determined the changes; they did not follow the changes that already took place outside the Church. On the contrary, there is talk today about adjusting to modern reality in exactly the same way as the world. Generally, a feeling of inadequacy prevails in such attempts, with a tendency to abolish whatever differences distinguish the Church from the world."[3]

On the issue of the translation of liturgical texts, we believe that very secular criteria prevail, and that the phenomenon of secularism is expressed. "We do not understand the texts. We need to translate them." We subordinate our whole tradition on instant, arbitrary, personal initiatives that might last for one generation, but later, succeeding generations, by doing other changes, will totally change tradition.

Continued...Part Two.
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Child Martyr Gabriel of Zabludov, Poland (+ 1690)

Child Martyr Gabriel of Zabludov, Poland (Feast Day - April 20)

The holy youth Martyr Gabriel was born in 1684 in the village of Zverka, Zabludov diocese, to a pious peasant couple, Peter and Anastasia Govdel. He was baptized in the Dormition church of the Zabludov monastery and received the name Gabriel in honor of the Archangel.

Besides the meekness and guilelessness normally found in children, the young Gabriel was marked by characteristics uncommon to his age. He had, for example, a reflective nature and a mature perception of the action of Divine Providence in people's lives. It is not surprising that he inclined more towards prayer and solitude than towards the amusements which occupied his peers.

In 1690 tragedy visited the GovdeI family. One day the unsuspecting mother, leaving the six-year old Gabriel alone in the house, took some food to his father who was out plowing the fields. While she was gone a local tenant came to the house. Taking advantage of the parents' absence and the child's trusting nature, he kidnapped the boy.

Gabriel was taken secretly to the town of Bialystok and given over to sadistic torture. His side was pierced and a special instrument was inserted which gradually drained his blood. After nine days of such treatment the boy died. Desiring to conceal such a vile deed, the murderer secretly took the body and threw it onto the edge of a field near some woods in the vicinity of the boy's home village.


The holy Feast of Pascha approached. Hungry dogs began gathering around the lifeless body, predatory birds circled overhead. Miraculously the body remained untouched. Not only did the dogs refrain from devouring it, they even guarded it against the birds.

The body of the young martyr was eventually discovered and taken to Zabludov. An investigation brought to light the particulars of the crime which was duly entered in the town records. With the participation of many local inhabitants, deeply shaken by the committed atrocity, the body of the martyr Gabriel was laid to rest near the cemetery church. There it remained for close to thirty years.

Early in the 18th century, the whole territory surrounding Bialystok was seized by an epidemic. Thousands fell victim to the disease and crowded the cemeteries. Many children from the neighborhood of Zvevka and Zabludov were buried near the grave of the child-martyr Gabriel whom many revered on account of his innocent suffering and martyric death. Many sensed an abundance of grace present at his grave,

Once, during a burial, some grave diggers inadvertently came up against Gabriel' s coffin. When it was opened witnesses were astonished to see that after the passage of so many years, the child's body was incorrupt. News of the miracle spread with lightening speed among the faithful, strengthening and increasing veneration for the holy child. His relics were reverently transferred to the village church in Zverkov and placed in a special crypt below the church.

In 1794 a fire destroyed the church but, miraculously, the relics were spared. Only a portion of one hand was partially burned and this, undoubtedly, in accordance with God's Providence for the sake of strengthening faith and piety among the Orthodox people, for when the holy relics were subsequently transferred to the Zabludov monastery, the injured hand was supernaturally restored; it was found to be newly covered with skin.


The living memory of the child-martyr, the honor accorded him, and the desire to promote his veneration inspired the building of a church on the site of his grave. On the day of Holy Pascha 1894, took place the festive consecration of the church. Sadly, only eight years later this church also burned. But on this occasion likewise there occurred a miracle. Although the church was completely destroyed, the icon of its heavenly patron, child-martyr Gabriel, was preserved unharmed.

For many years St. Gabriel's relics lay in the Zabludov monastery. External circumstances, however, forced upon the area a tense situation which was heightened by the ill will of some of its heterodox inhabitants. For the sake of security the relics were transferred to the Holy Trinity Monastery in Slutsky--which explains how St. Gabriel came to be called "Slutsky," a fact which clouds the true origin of this Zabludov saint. From Slutsky the holy relics were eventually transferred to the city of Minsk and then to Grodno where they remained until their solemn return in 1992 to Bialystok, the Martyr's homeland.

Archbishop Savva of Bialystok and Gdansk called the celebration "a second Pascha." And indeed, those who participated in the translation of the relics of Child Martyr Gabriel from Grodno to Bialystok on the memorable days of September 21-23 [1992], would agree.

Source





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On Guardian Angels


St. Anastasius of Sinai teaches: "To every Christian is given an angel [Guardian Angel] from God to guard him all his life unless someone through evil deeds drives him away. But as the snake drives away bees and evil smell drives away pigeons, thus our sins drive away the guardian angel of our life: drunkenness, adultery, anger and so forth. The angel of every faithful man leads him to every good deed, while the demons exert to scandalize the faithful ones and to deprive them of the Kingdom of Heaven."

The angels are close to men and that they take care of men, the whole of Holy Scripture attests to this, but especially the New Testament.

Besides this, there exists in the Orthodox Church numerous traditions of saintly men and women, who witness to that which St. Athanasius confirms, i.e. that is that each one of us in this world is accompanied by a gentle and mighty [herald] messenger of God, a soldier of the King of Heaven, the angel of light.

Who, except an insane person drives a good friend away from himself? In truth, only the insane and the extremely ignorant, drive away their best friend, their guardian angel by their sins.

- St. Nikolai Velimirovich, Prologue

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The Volcanic Ashes of Constantinople In 472 AD


In the Synaxarion for November 6th, together with the Saints who are celebrated that day, it also states: "On this day we remember the ashes falling during the reign of Leo the Great".

The Stichos for the feast says: "You threatened to burn us, but we did not burn, since You stirred Your anger with long suffering O Word".

The explanation for the feast in the Menaion for November 6th, written by Saint Nikodemos the Hagiorite, reads:

"In the eighteenth year of Emperor Leo the Great [472 AD] on November 6, in the afternoon hours, the entire sky [of Constantinople] was filled not only with the common black clouds, but with clouds as red as fire. All were amazed and feared that flames of fire would fall, burning them like Sodom. The people ran to the churches and prayed with tears and lamentation.

"But the God who loves mankind tempered His punishment with His love and in the evening it began to rain until midnight. The rain brought down dust that was black as ash and covered the earth and houses more than an inch. All the crops and grass and trees of the earth were burned. It was not easy to unstick this dust with water, and thereby the anger of God was revealed for our sins.

"The following days many heavy rains fell and the dust was washed away. This means that our sins are like red and black dust on us and it eats away our every virtue, and like the rain many tears are needed and much repentance for us to be washed of the hot ashes of our sins. And when the evil ashes are washed away, let us water the good earth of our nous to bring forth fruit-bearing virtues. In this way we will escape the punishment of hell which will burn our bodies and souls, and gain the Kingdom of Heaven."

This then was the event, the unusual weather phenomenon which the historian Procopius and the Synaxaria portray with such horrifying colors, that it caused the people to interpret this as the wrath of God for the sins of mankind. It was a justifiable anger that would have burned everything, eventually however God's love for mankind, the long suffering of Christ, changed the fire to a warm ash that eventually washed away and left.

The incident must have been so horrifying for the Church at the time to celebrate this event every year. And on the Sunday between October 30th and November 5th it has been established that the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus be read which speaks of the other life, of our repentance, and of the terrible fires of hell and punishment of sinners. From one historical, meteorological event, the Church reminds the faithful of our salvation.

It was the eruption of Vesuvius on 5-6 November 472 which brought the clouds with the warm ashes to Constantinople that created this horrifying incident mentioned in the Menaion of November, in which the relationship between spiritual laws and natural laws are taught, as they were established by God and given to man.
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Monday, April 19, 2010

Icons of the Nicene Creed


We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible.

And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Only-begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father before all ages. Light of Light, true God of true God, begotten, not made, of one essence with the Father; by Whom all things were made. Who for us men, and for our salvation, came down from heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit and of the Virgin Mary, and was made man. He was crucified for us under Pontius Pilate, and suffered, and was buried, and the third day He rose again, according to the Scriptures. And ascended into heaven, and sits on the right hand of the Father. And He shall come again, with glory, to judge the living and the dead; Whose kingdom shall have no end.

And in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of Life, Who proceeds from the Father. Who together with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified. Who spoke through the Prophets.

In One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church; we acknowledge one baptism for the remission of sins; we look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the age to come. Amen.












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Labels: Heresy, Iconography, Liturgics, Theology
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"Atheism Turns People Into Brutes" Says Russian Patriarch


The Voice of Russia
Apr 16, 2010

Patriarch Kirill reminds the public that atheism breeds immorality and turns people into brutes. He also calls on the Russian people to return to faith, so that a new chapter of national history may become a possibility. His Holiness was speaking at a Monastery in Alapayevsk in the Ural Mountains where the Bolsheviks brutally murdered Grand Duchess Yelizaveta Fyodorovna in 1918. She, together with others, was thrown into a mine shaft while still alive.
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Europe's Largest Church To Be Built In Kiev


The Voice of Russia
Apr 6, 2010

Construction has begun in Kiev, the capital of Ukraine, of what will be Europe’s largest Orthodox temple. The Church of Resurrection, 120 meters high and capable of housing 5,000 worshipers, will belong to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate. It will have three altars and a four-level belfry. The future church compound will include a residence for the Metropolitan of Kiev and All Ukraine, a seminary, a TV studio and a hotel for pilgrims.
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Holy New Martyr Agathangelos of Esphigmenou

Neomartyr Agathangelos of Esphigmenou (Feast Day - April 19)

The Monk Martyr Agathangelos, in the world Athanasios, was born in the city of Ainos, Thrace, and was raised in a poor and pious Orthodox family. After the death of his parents Constantine and Krystalia, he became a sailor on the ship of a Turk to earn a living.

The Turks wanted to convert the skilled and intelligent youth to Islam, but knew that he would not do so of his own free will. One day when they had travelled from Constantinople to Smyrna, the nefarious judge of the Hagarenes of Smyrna saw the unchanging faith of Athanasios and wanted to do all he could to convert him to Islam. The judge therefore asked Agathangelos one night to light a lantern and help him allegedly walk to a certain place ahead of him. When they arrived at a Turkish cemetery the Hagarene told Athanasios to lead him to the inner part of it, at which time the Hagarene pulled out a knife against Athanasios and injured him. The young man became afraid and began to cry, and his Master told him that it was impossible for him to keep him alive unless he changed his faith to Islam. Athanasios then reasoned that privately he would deny his faith, but publicly he would deny such a thing. He reasoned that he could do this because the judge was a notorious liar and thus no one would believe him. But this reasoning proved to be a temptation of the devil. When he made his profession to accept Islam the judge gave him a kiss, gave him a new name and said that he would not be allowed to go free unless he was first circumcised; at midnight he was circumcised. A few days later he became seriously ill, and he feared that he would die as a Muslim, but the Lord had pity on him. After much hardship he was finally able to leave his Master, who was about to kill him again, this time over economic differences. Upon leaving he assumed once more his Christian name.

Tormented by pangs of conscience, he was able to leave the world and seek refuge on Mount Athos. After travelling throughout the various monasteries of Athos and confessing his sin to many, he finally came upon Elder Euthymios of Esphigmenou Monastery, the abbot, who confessed him and blessed him to become a novice. His job was to serve the trapeza, which he did with much diligence. He faced intense temptation from the devil, but with prayer to the Lord and the Holy Virgin as well as fasting he overcame them.


Athanasios considered even his most intense efforts insufficient to atone for his sin of apostasy. He believed that he had to suffer martyrdom for Christ, and he began to pray about this.

One day when he was serving his duties he came across a large amount of smoke that began to hurt his eyes. Turning away he went into his cell and began to weep, saying that if he could not endure such little suffering as smoke in the eye, how could he endure the tortures of martyrdom. He prayed for many hours and began to do many prostrations until he fell asleep. In his sleep he saw the Theotokos, who asked him: "Why are you so sad, my child, and anxious?" He answered: "How can I, the thrice-wretched, not be sad, since besides my other sins I denied my Lord?" The Theotokos, like a gentle mother, answered him: "Have courage my child, because your desire for martyrdom will be fulfilled." All these things he told his teacher Germanos, who was appointed by the abbot to instruct him and hear his thoughts in confession. The abbot sent Germanos to inquire about this to Ecumenical Patriarch Gregory V, who was at that time living at Iveron Monastery, and Patriarch Gregory said that this was indeed a revelation from God and that he should help Athanasios prepare for martyrdom during Great Lent.

Athanasios was therefore sent to Iveron Monastery to prepare for his martyrdom under Patrairch Gregory V, who had previously prepared the holy new martyrs Euthymios, Ignatios, Akakios and Onouphrios for their martyrdoms. Athanasios venerated their holy relics and became further resolved to undergo martyrdom and his soul rejoiced in such an ordeal. He returned to Esphigmenou and continued his preparations with much prayer and fasting. The abbot ordered that he be enclosed within the north tower of the monastery where he was given only a little bread and water every day, and made 1500 great prostrations a day as well as 4000 small prostrations. For eight days the abbot read over him the prayers of forgiveness and then was anointed with the Holy Chrism. On the Fourth Sunday of Great Lent the nineteen-year-old youth was tonsured as a monk with the name Agathangelos.

After receiving the Holy Mysteries a fire was set in his heart and he returned to the tower to face greater ascetical preparation. He found a chain weighing ten kilos [25 lbs] and wrapped it around his body like a true "esphigmenou" [someone who is tied up]. He then put on a sack made of hair and increased his prostrations to 3000 great prostrations and 8000 small prostrations a day. He read the Salutations to the Theotokos twice a day, the Gospels, and the New Martyrology as well as other books. He prayed unceasing the Prayer of the Heart and desired more and more to die for the Lord.

Unable to hold back his passion for martyrdom, he decided to approach the abbot to allow him to leave and face his trial. The abbot asked all the monks to pray about this to see if it was God's will. That night the abbot saw St. Nicholas the Wonderworker speaking with Agathangelos saying to him: "You desire a good work, my child, so hurry and you will succeed." From that moment he began to make his final preparations.


By Divine Providence, on Holy Saturday a boat docked at Esphigmenou from Chios that was going to Smyrna. On Bright Monday Agathangelos was given the Great Schema before his departure and he embraced all his brothers with tears, and they prayed to the Lord that He would strengthen Agathangelos for his contest. On the Sunday of Thomas Agathangelos arrived in Smyrna with Germanos. The following Thursday he was shaved and put on Turkish garments, and given a wooden Cross and an icon of Christ's Resurrection.

He then approached the Turkish officials and asked to see his former Master. When his Master came Agathangelos said: "When I began to work for him I was a Christian. Then he forced me to become a Turk, but I am again a Christian and I believe in Jesus Christ, who I confess to be the true God." After being reprimanded, Agathangelos pulled out of his clothes his wooden Cross and the icon of the Resurrection and began to criticize the Islamic faith. For a long time they flattered him with earthly possessions to bring him back to Islam, but he just remained silent and prayed. Flatteries however turned to threats and he was sent to the ruler. He remained steadfast and was imprisoned.

The next day he was again brought into the courtroom and threatened with the sword, but it was the sword which he desired. Then appearing before the judge and the ruler he was given another chance at freedom, but he just prayed and confessed Christ as the true God. They bound St Agathangelos with heavy chains, hammered his feet into wooden boots, and threw him into prison. With him were two other wrongly condemned Christians. One of them, Nicholas, gave an account of the saint's martyrdom. Nicholas told him that a certain influential man would intervene before the judge for his release, but St Agathangelos wrote a note to this man asking that he not attempt to free him, but to pray to God that he be strengthened for martyrdom. The Metropolitan of Smyrna and many priests and faithful came and they all prayed that the martyr will endure his trial to the end.

The saint readied himself for the final trial. At midnight, it was revealed to him in a vision that they would execute him no later than the fifth hour, and he waited for the appointed hour. At about the fourth hour, a watch was placed over him. Seeing no possibility of converting the confessor from his faith in Christ, the judges decided to execute him. Absorbed in unceasing prayer, the martyr did not take notice the preparations for execution, nor the large throng of people.


He was beheaded at the fifth hour of the morning, on Saturday April 19, 1819. Christians were strengthened in their faith and rejoiced, and gathered up the holy relics of the martyr which immediately became beautifully fragrant and buried them in the city of Smyrna, in the Church of the Great Martyr George in the tomb of the Holy New Martyr Dimos who was martyred in Smyrna in 1763. A teacher of the School of Smyrna, the Great Oikonomos Constantine Economou, was informed of this, and went to the funeral. When the time came to chant the hymn "Come for the final kiss" at which time those gathered give their final farewell, he instead chanted the following hymn extemporaneously:

"Πληθύς η των Σμυρναίων εν ωδαίς ευφημήσωμεν ημών πολιούχον και της Αίνου το βλάστημα, πρόμαχον θερμόν Αγαθάγγελον ιερομάρτυρα εσθλόν. Επλάκη γαρ γενναίως τω δυσμενεί και τούτον κατηκόντισεν. Oθεν στεφηφορών ουρανομάρτυσι συναγάλλεται υπέρ ημών εξευμενίζων τον μόνον φιλάνθρωπον" (27. Θρακικά Τόμος 10ος, σ.376).

“Multitudes of Smyrna, let us praise with songs our protector and the offspring of Ainos, fervent fighter Agathangelos, the honorable holy martyr. He bravely confronted that which is unfavorable and defeated it. For that, he is among the heavenly martyrs having a crown on his head and he prays for us to the only Lover of Mankind.”

Following his death, he appeared alive to Germanos, his spiritual father.

The myrrh-streaming and miraculous skull of St Agathangelos was sent to the Esphigmenou monastery on Mount Athos in 1844, along with his right hand, his right leg, and a portion from his side [rib]. A sealed letter dated February 19, 1844 is still preserved at Esphigmenou granting these relics which wardens from the Church of St Georgea gave to them. They relics were entombed at the Church of St. George in Smyrna under a plane tree until the Asia Minor Catastrophe in 1922.


Ἀπολυτίκιον Ἦχος δ’. Ταχὺ προκατάλαβε.
Ἀσκήσεως νάμασι, καταρδευθεῖς τὴν ψυχήν, Μαρτύρων ἐξήστραψας, μαρμαρυγᾶς φωταυγεῖς, σοφὲ Ἀγαθάγγελε, ὅθεν ἐν ἀμφοτέροις, ἀκριβῶς διαπρέψας, ἤσχυνας τοὺς ἐξ Ἄγαρ, τὸν Χριστὸν μεγαλύνας. Αὐτὸν οὒν ὁσιομάρτυς, ἠμὶν ἰλέωσαι.

Apolytikion in Tone Four
Your soul drank of the waters of asceticism, you shown forth among Martyrs, you were radiantly glaring, O wise Agathangelos. Therefore graciously, as is truly fitting, you shamed those from Hagar and magnified Christ. Him therefore entreat O Righteous Martyr that He be merciful to us.


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On Empty Philosophy, Myths and Worldy Teaching


by St. Nikolai Velimirovich

"Brethren, see to it that no one captivate you with an empty, seductive philosophy according to human tradition, according to the elemental powers of the world and not according to Christ" (Colossians 2:8).

Brethren, do not let philosophy enslave us, which by conjecture, says that there is no eternal life nor resurrection from the dead. For we do not arrive at the Truth through the conjecture of man, but by God's revelation. That which we know about the truth we know from Truth Itself which was revealed in the Lord Jesus Christ and which was communicated to us through the faithful and wise witnesses of the Truth: the apostles and the saints. If we, because of our sins, were to reject these witnesses and accept the conjecture of humans, we will fall into the dark and bitter slavery of nature and of the body, to sin and to death.

Brethren, let us not be deceived by the empty myths of men, from men and according to men as though another world does not exist or if another world does exist, we, so to speak, do not know anything about it. Behold, we know with confidence that another world does exist. We know this not from conjecturers or deceivers but from the Lord Jesus Himself Who, on Mount Tabor, appeared to His disciples with Moses and Elijah who long ago departed this world and Who Himself, appeared to many of His followers after His death. We also know about this from the apostles, saints and numerous discerners to whom, because of their chastity and sanctity, God revealed the ultimate Truth about the other world. If, because of our sins, we do not believe these holy and the truthful witnesses, we will then have to believe those unholy and false men and we will be slaves to darkness, sin and death.

Brethren, let us not be led astray by worldly teaching, which examines animals, plants and stones and say it has not found God among these things and, from that, arrogantly attest that there is no God. Behold, we know that the Creator cannot be, as a thing among things, rather He is above all things and different from all things. We know this, as much by spiritual understanding and conscience, as well as by the obvious revelation of the Lord Jesus Himself, Who appeared in the body of a man as the Lord of all created things, as well as through the witness of the apostles, many other saints and discerning men.

Rather, let us glorify the Lord Jesus resurrected from the dead.
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Elderly Woman, 92, Becomes Orthodox Nun


Elderly Woman, 92, Becomes Nun in Greek Orthodox Church

April 18, 2010
Patricia A Ziegler
Associated Content

Her Childhood Dream Realized at Last, 92-Year-Old Woman Becomes a Nun

Greek-born Chrystalla Petropoulou, of Long Island, NY has fulfilled a lifelong dream. At the age of 92, the Mattituck resident has become a nun in the Greek Orthodox Church.

The April 18, 2010 edition of Newsday reports that Petropoulou, seated in her wheelchair, officially became a nun on April 17, 2010 at the new All Saints Greek Orthodox Monastery in Calverton, Long Island. Along with Elizabeth Brandenburg, aged 28, and Maria Kallis, aged 27, Petropoulou received a new religious name and a new black habit.The three women each had hair in the shape of a cross ceremonially snipped from their heads.

Petropoulou a Driving Force Behind the All Saints Greek Orthodox Monastery

Petropoulou, aided by her relatives and the Greek Orthdox population in Calverton, was one of the leaders in the community effort to build this monastery. In 1997, Petropoulou herself deposited $13.00 in a special bank account. This $13.00 became the basis of the fund-raising effort to get the monastery built. Petropoulou later donated thousands more, and some of her relatives did the same. The largest donation received, in the amount of $125,000.00, was given anonymously.

A Monastery Minus Nuns

In 2005, when the monastery was completed, Sunday services began. But the monastery lacked nuns. Unfortunately Petropoulou, who had dreamt of this since childhood, was now too sick and frail to do it alone. All of that changed when Brandenburg (of St. Louis) and Kallis (of Detroit) agreed to move into the Calverton monastery last August. Petropoulou followed on their heels in September. In all, five women currently live at the Calverton Monastery, and two others are expected soon.

Prayer is Central to the Monastic Life of a Greek Orthodox Nun

Because they live the monastic life, the women are expected to pray around the clock. Formal prayer sessions are scheduled every three hours of every day, including midnight and 3 am. Although she is often up at those hours anyway, Petropoulou will likely be excused from any prayer sessions which are scheduled for the middle of the night.

Always Wanted to Be a Nun, but Life Got in the Way

Born in Cyprus, Petropoulou never married and has no children. Although she'd wanted to become a nun "since the day I was born," life stood in the way. Her family moved first to England, then to the United States, where there was no monastery available in which she could have studied. When she grew older, she stayed at home to care for her elderly parents.

From Dream to Reality at Last

In the end, the dream of her childhood has become a reality. Speaking through an interpreter, Petropoulou told Newsday reporters, "I don't care about doctors. I don't care about medicine. I just want to die at the monastery."
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On Liturgical Language and Understanding


Once a Russian called Fr Tobias, who lived in the skete, came to the vigil and revealed to Fr Gideon that he was bored because he did not understand anything in the service. Fr Gideon consoled him: "It doesn’t matter: don’t grieve because you don’t understand. Sit in your stall, keep praying and don’t be troubled because you don’t understand. Look at a ship on the sea, there are various passengers on it: Greeks, Romanians, Russians, Arabs. They don’t understand each other but they’re on the same ship, sitting down together, and the ship will take them all to the port. So it is with the Church; it doesn’t matter who is in it, whether they understand or not, the Church will take them all to the port of the Kingdom of Heaven."

- From Elder Gideon the Greek (+ 1896) in Lives of Nineteenth Century Athonite Ascetics of Piety by Hieromonk Antony of the Holy Mountain, Jordanville 1988.
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The Cross Glistens With the Blood of the Martyrs


In one of the writings of the martyrdom of Christians during the reign of the Persian Emperor Sapor, it is said: "The swords became dull, the sword-bearers fell and the sword-makers fatigued, but the Cross is uplifted even higher and glistened from the blood of Christ's martyrs."

How many and how many times did the persecutors of Christians complacently think that they were through with Christianity forever? In essence, their lives have ended while Christianity has always regenerated itself and blossomed anew. Nevertheless, even in addition to that experience, some of our contemporaries think, that the Christian Faith can be uprooted by force. But, they do not say by what means. They forget that all those means have been tried and all without success.

With reason Tertullian cried out to the pagans: "In vain do you spill our blood. For the blood of the martyrs is the seed of Christianity."

- St. Nikolai Velimirovich

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Sunday, April 18, 2010

The Myrrh-Streaming Skulls of Panahrantos Monastery on Andros


[Below is an account of a wondrous miracle that happened last year on Andros on May 3, 2009 on the Sunday of the Holy Myrrhbearers, when myrrh-streaming skulls were discovered underneath the Church of the Holy Transfiguration in a crypt amidst hundreds of other relics. More can be read about this fascinating discovery in the May-June 2009 issue of The Orthodox Word which contains the article "Secret Garden of the Saints: The Holy Monastery of the Panagia Panahrantos, Andros, Greece" by Lawrence Damian Robinson (who also provided the photos). - J.S.]

Account of a Miracle at the Monastery of the Panagia Panachrandos on the Island of Andros, as Related to Me by Eye-Witness Martha Zisimou

I spoke with my sister-in-law, Martha, about the event that happened at the monastery in Andros, and I'm going to try to write down as many of the details as I can while it is still fresh in my mind. She was so excited that she was speaking a mile a minute and there were so many things she told me that I hardly know where to start. But first let me just provide a bit of background about the monastery that I gathered from what she told me.

First of all, this monastery is not one of the well-known monasteries on Andros (St. Nicholas or St. Marina). This is a monastery dedicated to the Panagia “Panachrandos”, which was founded in 961 AD after the Byzantine emperor Nicephoros Fokias, who was a military commander at the time (and not yet emperor) visited the island. The circumstances of the visit and the founding of the monastery appear to have been miraculous in themselves, from the account Martha gave me. It seems that Nicephoros Fokias was sent from Constantinople to Crete to quell a rebellion there, but on the way his fleet encountered rough weather and he was forced ashore on Andros. Near the present monastery, there was a skete made up of a number of monastic cave dwellings, and when the monks heard that Nicephoros Fokias was on the island, they went to pay homage to him (as a high commander of the Byzantine empire). They told him that they had a miraculous icon of the Panagia, which was painted by St. Luke the Evangelist,[1] and since they were living in cave -dwellings, they told him they would pray for him daily to have a speedy victory in Crete, if he would only come back and give them money to build a monastery. It is said that he agreed, and when he went to Crete, before even going ashore, he was visited by the Panagia in a dream and she told him exactly what he had to do in order to secure the peace without even having to fight; but she told him to be sure to return to Andros and build a monastery there. He listened to the vision and everything went as the Panagia told him – he quickly pacified the island without any bloodshed, and returned to Andros and donated a large sum of money for the construction of a monastery on the site where the icon had been found. Apparently the hegoumenous of the monastery at that time had prophetic sight and told Nicephoros Fokias that he would become emperor, which pleased him so much that he gave them even more money for the monastery. As a result, the monastery that was built was huge and basically like a fortress. (I have not seen it, but this is how Martha describes it, and it actually is an important detail for the rest of the account).

Today, the monastery is in a terrible state of disrepair, and has only two monks: an aged hegoumenos, Geronda Evdokimos, who is around 80 and has some health problems, and a young (35-40 year old) hieromonk, Fr. Aetios (named after one of the 40 Holy Martyrs of Sebaste), who Martha said is constantly running around like crazy doing everything that needs to be done. They hardly have any money, to the point where they don't even turn on lights until after dark and even then only when absolutely necessary. They don't have a phone (not even a cell phone), and the monastery is difficult to get to by bus, so the numerous coaches that visit the other monasteries pass them by. That's unfortunate, because the monastery's church (Dormition of the Theotokos) has a wealth of holy relics. They have the kara (skull) of St. Panteleimon (which Fr. Aetios says still has hair and skin on the back of the skull, and which often produces copious amounts of fragrant myrrh during Divine Liturgies), as well as relics of St. Kyriake and the hand of St. Anastasia of Rome, the Deliverer from Potions. Martha also mentioned some other holy relics, but I can't remember which ones.

Now, on to the main event. What Martha told me was that when she and her mother went to Andros for their weekend pilgrimage, they originally intended to go to one of the other more famous monasteries on the island (St. Nicholas or St. Marina), but somehow they decided to visit this monastery first. They said it's in a beautiful spot with European maples (platanos) all around, a fantastic view, and five or six springs within the monastery compound. They stopped there and had a picnic lunch, and while they were there, they decided to ask Fr. Aetios if the monastery had a guest house (just in case they couldn't find a place to stay at one of the other monasteries they were planning to visit). They had one, but Fr. Aetios had to ask the Geronda if they could stay (especially since they weren't accustomed to having visitors and the guest house was in serious disarray). But the Geronda wanted them to stay, and Fr. Aetios told them that the next day (Sunday) they were going to have the Divine Liturgy at the cemetery, not in the katholikon, and that they were going to do the washing of the monks' bones, and he seemed to be very excited about it. Martha and Effie's mother didn't really understand the significance of what Fr. Aetios was telling them, but they saw how excited they were to have them as visitors and didn't want them to feel bad, so they ended up staying and not going to the other monasteries.


The next morning, they celebrated the Divine Liturgy in a small church outside of the monastery compound, dedicated to the Transfiguration of the Saviour (Tis Metamorphoseos, and commonly called Tou Photadoti). Let me know explain what Fr. Aetios meant by celebrating the liturgy “at the cemetery”. It seems that at some point early in its long history, the monks began burying the monks who had fallen asleep in a hidden crypt underneath this church of the Transfiguration. Martha says it was because they were afraid the Turks would desecrate the tombs and the remains, but I'm not sure I understand the timeline since the Turks did not occupy Andros as early as the 10th or 11th century; but it could have been because of pirates (which were very common and very savage during those centuries). In any case, the church is built over a crypt which Martha said is probably about 200 to 300 sq. ft. in area and about 6 or 7 ft. high. The only opening to the crypt is a hole in the floor of the church near the chanters' stand, which is covered by a stone slab about a foot thick, which blends into the floor. In other words, anyone who didn't know it was there and what it was for would mistake it as one of the paving stones of the church's floor. There is no other indication that there is a space below the church, as from the outside the walls of the crypt appear to be foundation walls. So apparently for many hundreds of years, until the liberation of Greece from the Ottoman Turks in 1821, this crypt was used as a burial place for the monastery's departed monks, whose remains were thrown down into the hole. Fr. Aetios told Martha that there are records indicating that in one year in the 1700s as many as 400 monks were buried in that year alone. They don't know how many remains are there in total, but they estimate that it is well over a thousand. None of the remains had ever been removed from the crypt, as it had never been opened up until yesterday.

Fr. Evdokimos and Fr. Aetios (who has been at the monastery for about 6 years), have been wanting to open the crypt and wash the bones for a long time, but they finally decided they would do it this year on Myrrh-bearers Sunday. So contrary to what I wrote in my initial report, it is not something they do every year. This was a first-of-a-kind event, and Martha and my mother-in-law just happened to have the blessing to be there for it. The way they had to open the crypt was to drill through the side wall from the outside – an extremely arduous process since the walls were made of stone at least 3 feet thick (remember, the place was built like a fortress to withstand attacks from invaders) – and create a small doorway. There were a couple of pious men who visit the monastery who came with the tools to do everything, and Martha said it took them a long time to get through the wall. In any case, according to Martha, the events unfolded as follows:

There were about 10 people there in total during the Divine Liturgy: Fr. Aetios (Fr. Evdokimos, the abbott, wasn't there because he had to go and liturgize at some other church), his mother who was visiting, the two men who came to help open up the crypt, Martha and Effie's mother, and a few other pious pilgrims who had been called by the monks to be there especially for this occasion. All during the liturgy, they were smelling a sweet fragrance that came and went wafting through the church, but no one was really sure where it was coming from. Martha said she thought one time it was from the incenser, but then saw it wasn't lit or not smoking or anything; another time she thought it was perfume from one of the other women who were there; and apparently everyone was thinking the same kinds of things, as she noticed everyone looking around and sniffing from time to time. But she said it really became obvious to everyone during the Cherubic Hymn, and then during the Creed, and especially at the words “I look for the resurrection of the dead”, Martha described the fragrance as like being in an earthquake – i.e. something that was so strong that it suddenly shook them all. She said that after the Divine Liturgy, the priest opened up the hole in the floor of the church and suddenly the fragrance became so powerful that they could hardly stay inside the church. She said it filled the whole place, and was even strong outside and on the road back up to the monastery. [Just imagine how strong it must have been to come through such thick stones!]

They proceeded to start the work of opening the outside wall to get into the crypt, and Fr. Aetios insisted that they have candles burning in the candle holder in the narthex the whole time that this work was going on. Effie's mother went back up to the monastery at a certain point, but Martha stayed on to watch them do the work and to see what was going to happen, as she was convinced they were going to see something. At a certain point, they finally got through the wall and started removing the stones, and she said the fragrance at that point became so strong that they were getting dizzy. When they finally opened up the wall to the point where they could get inside the crypt, they could only go in for a few seconds at a time because the fragrance was so overpowering. The workers were worried that there might be snakes inside the crypt, but Fr. Aetios told them that he had never seen snakes in the area and that the worst might be some scorpions. But when they finally managed to get in, they found that aside from the earth inside that had been thrown in with the monks' bones, the space was very clean (i.e. no mold or fungus or anything, and no critters of any kind).

There were bones and skulls all over, all mixed together and jumbled up, and in such great quantity that the floor was not even visible; but since the strong fragrance seemed to be coming from close to where they had made the opening in the wall, they started trying to identify its source. Fr. Aetios focused on one particular skull that he seemed to think was the one (Martha said he told the workers why he thought so, but she didn't get what he was saying). They smelled it, and confirmed that it was fragrant – but at that point the fragrance didn't seem to be as strong as it had been previously. In any case, they also smelled other bones, but didn't find anything else that seemed to be exuding fragrance. They then began to bring bones out of the crypt, give them a very quick dusting to brush away loose dirt and lay them out on tables outside the church for a more careful washing later. The skull that they thought was the source of the fragrance was given the same treatment, and put on a table near the others, and they continued working.

After a little while, Fr. Aetios asked Martha to go to the monastery's kitchen and make some pasta for everyone, but on the way up to go and check the candles in the church's narthex and put out those that had gotten low and light new ones. She went up to do it and as she came out of the church intending to go up to the monastery, she started screaming for the priest to come. The skull that had seemed to be fragrant was exuding myrrh from the top, which had begun flowing down its sides. Martha said that she saw the myrrh start gushing right before her eyes, and as it flowed around the skull, the skull suddenly changed appearance. Prior to exuding myrrh, it had been white like all the others, but as the myrrh flowed around it (and she said it went everywhere, all over the skull), it began to change color and become like a yellowish/amber color as she watched. Not only that, but she said that whereas the skull had been covered in places with dirt (the priest had only brushed off what was loose, the rest to be removed upon a more thorough washing), it was now absolutely clean all by itself (at that point, only Fr. Aetios, Martha and the two workers remained at the church and the rest had gone back up to the monastery, so there was no one else there who could have washed it). She also said that she felt a clear presence – as if the skull were not just an inanimate object anymore, but was a live person that she knew in front of her.

Fr. Aetios and the two men ran up from where they were working and were astounded to see what Martha was seeing. They all started crying and praying, and Fr. Aetios took the holy relic in his arms and carried it into the holy of holies, whereupon it suddenly started gushing myrrh even more profusely. He placed it on a linen cloth with cotton all around it to absorb the myrrh, but as soon as they would wipe off the myrrh, more would flow so that it was hard to keep up with it. Martha called her mother on her cell phone and she came down from the monastery and saw everything as well, and confirmed to me that what Martha told me was all true. And they also brought out a piece of the cotton they had brought back with them for me to smell, and indeed, though there were no visible signs of staining on it, it was incredibly fragrant with a very sweet, flowery aroma – so much so that I not only smelled it, but I also tasted something. Martha also confirmed to me that when they smelled it in the church, they also tasted something very sweet from the fragrance.


As I mentioned in my earlier e-mail, they have no idea whose relics these are (and indeed there are thousands of bones in the crypt and perhaps others of Saints yet to be revealed), but the men that were there have been praying for the Saint to reveal himself to someone in a dream or vision so that we may find out who it is.

Wondrous is God in His Saints!

[Forgive me if I have unintentionally made any factual errors in my haste to write this down, but I have not had time to fact check any of the historical information mentioned at the beginning of this account.]

Damian Robinson

Penteli, Athens, Greece

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New Martyrs of Optina Monastery (+ April 18, 1993)


In the year 1993 the whole Orthodox world was shocked by a tragic event, which had happened in Optina Hermitage: three inhabitants of the monastery were brutely murdered on Easter night. They were hieromonk Vasily (Roslyakov), monk Ferapont (Pushkarev) and monk Trophim (Tatarinov).

The Easter service in Optina began as usual. According to the existing tradition, the religious procession to the skete of St. John the Baptist,which is situated to the east of the Monastery, and back was coming to an end. The festive Easter peal was heard coming from monastery and skete belfries. The number of people was enormous—up to 10 thousand people (as the militia later reported, which were guarding the Monastery during the festive service,). After the Liturgy the monks went to the refectory to break the fast. After completing the meal, two of the bell-ringers, monk Ferapont and monk Trophim, returned to the belfry to continue the Easter peal. By then it was ten past six. Suddenly the bell ringing became uneven and then stopped completely. A terrible crime was committed on the belfry—the monks were villainously killed with stabs from a knife.

Monk Ferapont expired at once. After the stabbing Monk Trophim uttered a loud shriek: “God, have mercy upon us!” and “Help!; having risen a bit, he rang the bell—and fell down.

The murderer ran away to the skete, where hieromonk Vasily was also going in order to hear confessions. The criminal stabbed him in the back with the same knife.

Then the murderer climbed over the monastery wall and threw away a blood-stained self-made knife. It was double-edged, five centimeters wide, and resembled a sword. It was engraved on its blade with “ 666” and “satan”. The same inscription was found later on a knife in the pocket of a greatcoat that was abandoned by the murderer.

The murderer Nikolay Averin inflicted knife wounds to the back. According to the investigator, the injuries were inflicted with unusual professionalism “and deliberately—they were not too deep—to make the victim bleed to death over a long time”. In fact, hieromonk Vasily suffered for several hours, though monks Trophim and Ferapont died immediately.

Averin killed monks Ferapont and Trophim while they were announcing to the world on the belfry the Resurrection of Christ. And hieromonk Vasily was killed when he was going to the skete to hear confessions. Having committed the murder, Averin slipped the edge of the monks’ robes to their heads and pulled their klobuks over their faces.

It seemed that there was still life in monk Trophim. He was brought to Vvedensky Cathedral, but a few minutes later he passed away.

In spite of a terrible wound, Hieromonk Vasily lived longer than the others. He looked at the people surrounding him and even tried to rise. He was also brought to the Cathedral and was put next to the relics of St. Elder Ambrose, and then he was taken by ambulance to the local hospital in Kozelsk. There he soon passed away.

It was also surprising that the monks began to give away their possessions before their murder, including their personal tools, saying they would not need them any more (which was all the more unusual at the time when there was such a lack of tools in the monastery that one had to bring them from home or get them somehow through friends, otherwise one could not do his work). Everyone in Optina monastery was surprised by this occurance, but after the murder it became clear: the monks had foreseen the glory of martyrdom prepared for them.

To understand why the monks were ready to die, it is necessary to know what kind of life they lived.

For more than ten years people in Optina monastery have been collecting information about monks Trofim, Ferapont and Vasily.

Read the rest here.

Read also the following: New Martyrs of Optina Pustyn








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New Martyr John the New of Ioannina

New Martyr John the New of Ioannina, Epirus (Feast Day - April 18 and Bright Tuesday)

The Holy Martyr John was born in 1522 in the Greek district of Epirus, in Terovo between Ioannina and Arta. His parents were pious, but he was orphaned at an early age, and he went to Constantinople. On the way he stopped in Trikala where he was accused of being an apostate by some local Turks from Islam. Somehow he escaped this accusation and with the means left him by his parents, he built a small stall in the bazaar of Constantinople and was occupied with the trade of being a tailor.

He loved to work, he honorably filled all his orders, and his business was successful. However, his soul did not yearn for earthly blessings, but for the Kingdom of Heaven.

St John lived during difficult times. Constantinople was under the dominion of the Turks, and Christians were subjected to oppressions. Many Christian tradesmen and merchants went over to the Muslim religion. St John reproached them for their betrayal of Christ, and he also sustained the unwavering in their faith. The apostates were filled with hatred for St John, and they desired his ruin. The saint knew this, but was not afraid. He was willing to suffer for Christ. His desire for martyrdom was answered when the men who had accused him in Trikala saw him and made their accusation, which he vehemently denied.

On Great and Holy Friday he went to his spiritual Father and asked his blessing to seek martyrdom. The priest counselled the youth to examine himself and to prepare himself by fasting and prayer, so that at the time of torture he would not deny Christ. St John prayed ardently to the Lord to strengthen him. At night on Great and Holy Saturday he saw himself in a dream, standing in a fiery furnace and singing praises to the Lord. Interpreting this vision as an indication to go to martyrdom, St John received the Holy Mysteries and asked the priest's blessing.

When St John arrived at the market, the vexed tradesmen began to reproach him that he had promised to renounced Christ, but that he was not fulfilling his word. In reply, the martyr declared that he was a Christian and had never renounced, nor would he ever renounce Christ. He then climbed onto a minaret and began to chant "Christ is Risen!", since it was Pascha, and his voice echoed through the city. They sentenced the martyr to be burned alive that day.

St John met his sentence with joy on Pascha. When they led him to the blazing fire, he went boldly into the midst of the flames. A neighbor, who was afraid his house was going to burn down, ordered the fire be extinguished immediately, so they pulled John out half burned. They lit another fire elsewhere, but John ran towards it to throw himself in. However Greeks bribed the officers to have him killed quickly by beheading so he would not suffer so much, and they beheaded John with the sword (April 18, 1546). They then threw the martyr's head and body into the fire.

Christians gathered up the ashes and bones of the martyr which remained from the fire, and reverently buried him in the City. His skull is now in the Monastery of Varlaam on Meteora. There is also small portion of his relics at Panagia Eleousa Monastery and an icon of him at Philanthropos Monastery, both on the island in Ioannina Lake [pictured below].


HYMN OF PRAISE: THE HOLY MARTYR JOHN THE NEW

by St. Nikolai Velimirovich

John the Artisan, of honest craft,
His soul was as bright as a lump of gold,
By the teaching of Christ, wonderfully illumined,
And he prays to God: to wed him with suffering,
Oh Victorious Christ, Who for me was crucified,
From sinful darkness, cleanse me by suffering!
The shameful glory of a traitor, Oh do not give me,
But wed me with the sufferings of Your sufferers.
Prepare me for sufferings with Your Holy Spirit,
And allow sufferings and, to me direct them,
And You, Mother of God, of infinite mercy
Who, under the Honorable Cross of Your Son stood,
Pray for me at the time of my sufferings,
That, as an impregnable wall, I be firm.
Even you, O holy apostles, have mercy,
That the devil of the human race not prevail against me
Martyrs holy, my rejoicing,
Into your ranks, receive me also!
And now, torturers; traitors of God -
Yours is the sword and fire - here is my body!

Apolytikion in Tone Five
Let us praise with joy the holy new martyr John, for as a heavenly craftsman he fashioned for himself a martyr's crown which he offered to the Lord on Holy Pascha. Exalted for his faith, we now beg him to pray for us that our souls be saved.
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The Holy Myrrhbearers and Contemporary Christian Women


by S. V. Bulgakov

The diligence of the Holy Myrrhbearing Women is truly great and their fervent love for the Lord is constant. Free from every earthly predilection their hearts lived and breathed only for the Lord: all their thoughts, desires and hope were concentrated in Him and all their blessings and treasure consisted in Him. For the sake of their beloved Teacher they willingly leave their homes, their close and known relatives, forget the weakness of their gender, are not frightened by the cruelty of the numerous enemies of the Lord, steadily follow Him everywhere, long-sufferingly pass through the cities and villages with Him and minister to Him from their means. They do not abandon their beloved Teacher during His suffering and His death. Trailing behind with love, they accompany the Lord also to Golgotha and they look upon the Crucified One, taking measure of the compassionate feeling of His extreme suffering. Having disdained all the dangers of the frantic enemies of Christ, they finally come nearer, to His very cross and by their participation ease the unquenchable grief and illness of His All-pure Mother. Having fervently served the Lord with their means during His lifetime, they do not stop serving Him even after His death. According to their internal burning love of their Divine Teacher they will zealously render Him the final burial honor: the anointing of His body with aromatic spices (Mk. 15:40, 47, 16:1-2; Mt. 27:55; Lk. 23:28-31, 49-56, 24:1; Jn. 19:25). In a holy impulse to see and to visit the tomb of the Lord they forget about themselves, about their need for rest, do not remember the obstacles and dangers, and even the weakness of their gender does not stop them. Such is the true love of the holy women for the Lord. It is continual, pure and simple, deep and strong. The burning continual love, the sincerest unquenched diligence of the holy women was worthily rewarded by the Lord Himself. The Holy Myrrhbearing Women, who preceded every one to the tomb of the Lord, also went before everyone in the joy of the Resurrection (Mt. 28:1-10; Mk. 16:6; Lk. 24:1-11). From this time the holy women have become true witnesses equally with Holy Apostles to the resurrection of Christ for all the people.

The ardor and continual love of the Holy Myrrhbearers for the Lord also serves as an example for our love for Him. By the example of the holy women, we also should strengthen in our hearts the true self-denying love for our Savior. Even the strength of our love for Him should be like those, as the holy Apostle says, that nothing could separate us from Him, neither things present nor things to come, neither life nor death, neither angels nor men (Rom. 8:38-39). Besides this, in the example of the Holy Myrrhbearing Women the Holy Church presents a spiritual healing for all Christians tempted with sorrows, leading to depression. Like the holy women, wounded with fierce grief during the scene of their Lord and Savior, crucified on the cross and buried in a tomb, however searched for unique comfort in that tomb where all their happiness and life were hidden and found this desired comfort, so it is that each Christian soul should seek consolation in the sorrows and grief at the tomb and cross of the Savior.

Together with this, the life and labors of the Holy Myrrhbearing Women themselves represent an example of the true-Christian pursuit of the Christian woman. Her calling on earth is that this is according to privilege a life of the heart in all its lawful displays. An example of the Holy Myrrhbearers and the contemporary Christian woman is likewise called to serve the indigent from their means, to ease the situation of the disabled by their labor, comfort the sorrowful and the sick and, to care "not for the beauty of the body, not for the external braiding of the hair, not about gold finery and elegance in clothes, but about the secret heart of the person in the incorruptible beauty of the gentle and taciturn spirit, that is precious before God" (l Pet. 3:З-4; 1 Tim. 2:9, 12), i.e. about the development and improvement in the Christian spirit of internal spiritual qualities, especially of the good and loving heart.

(See Rukovodstvo dlia Seljskikh Pastirej (Manual for Village Pastors) 1892, 15; Smolenskiia Eparkhialniia Vestnik (Smolensk Diocesan Messenger), 1891, 9).

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Read also The Myrrhbearing Women and the Christian Women of Today by Elder Sofian (Boaghiu).
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Homily For the Sunday of The Myrrhbearing Women


by Saint Gregory Palamas

The resurrection of the Lord is the regeneration of human nature. It is the resuscitation and re-creation of the first Adam, whom sin led to death, and who because of death, again was made to retrace his steps on the earth from which he was made. The resurrection is the return to immortal life. Whereas no one saw that first man when he was created and given life—because no man existed yet at that time—woman was the first person to see him after he had received the breath of life by divine inbreathing. For after him, Eve was the first human being. Likewise no one saw the second Adam, who is the Lord, rise from the dead, for none of his followers were near by and the soldiers guarding the tomb were so shaken that they were like dead men. Following the resurrection, however, it was a woman who saw Him first before the others, as we have heard from Saint Mark’s Gospel today. "After his resurrection Jesus appeared on the morning of the Lord’s Day [Sunday] to Mary Magdalene first."

It seems that the Evangelist is speaking clearly about the time of the Lord’s resurrection - that it was morning - that he appeared to Mary Magdalene, and that he appeared to her at the time of the resurrection. But, if we pay some attention it will become clear that this is not what he says. Earlier in this passage, in agreement with the other Evangelists, Saint Mark says that Mary Magdalene had come to the tomb earlier with the other Myrrhbearing women, and that she went away when she saw it empty. Therefore, the Lord had risen much earlier on the morning on which she saw him. But wishing to fix the time more exactly, he doesn’t say simply “morning,” as is the case here, but “very early in the morning.” Thus the expression “and the rising of the sun” as used there refers to that time when the slightest light precedes from the east on the horizon. This is what Saint John also wants to indicate when he says that Mary Magdalene came to the tomb in the morning while it was still dark and saw the stone pulled away from it.

According to Saint John, she did not come to the tomb alone, even though she left the tomb without yet having seen the Lord. For she ran to Peter and John, and instead of announcing to them that the Lord was risen, told them that he had been taken from the tomb. Therefore, she did not yet know about the resurrection. It is not Mary Magdalene’s claim that Christ appeared to her first but that he appeared after the actual beginning of the day. There is, of course, a certain shadow covering this matter on the part of the Evangelists that I shall, through your love, uncover. The good news of the resurrection of Christ was received from the Lord first, before all others, by the Theotokos. This is truly meet and right. She was the first to see him after the resurrection and she had to joy to hear his voice first. Moreover, she not only saw him with her eyes and heard him with her ears but with her hands she was the first and only one to touch his spotless feet, even if the Evangelists do not mention these things clearly. They do not want to present the mother’s witness so as not to give the nonbelievers a reason to be suspicious. In that now my words about the joy of the risen one are directed to believers, the opportunity of this feast moves us to explain what is relative to the Myrrhbearers. Justification is given by him who said: There is nothing hidden that shall not be made known, and this also will be made known.

The Myrrhbearers are all those women who followed with the mother of the Lord, stayed with her during those hours of the salvific passion, and with pathos anointed him with myrrh. After Joseph and Nicodemos asked for and received the body of the Lord from Pilate, they took it down from the cross, wrapped it in a cloth with strong spices, placed it in a carved out tomb, and closed the door of the tomb with a large stone. The Myrrhbearers were close by and watched, and as the Evangelist Mark relates, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary were seated opposite the grave. With the expression “and the other Mary” he means the mother of Christ without a doubt. She was also called the mother of Iakovos [James] and Joses, who were the children of Joseph, her betrothed. It was not only they who were watching the entombment of the Lord but also the other women. As Saint Luke relates:

"And the women, also, who had come with him from Galilee, followed after, and beheld the sepulcher and how his body was laid. These women were Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of Iakovos, and the other women who were with them."

He writes that they went and bought spices and myrrh; for they did not yet clearly know that he is truly the perfume of life for those who approach him in faith, just as he is also the odor of death for those who remain unbelievers to the end. They did not yet clearly know that the odor of his clothes, the odor of his own body, is greater than all perfumes, that his name is like myrrh that is poured out to cover the world with his divine fragrance. For those who wanted to remain close by the body, the contrived an antidote of perfumes for the stench of decomposition and anointed it.

Thus they prepared the myrrh and the spices and rested on the Sabbath according to the commandment. For they had not yet experienced the true sabbath, nor did they understand that exceedingly blessed sabbath that transports us from the confines of hell to the perfection of the bright and divine heights of heaven. Saint Luke says that “on the first day of the week, very early in the morning,” they came to the sepulchre bearing the spices that they had prepared. And Saint Matthew says that those who came “late on the Sabbath towards the dawn of the Lord’s day” were two in number. Saint John says that it was only Mary Magdalene who came, and that it was “morning, even though it was still dark.” But Saint Mark says that three women came very early in the morning on the first day of the week. By ‘’the first day of the week” all the Evangelists mean the Lord’s Day [Sunday] and they use expressions like “late on the Sabbath,” ”early dawn,” ”early dawn,” “early morning,” “morning,” and “even though it was still dark” [to refer to the Lord’s Day which is Sunday]. They mean the daybreaking hour when the darkness fights with the light and the hour when the eastern part of the horizon begins to become light as it presages the day. Observing from afar, one sees the light changing colors in the east at about the ninth hour of the night, which colors remain until the fulfillment of the day three hours later. It seems that the Evangelists disagree some-what concerning both the time of the visits and the number of women [that are involved]. This is attributable to the fact that, as we said, the myrrhbearers were many; that they did not come to the sepulchre one time only but two and three times, and not always in the same groups; that all the visits were at dawn but not at exactly the same hour. Mary Magdalene also came by herself without the others and stayed longer. Each of the Evangelists, therefore, relates one journey of some of the women and leaves the others. Consequently, by comparing all the Evangelists—and I said this before–I conclude that the Theotokos was the first who came to the grave of her son and God, together with Mary Magdalene. We are informed of this by the Evangelist Matthew who said: "In the end of the sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulchre" (Matthew 28:1).

Mary Magdalene and the other Mary – who was, of course, the Mother of the Lord - went to look at the sepulchre. And behold there was a great earthquake: for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled back the stone from the door of the tomb and sat upon it. His countenance was like lightening and his raiment white as snow. And for fear of him the guards did shake and become like dead men.

The other women came after the earthquake and the flight of the guards, and found the grave open and the stone rolled back. The Virgin Mother, however, was there when the quake occurred, when the stone was rolled back, when the grave opened, and while the guards were there, even though they were completely shaken with fear. That is why the guards immediately thought of fleeing when they came to from the earthquake but the Mother of God rejoiced without fear at what she saw. I believe that the life-bearing grave opened first for her. For her and by her grace all things were revealed for us, everything that is in heaven above and on the earth below. For her sake the angel shone so brightly so that, even though it was still dark, she saw by means of the bright angelic light not only the empty grave but also the burial garments carefully arranged and in an orderly fashion, thereby witnessing in many ways to the resurrection of the one who was entombed. He was, after all, that same angel of the Annunciation, Gabriel; he watched her proceed rapidly towards the grave and immediately descended. He who in the beginning had told her “fear not, Mary, you have found grace with God,” now directs the same exhortation to the Ever Virgin. He came to announce the resurrection from the dead to her who, with seedless conception, gave him birth; to raise the stone, to reveal the empty grave and the burial garments, so that in this manner the good news would be verified for her. He writes: "And the angel answered the women and said: fear not. Do you seek the Christ whom they crucified? He is risen. Here is the place where the Lord was placed. If you see the soldiers overcome with fear, do not be afraid. I know that you seek the Christ whom they crucified. He is risen. He is not here. For not only can He not be held by the keys, the bars, and the seals of hell, of death, and of the grave, but he is even the Lord of the immortal angels of heaven, and the only Lord of the whole world. See the place where the Lord lay. Go quickly and tell his disciples that he is risen from the dead." And they departed, he says, with fear and great joy. At this point I am of the opinion that Mary Magdalene and the other women who had come up to that point were still frightened. For they did not understand the meaning of the angel’s powerful words nor could they contain to the end the power of the light so as to see and understand with exactitude. But I think that the Mother of God made this great joy her own, since she comprehended the words of the angel. Her whole person radiated from the light in that she was all pure and full of divine grace. She firmly appropriated all these signs and the truth and she believed the archangel, since, of course, he formerly had shown himself to be worthy of trust for her in other matters. And why shouldn’t the Virgin understand with divine wisdom. what had occurred in that she observed the events at first hand? She saw the great earthquake and the angel descending from heaven like lightening, she saw the guards fall as dead men, the removal of the stone, the emptying of the tomb, and the great miracle of the burial garments which were kept in place by smyrna and aloes, even though they contained no body. In addition to all of these things, she saw the joyous countenance of the angel and heard his joyful message. But Mary Magdalene, in responding to the annunciation, acted as if she had not heard the angel at all–he had not in fact spoken directly to her. She testifies only to the emptying of the tomb and says nothing about the burial garments, but runs directly to Peter and to the other disciples, as Saint John says. The Mother of God went back to the tomb again when she met the other women and, as Saint Matthew says, behold Jesus met them and told them to rejoice.

So you see that even before Mary Magdalene, the Mother of God saw Him who for our salvation suffered and was buried and rose again in the flesh.

And they approached, touched his feet and worshipped him.

Just as the Theotokos alone under-stood the power of the angelic words–even if she heard the good news of the resurrection together with Mary Magdalene–when she met her son and God with the other women she saw and recognized the risen one before all the other women. And falling down, she touched his feet and became his apostle to his apostles. We learn from Saint John that Mary Magdalene was not with the Mother of God when, on her return to the sepulchre, she encountered the Lord. He writes:

"She runs to Peter Simon and the other disciple whom Jesus loved and tells them: they have taken the Lord from the tomb and we don’t know where they have put him."

If she had seen and touched him with her hands and heard him speak, how could she say the words “they have taken him and placed him elsewhere, and we don’t know where?” But after Peter and John ran to the grave and saw the burial clothes and returned, Saint John says that Mary Magdalene was standing near the tomb and crying.

You see that not only had she not yet seen him but neither had she been informed of the resurrection. And when the angels that appeared asked her “why are you crying, woman,” she again answered as if she thought that he was dead. Thus when, upon turning, she saw Jesus and still did not understand, she answered his question “why do you weep” in the same manner. Not until he called her by her name and showed her that he was the same did she understand. Then, when she also fell down before him wishing to kiss his feet, she heard him say: “Don’t touch me.” From this we understand that when he appeared previously to his mother and to the women who accompanied her, he allowed only his mother to touch his feet, even if Matthew makes this a common concession to all the women. He did not wish, for the reason we mentioned in the beginning, to suddenly present the appearance of the mother into the issue. It was the Ever Virgin Mary who came to the grave first and she was the first to receive the good news of the resurrection. Many women then gathered and they also saw the stone rolled back and heard the angels, but they were separated on their return. As Saint Mark says, since they were afraid, some of the women left the tomb in a frightened and ecstatic state without saying anything to anyone. Other women followed the Mother of the Lord and because they happened to be with her they saw and heard the Lord. Mary Magdalene left to go to Peter and John, and with them was returning to the grave. And even though they left, she stayed and she also was made worthy to see the Lord and to be sent by him to the apostles. Thus, as Saint John says, she again comes to them shouting to all that she had seen the Lord and that he had told her these things.

And Saint Mark says that this appearance happened in the morning, the indisputable beginning of the day, when the dawn had passed. But he does not contend that the resurrection of the Lord occurred at that time, nor that it was his first appearance. Therefore, we have information concerning the Myrrhbearers that is exact and the general agreement of the four Evangelists as a higher confirmation. But even with all that they had heard on the same day of the resurrection from the Myrrhbearers, from Peter, and even from Luke and Cleopas that the Lord lives and that they had seen him, the disciples showed disbelief. That is why He castigates them when he appeared to all of them gathered together. When, however, he showed them many times through the witness of many that he was alive, not only did they all believe but they preached it everywhere.

Their voice poured out on all the earth and their words spread to the ends of the earth; and the Lord worked with them and confirmed his word by signs that accompanied it. For until the teaching is preached to all the earth, the signs were indispensable. Exceptional signs were needed to represent and certify the truth of the message. But excellent signs are not needed for those who accept the word through firm belief. Who are these [who have firm belief]? They are those whose deeds bear witness [to their faith]. ‘’Show me your faith in your deeds,” he says. “Who is faithful? Let him manifest it with the deeds of his good life.” For who will believe that he who commits wicked acts and is oriented to the earth and material things has a true, exalted, great, and heavenly under-standing which is, so to speak, exactly what piety is? Brethren, what does it profit a man to say that he has divine faith if he does not have deeds analogous to the faith? What did the lamps profit the foolish maidens when they had no oil, in other words, the deeds of love and of compassion? What did it profit that rich man who, when he was burning in the unquenchable flame because of his indifference to Lazarus, invoked the father of Abraham? What did it profit that a man to accept an invitation to the divine wedding and that incorruptible bridal chamber when he did not have a suitable garment of good deeds? Of course, in so much as he believed anyway, he received an invitation and went to sit amongst those holy ones who were at the banquet. But he also received the examination and was ashamed because he was clothed in the wickedness of his attitude and works, through which his hands and feet were tied and he was lowered to Gehenna where wailing and gnashing of teeth reverberates. May no one who has the name of Christ experience [such a thing]. Rather let us all manifest a life analogous with the faith and enter the bridal chamber of unstained joy and eternal life with the saints, which is the resting place of all who perceive the true joy.

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