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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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Thursday, June 2, 2011

The Ascension of Our Lord, God, and Savior Jesus Christ


By Protopresbyter George Dion Dragas, PhD, DD, DTh[1]

"And while he was blessing them, he departed and started to ascend to heaven" (Luke 24:51).

The Ascension as the pinnacle of the Feasts of the Lord: How bright and wonderful is this Feast! It is the pinnacle of all the Feasts of the Lord, because with it the sacred and saving purpose of the Divine Incarnation and Inhomination of the Word of God is completed. For what purpose did the Son and Word of God become man, and underwent the passion, the death, the resurrection…and the ascension? All these events took place so that the human nature might not remain below on the earth, but be raised to heaven, become deified and glorified according to the Creator’s original design. This, then, was the purpose for which the Son of God condescended to assume within his super-godly person (hypostasis) our human nature, which had fallen from its original condition, in order to renew it with his Crucifixion and Resurrection and to raise it to the heavenly heights with his glorious Ascension, presenting it to God the Father as the super-brilliant trophy of his victory.

The Ascension as the triumph of the human nature: At the Ascension of Christ God the Father accepted the first-fruits of our humanity, and was well pleased not only for the worthiness of Him who offered it, but also for the purity of the offering. This, then, is the perfect victory against sin. This is the triumph of the human nature. The human nature could not have descended to a lower point than that at which it arrived after the fall of Adam, but neither could ascend to a higher point than that at which the New (or Last) Adam raised it with his Ascension!

The Ascension as the final benefit offered by God to man: What mind could grasp the real dimensions of this event? The forsaken and feeble human nature, the nature which run away from God and was exiled from paradise, the low, miserable, condemned and captured nature of human beings becomes today more glorious than that of the angels, is made to sit with Christ at the bosom of the Father and is worshiped by every visible and invisible creation! What language could praise the magnitude of this celebration, or to present worthily the enormity of the beneficence of God to human beings? Today the entry into the longed for paradise, the heavenly Jerusalem, is opened to Adam’s exiled descendants. Today, the restoration of the new Israel in the Promised Land is accomplished.

The Ascension as the final victory of Christ for man: Today, on the Mount of Olives Heaven and earth kiss each other and angels and human beings are united. Here the chorus of the Apostles greets their sweet Teacher with joy on his departure from them, and the Orders of the Angels salute the King of the Heavens with ineffable elation and joy. Here the captivity, which the victor of death captivated with his ascension to the heights, i.e. the souls of the just who have been redeemed, have their eyes on their Redeemer with feelings of exhilaration and joy. Here also, His Mother, the most pure Virgin, greets and sends off her beloved Son who is ascending into Heaven, where God the Father welcomes his Only-begotten Son and makes him sit on his right. Here too, at the prestigious Mount of Olives, we are called to ascend with our minds and become eye-witnesses to the great and wondrous events which take place, having as our guide Luke the theologian, who alone among the Evangelists narrates with brevity but also with priestly and solemn fashion the glorious Ascension of our Lord and God and Savior Jesus Christ.

Why did the Ascension take place 40 days after and not immediately after the Resurrection? The leader of life, who loosened the bonds of death by his Resurrection, met with his disciples for 40 days and confirmed his Resurrection to them by means of several proofs. He did not ascend into heaven on the day he rose again, because such an event would have raised doubts and questions. Had he done that, many of the unbelievers would be in a position to project the argument that the Resurrection was one more dream of pious aspirations which easily emerge and more easily disappear. For this reason, then, Christ remained for 40 days on the earth, and appeared to his disciples repeatedly, showing them the marks of his wounds, explaining to them the prophesies which he fulfilled in his life and sufferings as man, and even eating with them.

Why did the Risen Christ eat broiled fish and honey? The Gospel for today’s Feast tells us that the Risen Christ asked for and ate “a piece of broiled fish and from honey of a honeycomb” (Luke 24:42). Why is this detail mentioned? According to the church tradition this detail has a very important allegorical meaning. As regards the fish, we know that although it lives in the salty sea, it is not salty, but sweet. In the same manner Christ, who lived in the ‘salty sea of sin’ of this world, “he did not commit any sin, and no guile was found in his mouth” (Is. 53:9). Also, Christ remained even more voiceless than the fish when he endured his saving passion and received unheard-of torture and unmentionable insult. As regards the honey and the beeswax, we know that the honey is sweet and the beeswax is illuminative, and for this reason they are considered to be symbols of the spiritual pleasure and illumination which the Risen Christ transmits to the faithful. Also, honey and beeswax symbolize, the former, the cure of the great bitterness of sin which is symbolized by the gall that was offered to the Lord at his passion and, the latter, the diluteness of the dense darkness of sin which was symbolized by the darkness which took place at the Lord’s crucifixion.

Why did the Ascension take place on the Mount of Olives? Once Christ had confirmed his Resurrection from the dead to his disciples through his mellifluous teaching, and enlightened their minds and warmed their hearts by his presence, he led them on the 40th day after the Resurrection to the Mount of Olives which lies east of Jerusalem. The Ascension ought to take place from this Mount, because according to an ancient tradition, it is here that the Lord will return bodily and with glory on the last Day when he will judge the world. It is here that the righteous will receive the great mercy and here also that the sinners will grieve with an inconsolable lamentation. These two opposite conditions of humanity are denoted by the name of this Mount, because its peaks are called Mount of Olives and its foot Valley of Wailing. This is also what was pre-signified by the oracle of the prophet Zachariah which explicitly states:

Why the Apostles and the Theotokos had to be present at that time? The Lord led his disciples on this Mount and the Theotokos who gave birth to him as man, so that they could see with their own eyes his glorious Ascension. His Mother after the flesh had to be present at that great glorification of her Son, so that she who had been gravely wounded in her soul for his passion above all others, might commensurably rejoice by seeing her Son ascending into heaven with glory, being worshiped as God by the Angels and being seated on the throne of the Most High above all principalities and authorities. The divine Apostles had to be there also, that might become eye-witnesses of the Lord’s Ascension, be informed that their Divine Teacher who is now ascending into heaven, had initially come down from there and that he will wait for them there as the true Son of God and Savior of the world.

How did this utterly unfamiliar and unique event of the Ascension of Christ occur? They had already arrived at the middle peak of the Mount. The city of Jerusalem stretched in front of them. The hole where the Cross had stood was still open. So was also the entrance to the Grave of the Savior, since the great stone that had been used to seal it was still lying on the ground. And then, the Savior turns his back to the ungrateful city of Jerusalem and his glance looks to the East, as David joyfully sings in one of his psalms: “Sing to the Lord who is going up to the heaven of the heaven towards the East” (Psalm 67:34). And as he takes leave of his Disciples he raises his immaculate hands and blesses them for the last time – those hands with which he recreated the man whom he created at the beginning, and which he stretched on the cross out of love for humanity and united those that had been severed, i.e. those which had been diversified. Just as the eyes of the disciples could not be satisfied enough in seeing the divine and mellifluent face of their Lord, suddenly he began to ascend into heaven. Their glance remained nailed, as it were, on that paradoxical and inexplicable display of the bodily Ascension of the Lord, until he was concealed by the luminous cloud.

How utterly unfamiliar and unique was the majesty of this Ascension! Elijah had also ascended into heaven, as Scripture relates; but this ascension took place by means of a fiery chariot and fiery horses, because Elijah was a mere man and needed help in order to ascend above the earth. Christ, however, was a God-man and ascended by himself, by virtue of his own omnipotence. As regards that cloud, it had to do with the Holy Spirit, just as it happened with the transfiguration of Christ. Just as his descend and becoming man were wrought “through the Holy Spirit, according to the message of Archangel Gabriel” (“The Spirit of the Lord will come upon you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you,” Luke 1:35), so now he “co-ascends” with him (the Holy Spirit) because He follows him and coexists with him, being coessential (“homoousion”) with him and being worship and glorified with him.

Why were those two anthropomorphic and white-dressed Angels sent? While the holy Apostles were gazing with astonishment at the heavenly sight, two men appeared to them dressed in white garments. These two men were angels, who had assumed a human form in order to avoid scaring the disciples. They were dressed in white so that their chastity might be manifest, as well as the enlightening and joyous message which they were sent to deliver. They were sent by Christ on his Ascension, in order to console them at the moment of their sorrow for his departure, but also to enlighten them that their Lord who is now invisible is seating at the right side of God the Father and that he will descend on the earth once again in order to judge all human beings, the living and the dead.

What is the message of the Angels dressed in white? “Men of Galilee,” they told them, “why do you stand with your gaze ailed on the sky?” This Jesus, whom you see today being taken up, will return to judge the world and his return will be the same with his Ascension.” In other words, he will come from heaven wearing the same immaculate Body, which he assumed from the bloods of the pure Virgin, and which will bear upon it the marks from the wounds which he received at his passion. Right now it is only you who see him ascending to heaven, but when he returns, all the races of the earth will see him descending from there with glory upon the clouds. His glorious condescension will become the cause of blessedness and joy for those who lived righteously. For the sinners, however, it will be the cause of sorrow and calamity.

What was the impact of the Ascension for the Apostles and the small flock of the first Church? Having heard this message, the Apostles worshiped the Savior on his Ascension and, then, joyfully returned to Jerusalem. Their joy was great, because they had definitely learned that their divine Teacher was true God who ascended into heaven, not because he abandoned the earth, but in order to unite it with heaven. Their joy was also great because they received the blessing of their Savior on his Ascension. It was with this blessing that the numerically small Church of the disciples greatly increased its numbers in a relatively short space of time and, having received the grace of the Spirit, was established as the great Church throughout the earth.

What was the impact of the Ascension on the orders of the Angels in heaven? While these things occurred on the earth because of the Ascension, the Angels mounted a great celebration in heaven. The Angels which served the Savior on the earth and now accompanied him on his ascension called out the orders above to open the heavenly gates for the King of Glory to enter in. As David sings, “Lift up your heads, O gates, and be lifted up, O ancient doors, that the King of Glory may come in” (Ps. 23:7). Since through his saving passion Christ the Savior became more glorious and highly exalted –as the Apostle Paul actually puts it, “Having humbled himself and having become obedient unto death, indeed a death by crucifixion, God exalted him highly and granted him the name which is above all” (Phil. 2:9) –for this reason the gates of heaven ask to become higher in order to welcome him more fittingly. Also, because the glory of the victor of Hades and death, which could not be contained by the small space of the earth, but filled the heavens, the Angels ask that they too be expanded on his appearance! At the same time, the heavenly hierarchies of the Angels, seeing the human body to be transferred above them, were seized by dazzle and amazement; because, just as a human being is seized by amazement of fear on seeing an angel on the earth, so the bodiless Angels, seeing a body to be raised on a cloud, seek with amazement to learn about this paradoxical display, and to be twice assured about the identity of this King of Glory. Hearing, then, that he is the Lord, who is powerful in battles, who fought the devil and defeated him and who is now ascending into heaven, they wonder how this superbly luminous body is dressed in royal purple and ask, “Who is this that comes from Edom, in crimsoned garments from Bosor, who is glorious in his apparel” (Is. 63:1)? In other words, who is this earthly person, who comes wearing a flesh which is like a superbly bright, royal purple dress? Because, Edom means earthly and Bosor means flesh, and the point of reference here is the glorified Body of Christ the King which appeared to be red in his Ascension into heaven due to the marks of the wounds on his immaculate side, his hands and his feet.

Why were the marks from the wounds retained on the Risen Body of Christ? How was it that the wounds on that incorruptible body were visible? This was a matter of economy, and its purpose was to manifest the ineffable and excelling love for man of the God-man. He consented not only to receive these wounds, but also to retain them after his Resurrection on his incorruptible body in a paradoxical manner and to show them on his Ascension to the world of the Angels as the symbols of his passion and as the indelible proofs of his love for us human beings. In addition, he retained the wounds of his incorruptible body, in order to persuade us that we should never forget his passion, but keep it always before us, so that our heart might overflow with gratitude and sacred feelings towards him. Northing else, says St. John Chrysostom, can beget inside us these saving results as seeing God carrying the traces of the Cross as far as the throne of his Majesty. According to St. Augustine, the God-man preserved his wounds in heaven in order to show that he will not forget us even in the condition of his glory –which, in any case, is also affirmed by the head-prophet: “Behold on my hands I inscribed your walls, so that they remain in front of me for ever“ (Is. 49:16). In other words, he will never forsake us, because he has written our names on his hands and will intercede for us before God the Father. He may have also retained his wounds in order to teach us that only through sufferings and sorrows will be able to enter the kingdom of heaven. If the God-man was exalted through suffering crucifixion, and if he was glorified by an ignominious death, then, how can we enter into this glory without walking on the narrow path of virtue, and without enduring sorrows and temptations in fighting the good fight? This is quite impossible.

The Ascension as a universal joy embracing heaven and earth. We see, then, that in today’s Feast of the Ascension of Christ, the joy is universal because it extends to both heaven and earth. The Angels rejoice in heaven, because they welcome their King. Human beings also jubilate on the earth, because their entry into the heavenly Jerusalem is now allowed. “All nations clap your hands, shout with a loud voice of elation unto God” (Ps. 46:2). Let us rejoice today, on the day of universal joy, seeing our Lord ascending where he was not before and opening once for all the gates of the heavens so that our human nature, which he bought with his most precious blood, may enter in with him. What a great comfort this is in our hearts, seeing Him who became for us life and light, faithful friend and powerful protector, who truly loved us and shed his Blood for us, and sat at the throne of the Godhead, and gave us the assurance that he will come again sometime in the future in order to take us there too! He himself gave us with his Ascension the confirmation of this truth and the living hope that we too will ascend there and we will never again be separated from him. Our union with him will be like that of the members of a body with its head, since we are the members of his body and he is the Head of us all. If he was resurrected bodily, we too will be resurrected bodily if we so wish. If he was glorified which being in the flesh, we too will be glorified with the flesh and will walk there, where our Lord is, provided that we behave prudently.

The implications of the Ascension of Christ for the Christians:

a) Christians ought to be united with Christ, loving him and keeping his commandments. Since the joy for the gifts of Christ granted to us is true, and the hope that we too will enter into that dwelling place of light and live the blessed life is also assured, we ought to be united with him already in this life, knowing that he is the source of light and life. There is no other way for us to achieve this, except to love him with all our soul, and to keep his saving commandments. When we do this we become God’s dwelling place and begin to experience the true joy of life, recognizing the benefits of his grace and realizing that our joy will be completed when we too participate in his ascension and the glory of his presence and co-reign with him for ever. And this is not all, because we will also sit on the throne of his divine Majesty, as this was explicitly revealed by the truthful mouth of our Savior, which said: “To him who wins, I will grant him to sit with me at my throne, just I won and sat with my Father at his throne” (Rev. 3:21). This is the glory that we will receive if we conquer the passions. We will rise and arrive where the Savior led today his nature, which is related to us, namely, his human bodily existence.

b) Christians ought to live on earth as citizens of heaven. Who, then, would deny, that even if we had a thousand souls and lives, and had to suffer a thousand deaths, would should accept these with absolute eagerness, in order to enjoy even one day of that ineffable glory? Which earthly benefit could constrain our hearts on this earth, which our Savior left, since our citizenship is in heaven and since the ineffable glory awaits us there? Our Lord ascended into heaven, and we here can follow him, remaining united with him through faith and virtue. Certainly, much labor is required of us if we are to ascend to that great height. We are encouraged, however, by the fact that our Lord who ascended there supplies us with strength so that we can succeed. The only thing that he expects of us is to have a willing disposition, and he admonishes us to turn a deaf ear to anything earthly, so that we can be more transportable in our journey above. This means that we are called to leave earthly things on the earth, and to take off our coats of skin, which we put on account of our sin. As the Prophet Elijah threw off his woolskin when the time came for him to ascend to heaven, so should we shake off every agonizing, material endeavor and be detached from a servile attachment to the earth, so that we can easily ascend to the heavenly places. How can we worthily prepare ourselves to rise to the clouds and to go out to meet with our Lord, when he comes with all his royal glory? On that great and celebrated Day, all human beings will be resurrected. Not all of them will be snatched by clouds to go out to meet the Lord in the air. This will happen only to those who kept the commandments of Christ and loved him with all their heart (I Thess. 4:16-17); because only these Christians will be deemed worthy to enjoy such a glory, and only to them will be granted to enjoy that eternal and ineffable blessedness.

The true celebration of the Feast of the Ascension of Christ. Today’s happy Feast of the Ascension of our Lord invites us all who wish to celebrate it truly to do what the holy Apostles did after the Ascension. They worshiped their Teacher on his ascension and returned to Jerusalem (Luke 24:52), i.e. to the house of peace (because this is the meaning of the name Jerusalem). Likewise, we too should return to our homes and make peace with all. The Apostles were in the temple glorifying God and waiting for the descent of the Holy Spirit (verse 53). We should thank our Savior because he gave us the opportunity to celebrate his Ascension and to beseech him from the depths of our heart to make us worthy to celebrate the holy Pentecost as well and be renewed with the grace of the Holy Spirit. It is with this grace that we shall be able to continue the struggle for virtue and to do works which are worthy of our heavenly calling and finally to enter into the great joy of the coming of our Lord.

1. This sermon is based on a Greek text which I found in a damaged Greek book of sermons on the Major Feasts of our Church and bearing the title Εορτοδρόμιον.

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The Glorious Ascension of Our Lord and the Prayer of the Heart


The Glorious Ascension of Our Lord: A Guide to the Neptic Activity of Prayer of the Heart

COME, all ye feast-loving Faithful! Let us spiritually celebrate, with enthusiasm and clapping our hands, the marvelous ascent of our Lord and God and Savior from the earth to Heaven.

Today we celebrate the most glorious “Epilogue to the most exquisitely beautiful, most salutary, and universal discourse of the Economy of God the Word for our sake.”1

Now is the time of ineffable gladness and jubilation, because our corruptible and mortal nature ascends in Christ, incorruptible and immortal and with indescribable glory, to Heaven.

“Let us radiantly rejoice and let us celebrate, reflecting that our substance, which descended into the abyss of Hades, ascends today above the Angels, Archangels, and Principalities; above the Authorities and Powers and Dominions; above the Seraphim, Cherubim, and the Thrones.”2

Let us take godly delight in that Christ our Savior, having raised our erring nature together with His own Divine Flesh, lifted it on His shoulders; and, having ascended, “goes”3 to offer it to God the Father with God-befitting joy and to seat it “on the right hand of the Majesty on high,” “at the right hand of the Throne of God.”4

And together with the God-inspired Hymnographer of Damascus, let us chant from the heart and with compunction:

“By the power of Thy Cross, O Christ, do Thou make steadfast mine understanding, that I may hymn and glorify Thy saving Ascension.”5

* * *

BUT WHY should our “understanding” be made steadfast by the power of the Cross and not of the Resurrection? Because the glory of the Ascension came after the abasement, the Cross, and the Passion:

“He humbled Himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted Him and given Him a Name which is above every name.”6

Thus will it turn out for those who love Christ: “All who have crucified sin through repentance and the evangelic life before death” will become partakers of the glorious Ascension of our Lord, says St. Gregory Palamas.7

And why should our “understanding” be made steadfast and not our tongue or our lips? Because repentance and the keeping of the holy commandments of our Lord call for unceasing vigilance; that is, watchfulness, force, and preparedness:

“Let your loins be girded about, and your lights burning.”8

The Neptic Fathers say that the “noetic loins and waist are the mind of man,” which “bears the entire burden of the soul.”9

The Holy Apostle Paul enjoins us: “Stand, having your loins girt about with truth”:10 to gird our noetic “loins,” that is, our “mind,” “as much with the truth of right dogma and faith as with the truth of our virtuous life.”11

But the Holy Apostle Peters also most clearly exhorts us:

“Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the Grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”12

Our “understanding,” that is, our “mind,” which is the governor and emperor of the passions, must not be “loose” and “ungirded,” or be diffused by means of the five senses and passionately attach itself to vain and sensible things, defiled and sinning and darkened.

On the contrary, the governing “mind” must put on a “girdle,” be tightened and restrained. And what is the “girdle” of the “mind” and “understanding”?
The Neptic Fathers tell us that the “girdle” is “attention and the forcible return of the mind to the heart.”14

“Bind tightly,” they exhort us, “and gather your entire mind in your heart with mighty force and great strength.” “With attention, as if with a girdle, and with the holding of the breath, one must bind one’s mind tightly” and keep it in the heart, “without contemplating any sensible or noetic object, but solely the Name of God and of Jesus Christ through noetic prayer and prayer of the heart.”15

* * *

PRECISELY for this reason, the Holy Damascene entreats Christ: “By the power of Thy Cross, O Christ, do Thou make steadfast mine understanding.”16

For, when our “understanding,” when our “mind,” is “made steadfast” in the neptic activity of the Prayer of the Heart, then we will be noetically illumined by the Light of the Comforter; “and we are sure to acquire the Divine illumination in our heart, abiding enhypostatically within us, for the illumination of the Holy Spirit, according to the Neptic Fathers, is called hypostatic light, which is both personal and enhypostatic, since it abides in those who are illumined.”17

And by this “enhypostatic” illumination “abiding in our heart,” we may perhaps at some point be vouchsafed, by the Grace of God, to be caught up in revelations of the Divine and unutterable Mysteries of the Future Age.

This, then, “is the order and the way: firstly, the mind and heart must be cleansed; secondly, they must be illumined; and, thirdly, the mind must be caught up in God. For without the enhypostatic illumination of the heart, it is impossible for the mind to be caught up in God.”

* * *

ALL YE who love the feasts and Christ, let us celebrate the Ascension of our Savior! “Gird up the loins of your mind”; let us be vigilant! And praying in the heart, let us accept the enhypostatic illumination! And thus may we become participants of the most glorious Ascension of our Lord!

Notes
1. St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite, Ἑορτοδρόμιον [Commentary on the Great Feasts], p. 455.
2. Ibid.
3. St. John 16:28.
4. Hebrews 1:3 and 12:2.
5. First Canon of the Ascension, Ode Three.
6. Philippians 2:8-9.
7. St. Gregory Palamas, Patrologia Græca, Vol. CLI, col. 296C.
8. St. Luke 12:35.
9. St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite, “Interpretation” of Ephesians 6:14.
10. Ephesians 6:14.
11. See note 9.
12. I St. Peter 1:13.
13. St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite, “Interpretation” of Ephesians 6:14 and I St. Peter 1:13, on the basis of St. Gregory Palamas.
14. Ibid.
15. See note 5.
16. St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite, Ἑορτοδρόμιον, pp. 643-644.
17. Ibid.

Source: Ἅγιος Kυπριανός, No. 320 (May-June 2004), pp. 41-42.
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Righteous Martyr Pachomios the New (+ 1730)

St. Pachomios the New Martyr (Feast Day - May 7 and Ascension Day)

The holy New Martyr Pachomios was from Little Russia, and was captured by Muslim Tatars who made him a slave. He was taken to Usaki, near the ancient city of Philadelphia in Asia Minor, where he was sold to a Muslim tanner.

While teaching Pachomios his occupation, the tanner also tried to instruct the young man in the Islamic religion and convert him. Although Pachomios was eager to learn his new master's trade, he had no desire to become a Muslim. Since he would not deny Christ, he was sometimes beaten and denied food.

This faithful warrior of Christ lived for twenty-seven years as a slave, working for his master in the tannery. The tanner was so pleased by the work of his servant that he offered to give him his own daughter in marriage and make him his heir, even though the righteous one would not convert to Islam. Since he would have to become a Muslim in order to marry the tanner's daughter and to inherit anything from him, Pachomios declined the offer. Impressed by the principled stand of his servant, he freed him and told him that he could go wherever he wished.

St Pachomios became ill just before he was to leave his master. Some Muslims spread the rumor that he had already denied Christ and accepted their religion. Due to his illness they did not circumcise him, but dressed him in green clothing such as Muslims wear. Christians were not permitted to wear green. When he recovered Pachomios traveled to Smyrna and became a merchant.

After some time had passed, the saint discarded his Muslim clothes and went to St Paul's Monastery on Mount Athos. There he met Hieromonk Joseph, confessed the secrets of his heart to him, and told him he wished to become a monk. He lived with Elder Joseph for the next twelve years living the monastic life, and acquiring the virtues.

After hearing of St Akakios of Kavsokalyvia (April 12), he transferred there and became a disciple of Elder Akakios. For six years he devoted himself to the life of unceasing prayer, and became the very type and paradigm of a virtuous monk.

Day by day, the desire to become a martyr for Christ grew within him, because he feared that he might have spoken a careless word and denied the Lord when he was sick and not in his right mind. St Akakios tried to persuade him not to follow this course, because he thought that this desire might have arisen from Pachomios's pride.

St Akakios did not want to let Pachomios go, and so he decided to test his resolve. For the next year, he imposed various rules and obediences on him, and both of them prayed that God would make His will known to them. They also consulted the most virtuous Fathers on the Holy Mountain, who all agreed that Pachomios should be blessed to leave the monastery and to seek martyrdom. He removed his monastic garb and dressed in the clothes of an ordinary Christian. He did this so that his actions would not lead to reprisals against the Athonite monasteries.

Accompanied by Elder Joseph, Pachomios returned to Usaki, the site of his supposed denial of Christ. Elder Joseph stayed at an inn, while Pachomios went to the home of his former master, and then walked through the marketplace, hoping to be recognized. It did not take long for him to be arrested and brought before the kadi. He was charged with accepting Islam, and then returning to the Christian faith, a "crime" which was punishable by death. His accusers pointed to the saint's Christian clothing as evidence. "Behold what sort of garments he is wearing," they shouted.

The kadi told Pachomius that he was not allowed to wear Christian garb, because he had previously denied Christ. He urged Pachomios to go back to being a Muslim, or to be put to death. With resolute courage, St Pachomios replied that he abhorred their religion, and that he would never deny the Savior. Furthermore, he declared that he was quite willing to endure any torture, and to die for Christ many times over, if such a thing were possible.

The holy one was thrown into prison, where he was deprived of food, sleep, and also of any sort of comfort. During this time he was sustained only by his trust in the Lord. After three days, he was sentenced to death. The martyr rejoiced, and told the kadi to carry out the sentence without delay.

Bound and dragged to the place of execution, St Pachomios was cursed and spat upon by some of the Turks in the crowd, while others urged him to return to Islam. As the holy athlete of Christ knelt for his beheading, even the executioner entreated him to save himself by accepting the Muslim religion. St Pachomios remained firm in his resolve, and told the executioner to do as he was ordered without delay. The victorious martyr was beheaded on May 7, 1730 (which happened to be the Feast of the Ascension), thereby receiving an incorruptible crown from Christ.

The body of St Pachomios remained exposed to the elements for three days, and then the Orthodox were granted permission to bury him. After the burial, the executioner was possessed by demons, and ran through the city, shouting and foaming at the mouth. He died a few days afterward.

Elder Joseph left the inn where he was hiding, and went to the place where the saint's body was. He spoke to St Pachomios as if he were still alive. "My dear Pachomios", he said, "you have achieved what you desired. Intercede with the Lord for me, and for all who call upon you."

Father Joseph was troubled at the thought of trying to leave the area without being captured. St Pachomios appeared to him in a dream and said, "Do not be afraid, O Elder, for no harm shall come to you." Trusting in the words of the saint, he left the city and went back to the Holy Mountain without any trouble.

A local Christian woman, who had been suffering from severe headaches for many years, prayed to St Pachomios and asked for his help. She placed some of his blood on her head, and she was healed. She wrote to the monks on Mount Athos, asking them to paint an icon of the martyr for her. Since they had known him when he lived there, they remembered how he looked, and were able to paint the icon. The woman received the icon, and reverently honored the memory of St Pachomios every year on the anniversary of his martyrdom.

Later, his holy relics were taken to the Monastery of St John on the island of Patmos. On January 26, 1953, with the blessing of the Ecumenical Patriarch, the Monastery of St John gave a piece of the relics of St Pachomios to the Monastery of St Paul on Mount Athos, where the saint had lived for a time.

Through the prayers of the holy New Martyr Pachomios, may we also be accounted worthy of the Kingdom of Heaven.


Apolytikion in the Third Tone
Your godly life was made radiant by the trials of holy martyrdom, O glorious, righteous Martyr Pachomios. Through your ascetical deeds you shone forth on Athos and shed your blood as an Athlete. Intercede with the Lord Who has glorified you that He may grant us His great mercy.

Kontakion in the Fourth Tone
You became illustrious on Athos through your ascetic life and later excelled in martyrdom. For you were given wings by your love for God, O divinely-wise Martyr, glorious Pachomios.

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Synaxis of Panagia Chrisopigi of Sifnos

Panagia Chrisopigi (Feast Day - Ascension Day)

On the road leading to Platy Gialos there emerges the sacred rock of Chrisopigi. This is one of the most beautiful and famous landscapes of the island of Sifnos: a small bridge connects the island with Sifnos, and on the rock is the majestic Monastery which dates to the 16th century.

Inside the Monastery is housed the miraculous icon of Panagia Chrisopigi (Golden Spring).

According to folk tradition, centuries ago there lived nuns in the Monastery of Panagia Chrysopigi, who preserved the Monastery and lived in cells. In a raid on the island, while most of the nuns managed to flee from the attackers, one of them stayed behind at the Monastery. Pursued by pirates, the nun asked Panagia Chrysopigi to save her. Responding to the nuns prayer, the Virgin Mary divided the bay in two, creating a schism, throwing the invaders into the sea. The schism is the hallmark of Chrisopigi where a strip of sea separates the bay from the mainland.

Panagia Chrysopigi was declared the patroness of the island in 1964 with more than 35 miracles recorded.

The main church is a basilica with a dome and interior walls that form a semi-circular apse. The floor is marble bearing an inscription dated to 1818. It also has a magnificent wooden iconostasis.

Normally the Monastery celebrates on the fifth day after Pascha, but the people of Sifnos solemnly celebrate on the day of the Ascension of Christ, 40 days after Pascha.
















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The Holy Georgian Martyrs of Persia (+ 1616)

The Holy Georgian Martyrs of Persia (Feast Day - Ascension Day)

Throughout history Georgia has frequently been forced to defend what St. Ilia the Righteous called its “threefold treasure” — language, fatherland, and Faith. In this regard, the events of the 17th century are some of the most tragic in all of Georgian history.

In 1616 the bloodthirsty Persian ruler Shah Abbas I invaded Georgia with a massive army. His goal was to level the country completely, to leave not a single building standing. The shah’s army kidnapped hundreds of thousands of Kakhetian Georgians and then sent them to Persia to be sold as slaves. They settled Turkmen in the newly depopulated Georgian regions. In collaboration with the shah, many Lezgin peoples from the mountainous North Caucasus moved south to occupy the homes of the exiled Georgians.

The 17th-century Italian traveler Pietro della Valle described the Georgian exile in Persia: “It would be too long to narrate all that has passed in this miserable migration, how many murders, how many deaths caused by privation, how many seductions, rapes, and acts of violence, how many children drowned by their own parents or cast into rivers through despair, some snatched by force from their mother’s breasts because they seemed too weak to live and thrown down by the wayside and abandoned there to be food for wild beasts or trampled underfoot by the horses and camels of the army, which marched for a whole day on top of dead bodies; how many sons separated from their fathers, wives from their husbands, sisters from their brothers, and carried off to distant countries without hope of ever meeting again. Throughout the camp, men and women were sold on this occasion much cheaper than beasts, because of the great number of them.” (Quoted in David Marshall Lang, Lives and Legends of the Georgian Church (London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1956), p. 170.)

The Georgian exiles in Persia included a large number of clergy. Many of them celebrated the divine services in secret and inspired the people to remain faithful to God. Those discovered were punished severely. Many Georgians were martyred for the Christian Faith during the Persian exile. Not only Georgian researchers, but historians and travelers of other nationalities attest to the truth of this. Furthermore, ethnic Georgians currently residing in formerly Persian territories continue to commemorate their fallen ancestors to this day. They make pilgrimages to the sites where their ancestors were martyred and prepare feasts there in honor of their memory. One of these sites has been called “Ascension.”


Of language, fatherland, and Faith, only language remains alive among Georgians in the formerly Persian territories. Most have lost touch with both their fatherland and the Christian Faith. Those fortunate enough to be able to return to Georgia often convert to Orthodox Christianity. In 2001, when Catholicos-Patriarch Ilia II visited the ethnic Georgians in Iran, he presented them with a mound of Georgian soil. With great emotion the Georgians scattered the soil over the ground where their ancestors were martyred.

On September 18, 2003, the Holy Synod of the Georgian Orthodox Church prayerfully considered the martyric contest of the Georgians in Persia. The Synod declared all those martyred at the hands of Muslims in the 17th and 18th centuries worthy to be numbered among the saints. Their commemoration day was set on the feast of Holy Ascension, in honor of the place where many of them were martyred.

Source

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God is Without Form and Beyond Description


“The Divine Word above all forbids that the Divine be likened to any of the things known by men, since every idea deriving from some conceptual image according to our understanding, which is the product of conjecture about the Divine Nature, makes an idol of God and does not proclaim God.”1 - St. Gregory of Nyssa

“God is beyond every image.”

The Holy Fathers often draw the attention of the Faithful to a very important matter—one which simpler Christians, in particular, ought to take into consideration. The latter have a tendency, especially when they pray, to try to attribute forms and shapes to God, in order somehow to render tangible His presence when they stand before Him.

This tendency, however, is unhealthy and is regarded [by the Fathers] as the beginning of spiritual deception (πλάνη); it arises out of the vainglory of the mind, as St. Neilos assures us: “The beginning of deception is the vainglory of the mind, aroused by which, the mind attempts to portray the Divine in form and shapes.”2

To be sure, in Holy Scripture “many things” are said “concerning God which are more applicable to what is corporeal”;3 but the Saints explain to us that these anthropomorphic expressions should not be taken literally or in their exact sense, but “symbolically”: “Everything that is said of God as if He had a body is said symbolically, but has a higher meaning; for the Divine is simple and formless.”4

Searching for the “hidden meaning.”

Since, as human beings, we are clothed with “this gross flesh,” it is impossible for us to understand or to express “the Divine, lofty, and immaterial energies of the Godhead,” except by means of images, types, and symbols that correspond to our nature.5

Here is a concrete example: Holy Scripture talks of the “eyes,” “eyelids,” and “sight” of God. What is the “higher meaning” of these? Let us take the Saints as guides, so that, ascending from what is said “symbolically” and “corporeally” about God, we might arrive at its “hidden meaning.”6

Let us understand, says St. John of Damascus, by the “eyes,” “eyelids,” and “sight” of God, His power to oversee all things, as well as His knowledge, from which nothing can escape. By analogy, this symbolism applies to us, since we are aware that by this sense of sight we, too, acquire more complete knowledge and learning.7

God is “in every respect without form or figure.”

But this truth—that “everything that is said of God as if He had a body has some hidden meaning which, through things corresponding to our nature, teaches us things that are above us”8—should not lead us to form mental “conceptions” of God, Who is beyond description, that are congruous with and that correspond to our bodily nature.

And this is because, as St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite says, “just as God is beyond all senses and sensory things, and beyond all shape, color, dimension, and place, since He is in every respect without form or figure, existing everywhere, and is above everything, so, also, is He beyond every image”; “no image has any application to God, for, to put it simply, He transcends every conception.”9

Furthermore, the God-bearing Apostle Paul reminded the Athenians of this point: “We ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man’s device.”10

For this reason, the Holy Fathers place special emphasis on the fact that, “since God is incorporeal, invisible, and immaterial, devoid of shape, uncircumscribable, and incomprehensible, it is impossible to make an image of Him; for, how can the unseen be portrayed?”11 “It is the height of insanity and impiety to give form to the Divine.”12

Christ “sat at the right hand of God.”

Thus, we should not think in human terms, when we hear the Holy Evangelist recounting that, “after the Lord had spoken unto them, He was received up into Heaven, and sat on the right hand of God.”13

We should understand our Savior’s “sitting at the right hand of the Father” symbolically; it is described in this way in order to show His “affinity and equality of honor to the Father,”14 that is, to affirm that our Lord, the God-Man, is “on one throne” with and “equal in honor” to His Heavenly Father, with Whom He “reigns,” “is honored,” and “is glorified.”

The Holy Apostle Paul says that the Son of God, after saving us, “sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high,”15 and, after His extreme abasement, “is set down at the right hand of the throne of God”;16 in the Sacred Apocalypse, Christ Himself is represented as saying: “I also overcame, and am set down with My Father on His throne.”17

The Divine Damascene very beautifully and aptly summarizes the teaching of our Church on this subject: We believe “that Christ sits in the body at the right hand of God the Father,” though we do not mean “that the right hand of the Father is an actual place”; for, how could “He that is uncircumscribed have a right hand limited by place? Right hands and left hands belong to what is circumscribed.”

And the God-bearing Saint concludes: “We understand the right hand of the Father to be the glory and honor of the Godhead in which the Son of God, Who existed as God before the ages, being of one essence with the Father, in the last days became incarnate, and in which He sits corporeally, His flesh being glorified together with Him; for He, along with His flesh, is adored with one adoration by all creation.”18

“O all ye peoples, let us sing a song of victory unto Christ, Who is taken up with glory upon the shoulders of the Cherubim, and Who hath seated us together with Himself at the right hand of the Father; for He is glorified.”19

Notes

1 Patrologia Græca, Vol. XLIV, col. 377B.
2 Patrologia Græca, Vol. LXXIX, col. 1193A.
3 St. John of Damascus, Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCI V, col. 841AB.
4 See note 4.
5 See note 4.
6 Idem, Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCI V, col. 844B.
7 See note 4.
8 See note 7.
9 Ἀόρατος Πόλεμος [Unseen Warfare], Part I, ch. 25.
10 Acts 17:29.
11 St. John of Damascus, Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCI V, col. 1289BC.
12 Idem, Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCI V, cols. 1169C-1172A.
13 St. Mark 16:19.
14 Zigabenos, Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIX, col. 852A.
15 Hebrews 1:3.
16 Hebrews 12:2.
17 Revelation 3:21.
18 Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCI V, col. 1104BC.
19 First Canon of the Ascension, Ode 1, Troparion 1.


Source: Orthodox Tradition, No. 2, Vol. XIX (2002), pp. 2-4.
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Video: The Iconography of the Fall of Constantinople

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Synaxarion For the Thursday of the Ascension


By Nikephoros Kallistos Xanthopoulos

Thursday of the Ascension

On this day, the Thursday of the sixth week of Pascha, we celebrate the Ascension of our Lord, God, and Savior, Jesus Christ.

Verses

Thou didst sit at the right hand of the Father, O Word,
Granting unto Thine initiates a most steadfast faith.


Synaxarion

When Christ was with the Disciples before His Passion, He promised them the coming of the All-Holy Spirit, saying: “For if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you.” And again: “When He is come, He will teach you all the truth.” For this reason, after His Arising from the dead, being seen of them for forty days, not always eating and drinking with them, but at intervals, He gave them firmer proof of His Resurrection. Finally, after making many promises concerning the Kingdom of God, He commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but await there the coming of the All-Holy Spirit, since they were to be baptized through Him. He commanded them to remain in Jerusalem, so that in that place the preaching of the Gospel might be first confirmed, lest in going to foreign parts they should become easy prey for slander, and because it was necessary for them to be equipped, like soldiers, with the weapons of the Spirit, and go thus into battle against the enemies of Christ.

When the time for the Ascension was at hand, He led them forth to the Mount of Olives (it is called by this name, because it was planted with a great many olive trees), and conversed with them about His proclamation to the ends of the earth, and also about His perpetual Kingdom to come. When He saw that they were going to ask Him what they should do, and since His immaculate Mother was also present there, He drew their attention to the Angels, who indicated His ascent to Heaven. And while they beheld, He was taken up from their midst, and a cloud received Him out of their sight. Being thus escorted by the Angels, who exhorted each other to lift up the heavenly gates and were astonished that His flesh was reddened with blood, He ascended and sat at the right hand of the Father, deifying the flesh, and—I make bold to say—putting it on a level with God. For through the flesh we were reconciled to God and the ancient enmity was destroyed. The Angels stood before the Apostles in the form of men, saying: “Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye in amazement, gazing up into Heaven? This Jesus, Whom ye saw as God in the flesh, will come again thus, that is, in the flesh; save not as before, in poverty and gentleness, but with great glory, as ye behold Him now escorted by Angels.”


Then the Apostles, wearied by their gazing, returned from the Mount of Olives. This is very close to Jerusalem, by a distance of two thousand and forty paces. This is the Way of the Sabbath. Thus was it enjoined on Moses to walk so many paces on the Sabbath, because this was the distance from the Tabernacle of witness to the camp of the Jews. It was permitted for worshippers to go out there on the Sabbath, but not to extend their journey any further. For this reason it was called the Way of the Sabbath. Hence, it seems to some that the Ascension of Christ took place on the Sabbath, but this is rather improbable.

When they returned, the Apostles went up to the upper room, in which they remained, together with the Myrrh-Bearing Women and the Mother of the Word, occupying themselves in fasting, prayer, and supplications and awaiting the advent of the All-Holy Spirit, according to the promise.

O Christ our God, Who didst ascend in glory, have mercy on us. Amen.

Source


Apolytikion in the Fourth Tone
Thou hast ascended in glory, O Christ our God, and gladdened Thy disciples with the promise of the Holy Spirit; and they were assured by the blessing that Thou art the Son of God and Redeemer of the world.

Kontakion in the Plagal of the Second Tone
O Christ our God, upon fulfilling Your dispensation for our sake, You ascended in Glory, uniting the earthly with the heavenly. You were never separate but remained inseparable, and cried out to those who love You, "I am with you and no one is against you."

Megalynarion
We magnify Thee, O Life-giver Christ, and we honor Thy divine Ascension with Thy most pure flesh into heaven.
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Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Beneficial Tale of Metrios the Farmer


The following beneficial tale is recorded in the Greek Synaxarion to be read annually on June 1st.

In the area of Galatia and Paphlagonia, there was a farmer named Metrios. He would see his neighbor preparing his sons for Constantinople, where they would become officers and servants of the Emperor. Then Metrios beseeched God, saying: "Lord, if I am Your worthy servant, grant me a male child to lean on in my old age, and that I may glorify Your Holy Name." Having prayed, he went to the festival that took place every year in Paphlagonia, loading his carriage with whatever he needed.

On his return, Metrios stopped in a small forest that had water in order to water his animals. There, he found a pouch that had 1500 coins. As it was sealed, he did not open it, but took it and went home. He hid the pouch in a safe spot and did not tell anyone about it.

The next year Metrios returned again to the festival of Paphlagonia, and when finished he went and stood in the woods where he found the coins, and there he observed those who passed. There then appeared someone who was looking for something, heavily distressed. The farmer asked him why he was so distressed, and he replied that last year he had sold a lot of goods at the festival and had accumulated 1500 coins, but then lost them in this forest. Seeing that the farmer was poorly dressed, he despaired that he would be unable to help him. Then the farmer went and took from his carriage the pouch which he had found and showed it. The dealer dropped when he saw it, and out of sheer joy lost consciousness. The poor farmer helped the dealer recover by getting water for him, then he opened the pouch, and they counted the coins which were in fact 1500. The dealer then wanted to give the farmer 500, but he would not accepted anything. Less was offered, but the poor farmer would not take even one coin. So after both thanked God, they separated.

That night, when the farmer fell asleep, he saw in his dreams an angel of the Lord, who said that for what he had done God would grant him a male child which he was to name Constantine, and that the child would bring great blessing to his house. It happened after a certain time that the farmer's wife gave birth to a baby boy, which when he grew up was educated in Constantinople, and Emperor Leo the Wise elevated him to be a Patrician. This brought many riches to his family for many generations, and God rewarded the farmer this way for his act of honesty.

St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite writes the following note regarding the tale of Metrios the Farmer:

This blessed and grace-filled Metrios must be imitated also by contemporary Christians, that they may be granted the same blessings. Hence if they are to find anything that is lost, let them not hold on to it, because this is considered theft, even if they don't know to whom it belongs. Rather, let them proclaim its discovery, and when the one is found who had lost it, let them give it back without seeking back a reward. Christians ought to do that which is written in Canon 10 of St. Gregory of Neoceasarea: "...demand nothing as a reward for their discovery, and salvage, or under any pretence whatsoever."

Translated by John Sanidopoulos
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Saint Agapitus the Unmercenary of the Kiev Caves

St. Agapit (Feast Day - June 1); photo is a forensic facial reconstruction by S.A. Nikitin (1986)

This holy Unmercenary Physician was born at Kiev. He was a novice and disciple of St Anthony of the Caves, and lived during the eleventh century. If any of the monastic brethren fell ill, St Agapitus came to him and selflessly attended to the sick one. He fed his patient boiled herbs which he himself prepared, and the person recovered through the prayers of the saint. Many laymen also turned to the monastic physician with the gift of healing.


In Kiev at this time was an experienced Armenian physician, who was able to diagnose the nature of the illness and even accurately determine the day of death just by looking at a patient. When one of these doomed patients turned to St Agapitus, the grace-bearing healer gave him some food from the monastery trapeza (dining area), and the patient became well. Enflamed with envy, the physician wanted to poison St Agapitus, but the Lord preserved him, and the poison had no effect.

St Agapitus healed Prince Vladimir Monomakh of Chernigov, the future Great Prince of Kiev (1114-1125), by sending him boiled herbs. The grateful prince went to the monastery and wanted to see his healer, but the humble ascetic hid himself and would not accept gifts.


When the holy healer himself became sick, that same Armenian physician came to him and after examining him, he said that he would die in three days. He swore to became an Orthodox monk if his prediction were not fulfilled. The saint said that the Lord had revealed to him that He would summon him only after three months.

St Agapitus died after three months (on June 1, not later than 1095), and the Armenian went to the igumen of the Caves monastery and received monastic tonsure. "It is certain that Agapitus was a saint of God," he said. "I well knew, that it was impossible for him to last three days in his sickness, but the Lord gave him three months." Thus did the monk heal sickness of the soul and guide to the way of salvation.


Apolytikion in Plagal of the First Tone
O righteous Agapit, you healed the infirm with edible herbs, and with humility like Anthony the Great. So doing, you brought the unbelieving physician to the Faith, guiding him on the path of salvation. Heal our infirmities and pray to Christ our God for those who sing to you!

Apolytikion in Plagal of the First Tone
You proclaimed your faith as a good physician. You rebuked the Armenian and brought him to piety. When dying you asked God for life, and by this wonder brought him to Christ. Now standing joyfully before the Lord, pray for us, O righteous one!

Source






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The "Ark" of Elder Gabriel In Dolous of Mani


In Upper Doloi of Mani, a few kilometers away from Kalamata, there are four monks who have turned the Holy Monastery of the Transfiguration into an ecological paradise and ark, where they rescue and keep rare plants and animals. Elder Gabriel is the abbot here and has a special love for God's creation.


They breed Skyros horses and donkeys from Mani which are endangered. Children with mental problems ride these ponies for therapy. Moreover, native trees and plants such as garlic from Mani and cherries from Taygetos are back again, while special care is shown by monks to the olive trees of about 60 registered varieties.


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The Holy Monastery of Saint Nicholas of the Cats


“It is wonderful to see them, for nearly all are maimed by the snakes: one has lost a nose, another an ear; the skin of one is torn, another is lame: one is blind of one eye, another of both. And it is a strange thing that at the hour for their food, at the sound of a bell, they collect at the monastery and when they have eaten enough, at the sound of that same bell, they all depart together to go fight the snakes.” - The Venetian Francesco Suriano (1484)

Spooky
April 28th, 2011
Oddity Central

The Monastery of Saint Nicholas of the Cats is regarded as a sacred cat haven in Cyprus, as it’s name has been linked to felines for almost 2,000 years.

The original monastery was built in 327 AD, by Kalokeros, the governor of Cyprus appointed by Constantine the Great, and patronised by Saint Helen, the mother of Constantine the Great. At that time, a terrible drought affected the whole of Cypus, and the entire island was overrun with poisonous snakes which made building the monastery a dangerous affair. Many of the inhabitants left their homes and moved off the island, for fear of the snakes, but Saint Helen came up with a solution to the plague – she ordered 1,000 cats to be shipped in from Egypt and Palestine to fight the reptiles.


In the following years, the cats did their duty, hunting and killing most of the snakes in the Akrotiri Peninsula, which soon came to be known as the “Cat Peninsula”. The monks would use a bell to call the cats to the monastery at meal time, and then the felines were dispatched to their snake-hunting duties. Pilgrims from all around Europe traveled to the Holy Monastery of Saint Nicholas to see its feline guardians, and the discovered documents of a Venetian monk describe them as scarred, missing various body parts, some completely blind as a result of their relentless battle against the snakes.


According to the writings of Father Stephen de Lusignan, in 1580, the Byzantine monks at the Monastery of Saint Nicholas were awarded the surrounding lands, on one condition – they had to take care of at least 100 cats and feed them at least twice a day. Legend has it, the cats were so well trained they knew that when the bell rang once they had to go hunting for snakes, and when it rang a second time, it was meal time at the monastery.

During the Turkish invasion, the Monastery of Saint Nicholas of the Cats was completely destroyed and its residing monks slaughtered or taken into captivity. Left without food and shelter, the cats left and wandered around the island, which explains the large number of cats currently living in Cyprus. Even now, locals appreciate their help in getting rid of the snakes centuries ago, and take good care of them, even if they’re strays.


After being rebuilt and abandoned several times, the modern history of the Monastery of Saint Nicholas of the Cats began in 1983, when it was assigned to a group of nuns. When they arrived there wasn’t a cat in sight, but the number of snakes was once again overwhelming, so they did exactly what Saint Helen did over 1,500 years ago – they brought in a couple of cats. Their numbers grew, over the years, and there are now six nuns at the monastery and over 70 felines. Many people bring abandoned cats to this place, and the nuns take them in.

The Monastery of Saint Nicholas of the Cats receives a small subsidy from the government, but that isn’t enough to take care of the entire feline population, so the nuns rely on donations made by locals or cat-loving tourists.

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The Churches of Kizhi: Russia's Sacred Island


In the middle of Karelia's Lake Onega sit churches that rival the great medieval cathedrals of Europe.

William Brumfield
January 28, 2011
Russia Beyond the Headlines

The forests of northern Russia, between Lake Ladoga and the White Sea, were once dotted with great ensembles of log churches. Now only a few precious examples remain, of which the most remarkable is located on the small island of Kizhi, one of almost 1,400 situated in Karelia's Lake Onega. Detached from the mainland, the island has long been known as a sacred space. Its unusually picturesque setting exists within a length of only 6 kilometers (3.7 miles).

Yet this beauty alone would not have saved the site from the decay and vandalism that destroyed so many other masterpieces of wooden architecture. For over a century, the efforts of some of Russia's leading preservations have ensured the protection of this legacy. In 1966, Kizhi achieved the status of a national architecture and historic museum; in 1990, it was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Kizhi Island now contains some of the oldest surviving examples of Russian log buildings, including one small church--the Resurrection of Lazarus--dated perhaps as early as the end of the 14th century.

The supreme example of Russian wooden architecture is Kizhi's Church of the Transfiguration of the Savior, built in 1714 ostensibly in honor of Peter the Great's victories over the Swedes, although a Transfiguration Church had existed at Kizhi since at least the early 17th century. Located on open space in the southwest part of the island, the church formed the center of a pogost, a term which by the 18th century had come to mean an enclosed cemetery with a parish or district church.

As with St. Basil's on Red Square in Moscow, the main Kizhi church, with its many domes, produces an impression of overwhelming profusion and complexity; yet the design derives from rigorous structural and aesthetic logic. Its soaring pyramidal silhouette (37 meters high) signifies consecrated ground from a great distance, and the design of the structure reinforces that symbolic purpose at every point. The core of the Transfiguration Church is an octahedron, rising in three tiers and buttressed by extensions ("arms") at the four compass points. These extensions are also stepped, thus providing platforms for additional cupolas: twenty on the structure, plus one at the top and another on the east side above the apse. This intricate pattern of cupolas and log structure is emphasized by the natural properties of the different woods: the dark walls of aged pine logs and the brilliant silver of the cupolas, covered with over 30,000 curved aspen shingles tightly fitted over the cupola frame.

The design of this elaborate superstructure provided an efficient system of ventilation to preserve the structure from decay. Yet as was typical of tall wooden churches in the Russian north, the tower was not visible from the interior, which was capped at a low level by a ceiling painted with saints and archangels--known as a "sky" or nebo--over the central part of the church. This "sky" provided a culmination to the religious imagery of the icon screen in front of the altar. Unfortunately this particular "sky" at Kizhi was lost during World War II, and we know of its form only through black-and-white photographs.

The Church of the Transfiguration was intended for use only during major church holidays in the summer. It was not uncommon in Russia to have paired churches, for summer and winter. At the Kizhi pogost, the adjoining "winter" Church of the Intercession, built in 1764, provides an admirable visual complement to the ensemble. Whereas the Transfiguration Church soars, the Intercession accentuates the horizontal, with an extended “refectory.” Its crown of eight cupolas surrounding the main cupolas at the top of its octagonal core is a dramatic and satisfying resolution that enhances, rather than competes with, the form of the Transfiguration Church.

The final element of the original pogost ensemble at Kizhi is a bell tower with a tent roof between and in front of the two churches. Originally built in the late 18th century, it was rebuilt in 1874 and renovated most recently in the early 1990s. The pogost, with cemetery, is enclosed by a low wall of horizontal logs on a base of fieldstone.

The middle and northern parts of Kizhi also have their chapels, brought to the island from villages in the surrounding area. All of them have the modest charm and beauty characteristic of traditional Russian log architecture for places of worship, with decorative carved end boards and small wooden cupolas. The most striking of these buildings is the 18th-century Chapel of the Three Prelates, originally from Kavgora village in the Kondopoga region of Karelia. The small structure culminates on its west end with an octagonal bell tower.

In departing Kizhi Island, the soaring forms of the Church of the Transfiguration are again visible. Although less known than the great Gothic cathedrals, it is their equal as a daring expression of the spiritual impulse in architecture. The Transfiguration Church is now undergoing a thorough, complex restoration that will enable it to survive as one of Russia’s defining monuments.


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Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The 700 Club Features the Fall of Constantinople


See the video at this link: The Fall of Constantinople - Gordon Robertson - The 700 Club

Transcript is here.

See also:

The Fall of Constantinople ... Did You Know?

Six Hours in Istanbul
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Fr. Gervasios Raptopoulos: Apostle To the Imprisoned


Archimandrite Gervasios Raptopoulos has ministered to those marginalized in prison since 1978, not only throughout all of Greece but also in many places throughout the world.

You can read more about him and his ministry at his website here.

You can donate here.


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The Grave of Elder Arsenie Boca


Elder Arsenie Boca (September 29, 1910 — November 28, 1989) was a Romanian hieromonk, known today for his profoundly spiritual life, the books and church icons that bear his name, but also for the way he honorably endured and survived imprisonment and persecution from communist Romania’s security service.

Though he is not yet canonized, Elder Arsenie's grave is visited by tens of thousands of pilgrims every year, where many miracles occur. One miracle which everyone can see is that the flowers over his grave never die or whither, neither in the hot summer or frigid winter.



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The Mystery of Baptism Photographed


A Serbian student by the name of Peter Restovic from Belgrade was an atheist and unbaptized until the age of 19. He found faith and was baptized in Hilandar Monastery on Mount Athos in 1980. A friend of his attended the baptism and took a photograph during the ceremony. They were later amazed and moved to find what looked like a white dove above the head of Peter.
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Posted by J.Sanidopoulos at 1:08 PM No comments: Links to this post
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Labels: Holy Mysteries (Sacraments), Miracles, Mount Athos
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We Are All Patients In A Hospital


By St. Nikolai Velimirovich

At the time of the First Ecumenical Council [Nicaea, 325 A.D.], the quarreling clerics wrote accusations one against the other and presented them to the emperor. Emperor Constantine received all of these accusations and not opening them, burned them over a flaming candle. To the amazement of those around him, the emperor said: "If I would see with my own eyes a bishop, a priest or a monk in a sinful act, I would cover him with my cloak, so that no one would ever see his sin." Thus, this great Christian emperor embarrassed the scandalmongers and sealed their mouths.

Our Faith prohibits us to be spies of the sins of others and stresses that we be merciless judges of our own sins. The sick person in the hospital is concerned with his own particular malady so that he has neither the will nor the time to question others who are ill or to mock their illness. Are we not all in this world as patients in a hospital? Does not our own common sense underline that we look at our own illness and not at another's illness? Let no one think that they will be cured of their illness in the other world. This world is merely a hospital and a place for healing and, in that world, there is no hospital; there is only a mansion or only a prison.
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Posted by J.Sanidopoulos at 12:25 PM No comments: Links to this post
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Labels: Vice and Sin
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Lust and the Search For Meaning


Not just sexual lust, but every kind of lust — whether they are lusts for people, positions, possessions, or pleasures — have some things in common. In David Needham’s Birthright: Christian, Do You Know Who You Are? there is an explanation that lust is driven, at least in part, by a search for meaning. Sometimes when we are frustrated in finding meaning in the eternal, we get stuck find meaning in the fleeting. This is often how sinful habits are initiated. He writes:

Usually we become gripped with an obsession to sin when some other more respectable or righteous fulfillment in life is being frustrated. Perhaps some relationship which should have been realized, some accomplishment which slipped through our fingers, some disappointment in our ability to fulfill a task or to use our heads. Nothing opens the door to sin faster than failure. (Unless, perhaps, it is success.) Since it is simply too unthinkable to be alive without some degree of satisfaction that will bring some sense into life, I automatically reach out for whatever object or experience is readily obtainable. That is why physical or sensory type lusts are so especially quick to arise. My vacuum of meaninglessness can be filled so immediately! There are times when stuffing my mouth satisfies. And for those moments life is making sense. Shallow sense, but then… any sense is better than an aching vacuum.

Sometimes it takes a little more time. If the lust is sex, it may take a little while to find that person, that book or magazine, that “something” which will awaken that fantasy of meaning. I must consider my reputation of course, and my financial resources… it may require some careful planning and delay, but that’s okay. For you see, from the very moment I set my mind on lust I am moving! My mind is alive—planning, anticipating.

And something else remarkable. Even if I cannot lay my hands on whatever object or experience lust demands, I can quite easily slide into fantasy. And for those few seductive moments, I can forget the real world. I can push aside the haunting frustration, the emptiness, the broken plans and dreams. I can even forget my lifeless, lackluster Christianity.

Then, of course, if my fantasies can be followed by actual experience, I have doubly lusted, doubly lived. Little wonder lusts are so consuming in view of such rewards! Temporary? Oh yes. And inevitably followed once again by the gnawing emptiness of that “meaning” vacuum.


1 Timothy 6:11-12: “But as for you, O man of God, flee these things. Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness. Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to which you were called….”
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Posted by J.Sanidopoulos at 11:49 AM 2 comments: Links to this post
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Labels: Sexual and Gender Issues, Vice and Sin
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The 12 Mandates of "The Shepherd of Hermas"


A very instructive book from the second century is called "The Shepherd", in which a man by the name of Hermas from Rome received revelations from an angel of God. Hermas was a wealthy man but because of his sins and the sins of his sons, he fell into extreme poverty. Once while in prayer, a man appeared to him in white raiment with a staff in his hand and told him that he is an angel of repentance who was sent to be with him until the end of his life. The angel gave him the following twelve mandates:

1. Believe in God;

2. To live in simplicity and innocence; do not speak evil and give alms to all who beg;

3. Love truth and avoid falsehood;

4. Preserve chastity in your thoughts;

5. Learn patience and generosity;

6. To know that with every man, there is a good and an evil spirit;

7. To fear God and not to fear the devil;

8. To do every good and to refrain from every evil deed;

9. To pray to God from the depth of the soul with faith that our prayer will be fulfilled;

10. To guard against melancholy as the sister of doubt and anger;

11. To question true and false prophecies;

12. To guard against every evil desire.

Read "The Shepherd of Hermas" here.
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Posted by J.Sanidopoulos at 10:30 AM No comments: Links to this post
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Labels: Apostles and Early Church, Ethical and Moral Issues, Virtue
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