  
  
 
       
  
      
|
April 26th (V - 9)
Icon of St. Iovstas, Hieromartyr Basil of Amaseia and St. Glaphyra the Righteous.
PriestMartyr Basil, Bishop of Amasea (+ c. 322). Sainted Stephen
of Great Perm' (+ 1396). Righteous Virgin Glaphyra (+ 322). Monastics: Justa, Nestor,
Ioannikii of Vevichensk (XIII). Saint Theophilos.
The PriestMartyr Basil, Bishop of Amasea, lived at the
beginning of the IV Century in the Pontine city of Amasea. He encouraged and comforted
the Christians, suffering persecution by the pagans. During this time the Eastern part
of the Roman empire was ruled by Licinius (312-324), a relative by marriage to the holy
Equal-to-the-Apostles emperor Constantine the Great (306-337, Comm. 21 May). Licinius
deceitfully undersigned Constantine's "Edict of Religious Toleration" (313), which
permitted the freely open confession of Christianity, but at heart he hated Christians
and continued to persecute them to return to paganism.
Licinius burned with passion for a maid-servant of his wife
Constancia, -- the Righteous Virgin Galphyra. The holy maid reported about this to the
empress and sought her intercession. Having dressed her in men's attire and provided
her with money, the empress Constancia sent her away from the city in the company of a
devoted servant. They told the emperor, that the maid-servant had gone mad and lay near
death. Righteous Glaphyra on the road to Armenia remained in the city of Amasea, where
the local bishop, Saint Basil, gave her shelter.
At this time the saint was building a church in the city. Righteous
Glaphyra for its construction gave over all the money that she had received from
Constancia, and in a letter to the empress she besought her to send additional funds to
complete the church. The empress fulfilled her request. But the letter of Righteous
Galphyra fell into the hands of the emperor. The enraged Licinius demanded the governor
of Amasea to send him the sainted-hierarch and the maid-servant. Righteous Galphyra died
(+ 322) before the edict arrived in Amasea. They dispatched Saint Basil to the emperor.
Two deacons, Parthenias and Thestimos, followed after him and lodged near the prison
where they locked up the saint.
The pious Christian Elpidyphoros bribed the jailer and each night
together with Parthenias and Thestimos he visited the saint. On the eve of the trial day
of the saint he sang psalms and the words "if I be at the very depths of the sea, even
there wilt Thy hand guide me and Thine right hand hold me" (Ps. 138 [139]: 9-10) -- and
thrice he broke down into tears. The deacons were apprehensive that the saint would be
in distress over the coming torments, but he calmed them.
At the trial Saint Basil resolutely refused the suggestion of the
emperor to become a pagan high-priest, and therefore he was sentenced to death.
Elpidyphoros got to the soldiers with money, and they allowed the saint to pray and to
speak with his friends before the execution. After this, the saint said to the
executioner: "Friend, do what thou art ordered to", -- and calmly he bent beneathe the
blow of the sword.
When the martyr had been beheaded, Elpidyphoros tried to ransom his
remains from the soldiers. But the soldiers were afraid of the emperor and they threw
the body and head of the saint into the sea. After this, three times in a dream an Angel
of God appeared before Elpidyphoros with the words: "Bishop Basil is in Sinope and doth
await you". Heeding this call, Elpidyphoros and the deacons sailed to Sinope and there
they hired fishermen to lower their nets. When they lowered the net "on the suggestion"
of the deacons Thestimos and Parthenias, they came up with nothing. Thereupon
Elpidyphoros declared, that he would ask them to lower the net in the Name of the God,
Whom he did worship. This time the net brought up the body of Saint Basil. The head had
come back together with it, and only the gash on the neck indicated the strike of the
sword. The relics of Saint Basil were conveyed to Amasea and buried in the church built
by him.
Sainted Stephen the Enlightener of Perm', and Apostle to the
Zyryani People, was born in about the year 1340 into the family of the Ustiug
church-assistant Simeon. Under the influence of his pious mother Maria, endowed with
great abilities, he displayed already in his young years an unusual zeal for the service
of the Church: in a single year he learned to read the Holy Books and he assisted his
father in church during Divine-services, fulfilling the duty of kanonarch, arranging
church music, and also that of reader.
In youth the saint took monastic vows at a monastery in honour of
Sainted Gregory the Theologian at Rostov. The monastery was famed for its fine
collection of books. Saint Stephen wanted to read the holy fathers in the original and
for this he studied the Greek language. In his youth when he had assisted his father in
church, he frequently spoke with the Zyryani people. And now, having been immersed in
the rich culture of the Church, Saint Stephen burned with a desire to convert the
Zyryani to Christ.
For the enlightening of the Zyryani, he compiled an alphabet of their
language and translated into it some of the Church books. For his pious deed the Rostov
bishop, Arsenii (1374-1380), ordained him to the dignity of monk-deacon. Having prepared
himself for missionary activity, Saint Stephen journeyed to Moscow (1379) to the
Kolomensk bishop, Gerasim, who then oversaw the affairs of the metropolitanate, and the
saint petitioned him: "Bless me, Vladyka, to go into a pagan land -- Perm'. I want to
teach the holy faith to the unbelieving people. I am resolved either to lead them to
Christ, or for Christ to lay down my head for them". The bishop with joy blessed him and
ordained him to the dignity of priest-monk. He provided him with an antimins
("antimension" or "corporal" for the altar-table), holy chrism and Divine-service books,
and GreatPrince Dimitrii Ioannovich gave him a grammota (document) of safe-passage.
From Ustiug Saint Stephen made his way along the North Dvina River up
to the confluence of the Vychegda into it, where settlements of the Zyryani began. The
proponent of faith in Christ suffered many a toil, and struggle, deprivation and sorrow,
living amidst the pagans who worshipped idols "with fire, water, trees, a stone and
golden woman-figure, and shaman, and wizard, and wood".
The Zyryani were wont to make their devotions particularly in front
of a so-called "magic-mischief birch tree". Immense in its thickness and height, the
birch tree grew on an elevated spot. The Zyryani gathered at it and brought wild animals
they caught as sacrifice. Saint Stephen made his cell not far from the birch tree and
made use of the gathering of the superstitious pagans at the tree, to teach the holy
truth. Then Saint Stephen cut down and burnt the birch tree for the dispelling of the
superstition. The Zyryani gathered to kill him. The saint turned to them preaching:
"Judge for yourselves, whether or not your gods have any power, when they are not able
to defend themselves from the fire? Are they gods, when they are so powerless, and
indeed possess not only not a mind, but neither also ears nor sight? And your divinity
could not defend itself against me, a weak man. Are all your other gods such as this?
Not so is the Christian God. He sees everything, knows everything and is Almighty, since
He created the whole world and fore-thinks everything. And how blessedly good He is,
particularly for those knowing Him! I desire what is good for you, bringing the True
God to you. He wilt love you and bless you, when ye begin to honour Him genuinely". On
the place of "the magic-mischief birch tree", Saint Stephen built a church in honour of
the Archangel Michael, the dispeller of the spirits of darkness.
The baptised Zyryani themselves began to do away with that, which
earlier they had worshipped: they cut down sacred trees, they destroyed idols; the rich
gifts, set aside for the pagan sacrifices, they brought to Saint Stephen. He bid his
Zyryan helper Matthew to throw it all into the fire and permitted only the use of the
linen cloth for foot wrappings.
But things came to a final culmination among the Zyryani after Saint
Stephen got the better of their chief-priest Pam, who rose up against the dissemination
of the holy faith. The pagan priest entered into a debate with Saint Stephen.
"Christian, you have only but the one God, -- said Pam, -- but we have many an helper
on the dry land, and in the water, granting us a lucky hunt in the forests and with
its abundance providing Moscow, the Horde and faraway lands; they impart to us the magic
mysteries, inaccessible to you". Saint Stephen answered, that the True God -- is one;
the Almighty -- is one, but that the idol-gods evidently through the test of experience
are powerless. After lengthy dispute the pagan-priest Pam in a proof of his faith made
a challenge to go through fire and water, and demanded that Saint Stephen do this. "I
have no command of poetic verse, -- humbly answered Saint Stephen, -- but great is the
Christian God: thus I shall go it with thee". Pam however lost his nerve and besought
the saint to save him from certain death. "Ye art witnesses, -- said Saint Stephen to
the gathered people, -- how he demanded to resolve the dispute about faith by means of
fire and water, but now doth not wish to be baptised. Who now hath regard for Pam? What
is to be done with him?" "Let the deceiver be put to death, -- answered the people, --
for if Pam be set free, he wilt make mischief for thee". "No, -- answered the saint, --
Christ hath sent me not to hand someone over to death, but to teach. Pam desireth not
to accept the saving faith, , wherefore let his stubbornness punish him, but not I". Pam
was banished. In thanksgiving to the Lord for victory over the chief pagans, Saint
Stephen built at Vishero a church in honour of Saint Nicholas. After this, the preaching
of the saint about Christ began to go all the more successfully.
In 1383 Saint Stephen was ordained bishop of Malaya Perm' (Lesser
Perm'). Like a doting father he incessantly concerned himself about his flock. For the
encouraging in the faith of the newly-converted, Saint Stephen opened schools alongside
the churches, where they studied the Holy Books in the Permian language. The saint
supervised the instructions, and taught them the necessities for them to become priests
and deacons. Saint Stephen taught several of his students how to write in the Permian
language. The saint constructed churches, in which he put priests from among the Zyryani, and led Divine-services in the Zyryani tongue.
Saint Stephen transposed into the Zyryani language the Chasoslov (Book of Hours),
the Psalter, selected readings from the Gospel and the Epistles, the Paroemnik
(Church-service Old testament readings), the Stikhirar (Church-service "stikhi" verses),
Oktoikhon (Eight Tones), several feastday services and the Divine liturgy.
During a time of crop failure the saint provided the Zyryani with
bread, many a time he delivered them from being taken advantage of and from the trickery
of corrupt officials, he bestowed alms upon them, and defended them from the incursion
of other tribes, interceding for them at Moscow. The fruition of his efforts and good
deeds came in the conversion of all the extent of the Perm' land to Christianity. This
great deed was accomplished by his strength of faith and Christian love. The life of the
saint -- was a victory of faith over unbelief, of love and meekness -- over malice and
impiety.
There was a touching "meeting in absence" of Sainted Stephen of Perm'
with the Monk Sergei of Radonezh, occurring in the year 1390 during the time of a
journey of the saint to Moscow on church business. Saint Stephen fervently loved the
Radonezh ascetic and very much wanted to pay him a visit on the way from the Perm' land,
but was not able to do so because of insufficient time. Being 10 versts from the
monastery of the Monk Sergei, Saint Stephen in praying turned towards the direction
of the monastery and with a bow he uttered: "Peace unto thee, spiritual brother!" The
Monk Sergei, who sat together with the brethren at the refectory meal, stood up, made
a prayer and, bowing towards the direction where the saint rode, answered: "Hail also to
thee, thou pastor of the flock of Christ, and the peace of God dwell with thee!"
The deep spiritual connection of Sainted Stephen of Perm' and the
Monk Sergei of Radonezh is testified to even at present by a particular daily prayer to
them at the refectory-dining of the brethren.
Besides building churches, Saint Stephen founded for the Zyryani also
several monasteries: the Saviour Ul'yanovsk wilderness-monastery 165 versts from
Ust'-Sysol'sk, the Stephanovsk -- 60 versts from Ust'-Sysol'sk, the Ust'-Vymsk
Arkhangel'sk, and the Yarengsk Arkhangel'sk.
In the year 1395 Saint Stephen again set out to Moscow on affairs of
his flock, and here died. His body was placed in the monastery "Saviour at the Wall"
(in a church to the north in honour of the Saviour) in the Moscow Kremlin. The Zyryani
bitterly bewailed the death of their apostle. They earnestly entreated the Moscow prince
and the Metropolitan to send back to Perm' the body of their patron, but Moscow did not
wish to part with the remains of the great saint.
The glorification of Sainted Stephen began already at the beginning
of the XV Century. The Life of the saint was written soon after his death. The
service to him was compiled by the priestmonk Pakhomii the Serb, together with the
priestmonk Epiphanii the Wise, who was a student of the Monk Sergei of Radonezh and
also well knew Saint Stephen and loved to converse with him.
|