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January 17th (I - 30)
Icon of St. Anthony the Great
Monk Anthony the Great (+ 356). Monk Antonii (Anthony) of Dymsk
(+ 1224). Monk Antonii (Anthony) of Chernoezersk (XVI). Monk Antonii (Anthony) of
Krasnokhomsk (+ 1481). Monk Anthony the New (in Macedonian Berroea). Holy Emperor
Theodosius the Great (IV). Monk Achilles the Confessor (V). Saint Antonina. Martyr
George (+ 1838). Saint Martyrios. Sainted John, Bishop of Rostov (+ 1213).
The Monk Anthony, a very great ascetic, the founder of
wilderness-monastery life and as such the father of monasticism, is entitled "the Great"
by Holy Church. He was born in Egypt in the village of Coma, near the Thebaid wilderness,
in the year 251. His parents were pious Christians of illustrious lineage. From his youth
Anthony was always serious and given over to concentration. He loved to visit church
services and he hearkened to the Holy Scripture with such deep attention, that he
remembered what he heard all his entire life. The commandments of the Lord guided him
from the time of his very youth. When Saint Anthony was about twenty years old, he lost
his parents, but in his care remained his sister, a minor in age. Visiting the church
services, the youth was pierced through by a reverent feeling towards those Christians
who, as it relates in the Acts of the Apostles, sold off their possessions and the
proceeds thereof they applied in following after the Apostles. He heard in church the
Gospel passage of Christ, spoken to the rich young man: "If thou wouldst be perfect,
sell what thou hast and give it to the poor; and thou wilt have treasure in heaven; and
come follow after Me" (Mt. 19: 21). Anthony understood this as spoken to him personally.
He sold off his property that remained to him after the death of his parents, he
distributed the money to the poor, he left his sister in the care of pious virgins in a
monastic setting, he left his parental home, and having settled not far from his village
in a wretched hut, he began his ascetic life. He earned his livelihood by working with
his hands, and alms also for the poor. Sometimes the holy youth also visited other
ascetics living in the surrounding areas, and from each he sought to receive direction
and benefit. And to a particular one of these ascetics he turned for guidance in the
spiritual life.
In this period of his life the Monk Anthony was subjected to terrible
temptations by the devil. The enemy of the race of man troubled the young ascetic with
thoughts, and with doubts about his chosen path, with anguish over his sister, and he
attempted to incline Anthony towards fleshly sin. But the monk preserved his firm faith,
he incessantly made prayer and intensified his efforts. Anthony prayed that the Lord
would point out to him the path of salvation. And he was granted a vision. The ascetic
beheld a man, who by turns alternately finished a prayer, and then began to work -- this
was an Angel, which the Lord had sent to instruct His chosen one. The monk thereupon set
up a strict schedule for his life. He partook of food only once in the entire day, and
sometimes only once every second or third day; he spent all night at prayer, giving
himself over to a short sleep only on the third or fourth night after unbroken vigil.
But the devil would not desist with his tricks, and trying to scare the monk, he appeared
under the guise of monstrous phantoms. The saint however with steadfast faith protected
himself with the Life-Creating Cross. Finally the enemy appeared to him in the guise of
a frightful looking black lad, and hypocritically declaring himself beaten, he reckoned
to sway the saint into vanity and pride. But the monk expelled the enemy with prayer.
For yet greater solitude, the saint re-settled farther away from the
village, in a graveyard. On designated days his friend brought him a scant bit of food.
And here the devils, pouncing upon the saint with the intent to kill him, inflicted upon
him terrible beatings. But the Lord would not allow the death of Anthony. The friend of
the saint, on schedule taking him his food, saw him as though dead laying upon the
ground, and he took him away back to the village. They thought the saint was dead and
began to prepare for his burial. But the monk in the deep of night regained consciousness
and besought his friend to take him back to the graveyard. The staunchness of Saint
Anthony was greater than the wile of the enemy. Taking the form of ferocious beasts, the
devils again tried to force the saint to forsake the place chosen by him, but he again
expelled them by the power of the Life-Creating Cross. The Lord strengthened the power of
His saint: in the heat of the struggle with the dark powers the monk saw coming down to
him from the sky a luminous ray of light, and he cried out: "Where hast Thou been, O
Merciful Jesus?.. Why hast Thou not healed my wounds at the very start?" The Lord
replied: "Anthony! I was here, but did wait, wanting to see thine valour; and now after
this, since thou hast firmly withstood the struggle, I shalt always aid thee and glorify
thee throughout all the world". After this vision the Monk Anthony was healed of his
wounds and ready for renewed efforts. He was then 35 years of age.
Having gained spiritual experience in the struggle with the devil, the
Monk Anthony pondered going into the deeps of the Thebaid wilderness, and in full
solitude there to serve the Lord by deed and by prayer. He besought the ascetic elder (to
whom he had turned at the beginning of his monastic journey) to go off together with him
into the wilderness, but the elder, while blessing him in the then as yet unheard of
exploit of being suchlike an hermit, decided against accompanying him because of the
infirmity of age. The Monk Anthony went off into the wilderness alone. The devil tried
to stop him, throwing in front of the monk precious gems and stones, but the saint paid
them no attention and passed them on by. Having reached a certain hilly spot, the monk
caught sight of an abandoned enclosed structure and he settled within it, securing the
entrance with stones. His faithful friend brought him bread twice a year, and water he
had inside the enclosure. In complete silence the monk partook of the food brought him.
The Monk Anthony dwelt for 20 years in complete isolation and incessant struggle with the
devils, and he finally found tranquillity of spirit and peace in his mind. When it became
appropriate, the Lord revealed to people about His great ascetic. The saint had to
instruct many layfolk and monastics. The people gathering at the enclosure of the monk
removed the stones sealing his entrance way, and they went to Saint Anthony and besought
him to take them under his guidance. Soon the heights on which Saint Anthony asceticised
was encircled by a whole belt of monastic communities, and the monk fondly directed their
inhabitants, teaching about the spiritual life to everyone who came into the wilderness
to be saved. He taught first of all the need to take up spiritual efforts, to
unremittingly strive to please the Lord, to have a willing and unselfish attitude towards
types of work shunned earlier. He urged them not to be afraid of demonic assaults and to
repel the enemy by the power of the Life-Creating Cross of the Lord.
In the year 311 the Church was beset by a trial -- a fierce
persecution against Christians, set in motion by the emperor Maximian. Wanting to suffer
together with the holy martyrs, the Monk Anthony left the wilderness and arrived in
Alexandria. He openly rendered aid to the imprisoned martyrs, he was present at the trial
and interrogations, but the torturers would not even bother with him! It pleased the Lord
to preserve him for the benefit of Christians. With the close of the persecution, the
monk returned to the wilderness and continued his exploits. The Lord bestowed upon His
saint a gift of wonderworking: the monk cast out devils and healed the sick by the power
of his prayer. The multitude of people coming to him disrupted his solitude, and the monk
went off still farther, into the so-called "interiour of the wilderness", and he settled
atop an high elevation. But the brethren of the wilderness monasteries searched out the
monk and besought him at least often to pay visits to their communities.
Another time the Monk Anthony left the wilderness and arrived amidst
the Christians in Alexandria, to defend the Orthodox faith against the Manichaean and
Arian heresies. Knowing that the name of the Monk Anthony was venerated by all the
Church, the Arians circulated a lie about him -- that he allegedly adhered to their
heretical teaching. But actually being present in Alexandria, the Monk Anthony in front
of everyone and in the presence of the bishop openly denounced Arianism. During the time
of his brief stay at Alexandria he converted to Christ a great multitude of pagans. Pagan
philosophers came to the monk, wanting by their speculations to test his firm faith, but
by his simple and convincing words he reduced them to silence. The Equal-to-the-Apostles
emperor Constantine the Great (+ 337, Comm. 21 May) and his sons deeply esteemed the Monk
Anthony and besought him to visit them at the capital, but the monk did not want to
forsake his wilderness brethren. In reply to the letter, he urged the emperor not to be
overcome with pride by his lofty position, but rather to remember, that even over him
was the Impartial Judge -- the Lord God.
The Monk Anthony spent 85 years of his life in the solitary wilderness.
before his death, the monk told the brethren, that soon he would be taken from them. Time
and again he instructed them to preserve the Orthodox faith in its purity, to shun any
association with heretics, and not to weaken in their monastic efforts. "Strive the yet
more to dwell ever in unity amongst ye, and most of all with the Lord, and then with the
saints, so that upon death they should bring ye into eternity by their blood, as friends
and acquaintances", -- thus were the death-bed words of the monk passed on in his Vita
(Life). The monk bid two of his disciples, who had been together with him the final 15
years of his life, to bury him in the wilderness and not arrange any solemn burial of his
remains in Alexandria. Of his two monastic mantles, the monk left one to Sainted
Athanasias of Alexandria (Comm. 18 January), the other to Sainted Serapion of Tmunta. The
Monk Anthony died peacefully in the year 356, at age 105, and he was buried by his
disciples at a treasured spot glorified by him in the wilderness.
The Vita (Life) of the famed ascetic the Monk Anthony the Great was
written in detail by a father of the Church, Saint Athanasias of Alexandria. This work of
Saint Athanasias is the first memorial of Orthodox hagiography, and is considered one of
the finest of his writings; Saint John Chrysostom says, that this Vita should be read by
every Christian. "These narratives be significantly small in comparison with the virtues
of Anthony, -- writes Saint Athanasias, -- but from them ye can conclude, what the man of
God Anthony was like. From his youth into his mature years observing an equal zeal for
asceticism, not being seduced by the avenues of filth, and not as regards infirmity of
body altering his garb, nor the any worse for it in suffering harm. His eyes were healthy
and unfailing and he saw well. Not one tooth fell out for him, and they only weakened at
the gums from the advanced years of age. He was healthy of hand and of foot (...). And
what they said about him everywhere, all being amazed at him, whereof even those that did
not see him loved him -- this serves as evidence of his virtue and love for God in soul".
Of the works of the Monk Anthony himself, there have come down to us:
1) his Discourses, 20 in number, treating of the virtues, primarily monastic, 2) Seven
Letters to monasteries -- about striving for moral perfection and regarding the spiritual
struggle, and 3) a Rule of life and consolation for monastics.
In the year 544 the relics of the Monk Anthony the great were
transferred from the wilderness to Alexandria, and later on with the conquest of Egypt by
the Saracens in the VII Century, they were transferred to Constantinople. The holy relics
were transferred from Constantinople in the X-XI Centuries to a diocese outside Vienna,
and in the XV Century -- to Arles (in France), into the church of Saint Julian.
The Monk Antonii (Anthony) of Dymsk was born at Novgorod in
about the year 1157. Upon a time once hearkening in church to the words of Christ: "Whoso
wouldst to follow Me, let them deny themself and take up their cross and come follow Me"
(Mt. 16: 24), the saint resolved to leave the world and take monastic vows under Saint
Varlaam of Khutynsk (Comm. 6 November) at his monastery. When he was dying, the Monk
Varlaam established Saint Antonii as monastery head in his place; but Antonii, shunning
glory, left the monastery and settled at the shores of Lake Dyma, in the outskirts of the
city of Tikhvin. Here he founded a monastery and asceticised at it until the end of his
own life. According to tradition, the Monk Antonii made a journey to Constantinople and
through the holy places. The Monk Antonii died in the year 1224 on 24 June (on this day
is made his memory). In the year 1330 his relics were uncovered undecayed, and from that
time they were glorified by many miracles.
The Monk Antonii (Anthony) of Chernoezersk founded the Mother
of God monastery at BlackLake (Chernoezero) in the Novgorod holdings, not far from the
city of Chernopovets. The monastery was situated on an island of the Schirsk countryside.
The monastery twice suffered a complete destruction: in 1581 -- from the Lithuanians, and
in 1682 -- from the Swedes. In 1764 the monastery was closed.
The Monk Antonii (Anthony) of Krasnokholmsk was initially a
wilderness-dweller in the Belozersk (WhiteLake) lands. Having already the dignity of
priestmonk, he arrived in the Tver' land and settled near "Pretty Hillock" ("Krasnyi
kholm"), at the bank of the River Mologa, building there a chapel and cell. After the
discovery of an icon of Saint Nicholas, a stone church was built and a monastery founded,
headed by the monk, who taught the brethren both by word and by example throughout his
life. The Monk Antonii died in the year 1481.
The Holy Emperor Theodosius the Great during the period of his
reign (379?395) delivered a decisive blow to paganism: he issued a legal edict, under
which any sort of service to the pagan gods was considered a transgression. The zealous
proponent of Orthodoxy issued many laws in defense of the Church and against heretics.
The Second OEcumenical Council (381) was convened by him.
The Monk Achilles the Confessor asceticised living the life of
an hermit, and died during the V Century.
© 1998 by translator Fr S Janos
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