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January 2nd (I - 15)
Icon of St. Sylvester, St. Seraphim, and St Theologe
Sainted Sylvester, Pope of Rome (+ 335). Monk Seraphim, Sarov
Wonderworker (+ 1833). Monk Sylvester of Pechersk, in the Nearer Caves (XII).
Righteous Juliania of Lazarev and Murom (+ 1604). PriestMartyr Theogenes, Bishop of
Parium (+ c. 320). Monk Theopemptos. Saint Theodotia. Monk Mark the Deaf.
Martyrs: Sergios (+ 304); Theopistos; Modestos; Zacheios; Zorzis (+ 1770); Saint
Isidor; Monk Peter of Rome. Sainted Cosma, Archbishop of Constantinople (+ 1081).
The Holy Pope of Rome Sylvester (314-335) was born at Rome of
Christian parents named Rufinus and Justa. His father soon died, and the saint remained in
the care of his mother. Sylvester's teacher, the presbyter Quirinus, gave him a fine
education and raised him as a true Christian. Having reached the age of maturity,
Sylvester set about fulfilling the command of the Lord about service to neighbour,
and particularly concerned himself with the taking in of vagrants, offering them in his
own house shelter and respite. During a time of persecution against Christians, Sylvester
did not hesitate to take in the holy confessor Bishop Timothy, who dwelt with him for more
than a year and who by his preaching converted many to Christ. After the Martyr's death of
Timothy, Sylvester secretly took up the body of the saint and reverently gave it burial.
This however came to the attention of the city-head Tarquinius, and the saint was arrested
and brought to trial. Tarquinius demanded him to renounce Christ, threatening him with
torture and death. Saint Sylvester was however not intimidated, and he remained steadfast
in his confession of faith, and was then thrown into prison. When Tarquinius suddenly died
after the trial, the saint was set free and fearlessly he evangelised amongst the pagans,
converting many to Christianity. At thirty years of age Saint Sylvester was accepted into
the clergy of the Roman Church and was ordained to the dignity of deacon, and then also
presbyter, by Pope Marcellinus (296-304). After the death of Pope Militiades
(or Melchiades, 311-314), Saint Sylvester was chosen bishop of Rome. He zealously concerned
himself about the purity of life in his flock, and he insisted that presbyters strictly
fulfill their duty, and not be overwhelmed with worldly matters.
Saint Sylvester became reknown as a profound expert on Holy Scripture
and as a staunch defender of the Christian faith. During the reign of the emperor Saint
Constantine the Great, when the periods of persecution had ended for the Church, the Jews
arranged a debate about the true faith, at which were present the holy Equal-to-the-
Apostles Emperor Constantine and his mother -- the holy Empress Helen, together with a
numerous retinue. On the side of the Christians Pope Sylvester stood forth, and on the
side of the Jews -- a number of learned rabbis, headed by Zambrius, a magician and
sorcerer. On the basis of the Sacred books of the Old Testament, Saint Sylvester
convincingly demonstrated, that all the prophets foretold the Birth of Jesus Christ from
the Immaculate Virgin, and also His voluntary Suffering and Death for the Redemption of
the fallen race of mankind, and His glorious Resurrection. In this verbal confrontation
the saint was declared the victor. Then Zambrius tried to resort to sorcery, but the saint
obstructed the evil by calling on the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Zambrius and the
other Jews came to believe in Jesus Christ, and they besought that there be made over them
the holy Baptism. Pope Saint Sylvester directed the Roman Church for more than twenty
years, and earning deep esteem as a Christian. He died peacefully in old age in the year
335.
The Monk Seraphim of Sarov, a great ascetic of the Russian
Church, was born on 19 July 1754. His parents, Isidor and Agathia Moshnin, were
inhabitants of Kursk. Isidor was a merchant involved in the construction of buildings,
and towards the end of his life he began construction of a cathedral in Kursk, but he
died before the completion of the work. His little son Prokhor -- the future Seraphim,
remained in the care of his widowed mother, who raised her son in deep faith.
After the death of her husband, Agathia Moshnina continued with the
construction of the cathedral, and one time when she took Prokhor along with her there,
he stumbled and fell down from the belfry. But the Lord watched over the life of the
future luminary of the Church: the terrified mother, running down, found her son
unharmed.
Young Prokhor, endowed with an excellent memory, soon mastered his
reading and writing. From the time of his childhood he loved to visit church-services
and to read with his fellow students both the Holy Scripture and the Lives of the Saints,
but most of all he loved to pray or to read the Holy Gospel in private.
At one point Prokhor fell grievously ill, and his life was in danger.
In a dream the boy saw the Mother of God, promising to visit and heal him. Soon through
the courtyard of the Moshnin home there came a church procession with the Znamenie (Sign)
Icon of the Mother of God; his mother carried out Prokhor in her arms, and he kissed the
holy icon, after which he speedily recovered.
While still in his youth Prokhor matured his plans to entirely devote
his life to God and to go off to a monastery. His pious mother did not object to this and
she blessed him on his monastic path with a cross, which the monk all his life wore on his
chest. Prokhor set off on foot with pilgrims going from Kursk to Kiev to venerate the
Pechersk Saints.
The starets-elder schema-monk Dosiphei, whom Prokhor visited, blessed
him to go off to the Sarovsk wilderness-monastery and there seek his salvation. Returning
briefly to his parental home, Prohkor bid a final farewell to his mother and kinsfolk. On
20 November 1778 he arrived at Sarov, where the monastery then was headed by a wise
starets-elder, Father Pakhomii. He amiably accepted him and put him under the spiritual
guidance of the starets-elder Joseph. And under his direction Prokhor passed through many
obediences at the monastery: he was the cell-attendant of the elder, he toiled in the
making of bread and prosphora and at carpentry, he did duty as a church-attendant, and
he did everything with zeal and fervour, just as though serving the very Lord Himself. By
constant work he hedged himself in against boredom -- this being, as he later said, "the
most dangerous temptation for newly-become monks, which is doctored by prayer, abstaining
from idle chatter, exertive handwork, by reading of the Word of God and by patience,
since that it is engendered by pettiness of soul, neglectfulness and idle talk".
Prokhor already in these years, on the example of the other monks that
went off into the forest for prayer, besought the blessing of the elder for free time
likewise to withdraw into the woods, where in complete isolation he made the Jesus Prayer.
After two years as a novice, Prokhor fell ill with dropsy, his body became swollen, and
he was beset with suffering. His instructor Father Joseph and the other startsi-elders
were fond of Prokhor, and they provided him care. The illness dragged on for about three
years, and not once did anyone hear from him a word of complaint. The elders, fearing for
his very life, wanted to call a doctor for him, but Prokhor asked that this not be done,
in saying to Father Pakhomii: "I have given myself over, holy father, to the True Physician
of soul and body -- our Lord Jesus Christ and His All-Pure Mother...", and he besought,
that they might commune him with the Holy Mysteries. Prokhor then had a vision: in an
inexpressible light there appeared the Mother of God accompanied by the holy Apostles
Peter and John the Theologian. Pointing with Her hand towards he that was sick, the
MostHoly Virgin said to Saint John: "This one -- is of our lineage". Thereupon with Her
staff She touched the side of the sick man, and immediately the fluid that had swelled up
his body began to flow through a sort of opening made, and he quickly became well. Soon at
the place of the appearance of the Mother of God there was built an infirmary-church for
the sick, and one of the side-chapels was dedicated in the name of the Monks Zosima and
Savvatii of Solovetsk. The altar-table for the chapel was fashioned by the Monk Seraphim
with his own hands from cypress wood, and he always communed the Holy Mysteries in this
church.
Being eight years an obedient (novice) at the Sarov monastery, Prokhor
accepted monastic tonsure with the name Seraphim, a name so finely expressive of his fiery
love for the Lord and the desire zealously to serve Him. After a year, Seraphim was
ordained to the dignity of monk-deacon. Earnest in spirit, he daily served in temple,
incessantly praying even after the service. The Lord vouchsafed the monk graced visions
during the time of church-services: repeatedly he beheld holy Angels, concelebrating with
the brethren. The monk was vouchsafed one particularly graced vision during the time of
Divine Liturgy on Holy Great Thursday, which was celebrated by the monastery-head Father
Pakhomii and by Father Joseph. When after the Little Entrance with the Gospel, the
Monk-deacon Seraphim pronounced the words "O Lord, save the God-fearing, and hear us",
and standing in the royal doorway, he lifted his orarion (deacon's stole) with the
exclamation prayer "And unto ages of ages", suddenly a bright ray of light blinded him.
[trans. note: this prayer "O Lord, save the God-fearing..." in Divine Liturgy falls
between the priest's exclamation "For holy art Thou..." and the choir's beginning of the
"Holy God, Holy Mighty...". To Orthodox believers in the West, this is likely unfamiliar
(even though found in Hapgood): its use apparently ceased in Russia after the Revolution,
and was restored only recently with the demise of the Soviet Union, with other liturgical
changes, such as the adding of Saint Seraphim of Sarov to the commemoration of the 6th
rank of saints in Proskomedia, a particle being taken from the third prosphora for the
rank of the Monastics.] Looking upwards, the Monk Seraphim beheld the Lord Jesus Christ,
coming through the air from the western doors of the temple, surrounded by the Heavenly
Bodiless Hosts. Reaching the amvon, the Lord blessed all the praying and entered into His
Image located there to the right of the royal doors. The Monk Seraphim, in spiritual
rapture viewing this miraculous vision, was able to utter neither a word, nor to move from
the spot. They led him by the hand into the altar, where he just stood for another three
hours, his face having changed colour from the great grace that shone upon him. After the
vision the saint intensified his efforts: by day he toiled at the monastery, and nights he
spent at prayer in the forest wilderness cell.
In 1793, at age 39, the Monk Seraphim was ordained to the dignity of
priestmonk and he continued at serving in the temple. After the death of the monastery
head Father Pakhomii, the Monk Seraphim, -- having before this received deathbed blessing
for the new exploit of wilderness-dwelling, and having likewise received blessing of the
new monastery-head Father Isaiah, -- went off to a wilderness cell some several kilometers
from the monastery, in the deep forest. Here he devoted himself to solitary prayer,
arriving at the monastery only on Saturday before the all-night vigil, and returning
to his cell after Liturgy, at which he communed the Divine Mysteries. The monk spent
his time at severe efforts. His cell rule of prayer he made according to the ustav-rule
of the ancient wilderness-monasteries; from the Holy Gospel he never parted, reading
through the course of the week all the New Testament, and he read likewise the holy
fathers and the Divine?service books. The monk learned by heart many of the Church songs
and sang them during his hours at work in the forest. Around his cell he cultivated a
garden and set up a bee-hive. Having seen to his subsistence, the monk kept to a very
strict fast, he ate only once during the entire day, and on Wednesdays and Fridays he
completely abstained from food. On the first Sunday of the Holy Forty-Days (Lent)he did
not partake of food at all until Saturday, when he communed the Holy Mysteries.
The holy elder in his solitude was sometimes so immersed in his inner
prayer of the heart, that at length he remained without stirring, neither hearing nor
seeing anything around him. The schema-monk Mark the Silent and the monk-deacon Aleksandr,
also wilderness-dwellers, would visit him every now and then, and finding the saint
immersed in suchlike prayer, in reverent quiet they would leave, so as not to disrupt his
contemplation.
In the heat of Summer the monk gathered moss in a swamp as fertilizer
for his garden; the gnats relentlessly bit at him, but he good-naturedly endured this
vexation, saying: "Passions are destroyed by suffering and by sorrow, either arbitrarily
or as sent by Providence". For about three years the monk ate only a certain vegetable,
which grew about his cell. All the more frequently there began to come not only monks, but
also laypeople, -- for advice and blessing. This disrupted his solitude. Having besought
the blessing of the monastery head, the monk at first barred the admittance of women to
him, and then all the rest, having received a sign that the Lord approved of his intent
for complete silence. Through the prayer of the monk, the pathway to his wilderness cell
was blocked by huge branches blown down from ancient pine trees. Now only the birds,
flocking to him in throngs, and the wild beasts, paid him visit. The monk fed a bear with
bread from his hand, when they happened to bring him bread from the monastery.
Seeing the efforts of the Monk Seraphim, the enemy of the race of man
roused up against him, and wanting to force the saint to foresake his silence, he decided
to frighten him, but the monk shielded himself by prayer and by the power of the
Life-Creating Cross. The devil conducted against the saint "mental warfare" -- persistent
and continous temptation. For repulsing the onslaughts of the enemy the Monk Seraphim
intensified his toil, and took upon himself the exploit of pillar-dwelling. Each night he
climbed up upon an immense rock in the forest and he prayed with up-raised hands, crying
out: "God, be merciful to me a sinner". By day he prayed in his cell and likewise upon a
stone, which he had brought from the forest, coming down from it only for brief rest and
to refresh his body with a scant bit of food. The monk prayed thus for 1,000 days and
nights. The devil, shamed by the monk, hatched a plan to kill the saint and sent out
robbers. Coming upon him while working in his garden, the robbers began to demand money
from him. The monk had in his hands at this time an axe, he was physically strong and
could have put up a fight, but he did not want to do this, having called to mind the words
of the Lord: "Those taking up the sword wilt perish by the sword" (Mt. 26: 52). The monk,
dropping his axe to the ground, said: "Do what ye intend to". The robbers began to beat
the monk, with the butt-end of the axe they bloodied his head, broke several of his ribs,
and then having tied him, they wanted to throw him in the river, but first they searched
the cell for money. Having trashed everything in the cell and finding nothing in it besides
icons and a few potatoes, they were shamed in their wicked deed and left. The monk, gaining
consciousness, got to his cell, and suffering terribly, he lay there all night. In the
morning with great difficulty he reached the monastery. The brethren were horrified,
seeing the ascetic all bruised with wounds. For eight whole days the monk just lay there,
suffering from his wounds; doctors were called for him, who were amazed that after such a
beating he even remained alive. But the monk did not receive his healing from the
physicians: the Queen of Heaven appeared to him in a subtle dream vision together with the
Apostles Peter and John. Touching the head of the monk, the MostHoly Virgin granted him
healing. After this instance the Monk Seraphim had to spend about five months at the
monastery, and then he again went off to his wilderness cell. Left in posture stooped over
always henceforth, the monk walked, leaning upon his staff or small axe, and he indeed
forgave his abusers and asked that they not be punished.
After the death of the monastery head, Father Isaiah, -- a friend of
the monk since his youth, -- the Monk Seraphim took upon himself the deed of silence, being
completely cut off from any worldly ponderings for a most purified being in the presence
of God in unceasing prayer. If the saint encountered a man in the forest, he fell face
downwards and did not rise up, until the passerby had moved on. In such a manner of
silence the starets?elder spent about three years, ceasing even to visit the monastery on
Sundays. The fruit of silence for the Monk Seraphim was the acquisition of peace of soul
and joy in the Holy Spirit. The great ascetic afterwards spoke thus to one of the monks of
the monastery: "...my joy, I pray thee, acquire a spirit at peace, and then a thousand
souls wilt be saved around thee".
The new monastery head, Father Nyphont, and the elder brethren of the
monastery suggested to Father Seraphim that either as before he show up at the monastery
on Sundays for participation in Divine-services and communing the Holy Mysteries at the
monastery, or that he return to the monastery. The monk chose the latter course, since it
had become difficult for him to walk from the wilderness to the monastery. In Spring of
the year 1810 he returned to the monastery after 15 years of living in the wilderness. Not
breaking off with his silence, he added onto it also that of hermit enclosure, neither
coming out anywhere nor admitting anyone, he dwelt in unceasing prayer and meditation on
God. In his hermitage the Monk Seraphim discovered an height of spiritual purity and was
vouchsafed of God the special gifts of grace -- perspicacity and wonderworking. Then the
Lord sent His chosen one to serve people in an utmost monastic exploit -- "Starchestvo"
("being an elder"). On 25 November 1825 the Mother of God accompanied by the two
sainted-hierarchs celebrated this day (i.e. PriestMartyr Clement, Pope of Rome, and Peter,
Archbishop of Alexandria), appeared to the elder in a dream-vision and bid him emerge from
his hermitage, so as to receive infirm human souls, needful of instruction, consolation,
guidance and healing. The monastery head gave blessing to this change in the manner of his
life, and the monk opened the doors of his cell to everyone. The starets saw into the
hearts of people, and as a spiritual physician, he healed the infirmities of soul and body
with a prayer to God and by words of grace. Those coming to the Monk Seraphim sensed his
great love and with tenderness they hearkened to his amiable words, with which he turned to
people: "my joy, my precious". The starets began to visit his own wilderness cell and
water-spring, called Bogoslovsk, around which they built him a small cell. Coming out from
the cell, the starets always carried on his shoulders a knapsack with stones. To the
question as to why he did this, the saint humbly answered: "I oppress that which oppresseth
me".
In the final period of his earthly life the Monk Seraphim especially
concerned himself about his spiritual children -- the Diveevo women's monastery. While
still in the dignity of monk-deacon he had accompanied the belated monastery head Father
Pakhomii to the Diveevo community to its monastic leader, the nun Mother Alexandra -- a
great woman ascetic, and then Father Pakhomii blessed the Monk Seraphim to concern himself
always for the "Diveevo orphans". He was a genuine father for the sisters, who turned to
him with all their spiritual and material difficulties. His students and spiritual friends
helped the saint to feed and nourish the Diveevo community: -- Mikhail Vasil'evich
Manturov, healed by the monk from grievous illness and on the advice of the elder having
taken upon himself the exploit of voluntary poverty; Elena Vasil'evna Manturovna, one of
the Diveevo sisters, voluntarily consenting to die out of obedience to the elder for her
brother, who was still needed in this life; Nikolai Aleksandrovich Motovilov, who likewise
was healed by the monk. N. A. Motovilov recorded in writing the remarkable teachings of
the Monk Seraphim about the goals of Christian life. In the last year of the life of the
Monk Seraphim, one of those healed by him saw him standing in the air during the time of
prayer. The saint strictly forbade this to be told of before his death.
Everyone knew and esteemed the Monk Seraphim as a great ascetic and
wonderworker. A year and ten months before his end, on the feast of the Annunciation, the
Monk Seraphim was vouchsafed yet once more to have appear the Queen of Heaven in the
company of the Baptist of the Lord John, the Apostle John the Theologian and twelve
virgins, martyrs and monastics. The MostHoly Virgin conversed at length with the monk,
entrusting the Diveevo sisters to him. Concluding the conversation, She said to him: "Soon,
My dear one, thou shalt be with us". During this vision with the miraculous visit of the
Mother of God, a certain Diveevo eldress was present, through the prayer of the monk for
her.
During the final year of his life the Monk Seraphim became noticeably
weaker and he spoke much about his approaching end. During this time they often saw him
at his grave, set at the approaches to his cell, and which he had prepared for himself.
The monk himself had pointed out the place, where finally they would bury him -- near the
altar of the Uspenie-Dormition cathedral. On 1 January 1833 the Monk Seraphim one last
time came to the Zosimo-Savvatiev church for liturgy and he communed the Holy Mysteries,
after which he blessed the brethren and bid farewell, saying: "Ye seeking salvation, be
not discouraged, but take heart, the day of crowns is prepared for us". On 2 January, the
cell?attendant of the monk, Father Pavel, at six in the morning left his own cell heading
for church, and he caught the smell of burning coming from the cell of the Monk Seraphim;
in the cell of the monk candles always burned, and he had said: "While I yet live, there
wilt be no fire, but when I die, my end shalt reveal itself with a fire". When they opened
the doors, it appeared that the books and the other things had burned, but the monk himself
remained upright on his knees before an icon of the Mother of God in a position of prayer,
but was already lifeless. His pure soul at the time of prayer was taken by the Angels and
had flown off to the Throne of the All-Mighty God, to Whom the Monk Seraphim had been a
faithful servant all his life.
The Monk Sylvester of Pechersk lived during the XII Century and
was hegumen of the Mikhailovsk Vydubitsk monastery at Kiev. He continued the work of the
Monk?Chronicler Nestor and he wrote nine Vitae of the Pechersk holy saints. In the service
to the Pechersk Fathers venerated in the Nearer Caves, the Monk Sylvester is called
blessed and endowed with "a miraculous gift to ward off demonic suggestions (Ode 9 of
the Canon). The Monk Sylvester was buried in the Nearer Caves, and his memory is
celebrated likewise on 28 September and on the 2nd Sunday of Great Lent.
Righteous Juliania of Lazarev and Muromsk presents an astonishing
example of a self-denying Russian Christian woman. She was the daughter of the nobleman
Iustin Nediurov. From her early years she lived piously, kept the fasts strictly and set
aside much time for prayer. Early on having become orphaned, she was given over into the
care of kinsfolk, who did not take to her and laughed at her. Juliania bore everything
with patience and without complaint. Her love for people expressed itself in this
manner -- she often nursed the sick and sewed clothing for the poor. The pious and
virtuous life of the maiden attracted the attention of the Lazarev village owner, Yurii
Osor'in, who thereafter soon married her. The husband's parents loved their gentle
daughter-in-law and gave over into her hands the running of the household. Domestic
concerns did not disrupt the spiritual efforts of Juliania. She always found time for
prayer and she was always prepared to feed the orphaned and clothe the poor. During the
time of an harsh famine, she herself remained without food, having given away her last
morsel to someone begging. When an epidemic started after the famine, Juliania devoted
herself completely to the nursing of the sick.
Righteous Juliania had six sons and a daughter. After the death of two
of her sons she decided to withdraw to a monastery, but her husband persuaded her to
remain in the world, and to continue to raise their children. On the testimony of a son
of Juliania -- Kallistrat Osor'in, who wrote her life, at this time she became all the
more demanding towards herself: she intensified her fasting and prayer, slept not more
than two hours at night, and then laying her head upon a board.
Upon the death of her husband, Juliania distributed to the poor her
portion of the inheritance. Living in extreme poverty, she was none the less for it
vivacious, cordial, and in everything she thanked the Lord. The saint was vouchsafed a
visitation by Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker and guidance by the Mother of God in church.
When Righteous Juliania expired to the Lord, she was then buried alongside her husband at
the church of Saint Lazarus. Here also was buried her daughter, the schema-nun Theodosia.
In the year 1614 the relics of Righteous Juliania were uncovered, exuding a fragrant myrh,
from which many received healing.
The PriestMartyr Theogenes was bishop of the Asia Minor city of
Pareia at the beginning of the IV Century. During the reign of the emperor Licinius
(307-324), -- a co?ruler of Constantine the Great, the tribune Zalicentius demanded
him to forsake the priestly dignity, to renounce Christ and to enlist in military
service. After his resolute refusal, Saint Theogenes was mercilessly beaten with canes
and thrown into prison, where it was forbidden to allow him food. They then sentenced
him to be drowned in the sea. Before execution the saint requested time for prayer, during
which time an extraordinary light shone on him. The sailors and certain of the soldiers
entrusted to drown the saint were struck by the light and were converted to Christ, but
other soldiers hastened to cast the saint into the sea. Saint Theogenes accepted a
martyr's death in about the year 320. His body was afterwards taken from the waters by
Christians and buried at the city walls. And at this spot numerous healings occurred.
© 1999 by translator Fr. S. Janos
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