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September 13th (IX - 26)
Icon of St. Cornelius the Centurion and St. Aristithis
Commemoration of Renewal of Temple of the Resurrection of Christ in Jerusalem (Having its Reputation
from the Resurrection) (335). PriestMartyr Cornelius the Centurion (I). Martyrs Kronides, Leontios and Serapion
(+ c. 237). Martyrs Seleucos and Stratonikes (III). Martyrs Macrobius and Gordian (+ 320). PriestMartyr Julian the
Presbyter (IV). Martyrs Elias, Zotikos, Lucian and Valerian (+ 320). Monk Peter at Atroe (IX). GreatMartyress Ketvana,
Empress of Kakhetin (+ 1624, Gruzia). Monk Hierotheos (+ 1745). Icon of Mother of God of Dubovich.
The Commemoration of the Renewal of the Temple of the Resurrection of Christ at Jerusalem
celebrates the solemnity on the occasion of the consecration of the Church of the Resurrection of Christ, built by the
Equal-to-the-Apostles Constantine the Great and his mother Equal-to-the-Apostles the empress Helen. This feastday is
still called among the people by its unique title "having reputation from the Resurrection" ("Voskresenie slovuschee")
and it means that it reputes to or pertains to the Resurrection, in distinction from the Feast of the Luminous
Resurrection of Christ, and refers particularly to the consecration of the Church in honour of the Resurrection of
Christ.
The history of the construction of this temple is thus. After the voluntary Passion and Death on
the Cross of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, the holy place of His suffering was long trampled on by pagans. When
the Roman emperor Titus in the year 70 conquered Jerusalem, he razed the city and destroyed the Temple of Solomon on
Mount Moriah, leaving there not a stone upon a stone, as even the Saviour had foretold about in conversation with the
disciples (Mt. 13: 1-2). Later on the zealous pagan emperor Adrian (117-138) built on the place of the Jerusalem
destroyed by Titus a new city, which was named after his name -- Aelia Adriani (Aelia Capitolina) and made it forbidden
to call the city by its former name. The Holy Sepulchre of the Lord he gave orders to cover over with ground and stones
and on that spot to set up an idol; and on Golgotha where the Saviour was crucified, in 119 he constructed a pagan-temple
dedicated to the goddess Venus. In front of the statues they offered sacrifice to demons and performed pagan rites,
accompanied by wanton acts. In Bethlehem, at the place the Saviour was born of the AllPure Virgin, the impious emperor
set up an idol of Adonis. He did all this intentionally, so that people would forget completely about Christ the Saviour
and that they would no more remember the places where He lived, taught, suffered and arose in glory.
When there began the reign of Equal-to-the-Apostles Constantine the Great (306-337), the first of the
Roman emperors to recognise the Christian religion, he together with his pious mother the empress Helen decided to
rebuild the city of Jerusalem and on the place of the suffering and Resurrection of the Lord to erect a new temple, to
purify from the foul pagan cults the places connected with memory of the Saviour, and again to consecrate them. The
nobleborn empress Helen journeyed to Jerusalem with a large quantity of gold, and Equal-to-the-Apostles Constantine
the Great wrote a letter to Patriarch Makarios I (313-323), in which he requested him to assist in every possible way
for the task of the renewal of the Christian holy places. Having arrived in Jerusalem, the holy empress Helen destroyed
all the idolous pagan temples and had the desecrated places re-consecrated. She was ardent with the desire to find the
Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ and she gave orders to dig up the place, where stood the temple of Venus. There they
discovered the covered over Sepulchre of the Lord and the place of the Skull, not far from where they found three
crosses and nails. In order to determine, upon which of the three crosses lay the Saviour, Patriarch Makarios gave
orders to touch alternately against a dead person, whom they happened to be carrying by towards a place of burial. Just
as the Cross of Christ touched the dead person, he immediately came alive. With the greatest of joy the nobleborn empress
Helen and Patriarch Makarios raised up high the Life-Creating Cross and displayed it to all the people standing
about.
The holy empress quickly set about the construction of a large church, which enclosed in its walls
the place of the Crucifixion of the Saviour -- Golgotha, and the Sepulchre of the Lord, located a not large distance from
each other, and as the holy Apostle and Evangelist John wrote about this: "At that place, where He was crucified, was a
garden and in the garden a new tomb, in which still no one had been put; there they did place Jesus because of the Jewish
Friday, since that the tomb was nearby" (Jn. 19: 41-42). The Church of the Resurrection was 10 years in building, and the
holy empress Helen did not survive to the completion of construction. Having returned to Constantinople, she reposed in
the year 327. After the time of her arrival in Jerusalem the holy empress built churches in Bethlehem, on the Mount of
Olives, at Gethsemane and in many other places, connected with the life of the Saviour and events in the New
Testament.
The completion of construction of the New Testament temple of the Resurrection of Christ, called
"Martyrion", in memory of the sufferings of the Cross of the Saviour, co?incided with the passage of the First Council
of Tyre, and with it the thirty year reign of the Equal-to-the-Apostles Constantine the Great. Wherefore at the
assemblage of 13 September 335 the consecration of the temple was particularly solemn. At the consecration of the church
participated hierarchy of the Christian Churches from many lands: Bythnia, Thrace, Cilicia, Cappadocia, Syria,
Mesopotamia, Phoenicia, Arabia, Palestine and Egypt. To the solemnity of the renewal were invited only the fathers
that concluded the Tyre Council. On this day was consecrated all the city of Jerusalem. The commemoration of this
remarkable event by the fathers of the Church was established as 13 September.
The PriestMartyr Cornelius the Centurion: Soon after the sufferings on the Cross of the Lord
Jesus Christ and after His Ascension into Heaven, there settled at Caesarea in Palestine a centurion by the name of
Cornelius, who earlier had lived in Thracian Italy. Although he was a pagan, he distinguished himself by deep piety and
good deeds, as the holy Evangelist Luke testifies about him (Acts 10: 1). The Lord did not disdain his virtuous life and
led him to the understanding of truth through the enlightening light of faith in Christ.
One time Cornelius was at prayer in his home. An Angel of God appeared to him and said, that his
prayer had been heard and accepted by God, and commanded him to send people to Joppa to Simon, called Peter. Cornelius
immediately fulfilled the command. While those dispatched were on their way to Joppa, the Apostle Peter was at prayer,
during which time he had a vision: thrice were lowered down vessels in visage of great plenitude, filled with meats and
fowl. From Heaven he heard a voice, commanding him to eat of everything. At the refusal of the apostle there followed a
reply: "What God hath purified, regard not as unclean" (Acts 10: 15).
By means of this vision the Lord commanded the Apostle Peter to go at preaching the Word of God to
the pagans. When the Apostle Peter in the company of those sent to meet him arrived at the house of Cornelius, he was
received with great joy and respect by the host together with his kinsmen and comrades. Cornelius on his knees bowed down
to the apostle and requested to be taught the way of salvation. The apostle began to preach about the earthly life of
Jesus Christ, about the miracles and signs worked by the Saviour, about His sufferings, the teachings about the Kingdom
of Heaven, the death on the Cross, the Resurrection and Ascent into Heaven. By grace under the influence of the Holy
Spirit, Cornelius believed in Christ and was baptised together with all his kinsfolk. He was the first pagan to receive
Baptism.
He retired from the world and went preaching the Gospel together with the Apostle Peter, who made him
a bishop. When the Apostle Peter, together with his helpers Saints Timothy and Cornelius, was in the city of Ephesus, he
learned of a particularly vigorous idol-worship in the city of Skepsis. Lots were drawn as to whom that would go there,
falling upon Saint Cornelius. In the city lived a prince by the name of Demetrios, learned in the ancient Greek
philosophy, hating Christianity and venerating the pagan gods, in particular Apollo and Theos/Deus (Zeus). Learning
about the arrival of Saint Cornelius in the city, he immediately summoned him and asked him the reason for his coming.
Saint Cornelius answered, that he came to free him from the darkness of ignorance and lead him to knowledge of the True
Light. The prince, not comprehending the meaning of what was said, became angry and demanded him to answer each of his
questions. When Saint Cornelius explained, that he serves the Lord and that the reason for his coming consists in an
announcement of the Truth, the prince became enraged and demanded from Cornelius an offering of sacrifice to the idols.
The saint asked to be shewn the gods. When he entered the pagan temple, Cornelius turned towards the East and bending
down on his knees, he uttered a prayer to the Lord. There began an earthquake, and the temple of Zeus and the idols
situated in it were destroyed. All the populace, seeing what had happened, were terrified. The prince was even more
vexed and began to take counsel together with those approaching him, about how to destroy Cornelius. They bound the
saint and took him to prison for the night. At this point one of his servants informed the prince the grievous news that
his wife and child had perished beneathe the rubble of the destroyed temple. But a certain while later one of the
pagan-priests, by the name of Barbates, reported that he heard the voice of the wife and son somewhere in the ruins and
that they were praising the God of the Christians. The pagan-priest asked to free the imprisoned one, as gratitude for
the miracle worked by Saint Cornelius, in that the wife and son of the prince remained alive. The joyous prince in the
company of those about him hastened to the prison, declaring that he believed in Christ and asking him to lead out his
wife and son from somewhere in the ruins of the temple. Saint Cornelius set off to the destroyed idol-temple, and through
prayer the suffering were freed. After this the prince Demetrios, and all his kinsmen and comrades accepted holy Baptism.
Saint Cornelius lived for a long time in this city, converted to Christ all the pagan inhabitants, and made Eunomios a
presbyter for service to the Lord. Saint Cornelius died in old age and was buried not far from the pagan temple destroyed
by him.
The Holy Martyrs Seleukos, Stratonikes, Kronides, Leontios and Serapion suffered for the
Christian faith in the III Century. Saint Seleukos -- came from Galatia, Stratonikes -- from Bythinian Nikomedia,
while Kronides, Leontios and Serapion -- were from Egypt. After fierce torments for their confession of faith in
Christ, holy martyrs were beastly killed. Saints Kronides, Leontios and Serapion they bound hand and foot and cast
into the sea. Their bodies were carried by the waves to shore, where Christians gave them burial.
Saint Seleukos suffered in Galatia, where after many tortures he was thrown together with his wife
for devouring by wild beasts.
Saint Stratonikes after torture by order of the Bythinan governor was bound to two drawn tree trunks.
His body was split into two parts. (His memory is celebrated also on 9 September).
The Holy Martyrs Gordian, Macrobius, Elias, Zotikos, Lucian and Valerian suffered at the
beginning of the IV Century at Paphlagonia (Asia Minor) under the emperor Licinius (307-324). Saint Gordian was a
native of Cappadocia, and Macrobius -- of Paphlagonia. They were handsome youths serving under the imperial court
and they enjoyed the particular favour of the emperor. For their firm confession of faith in Christ they were sent
to Skythia, where they met Zotikos, Lucian and Elias, likewise courageous confessors of the Name of Christ. First
suffered Saints Gordian and Macrobius. After this in the city of Tomak in Skythia were tortured and then beheaded
Saints Elias, Zotikos, Lucian and Valerian.
The Monk Peter from Atroe was from childhood dedicated to God and spent his whole life in
exploits of fasting and unceasing prayer. He pursued asceticism in the city of Atroe, near Asian Olympos. A distinctive
feature of the holy ascetic was his extreme temperance. While still during his lifetime the saint worked many miracles
and peacefully reposed during the time or rule of the Patriarch of Constantinople Tarasios (784-806).
The Holy GreatMartyr Ketvana was descended from the imperial Bagration lineage and was a
great-grandchild of the emperor Constantine of Kartalin (1469-1505). Having become the spouse of David, successor to
the emperor Alexander II of Khaketin (1577-1605), she herself governed the empire. The deep piety of the empress was
manifest in a particular attention to the needs of the Gruzian (Georgian) Church, -- in the building of churches,
shelters and vagrants homes. After the death of her husband Saint Ketvana settled into solitude.
The brother of her husband, Constantine (called Okayan), accepted Mahometanism and on the instructions
of the shah Abbas I sent assassins to his dying father, the emperor Alexander II, and his brother George. Having
committed the crime, Constantine gave orders to place the bodies of the murdered on camels and take them to the
empress Ketvana. Horrified at the wicked deed, the empress bewailed the innocent sufferers and buried them at the
Alaverdsk cathedral. The impious one, however, enroached upon her honourable widowhood and demanded her hand,
threatening force in case of refusal.
The empress Ketvana gathered the people of Kakhetin and marched against Constantine, defeating the
impious apostate. He met an inglorious death together with many in the Persian army. Under the wise rule of the empress
Ketvana, peace and justice were re-established in Kakhetia. Shah Abbas I returned her son Teimuraz, who although he had
lived several years in court in the guise of an hostage, preserved his Orthodox faith in purity. Afterwards the shah
Abbas, threatening Gruzia with destruction, coerced the Kakhetin feudal authorities into handing over illustrious
hostages. In that number voluntarily was the empress Ketvana. Wanting to avert disaster for the Gruzian nation and
Holy Church, she arrived in Ispahan. Shah Abbas urged the nobleborn empress to accept Mahometanism, but he received
decisive refusal. Thereupon the empress Ketvana was thrown into prison, where she spent ten years, filled with the
sufferings of martyrdom. Neither vileness from Persian courtiers, nor cunning offers by the shah to elevate her to
empress of the Persian realm, nor offers to her of great treasure, nor the implorings and entreaties of the courtiers
and Persian nobles, -- nothing was able to budge her, not even to uttering a single blasphemous word against Christ,
nothing was able to move the sufferer for Christ. They tortured her with red-hot tongs hung cross-wise in wood. On the
head of the holy martyress they touched a red-hot iron kettle. The dense smoke from her burning hair and head rose
upwards, and the blessed martyress gave up her soul to God on 13 September 1624.
Three bright pillars, having come down upon the body of Saint Ketvana, signified her spiritual
victory. The relics of the holy empress were taken to Rome, to the cathedral of the holy Apostle Peter, by monks
of the Augustinian order who had been witnesses to her deed of confessor. Part of the relics (the venerable head and
right hand of the martyress) was given by the Augustinian monks to emperor Teimuraz I and placed beneathe the
altar-table (prestol') of the Alaverdi cathedral of the holy GreatMartyr George in Kakhetia. The Catholikos-Patriarch
Zakharia (1613-1630) enumerated the great-martyress to the rank of the saints and established her memory on 13
September.
The Monk Hierotheos was born in 1686 in Greece. Desiring to comprehend Divine wisdom as it is
in the sciences and likewise as it is in monastic life, the pious youth, displaying great ability and diligence, studied
Latin and Greek philosophy. After the death of his parents, and wanting to continue his education, Saint Hierotheos first
of all visited Holy Mount Athos, which was famous for its many male teachers. At first he was the student of a certain
hermit near the cell of Saint Artemias (Comm. 20 October), and then he joined the brethren of the Iveria monastery,
where he took monastic vows. On matters of the monastery Saint Hierotheos soon journeyed to Constantinople, and from
there to Valachia, where the Lord directed him to continue his interrupted education. Having been instructed by a certain
Cypriot monk, Saint Hierotheos by his good manners merited the favour of the Sofia metropolitan Avksentii and was
ordained deacon. Having completed his education in Venice, Saint Hierotheos returned to the Holy Mountain. He settled
near the Iveria monastery in the Khaga wilderness. On the testimony of his contemporaries, he led a very strict hermit's
life; with the constant Jesus Prayer the monk discovered deep love for neighbour and joy-creating weeping. On the
intercession of the hegumen of the Iversk monastery Saint Hierotheos was vouchsafed the priestly dignity by the
metropolitan of Neocaesarea James, living there in retirement.
At the request of the inhabitants of Skopelo, having been bereft of priest-server, the self-denying
ascetic forsook his solitude. During the course of 8 years together with his Athos disciples -- the priestmonk Meletios
and the monks Joasaph and Simeon, he made Divine-services and preached much. Foreseeing his own impending end, the Monk
Hierotheos with three disciples withdrew to the island of Yura, where usually were sent those banished for life. There
after a short illness he expired to the Lord in the year 1745. His disciples buried him on that island, and after three
years his venerable head was transferred to the Iveria monastery. By prayers to the saint were healed many sick and
those contending with bodily suffering.
© 1997 by translator Fr. S. Janos.
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