The Prologue from Ohrid: March 12
1. VENERABLE THEOPHANES THE CONFESSOR
Theophanes is called the Sygrian [Sigrian] because of Sygriana [Sigriana],
the place of his birth. He was a kinsman of the Emperor Leo Isaurian and his son
Copronymos. He possessed great wealth and splendor. But all of this lost its
worth for Theophanes when the Lord Christ began to reign in his soul. He
resisted his own marriage and, when he was compelled to marry, succeeded in
counseling his bride to live together in chastity, as brother and sister. As
soon as his parents died, his wife entered a convent and he, a monastery. His
monastery was located in the Sygrian Mountains in the Province of Cyzicus. The
one-time glorious and wealthy Theophanes lived in this monastery as the least of
the poor. All were amazed at the change in him. Having become renown because of
his strong faith, abstinence, and wisdom, he was summoned to the Seventh
Ecumenical Council [Nicaea, 783 A.D.]where the veneration of icons was
confirmed. Because of his purity and chastity, God bestowed upon him the gift of
performing miracles, by which he cured all diseases, especially maniacal
disorders and insanity. He prayed to God for all the sick and the unfortunate
and, through his prayers, helped them. Only when he became ill and his illness
lingered for a while, did he refuse to pray to God for the restoration of his
own health but endured his illness with gratitude. When the Iconoclastic
persecution resumed again under the wicked Leo the Armenian, Theophanes was
brought to Constantinople and cast into prison, where he languished for two
years in hardships, pain and humiliation. Then the emperor banished him into
exile to the island of Samothrace, which he had earlier foreseen in his spirit
and had mentioned it to his jailers. After he arrived at Samothrace, he lived
for twenty-three days and appeared before His Lord and Creator to receive his
merited wreath of glory.
2. VENERABLE SIMEON THE NEW THEOLOGIAN
This God-bearing and great Father of the Church was born in Galatia,
Paphlagonia. Simeon was educated in Constantinople and was assigned as a
courtier in attendance to the Emperors Basil and Constantine Porphyrogenitus.
Simeon left all for the sake of Christ and retreated to a monastery. He lived a
life of asceticism under the direction of the Elder Simeon, after which he
became the abbot of the Monastery of St. Mamas and in the end became a recluse.
He is the greatest theologian after St. Gregory the Theologian. Simeon felt
God's Grace in his heart. His words are true spiritual and theological
revelations. He died in 1032 A.D. His relics are miracle-performing.
3. SAINT GREGORY DIALOGUES, THE POPE OF
ROME
The son of Senator Gordianus and afterwards, himself, a senator and mayor of
the city of Rome. As soon as his father died, Gregory surrendered himself to the
spiritual life. From his wealth he built six monasteries in Sicily and the
seventh in the city of Rome, in honor of St. Andrew the Apostle, in which he was
tonsured a monk. Sylvia, his mother, entered a convent and was tonsured a nun.
After the death of Pope Pelagius II, Gregory was chosen Pope. He fled from this
honor and authority hiding himself in the mountains and ravines, but the Lord
revealed him to those who were seeking him in the following manner: a fiery
column appeared from the ground to heaven over the place where Gregory hid
himself. He was exceptionally charitable. All of his income was used for
building shelters and hospices for the needy. Often he invited less fortunate
men and served them around the table. He spent his time writing beneficial
[inspirational] books. He is also called Dialogues because he wrote a book under
that name in which he extolled the miracles of the Italian saints. He also
composed the "Liturgy of the Pre-Sanctified Gifts," which is celebrated on
Wednesdays and Fridays of the Great Lenten Season. His Arch-deacon Peter saw a
dove flying above Gregory's head as he was seated and writing. He presented
himself before the Lord in the year 604 A.D.
HYMN OF PRAISE
SAINT THEOPHANES
Leo the Armenian offers Theophanes,
Offers riches as much as he wants,
Only his name to sign
On the evil roster of iconoclasts.
From the dungeon, Theophanes to him, writes:
O, emperor, to please you I cannot,
Neither, can I to God and to you be true.
While I was young and agreeable to the world
Immense wealth, I had,
Left all and turned to God,
Distributed all, and to the wilderness retreated,
Yet in the wilderness I did not have hunger,
By Himself, God feeds and sweetens me.
In my old age, what do you offer me?
Dust that I despised in early youth!
Nothing, O emperor, to me can you give
That the Lord does not give me a hundred-fold,
Except tortures, for which I waited so long,
From the world, tortures will separate me
And unite me with the All-Precious Lord.
O, emperor, why do you against icons, wage war?
Was not Christ Himself as an icon,
As an icon of the Eternal Hypostases,
As an icon of the Trinity Almighty,
As an icon of the unseen God,
Unseen and unapproachable.
Both you and me, will He judge,
Rule, O emperor, hope in your replacement.
The world passes, only God remains,
Whoever is with God, does not fear the world.
REFLECTION
No one, not even the Lord Himself, can easily instruct the proud. No one
wants to give instructions to him who cries out that he knows everything.
"For great is the power of God; by the humble, He is glorified" says the
wise Sirach. (The Book of Ecclesiasticus - Sirach 3:19), David also speaks about
God saying, "He guides the humble to justice, He teaches the humble His
way" (Psalm 25:9). The proud person is he who wants to teach everyone
and himself does not want to be taught anything by anyone. The humble is he who
does not wish to teach anyone but continually desires to be taught regardless by
whom. An empty spike [ear] of grain raises its head above the entire field and
the full spike [ear] of grain hangs down with bowed head. O proud man, if only
your Guardian Angel would somehow remove the veil from your eyes and show you
the endless open sea of all that you do not know, you would kneel before every
man before whom you have exhibited pride and kneel before every man whom you
have belittled. You would cry out lamenting, "Forgive me, forgive me! I do not
know anything!" Often times, to the humble and pius the time when they are about
to die is revealed, but the death of the proud comes unexpectedly and without
warning. St. Gregory Dialogues speaks of a bishop, Carpus, who daily celebrated
the Divine Liturgy and how suddenly someone appeared from the other world and
said, "Continue to do what you are doing in serving me and may your legs never
grow tired or your hands weakened. On the feast day of the Dormition of the
Mother of God [The Assumption], you will come to Me and I will give you your
reward in My Heavenly Kingdom, together with all of those for whom you have
prayed at the Divine Services." After a year, on the feast of the Dormition,
Bishop Carpus celebrated the Divine Liturgy of God, sought forgiveness from his
priests, and gave up his soul to God. His face glowed like the sun.
CONTEMPLATION
To contemplate the Lord Jesus before Pilate:
1. How the Jews accused Him before Pilate and how He does not say
anything;
2. How He does not reply, even to Pilate's questions;
3. How our Lord speaks when it is necessary to defend men from the devil,
from sin, from disease and death but is silent when it is asked that He, the
Defender of Men, protect Himself from man.
HOMILY
Again, about the second coming of
Christ
"And all the nations will be assembled before Him"
(St. Matthew 25:32).
All the nations will be assembled before the Lord Jesus when He appears in
His glory surrounded by Holy Angels sitting on a throne as the judge of all the
living and the dead. "All nations will be assembled," all, without
exception. Not only the Jews who tormented Him, not only the Christians who
glorified Him but also the heathen who knew Him not, nor acknowledged Him. For
if He did not appear to all nations, He sent to all nations someone or He gave
something for the sake of knowing God's will and for the sake of salvation. That
is why all nations must appear before Him for judgment. O what an awesome and
majestic spectacle when all the nations and all the tribes on earth are
assembled before the Lord, Who is brighter than many suns. What joy for the holy
martyrs and confessors when they see how, in this countless mass of nations,
there is not one tongue left at all to deny the divinity of the Lord Jesus! But,
it will not be of any value to anyone in that hour and in that place to
recognize and to confess the divinity of our great Lord, if they denied Him on
earth. There and then accounts will settled, not gain nor loss. He who appears
before the Lord with whatsoever, with that he will be either condemned or
justified.
Now is the time to acknowledge the divinity of the Lord Jesus, now, when many
deny Him and when His divinity is doubted by many. They who love the Lord and
who have trust in all of His words will easily acknowledge this. For when He
says this, about what do they who love Him have to worry, to doubt, or to
hesitate.
O Lord, Jesus Christ, our God, have mercy on us!
To You be glory and thanks always. Amen.