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St. Anthony of the Kiev Caves

Fr. John Whiteford speaks on the life of St. Anthony of the Kiev Caves, the founder of monasticism in Russia.




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Venerable Dosithea, Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Venerable Dosithea, Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Our Venerable Father Titus of the Lavra of the Kiev Caves




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Jul 10 - St. Anthony Of The Kiev Caves




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St Anthony of the Kiev Caves




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St. Anthony of the Kiev Caves




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Dec 11 - St. Nikon The Dry Of The Kiev Caves




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Saint Nikon the Dry of the Kiev Caves




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Apr 27 - Holy Father Stephen, Abbot Of The Kiev Caves and Burning Of The Relics Of St. Sava




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Our Holy Father Stephen, Abbot of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Vladimir




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Our Holy Father Stephen, Abbot of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Vladimir




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May 03 - St. Theodosius, Abbot Of The Kiev Caves Monastery




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St Theodosius, Abbot of the Kiev Caves Monastery




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St Theodosius, Abbot of the Kiev Caves Monastery




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Our Holy Father Athanasius “the Resurrected,” Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Our Holy Father Athanasius “the Resurrected,” Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Jan 31 - Venerable Nicetas, Hermit Of The Kiev Caves And Bishop Of Novgorod




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Venerable Nicetas, Hermit of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Novgorod




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Feb 10 - Venerable Father Prochorus Of The Kiev Caves




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Our Holy Father Agapitus of the Kiev Caves




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Apr 19 - St John Of The Ancient Caves In Palestine and Holy Father Agathangelos




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Our Holy Father Athanasius “the Resurrected,” Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Commemoration of the Miracle at the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev




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Our Holy Father Stephen, Abbot of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Vladimir




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Our Holy Father Agapitus of the Kiev Caves




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St. Anthony of the Kiev Caves




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Our Holy Father Athanasius “the Resurrected,” Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Commemoration of the Miracle at the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev




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Our Holy Father Stephen, Abbot of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Vladimir




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St Theodosius, Abbot of the Kiev Caves Monastery and Founder of Cenobitic Monasticism in Russia




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Our Holy Father Agapitus of the Kiev Caves




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Commemoration of the Miracle at the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev




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St. John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine




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Our Holy Father Stephen, Abbot of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Vladimir




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St Theodosius, Abbot of the Kiev Caves Monastery and Founder of Cenobitic Monasticism in Russia




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Our Holy Father Agapitus of the Kiev Caves




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St. Anthony of the Kiev Caves




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Venerable Dosithea, Recluse of the Kiev Caves




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Saint Nikon the Dry of the Kiev Caves




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St. John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine




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Our Holy Father Stephen, Abbot of the Kiev Caves and Bishop of Vladimir




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Our Holy Father Agapitus of the Kiev Caves (1095)




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St Anthony of the Kiev Caves (1073)




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Commemoration of the Miracle at the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev (?)

"Two friends, John and Sergius, swore brotherhood before the icon of the holy Mother of God in this monastery. John was a rich man, with a five-year-old son, Zachariah. John fell ill, and at his death commended his son to the care of Sergius, and left in Sergius' keeping a large sum of silver and gold for him to hand over to Zachariah when he had grown up. When Zachariah came of age, however, Sergius denied receiving anything from the deceased John. Then Zachariah said: 'Let him swear before the same icon of the most holy Mother of God, in front of which he accepted brotherhood with my late father, that he received nothing from John, and then I will seek nothing more from him.' Sergius agreed, but when he had sworn this and went up to kiss the icon, some force held him back and would not allow him to come near. Then, tormented all at once by a demon, he began to cry out: 'Holy fathers Antony and Theodosius, do not let this merciless angel destroy me!' The demon had attacked him by God's permission. He then told them of all the money which John had left. But when they opened the box, they found double the amount. Taking it, Zachariah gave it to the monastery and was himself tonsured as a monk. He lived a long time and was worthy of God's great gifts, entering peacefully into eternity."




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St John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine (8th c.)

Filled in his youth with the love of Christ and a hunger for holiness, he travelled among the holy places of the Middle East seeking the counsel of holy men. Finally he settled as a monk in the Ancient Caves of the Lavra of Chariton the Great in Palestine. Living in Chariton's own cave, he spent his days in fasting, prayer and vigil, becoming known in his own lifetime for his holiness. He reposed in peace in the 8th century.




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St John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine (8th c.)

Filled in his youth with the love of Christ and a hunger for holiness, he travelled among the holy places of the Middle East seeking the counsel of holy men. Finally he settled as a monk in the Ancient Caves of the Lavra of Chariton the Great in Palestine. Living in Chariton's own cave, he spent his days in fasting, prayer and vigil, becoming known in his own lifetime for his holiness. He reposed in peace in the 8th century.




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Saint Nikon the Dry of the Kiev Caves (1101)

He was a monk in Kiev, taken into slavery by a band of Polovtsi (Turkic raiders who were troubling the country at that time) along with the holy Martyr Eustratius (March 28). He humbly refused to be ransomed by his family and therefore suffered a harsh captivity for three years. Despite this, he prayed constantly for his captors, worked miracles for their sake, and once healed their leader from a deadly illness. One day St Eustratius appeared to him in a vision and told him that he would be set free in three days. When he told his captors, they severed the tendons of his knees and ankles and kept him under guard. But at the appointed time he was miraculously transported to Kiev, where he suddenly appeared in church among his astonished brethren. The Saint did not want his chains removed until his Abbot said "Brother, if the Lord wanted to see you in these chains, he would not have delivered you from captivity!" He was so withered from his hardships that he became known as Nikon the Dry. Later, the captor whom he had healed came to the Monastery of the Caves and became a disciple of his former slave.




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St John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine (8th c.)

Filled in his youth with the love of Christ and a hunger for holiness, he travelled among the holy places of the Middle East seeking the counsel of holy men. Finally he settled as a monk in the Ancient Caves of the Lavra of Chariton the Great in Palestine. Living in Chariton's own cave, he spent his days in fasting, prayer and vigil, becoming known in his own lifetime for his holiness. He reposed in peace in the 8th century.




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Our Holy Father Agapitus of the Kiev Caves (1095)

"A natural doctor, he was a disciple of St Antony of Kiev. He healed people by prayer and the prescribing of cabbage, which they made into a sort of bread. Prince Vladimir Monomachus was healed in this way, and this made Agapitus famed on all sides. The Prince's doctor, an Armenian, hearing of this, began to spread slander about him. When Agapitus became ill, the Armenian came and, looking at him, said that he would die in three days and that, if he did not do so, then he, the Armenian, would become a monk. Agapitus told him that it had been revealed to him by God that he would die, not in three days but in three months. And so it came to pass. After Agapitus's death, the Armenian went to the abbot of the Monastery of the Caves and asked him to make him a monk. He explained that Agapitus had appeared to him from the other world and reminded him of his promise. And so the one-time envier became a humble monk, by the providence of God whose care it is that all men be saved. St Agapitus entered into rest in about 1095." (Prologue)