ale Our Venerable Father Alexander the Unsleeping By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-03-01T18:18:32+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Alexis, the Man of God By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-06-02T19:04:58+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Zosimas, Monk, of Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-06-02T19:10:14+00:00 Full Article
ale St. John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-06-03T02:20:04+00:00 Full Article
ale Righteous Melchizedek, King of Salem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-06-04T21:53:37+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Thomas of Mt. Maleon By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-08-04T04:30:19+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Great-martyr and Healer Panteleimon By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-08-04T04:38:19+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Euphrosynos the Cook of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-10-04T04:47:30+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Chariton the Confessor of Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-10-04T04:53:22+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Apostle James, the Brother of the Lord and First Bishop of Jerusalem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-12-20T04:14:03+00:00 Full Article
ale The Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple in Jerusalem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-12-20T04:29:20+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Alexander Nevsky By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-12-20T04:32:40+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Hieromartyr Modestus I, Archbishop of Jerusalem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-19T22:57:12+00:00 Full Article
ale Our Holy Fathers Athanasius the Great and Cyril, Patriarchs of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:20:00+00:00 Full Article
ale Sts. Barsanuphius and John the Prophet, Monks of Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:25:47+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Alexis, Metropolitan of Moscow and Wonder-Worker of all Russia By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:27:13+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Martinian, Monk, of Caesarea in Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:27:28+00:00 Full Article
ale What Happened to Valentine's Day? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:27:47+00:00 Full Article
ale Martyrs Pamphilius and Those with Him, at Caesarea in Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:28:25+00:00 Full Article
ale St. John the Scholastic, Patriarch of Constantinople, and Saint Zachariah, Patriarch of Jerusalem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:29:59+00:00 Full Article
ale Our Venerable Father Alexander the Unsleeping By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:30:42+00:00 Full Article
ale St Zosimas, Monk, of Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:41:39+00:00 Full Article
ale St. John of the Ancient Caves in Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T03:39:24+00:00 Full Article
ale St Alexis Toth of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T03:44:35+00:00 Full Article
ale Righteous Melchizedek, King of Salem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T03:49:35+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Martyrs Pasicrates, Valentian, Julius and those with them (302) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T03:50:45+00:00 Full Article
ale St Cyril, archbishop of Alexandria (444) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:04:22+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Martyrs Alexander and Antonina (313) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:04:59+00:00 Full Article
ale St Juvenal, Patriarch of Jerusalem (458) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:44:59+00:00 Full Article
ale Our Holy Father Alexander, founder of the Monastery of the Unsleeping Ones (430) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:45:20+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Royal Martyrs of Russia: Tsar Nicholas II, Tsaritsa Alexandra, and Crown Prince Alexei By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:46:36+00:00 Full Article
ale St Thomas of Mt Maleon (10th c.) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:47:46+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Myrrh-bearer and Equal-to-the-Apostles Mary Magdalene By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:53:33+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Great-martyr and Healer Panteleimon (305) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:10:44+00:00 Full Article
ale Sts Alexander (340), John (595), and Paul the New (784), patriarchs of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:23:25+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Euphrosynos the Cook of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:26:29+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Chariton the Confessor of Palestine By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:33:24+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Hieromartyr Dionysius, Bishop of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:34:44+00:00 Full Article
ale Our Holy Father Gregory the Confessor, Patriarch of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:47:12+00:00 Full Article
ale The Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple in Jerusalem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:53:01+00:00 Full Article
ale St. Alexander Nevsky By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:53:55+00:00 Full Article
ale Holy Hieromartyr Modestus I, Archbishop of Jerusalem By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T00:00:25+00:00 Full Article
ale Our Holy Fathers Athanasius the Great (373) and Cyril (44), Patriarchs of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T00:15:40+00:00 Saint Athanasius, pillar of Orthodoxy and Father of the Church, was born in Alexandria in275, to pious Christian parents. Even as a child, his piety and devotion to the Faith were so notable that Alexander, the Patriarch of the city, took Athanasius under his protection. As a student, he acquired a thorough education, but was more interested in the things of God than in secular learning, and withdrew for a time into the desert to sit at the feet of Saint Anthony (January 17), whose disciple he became and whose biography he later wrote. On returning to Alexandria, he was ordained to the diaconate and began his public labors for the Church. He wrote his treatise On the Incarnation, when he was only twenty. (It contains a phrase, still often quoted today, that express in a few words some of the depths of the Mystery of the Incarnation: God became man that man might become god.) Just at this time Arius, a priest in Alexandria, was promoting his enticing view that the Son and Word of God is not of one essence with the Father, but a divine creation of the Father. This view, which (as Athanasius realized) strikes at the very possibility of mankind's salvation, gained wide acceptance and seemed for a time to threaten the Christian Faith itself. In 325, the Emperor Constantine the Great convoked a Council of the Church at Nicaea to settle the turmoil that the Arian teaching had spread through the Church. Athanasius attended the Council, and defended the Orthodox view so powerfully that he won the admiration of the Orthodox and the undying enmity of the Arians. From that time forth his life was founded on the defense of the true consubstantiality (homoousia) of the Son with the Father. In 326, not long before his death, Patriarch Alexander appointed Athanasius to be his successor, and Athanasius was duly elevated to the patriarchal throne. He was active in his pastoral role, traveling throughout Egypt, visiting churches and monasteries, and working tirelessly not only to put down the Arian heresy, but to resolve various schisms and moral declines that affected his territory. Though the Arian heresy had apparently been condemned once and for all at Nicea, Arius had many powerful allies throughout the Empire, even in the Imperial court, and Athanasius was soon subjected to many kinds of persecution, some local, some coming from the Imperial throne itself. Though he was Patriarch of Alexandria for more than forty years, a large amount of that time was spent in hiding from powerful enemies who threatened him with imprisonment or death. Twice he fled to Rome for protection by the Pope, who in the early centuries of the Church was a consistent champion of Orthodoxy against its various enemies. From his various hiding places, Athanasius issued tracts, treatises and epistles which helped to rally the faithful throughout Christendom to the Orthodox cause. In 366, the Emperor Valens, fearing a revolt of the Egyptians on behalf of their beloved Archbishop, officially restored Athanasius to favor, and he was able to spend the last seven years of his life in peace. Of his forty-seven years as Patriarch, about seventeen were spent in hiding or exile. He reposed in peace in 373, having given his entire adult life, at great suffering, to the defense of the Faith of Christ. With St Athanasius, the Church commemorates St Cyril (Kyrillos), also Archbishop of Alexandria (412-44). His lot was to defend the Faith against the heretic Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople, who denied that Christ in his Incarnation truly united the divine with the human nature. Cyril attempted in private correspondence to restore Nestorius to the Christian faith, and when this failed he, along with Pope Celestine of Rome, led the defense of Orthodoxy against Nestorius' teaching. Saint Cyril presided at the Third Ecumenical Council in 431, at which the Nestorian error was officially overthrown. After guiding his flock for thirty-two years, he reposed in 444. Full Article
ale Holy Martyr Agatha of Palermo in Sicily (251) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:20:08+00:00 She is one of the best loved and most venerated Martyrs of the West. She was born to a noble family in Catania or Palermo in Sicily. At an early age she consecrated herself to the Lord and, though very beautiful, sought only to adorn herself with the virtues. During the persecution under Decius (251), she was arrested as a Christian; at this time she was about fifteen years old. Quintinian, the Governor of Sicily, was taken by her beauty and offered to marry her, thinking in that way not only to possess her body but her riches as well. When she spurned his advances, and continued to mock the idols, he grew angry and decided to have her tortured. She was gruesomely tormented and cast bleeding into a dungeon to die; but in the night her Guardian Angel brought the Apostle Peter to her, and he healed her wounds. The following day, the Governor ordered that she be subjected to further torments, but at his words the city was shaken by an earthquake and part of the palace collapsed. The terrified people stormed the palace and demanded that Agatha be released, lest they be subject to the wrath of her God. The Saint was returned to her prison cell, where in response to her prayers she was allowed to give up her soul to God. At Agatha's burial, attended by many, her Guardian Angel appeared and placed a marble slab on her tomb, inscribed with the words 'A righteous mind, self- determining, honor from God, the deliverance of her fatherland.' Quintinian died soon thereafter, thrown from his chariot. On the first anniversary of Agatha's death, Mt Etna erupted and Catania was about to be engulfed in lava. Christians and pagans together, remembering the inscription on her tomb, took the slab from the tomb and bore it like a shield to the river of lava, which was immediately stopped. The same miracle has happened many times in the following centuries, and Saint Agatha is venerated as the Protectress of Catania and Sicily, loved and honored by Christians of the East and the West. Full Article
ale St Martinian, monk, of Caesarea in Palestine (422) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:24:13+00:00 "The life of this saint is wonderful beyond measure and is worth reading in full. What did he not endure to fulfil the Law of God? At the age of eighteen, he went off into a mountain in Cappadocia called the Ark and spent 25 years in fasting, vigils and prayer, and struggling with manifold temptations. When a woman came to tempt him and he saw that he would fall into sin with her, he leapt barefoot into the fire and stood in it until the pain brought forth tears from his eyes and he had killed all lust within himself. When other temptations arose, he fled to a lonely rock in the sea and lived there. When, though, in a shipwreck, a woman swam to the rock, he leapt into the sea intending to drown himself. But a dolphin took him upon its back and brought him, by God'd providence, to the shore. He then decided to make nowhere his permanent home but to travel incessantly. Thus he pased through 164 towns in two years, exhorting and advising the people. He finally arrived in Athens, where he died in 422." (Prologue) Full Article
ale Martyrs Pamphilius and those with him, at Caesarea in Palestine (308) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:25:12+00:00 These twelve holy Martyrs suffered in the reign of Diocletian. "The first of these, Pamphilius, was priest in the church at Caesarea in Palestine; a learned and devout man, he corrected the mistakes of various copiers in the text of the New Testament. He himself copied this saving Book and gave it to any who desired it. The second was a deacon, Valentine, old in years and white with wisdom. He was a great expert in the Holy Scriptures, knowing them by heart. The third was Paul, a respected and eminent man, who had on a previous occasion been cast into the fire for the sake of Christ. With them were five Egyptians, brothers both in blood and soul, who were returning to their native land from serving a sentence in the mines of Cilicia. As they reached the gate of the town of Caesarea they said that they were Christians, and were therefore brought to trial. When asked their names, they replied: 'We have cast away the pagan names given us by our mother, and are called Elias, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Samuel and Daniel.' when asked where they were from, they replied: 'From Jerusalem that is above.' They were all beheaded, and a young man called Porphyrius, who had searched for their bodies to give them burial, suffered soon afterwards. Him they burned. An officer, Seleucus, who had come up to the martyrs and embraced them before the sword descended on their heads, was also burned, and an old man, Theodulus, a servant of the Roman judge, who had embraced one of the martyrs while they were under escort. Lastly Julian, who had kissed the dead bodies of the martyrs and honoured them, followed them in death. So they exchanged the small for the greater, the tawdry for the precious and death for immortality, and went to the Lord in 308." (Prologue) The Synaxarion concludes, "After the martyrdom of Pamphilius, the leader of the glorious cohort, the impious governor gave orders that his body and those of his companions should be left where they lay as food for carnivorous animals. However by God's Providence, no animal came near their holy relics, which the Christians were able to lay to rest with due honour." The account of these Martyrs was written by Eusebius of Caeserea, Pamphilius' disciple. Full Article
ale Holy Martyr Alexander (270-275) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:35:16+00:00 "He was from the town of Side in Pamphylia. The Emperor Aurelian's governor asked him who he was, to which Alexander replied that he was a pastor of the flock of Christ. 'And where is this flock of Christ', further enquired the evil and suspicious governor. Alexander replied: 'Over the whole world live the people whom Christ the Lord created, among whom those who believe in Him are His sheep, but those who have fallen away from their Creator, who are enslaved to creation and the work of men's hands, to dead idols, such as you, are strangers to His flock, and at the Dreadful Judgement of God will be put to the left with the goats.' The wicked judge first commanded that he be whipped with iron flails and then thrown into a burning furnace. But the fire could in no way harm him. Then he was flayed and after that thrown to the wild beasts. But the beasts would not touch him. At last the governor ordered that he be beheaded. But as soon as the judge pronounced the sentence, an evil spirit took hold of him and made him rabid. He was led howling to his gods, the idols, but on the way the evil spirit wrested his wicked soul from him. St Alexander suffered between 270 and 275.' (Prologue) He is commemorated March 14 on the Greek calendar. Full Article
ale St Alexis, the Man of God (411) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:35:58+00:00 He was born of pious and noble parents in Rome in the time of the Emperor Honorius. His parents, Euphemianus and Agalais, set a high standard of godly living: his father, though wealthy, sat down to dine only once a day, at sunset. By his parents' arrangement Alexis was married at a young age. However, without ever living with his new wife, he fled to Edessa in Mesopotamia, where he lived in asceticism for eighteen years, presenting himself as a beggar in order to avoid the praise of men. When, despite his efforts, he began to be known as a holy man, he fled the city and took ship for Laodicea. By divine providence, the ship was blown off course and forced to land in Rome. Taking this as a sign, Alexis, still disguised as a beggar, returned to his parents' house, where he sat at the gates, unrecognized by any of his family. His father, not knowing who he was, allowed him to live in a hut in his courtyard. There Alexis spent another seventeen years, living only on bread and water. He died clutching a piece of paper on which he had revealed his true identity. At the time of his death, the pope of Rome heard a voice saying "Look for the Man of God," and revealing where he should look. It is said that the Emperor Honorius, the Pope and a large retinue came to the house, where they found Alexis dead in his tiny hut, his face shining like the sun. His parents and wife were at first overcome with grief to learn that their son and husband had been secretly living near them, but they were comforted when they saw that his body healed the sick and exuded a fragrant myrrh. Thus they knew that God had glorified him. His head is preserved at the Church of St Laurus on the Peloponnese. Full Article
ale St Cyril, archbishop of Jerusalem (386) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:36:32+00:00 He was born in Jerusalem in 315, ordained to the priesthood in 346, and succeeded Maximus as Archbishop of Jerusalem in 350. He was exiled three times by the Arian Emperors Constantius and Valens for his unwavering defense of the Faith. Restored by the Emperor Theodosius, he did not return to the throne, but lived for eight years in peace before reposing in 386. He was known to all his people as a tireless defender of the poor, and as a great ascetic. He was gentle and humble in his bearing, pale and gaunt from fasting. He struggled throughout his time against the Arian heresy, which had become very strong, claiming the allegiance even of the Emperors. In addition, he lived through the reign of Julian the Apostate, who tried by many means to weaken and undermine the Church and the Christian Faith. Of St Cyril's many writings, the best-known are his Catecheses, considered the oldest systematic summary of Christian teaching. Full Article
ale St Zosimas, monk, of Palestine (523) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-21T21:50:32+00:00 This is the monk who met St Mary of Egypt in the desert and preserved her story (See April 1). He reposed in peace at the age of 100, sometime in the sixth century. Full Article