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St. Ammonas of Egypt, Disciple of St Anthony the Great




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Our Father among the Saints, Nikolai, Archbishop and Enlightener of Japan




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Sts. Barsanuphius and John the Prophet, Monks of Palestine




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St. Martinian, Monk, of Caesarea in Palestine




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Thirty-four Holy Martyrs of the Monastery of Valaam




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Monk-martyr Nikon and 199 disciples, in Sicily




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




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St. Zosimas, Monk, of Palestine




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Hieromartyr Artemon, Presbyter of Laodicea in Syria




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




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Our Fathers Among the Saints Epiphanios and Germanos




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Our Father among the Saints Achillius, Bishop of Larissa




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Holy Great-martyr and Healer Panteleimon




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Holy Apostles of the Seventy and Deacons Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon and Parmenas




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Saints Isaac, Dalmatus and Faustus, Ascetics of the Dalmatian Monastery, Constantinople




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Our Holy Father Ammon of Egypt




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Our Father Among the Saints John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople




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Holy Apostle Philemon and Sts. Apphia, Archippus, and Onesimus




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Our Holy Father Simon the Outpourer of Myrrh, Founder of Simonopetra Monastery, Mt. Athos




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Our Father among the Saints Gregory the Theologian, Archbishop of Constantinople




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Sts. Barsanuphius and John the Prophet, Monks of Palestine




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St. Martinian, Monk, of Caesarea in Palestine




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Apostles Archippus and Philemon of the Seventy, and Martyr Apphia




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Monk-Martyr Nikon and 199 Disciples in Sicily




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St Zosimas, Monk, of Palestine




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Hieromartyr Artemon, Presbyter of Laodicea in Syria




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Apostle Simon Zelotes




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Our Father among the Saints Achillius, Bishop of Larissa (330)




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Holy Martyr Michael of St Sabbas' Monastery(9th c.)




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St Zosimas, monk, of Phoenicia (Syria) (6th c.)




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Commemoration of the appearance of the Archangel Gabriel to a monk on Mt Athos




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Our Holy Father Botolph, Abbot of the Monastery of Ikanhoe (680)




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Our Holy Father Dionysios, founder of the Monastery of St John the Forerunner on Mt Athos (1380)




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Our Holy Father Alexander, founder of the Monastery of the Unsleeping Ones (430)




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Our Father among the Saints Anatolios, Archbishop of Constantinople (458)




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Holy Great-martyr and Healer Panteleimon (305)




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Holy Apostles of the Seventy and Deacons Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon and Parmenas




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Sts Isaac, Dalmatus and Faustus, ascetics of the Dalmatian Monastery, Constantinople (5th c.)




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Our Father Among the Saints John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople




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Holy Apostle Philemon and Sts Apphia, Archippus, and Onesimus




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Our Father Among the Saints Nicholas the Wonderworker, Archbishop of Myra




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Our Father Among the Saints Ambrose, Bishop of Milan




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Holy Martyrs Philemon, Apollonius, Arian, and Those with Them




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Our Holy Father Simon the Outpourer of Myrrh, Founder of Simonopetra Monastery, Mt Athos




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Our Father among the Saints Basil the Great (379)




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Our Father among the Saints Gregory the Theologian, Archbishop of Constantinople (389)

This light of the Church is one of only three holy Fathers whom the Church has honored with the name "the Theologian" (the others are St John the Evangelist and Theologian, and St Symeon the New Theologian).   He was born in 329 in Arianzus in Cappadocia to a pious and holy family: both his father Gregory, mother Nonna, brother Caesarius and sister Gorgonia are all counted among the Saints of the Church. His father later became Bishop of Nazianzus. He studied in Palestine, then in Alexandria, then in Athens. On the way to Athens, his ship was almost sunk in a violent storm; Gregory, who had not yet been baptized, prayed to the Lord to preserve him, and promised that henceforth he would dedicate his entire life to God. Immediately the storm ceased.   In Athens, Gregory's fellow students included St Basil the Great and the future Emperor Julian the Apostate. The friendship between Gregory and Basil blossomed into a true spiritual friendship; they were loving brothers in Christ for the rest of their lives. After completing their studies, Sts Gregory and Basil lived together as monks in hermitage at Pontus. Much against St Gregory's will, his father ordained him a priest, and St Basil consecrated him Bishop of Sasima (in the Archdiocese of Caesarea, over which St Basil was Archbishop).   In 381 the Second Ecumenical Council condemned Macedonius, Archbishop of Constantinople, and appointed St Gregory in his place. When he arrived in the City, he found that the Arians controlled all the churches, and he was forced to "rule" from a small house chapel. From there he preached his five great sermons on the Trinity, the Triadika; these were so powerfully influential that when he left Constantinople two years later, every church in the City had been restored to the Orthodox.   St Gregory was always a theologian and a contemplative, not an administrator, and the duties of Archbishop were agonizing to him. In 382 he received permission from a council of his fellow-bishops and the Emperor to retire from the see of Constantinople. He returned to Nazianzus (for which reason he is sometimes called St Gregory of Nazianzus). There he reposed in peace in 391 at the age of sixty-two.   His writings show a theological depth and a sublimity of expression perhaps unsurpassed in the Church. His teaching on the Holy Trinity is a great bastion of Orthodox Faith; in almost every one of his published homilies he preaches the Trinity undivided and of one essence.




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St Isidore of Pelusium, monk (440-449)

He was born to a noble family in Alexandria. For a short time he taught rhetoric in Pelusium in Egypt; but soon his love for the things of God led him to flee to the Desert as a solitary. After a year of ascetical life, he returned to Pelusium, where he was ordained to the priesthood. After a few years he retired to a monastery where he spent the rest of his life, eventually becoming Abbot. From the monastery he wrote thousands of epistles full of divine grace and wisdom; of these more than two thousand still survive.   Saint Isidore was a student and devout disciple of St John Chrysostom, as he knew him through his writings. When St Cyril became Patriarch of Alexandria, he refused to commemorate St John in the diptychs during the Divine Liturgy. Saint Isidore wrote him a strong letter reminding him not to heed the rumors, prejudices or threats of men, and St Cyril was persuaded to restore commemoration of the Archbishop of Constantinople, and later became a strong advocate of the veneration of St John. Isidore, though a monk, was treated as a spiritual father by Patriarch Cyril: around 433, when St Cyril was inclined to deal harshly with some who had been swept up in the Nestorian heresy, St Isidore wrote to him: 'As your father, since you are pleased to give me this name, or rather as your son, I adjure you to put an end to this dissension lest a permanent breach be made under the pretext of piety.'   With reputation came persecution, and St Isidore suffered much from Imperial and church authorities unhappy with his holy influence. He bore all these troubles impassibly, and in 440 (according to one source) or about 449 (according to another) he joyfully gave up his soul to God.




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St Martinian, monk, of Caesarea in Palestine (422)

"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)




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Apostles Archippus and Philemon of the Seventy, and Martyr Apphia

Archippus was the son of Saints Philemon (Nov. 22) and Apphia (Feb. 15), and, like them, was a disciple of the Apostle Paul, who calls him "our fellow soldier" (Philm. 2). He and his father preached the Gospel at Colossae, and Archippus probably served as a priest for the church that gathered there at his family's house (Col. 4:17). Archippus' fervor in preaching the Gospel of Christ so angered the pagans that they seized him and brought him before the governor Androcles. When the Saint refused to sacrifice to Artemis, he was stripped, beaten, tormented in various ways, and finally stoned to death.




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Our righteous Fathers martyred at the Monastery of St Sabbas the Sanctified (633? 796?)

The holy Monastery of St Sabbas is still in existence today, by the providence of God, though several times in its history it has been plundered and left empty. At one time it was attacked by Arab raiders. The monks considered fleeing, but their abbot, Thomas, said, 'We have fled from the world into this wilderness for the love of Christ; it would be shameful for us now to flee from the wilderness for fear of men. If we are killed here, we shall be killed through love for Christ, for whose sake we have come here to live.' So the monks agreed with one mind to wait their attackers unarmed. The Arabs killed some with arrows, and shut some in the cave of St Sabbas, lighting a fire at the entrance to suffocate them with smoke. The whole company of monks were thus privileged to give their lives for Christ's sake.   Accounts of the date differ substantially: the Great Horologion says that they died during the reign of the Emperor Heraclius, when St Modestus was Patriarch of Jerusalem (632-634); the Prologue that they died in 796 during the reign of Constantine and Irene, when Elias was Patriarch of Jerusalem.