alexa Holy New Martyr Alexander of Thessalonica By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-11-01T20:28:24+00:00 Full Article
alexa Saints Alexander, John, and Paul the New, Patriarchs of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-11-01T21:43:26+00:00 Full Article
alexa Sts Alexander, John, and Paul the New, Patriarchs of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-11-02T01:45:05+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Great Martyr and Most Wise Catherine of Alexandria and Those with Her By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-12-01T23:30:33+00:00 Full Article
alexa Our Venerable Father Alexander the Unsleeping By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-03-02T22:15:55+00:00 Full Article
alexa An Unknown Girl in Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-03-03T22:49:32+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Martyr Alexander of Rome By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-06-30T06:57:52+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy New Martyr Alexander of Thessalonica By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-06-30T07:02:35+00:00 Full Article
alexa Hieromaryr Alexander, Bishop of Comana By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-08-15T05:59:29+00:00 Full Article
alexa St Euphrosynos the Cook of Alexandria (9th c.) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-09-12T16:49:16+00:00 Full Article
alexa St Alexander Nevsky By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-11-28T17:52:43+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Great Martyr and Most Wise Catherine of Alexandria and Those with Her By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-11-28T17:53:47+00:00 Full Article
alexa Our Holy Fathers Athanasius the Great and Cyril, Patriarchs of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-02-01T00:50:31+00:00 Full Article
alexa Our Venerable Father Alexander the Unsleeping By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-02-22T20:39:45+00:00 Full Article
alexa An Unknown Girl in Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-03-01T05:39:53+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Martyr Alexander By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-03-20T05:24:16+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Martyr Alexander of Rome By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-05-17T03:19:35+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy New Martyr Alexander of Thessalonica By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-05-23T18:49:32+00:00 Full Article
alexa Hieromaryr Alexander, Bishop of Comana By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-24T21:06:54+00:00 Full Article
alexa Saints Alexander, John, and Paul the New, patriarchs of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-01T21:36:13+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Martyr Iraida of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-27T04:36:06+00:00 Full Article
alexa St. Alexander Nevsky By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-11-29T06:12:32+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Great Martyr and Most Wise Catherine of Alexandria and Those with Her By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-11-29T06:13:09+00:00 Full Article
alexa Our Holy Fathers Athanasius the Great and Cyril, Patriarchs of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-02-10T02:26:13+00:00 Full Article
alexa Our Venerable Father Alexander the Unsleeping By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-03-01T18:18:32+00:00 Full Article
alexa St. Euphrosynos the Cook of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-10-04T04:47:30+00:00 Full Article
alexa St. Alexander Nevsky By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-12-20T04:32:40+00:00 Full Article
alexa 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
alexa Our Venerable Father Alexander the Unsleeping By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T01:30:42+00:00 Full Article
alexa St Cyril, archbishop of Alexandria (444) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:04:22+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Martyrs Alexander and Antonina (313) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T20:04:59+00:00 Full Article
alexa 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
alexa 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
alexa 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
alexa St. Euphrosynos the Cook of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:26:29+00:00 Full Article
alexa Holy Hieromartyr Dionysius, Bishop of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:34:44+00:00 Full Article
alexa Our Holy Father Gregory the Confessor, Patriarch of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:47:12+00:00 Full Article
alexa St. Alexander Nevsky By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-20T23:53:55+00:00 Full Article
alexa 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
alexa 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
alexa Sts Alexander (340), John (595), and Paul the New (784), patriarchs of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-22T03:32:29+00:00 St Alexander took part in the First Ecumenical Council as delegate of Patriarch Metrophanes, who was too frail to attend; and succeeded Metrophanes on the Patriarchal throne. By his prayer to God that the Church might be spared the schemings of Arius, Arius was struck dead. St John is, by one account, St John the Faster (Sept. 2), who reposed in 595; by another, St John Scholasticus (Feb. 21), who reposed in 577. St Paul was Patriarch for five years, then renounced the Patriarchal throne to take the Great Schema. Full Article
alexa Our Holy Mother Theodora of Alexandria (490) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-22T03:37:04+00:00 While a young married woman, she committed adultery with another man. Seized by remorse, she fled her husband's house, dressed herself as a man, renamed herself Theodore, and entered a men's monastery, pretending to be a eunuch. "Theodore"'s fasts, prayers, vigils and tears amazed "his" brethren. Her secret was only discovered after her death. She had spent nine full years devoting her life to repentance for one sin. During her life she showed herself to be a wonderworker, taming wild beasts and healing sicknesses. Her husband came to her funeral, then lived until his death in the cell of his former wife. Full Article
alexa Holy Martyr Iraida (Rais) of Alexandria (308) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-22T03:42:08+00:00 She was an Egyptian maiden, variously called Iraida, Rais and Raida. One day, while drawing water from a well near the sea, she saw a ship laden with Christians being taken by their pagan persecutors to torture and death. By God's grace, Iraida was touched by a desire to suffer for the Lord. She went to the ship, confessed herself to be a Christian, and was immediately taken prisoner with the other servants of Christ. They were all taken to the Egyptian town of Antinopolis, where Iraida was the first of the company to be beheaded. Full Article
alexa Our Holy Fathers Athanasius the Great (373) and Cyril (444), Patriarchs of Alexandria By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-01-22T05:12:49+00:00 Saint Athanasius, pillar of Orthodoxy and Father of the Church, was born in Alexandria in 275, 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
alexa St Cyril, archbishop of Alexandria (444) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-03-10T04:21:20+00:00 "St Cyril was... from Alexandria, born about the year 376, the nephew of Theophilus, Patriarch of Alexandria, who also instructed the Saint in his youth. Having first spent much time with the monks of Nitria, he later became the successor to his uncle's throne in 412. In 429, when Cyril heard tidings of the teachings of the new Patriarch of Constantinople, Nestorius, he began attempting through private letters to bring Nestorius to renounce his heretical teachings about the Incarnation; and when the heresiarch did not repent, Saint Cyril, together with Pope Celestine of Rome, led the Orthodox opposition to his error. Saint Cyril presided over the Third Ecumenical Council of the 200 holy Fathers in the year 431, who gathered in Ephesus under Saint Theodosius the Younger. At this Council, by his most wise words he put to shame and convicted the impious doctrine of Nestorius, who, although he was in town, refused to appear before Cyril. Saint Cyril, besides overthrowing the error of Nestorius, has left to the Church full commentaries on the Gospels of Luke and John. Having shepherded the Church of Christ for thirty-two years, he reposed in 444." (Great Horologion) Today we commemorate St Cyril's repose. He is also commemorated on January 18, the date of his restoration to his see in Alexandria after he had been driven out by Nestorians. Full Article
alexa Our Holy Father Alexander, founder of the Monastery of the Unsleeping Ones (430) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-03-20T20:59:14+00:00 "Born in Asia and educated in Constantinople, he went into the army after completing his studies and became an officer. Reading the Holy Scriptures, he came upon the Saviour's words: 'If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell all thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven; and come and follow Me' (Matt. 19:21). These words made such an impression on him that he sold and gave away all that he had, and went off to the desert. After long asceticism and striving for purification, he founded the community of the 'Wakeful Ones' (Acoemetae) with a special rule. According to this rule, the services in the church continued day and night in unbroken sequence. The brethren were divided into six groups, each having its appointed hours of day or night to go to church and take over the reading and singing from the previous group. He travelled a great deal over the East, bringing people to faith in Christ, disputing with heretics, working miracles by God's grace and growing old in the service of the Lord Jesus. He finished his earthly course in Constantinople in the year 430, where his relics revealed the miraculous power and glory with which God had glorified His holy servant." (Prologue) Full Article
alexa Sts Alexander (340), John (595), and Paul the New (784), patriarchs of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-05-22T16:43:42+00:00 St Alexander took part in the First Ecumenical Council as delegate of Patriarch Metrophanes, who was too frail to attend; and succeeded Metrophanes on the Patriarchal throne. By his prayer to God that the Church might be spared the schemings of Arius, Arius was struck dead. St John is, by one account, St John the Faster (Sept. 2), who reposed in 595; by another, St John Scholasticus (Feb. 21), who reposed in 577. St Paul was Patriarch for five years, then renounced the Patriarchal throne to take the Great Schema. Full Article
alexa Our Holy Mother Theodora of Alexandria (490) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-05-22T16:56:34+00:00 While a young married woman, she committed adultery with another man. Seized by remorse, she fled her husband's house, dressed herself as a man, renamed herself Theodore, and entered a men's monastery, pretending to be a eunuch. "Theodore"'s fasts, prayers, vigils and tears amazed "his" brethren. Her secret was only discovered after her death. She had spent nine full years devoting her life to repentance for one sin. During her life she showed herself to be a wonderworker, taming wild beasts and healing sicknesses. Her husband came to her funeral, then lived until his death in the cell of his former wife. Full Article
alexa Holy Martyr Iraida (Rais) of Alexandria (308) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-05-31T19:36:43+00:00 She was an Egyptian maiden, variously called Iraida, Rais and Raida. One day, while drawing water from a well near the sea, she saw a ship laden with Christians being taken by their pagan persecutors to torture and death. By God's grace, Iraida was touched by a desire to suffer for the Lord. She went to the ship, confessed herself to be a Christian, and was immediately taken prisoner with the other servants of Christ. They were all taken to the Egyptian town of Antinopolis, where Iraida was the first of the company to be beheaded. Full Article
alexa Holy Hieromartyr Dionysius, Bishop of Alexandria, and his disciples (258) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2020-06-28T17:30:32+00:00 He was a disciple of Origen and became a priest in Alexandria. He became Bishop of Alexandria in 247, serving not only his own see but the whole Church with fervor and compassion. He traveled to Rome to fight the Novatian schisms that disturbed the Body of Christ at that time, and mediated in the dispute between St Cyprian (September 16) and the Pope. During the reign of Valerian, the new Governor of Alexandra, Emilianus, summoned St Dionysius, along with a group of his clergy, and demanded that they renounce Christ. When all stood firm in the Faith, he exiled them to the remote village of Kephro. But Christians flocked to the village to seek out the holy Bishop, and many pagans in the region were converted by him — so that soon the town was more nearly a Christian mission than a place of exile. When Emilianus learned of this, he exiled the Bishop and his disciples far into the wilderness, where they lived amidst terrible sufferings and hardships for more than twelve years. Saint Dionysius and his deacons Gaius and Faustus all died there; Eusebius the deacon and Maximus the priest eventually escaped. Eusebius became Bishop of Laodicea; Maximus, like his spiritual father, became Bishop of Alexandria. Full Article