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TALMACH link list of Vladimir Djambov
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13 July 2012
St. Martyr Dorothea of Caesarea in Cappadocia
24 June 2012
Wnn-nfr Ονούφριος
“he who is constantly good”
St. Onuphrios the Great
Св. Онуфри Велики
Troparion, Tone 1
Through desire you have reached the spiritual desert,
Oh, divinely wise Onuphrios, and as fleshless
you have worked exploits in it, [you] labor-lover,
competing with the prophets Elijah and the Baptist,
and from the angelic hand you have delighted in the divine mysteries,
and you are now enjoying in the light of the Holy Trinity
together with them. Pray for us to be saved,
we who revere your memory.
Troparion (Tone 1)
In the flesh you lived the life of an Angel,
you were a citizen of the desert and a treasury of grace,
Oh Onuphrios adornment of Egypt.
Wherefore we honour your struggles as we sing to you:
Glory to Him Who has strengthened you;
glory to Him Who has made you wonderful;
glory to Him Who through you works healings for all.
и яко безплотен в ней многолетне подвизался еси трудолюбне,
соревнуя пророкам Илии и Крестителю:
и от руку ангельску таин божественных насладився,
ныне во свете Святыя Троицы купно с ними веселишеся.
Моли спастися нам, твою память почитающим.
творяй присно с нами по Твоей кротости,
не отстави милость Твою от нас,
но молитвами их
в мире управи живот наш.
The vision of the Venerable Onuphrius, a tall slender man with a long white beard flowing to the ground before him, has been an inspiration for Eastern Christians for hundreds of years. ... For several decades Orthodox seminarians in Poland have begun their spiritual training in the monastery of St. Onuphrius in Jablechna. It is said that he himself chose the place for it, appearing nearly four hundred years ago to fishermen and leaving them an Icon of himself on the banks of the river Buh.
The story of this remarkable Saint is shrouded in mystery for he was one of the Desert Fathers who made such an impression on Eastern spirituality in the third and fourth centuries, around the time that Christianity was emerging as the dominant faith of the Roman Empire. At that time many folks joined the Church with little understanding and still less intent to live according to the teachings of Our Lord Jesus as proclaimed in the Gospels and especially in the Beatitudes. At this time many Christians were inspired to go out into the desert and live in prayer under the providence of God alone in this harsh environment of extreme heat and cold, very little to eat and drink surrounded by all sorts of dangerous animals and desperadoes.
We know of the life of St. Onuphrius from the testimony of the monk Paphnutius. The saintly hermit had lived in the desert for sixty years when Paphnutius visited him. His hair and beard reached to the ground. This does not normally happen – the beard reaches a certain length and grows no further. His beard, related the Saint, grew to his feet in one day to cover his nakedness when the clothes with whish he had come to the desert fell away. All the hairs on him were as white as snow and his entire appearance glistened, sublime and awesome.
As soon as he saw Paphnutius, Onuphrius called him by name and related to him his life in the wilderness. He said that it was his guardian angel who had brought him to this desolate place. For a long time he fed only on vegetables which could rarely be found in the wilderness and after that, when he had overcome by patience and faith violent attacks of temptations by demons and when his heart was fortified and centred upon the love of God, an angel of God brought him bread for nourishment. Besides that, by the good Providence of God, a palm tree grew next to his cell which brought forth dates in abundance and a spring of water began to flow there.
However, Onuphrius said, his face shining: "I mostly feed and quench my thirst on the sweet words of God." To Paphnutius' question: "How do you receive Communion?" the hermit replied that an angel of God brings him Holy Communion every Saturday. The next day, the elder said to Paphnutius that this would be the day of his departure from this world. He knelt in prayer and quietly gave up his spirit to God. At that moment, Paphnutius saw a heavenly light as it illumined the body of the reposed saint and heard the singing of angelic hosts. Having buried the body of Onuphrius, Paphnutius returned to his monastery and related to others the wondrous life of this man and the greatness of God's Providence which always nourishes and protects those who have completely given themselves over to the service of God. Onuphrius died in the year 400 A.D. Perhaps it is the thought of God being able to keep a man alive for so many years in a situation where most could only live for a few days that has inspired Eastern Christians and led them to honour St. Onuphrius. Although it is not immediately obvious, we too live in deserts for even though comforts, food, clothing and shelter abound, their very abundance often leads to starvation of that which is most essential for a happy human life: the soul and the spirit. Without the nourishment of prayer and the sweet words of God these atrophy and people are filled with anxiety and despair which they seek in vain to dispel with more and more toys and pleasures. And so our lives flow by. Let us look to the strong figure of St. Onuphrius and recall where our true nourishment and health are to be found!
Life of St. Onuphrius the Great
Rev. Onuphrius the Great was one of those glorious desert-dwellers who
took refuge in the wild, picturesque Thebaid desert in Egypt, who in the 4th
century, during the time of the emperors Constantius and Valens, defended the
holy Christian faith, persecuted by the Aryan heretics, with fervent prayer,
fasting and repentance.
Rev. Onuphrius was born around the year 320 into the family of a Persian
king. His father, having no offspring for a long time, prayed with all his soul
to the Lord to give him a son, and God heard him. But even before the birth of
St. Onuphrius, one day a demon came to his father disguised as a wanderer and
said: “Oh Tsar, your wife will give birth to a son, but not from you, but from
one of your servants. If you want to make sure that I'm telling the truth,
order the newborn to be thrown into the fire. And if I tell a lie, then God
will keep him safe.” The father did not comprehend the deceit of the enemy and,
believing the imaginary wanderer, fulfilled the crafty advice, throwing the
newborn child into the fire. A miracle happened: the child stretched out his
hands to the sky, as if praying to the Creator for salvation, and the flame,
splitting into two sides, left the baby unharmed. Meanwhile, an angel of God
appeared to the father and, having exposed him of reckless trust in the
slanders of the devil, ordered him to baptize his son, to name him Onuphrius
and take him where God would indicate.
When they noticed that the child did not take mother's milk at all, the
father hurriedly set off on a journey with his son, fearing that the baby would
die of hunger. In the desert, a white doe ran up to them and, having fed the baby
with her milk, ran forward, as if showing them the way. So they reached the
monastery near the city of Hermopolis. The abbot, informed of this from above,
met them and took Saint Onuphrius into his upbringing. After saying goodbye to
his son, the king left and until his death did not stop visiting the monastery.
The deer fed St. Onuphrius until the age of three.
When the boy was seven years old, a miracle happened to him. The
monastery's dean gave him a piece of bread every day. Saint Onuphrius, visiting
the temple, approached the icon of the Most Holy Theotokos with the Eternal
Divine Infant in her arms, in his angelic simplicity he addressed the Divine
Infant Jesus with the words: “You are the same Infant as I am; but the clerk
does not give you bread. So take my bread and eat." The infant Jesus
stretched out His hands and took bread from Saint Onuphrius... One day the
priest noticed this miracle and informed the abbot about everything. The Abbot
ordered the next day not to give Saint Onuphrius bread, but to send him to
Jesus for bread. Saint Onuphrius, in obedience to the words of the key-keeper,
went to the temple, knelt down and, addressing the Divine Infant on the icon,
said: “The key-keeper did not give me bread, but sent me to You to receive it;
give me a piece, for I am very hungry.” The Lord gave him wonderful and miraculous
bread, and so large that Saint Onuphrius barely carried it to the Abbot. The
abbot, together with the brethren, glorified God, marveling at the grace that
rested on Saint Onuphrius.
At the age of ten, Saint Onuphrius went into the wilderness, wishing to
imitate the holy prophets Elijah and John the Baptist. When he secretly left
the monastery at night, a ray of light appeared before him, showing him the way
to the place of his desert exploits. Here Saint Onuphrius found a marvelous
hermit elder, with whom he lived for some time, learning from him the rules of
hermitage. A few years later, the elder died, and Saint Onuphrius lived for
sixty years in complete solitude. He endured many sorrows and temptations
during this time. When his clothes decayed, and he suffered greatly from the
heat and cold, the Lord clothed him with a thick covering of hair on his head,
beard, and body. For thirty years, the Angel of God brought him daily bread and
water, and for the last thirty years he ate from a date palm that grew, by the
grace of God, near his cave, which had twelve branches, which alternately bore
fruit every month. He now drank water from a spring miraculously opened by the
cave. During all sixty years, the Angel of God came to Rev. Onuphrius on
holidays and communed him with the Holy Mysteries of Christ.
The narrator of the lives of many desert-dwellers, Rev. Paphnutius,
reports that when he, led by Divine Providence, came to the cave where Rev. Onuphrius
lived, he was greatly frightened when he saw the monk, overgrown with white
wavy hair. Rev. Paphnutius wanted to flee, but Rev. Onuphrius stopped him with
the words: “Man of God, do not be afraid of me, for I am a sinful person like
you.” This calmed Rev. Paphnutius, and a long conversation took place between
the ascetics.
Rev. Onuphrius told about himself, how he came to this place and how
many years he lived here. During the conversation, suddenly, by no one knows
who, bread and a vessel with water were placed in the middle of the cave. The
ascetics, having refreshed themselves with food, talked and prayed to God for a
long time. The next day, Rev. Paphnutius noticed that the face of Rev. Onuphrius
had changed greatly. Rev. Onuphrius said: “God sent you, Paphnutius, for my
burial, for today I will complete my service to God in this world.” Rev.
Paphnutius began to ask Rev. Onuphrius to be allowed to stay on in this place
in the desert, but Rev. Onuphrius did not allow him, saying: “God chose you so
that, having visited many hermits, you would tell the monks and all Christians
about their lives and deeds. Therefore, return to your brethren and tell that
the Lord heard my prayers ; and that everyone who honors my memory in any way
will be worthy of God's blessing. The Lord will help him with His grace in all
good undertakings on earth, and in Heaven he will accept him into holy
villages.
Having said many more edifying words, Rev. Onuphrius prayed to God, lay
down on the ground and, folding his arms crosswise on his chest, reposed in the
Lord. His face shone like the sun, and the cave was filled with fragrance;
angelic singing and a wondrous Divine voice were heard: “Leave your mortal
body, my beloved soul, so that I can take you to a place of eternal rest with
all My chosen ones.” Rev. Paphnutius was greatly saddened by the fact that he
had no tools at hand for digging the grave, and the soil was stony. But then
two lions come running and with their claws at one moment prepare a grave in
the place that Paphnutius, having taken off his sackcloth and wrapped it around
the body of Rev. Onuphrius, intended for the burial of the deceased. Then
Paphnutius betrayed it with a prayer to the earth; the lions filled the grave
and then left. Heaping a heap of stones on the grave so that the predatory
beast of the desert would not disturb the peaceful sleep of God's saint, Paphnutius
wanted to look at least once into the cave of St. Onuphrius, but the latter
collapsed, the date palm withered and fell to the ground with its roots; dried
up and the source. Paphnutius thus clearly understood that God was not pleased
with his asceticism in this place and, glorifying God, marvelous in His saints,
returned to Egypt, preaching to everyone about what he had seen and heard.
Soon after this, the pious monks compiled a description of the life of
the Rev. Onuphrius, sent it throughout Egypt and the East, glorifying the holy
life of this great wilderness dweller.
Akathist to Rev. Onuphrius, the Great
Desert Dweller, Prince of Persia.
Kontakion 1
You chosen
and marvelous Father Onuphrius, shining with a dawn of tri-radiant life, do you
enlighten me – darkened by sinful passions, do extort me from the deadly wounds
and with your prayers save me from all troubles, so I may call unto you:
Rejoice, Father Onuphrius, brightest luminary of the whole universe.
Ikos 1
You Father
made the angelic ranks marvel at the feat that you constantly practiced in the
desert; You fasted for sixty three years, you were vouchsafed to receive the
Divine Mysteries from the hands of the angels, and now honoring you as a fellow
villager and interlocutor of the Angels, thus I cry out unto you, St. Onuphrius:
Rejoice, O most amazing miracle of angels;
Rejoice, O destroyer of soul-destroying passions.
Rejoice, O enlightener of impenetrable
deserts;
Rejoice, O punisher and teacher of abstinence.
Rejoice, O betterment of desert dwellers;
Rejoice, O divinely inspired luminary of
monks.
Rejoice, O most graceful servant of
Christ;
Rejoice, O warmest zealot of silence[-keeping].
Rejoice, O strong trampling of demonic
forces;
Rejoice, O true instructor of salvation.
Rejoice, O giver of joy to the faithful;
Rejoice, O quick helper to those who venerate
you.
Rejoice, Fr.
Onuphrius, brightest luminary of the whole universe.
Kontakion 2
Rev. Paphnutius
was greatly amazed at your strange and wondrous way of living, so am I – contemplating
on your measure of hard-working desert exploits – I chant to the Lord, Who strengthened
you for this: Hallelujah.
Ikos 2
Having prayed,
O Rev. Onuphrius, that I be given divine reason, you shining with divine light
and together with the angels helping settle in those who venerate you and
joyfully bringing you this praising chant:
Rejoice, you having strangely shone with
virtues;
Rejoice, you brighter than sunshine.
Rejoice, you led by an Angel into the
wilderness;
Rejoice, you desert-loving turtledove.
Rejoice, you crimson-blooming wildfire;
Rejoice, you all-honorable temple and
sanctified to God.
Rejoice, you fulfillment of God's gifts;
Rejoice, you marvelous astonishment in men.
Rejoice, terrible and formidable deterrence
of demons;
Rejoice, you most dear Adamante.
Rejoice, you viewer of the Trinity light;
Rejoice, you warm intercessor in prayers.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 3
The power
of the Most High lit you up from the maternal bed, O Reverend Onuphrius, and
showed the adobe and dwelling of the Holy Spirit, Whom I the unworthy am willing
to accept, and I chant a song unto the Lord: Hallelujah.
Ikos 3
Having
thee, father, as a great intercessor and quick helper in adversity, we call on
you to help sustain various adversities, and triumphantly in your blessed
memory, we joyfully cry unto you thus:
Rejoice, O quick listener to those who
pray to you in faith;
Rejoice, O renowned pleader of the
righteous Judge.
Rejoice, O honored dwelling of the Most
Holy Spirit;
Rejoice, O undefiled minister of the Most
Holy Trinity.
Rejoice, O dearest pearl of Christ the Lord;
Rejoice, O unspoken joy to the great
Paphnutius.
Rejoice, O mentor and teacher to that same
Paphnutius;
Rejoice, O quick consolation to those who
mourn.
Rejoice, O all-desired visitor to those desponding;
Rejoice, O doctor of the blind and healer
of the lame.
Rejoice, O health to those who are sick
and healing to those who are ailing;
Rejoice, O salvific haven of the faithful.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 4
Having come
to hate the storm of passions of the much-rebellious world, Father, you removed
all its beauties, settling in the wilderness, reverend, you followed the
Baptist in living, and imitated prophet Elijah, and now having received eternal
glory in the heavenly abodes, together with the heavenly inhabitants you stand
before God and chant together with them: Hallelujah.
Ikos 4
The
luminous sun and the golden-dawning luminary have you as faithful, Holy Onuphrius,
we implore you with tenderness, do enlighten, bring to our senses, teach us to
cry out unto you thus:
Rejoice, you brightest illumination of the
desert;
Rejoice, you golden-dawning lamp of the
world.
Rejoice, you most wonderful beauty of
Thebes;
Rejoice, you beautiful kindness to Lebanon
[Levia].
Rejoice, you brightest ornament of Egypt;
Rejoice, you great instructor of
Mesopotamia.
Rejoice, you true and aye imitator of John
the Baptist;
Rejoice, you fragrant cedar of the desert.
Rejoice, for you serve God equally with
the angels;
Rejoice, for having interceded for all who
warmly call on you for help.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 5
Seeing you
in the desert as the [flowing with] divine dawn, Father, the great Paphnutius diligently
followed you, and held unto you like a lamp of teaching, and curious of the
desert experienced that life – and learned it well from you, tenderly chanting a
song of praise to the Lord: Hallelujah.
Ikos 5
Having seen
your strange life, O reverend Onuphrius, the Church Cathedral [willed and] ordered
that your blessed memory be honored with reverence. For this sake I, too, willing
to receive salvation, read with joy and cry out unto you thus:
Rejoice, O brightest beauty of the Church
of Christ;
Rejoice, O unremitting representative of
those who seek your intercession.
Rejoice, for you always cry out unto the
Lord for us;
Rejoice, for the inner wilderness has been
enlightened by you.
Rejoice, for your good deeds have shone, as
the sun on earth and in heaven;
Rejoice, for you have gazed your mind onto
God.
Rejoice, for you have been enriched by the
poverty of spirit;
Rejoice, you eagle of heaven's nest.
Rejoice, for you scorch the charms of
demons like a reed;
Rejoice, you listener of the Gospel of
Christ.
Rejoice, you who have humbled the flesh philosophizing
by the strength of the Divine Spirit;
Rejoice, you earthly angel, heavenly man.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 6
The Lord God
trulu saw you as the creator of gospel sermons, who even didn’t worry about
robe or what to eat, thee are true, Onuphrius, see and at once with white hair,
like a garment, vested you wonderfully, and enriched you with glory from on-high
in your repose; pray that we, too, receive that from Christ, crying out unto
Him: Hallelujah.
Ikos 6
You have
shone from Egypt, being instructed by a pillar of Divine light, O reverend Onuphrius,
a refugee who cannot endure the army of demons the in the desert; do deliver us,
too, from their slanders with your prayers, for we are crying out unto you thus:
Rejoice, you consumer of demonic charms;
Rejoice, you exorcist of fearful demons.
Rejoice, you who wounded the head of the
serpent with your prayers;
Rejoice, you overfilled with gifts of the
Holy Spirit.
Rejoice, you having subdued the spirits of
wickedness with humility of wisdom;
Rejoice, for you have taken up your cross
on your shoulder.
Rejoice, for you have cast down the power
of that mental Amalek;
Rejoice, for you have taken up the light
burden of Christ upon your shoulder.
Rejoice, for from youth you have come to love
the yoke of Christ;
Rejoice, for you have been saved from the
enemy's nets, thankfully crying out unto God.
Rejoice, for you have dilligently helped
the faithful, as well, against enemies;
Rejoice, for you have changed the
disturbing passions of those who venerate you.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 7
Having
left the monastery into the inner desert, Paphnutius saw those working for the Lord,
he beheld you in a strange way with God's gaze and was horrified; according to
your words [spoken] to him, knowing you to be a man who faithfully and
marvelously works for God, he cried out: Hallelujah.
Ikos 7
You have appeared
to be a new true victor over carnal passions, O Reverend, and who may be
pleased to sing praise to your struggles? Who will be able to enumerate your
labors, illnesses and deeds, which you performed in the course of fasting? Being
dissatisfied with this praise, we further venerate you more with love and
faithfully cry out unto you thus:
Rejoice, you having oppressed your flesh
with hunger and thirst;
Rejoice, O having eternally conquered the representative
of darkness.
Rejoice, for you have withered all
voluptuousness by all-night vigils;
Rejoice, for abiding legitimately in
prayers and fasting, you have vested yourself in dispassion.
Rejoice, O mirror of miraculous
abstinence;
Rejoice, O great glory to the rank of
reverend [saints].
Rejoice, for your flesh is frozen with frost,
your spirit is warmed by the warmth of Christ's love;
Rejoice, for the dew of Divine grace cools
you from the scorching swelter, O Reverend.
Rejoice, O beautiful decoration of the
desert;
Rejoice, O image of heroic deeds and
perfection.
Rejoice, for you have portrayed every [single]
virtue in you;
Rejoice, for you did appear to be a
pleaser of the all-beloved ascetic [founder of exploits] Christ.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 8
Your life
was strange, you Onuphrius: looking at the date that grew near your cave, you nurtured
rather with abstinence. For this sake, having improved the lofty table, you sing
to God: Hallelujah.
Ikos 8
You were
all in the on-high and your eye of the soul gazed at the mountain unceasingly
in all your strange fasting, [and] now you having gained boldness to the Lord, O
reverend, you intercede for all who call upon you for help and cry out unto you
thus:
Rejoice, O great dweller of the wilderness;
Rejoice, like a star that shone up in the
deserts.
Rejoice, you who imitated Christ’s footsteps
from your infancy;
Rejoice, you zealot of angelic life.
Rejoice, you banisher of the invisible
enemy’s slander;
Rejoice, you indicator of the wonderful abstinence.
Rejoice, you teacher of the most graceful perfection;
Rejoice, you who shows the strange and
wondrous path unto heaven.
Rejoice, for you have lived on earth like
an angel;
Rejoice, for you have worthily received
glory and honor equal to the angels.
Rejoice, for in the heavenly adobes you
now bring prayers to the Creator for all;
Rejoice, for you – as an intercessor for
those who have acquired it – have begged [out] the great grace of God.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 9
All nature
have marveled at you, O holy Onuphrius: having hated the beautiful world from your
heart and having come to love the one God from your soul, you have fasted in a desert
manner. While exercising all alone in vision like this, you appeared as an
Angel, alive in the flesh, chanting to the Lord: Hallelujah.
Ikos 9
The ornate
tongues cannot praise you according to your acquisition, O God-wise Fr. Onuphrius:
you, having brought your meaning closer to God from your mother’s womb, were
very nigh to the Almighty King, bringing fruits worthy of Him of your feats in
all your life, O reverend. I, having truly seen from the Church of God that
glorifies you for these [feats], cry out unto you thus:
Rejoice, O you dedicated to monastic
training from your infancy;
Rejoice, O you introduced in youth by
God's instruction into the wilderness without a temple.
Rejoice, for having followed Christ's
word, you renounced the world, as well as the fatherland and family;
Rejoice, for you have taken up your gospel
cross on your shoulder.
Rejoice, you neglecting the robe, but
having made an incorruptible robe for yourself;
Rejoice, sowing with tears, but reaping
your helves with joy.
Rejoice, for by non-eating, by needy
poverty and by constant standing at prayer you exhausted the flesh;
Rejoice, for you have kept the cruel ways
for the words of the mouth of your Lord.
Rejoice, having mortified your bodily
passions to the end with your exploits;
Rejoice, [you] having preserved a purity equal
to the angels.
Rejoice, for you have lived for many years
like a fleshless one;
Rejoice, for the Crown Giver has now
counted you amongst the incorporeal rank.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 10
Willing to
save the faithful from various misfortunes, O Father, they set you up an
intercessor for themselves and [place you as] a champion and do not lose their
hopes: for you take away with your prayers to God the severe misfortunes and
sorrows that obsess us, and many various evils, instructing onto the steps
towards salvation those who diligently venerate you and faithfully cry out unto
the Lord: Hallelujah.
Ikos 10
I have
found you, the intercessor and man of prayer, O reverend, as a wall; like a
fragrant censer, with a sigh I give praise to God from the depths of my heart;
but to you, the eternally existing man of prayer, I bring chanting like this:
Rejoice, O well-prosperous field of
virtuous fruits;
Rejoice, O most proper betterment of
piety.
Rejoice, O strong intercessor for the earthly;
Rejoice, O warm listener to those venerating
you.
Rejoice, O luminary, that tears away
demonic darkness;
Rejoice, you who drive away the darkness
of soul-destroying passions ailments.
Rejoice, for you guide those deceived with
venerable morals onto the right path;
Rejoice, for you are leading the faithful
to fulfillment of God's desires.
Rejoice, for many kinds of benefactions
are given to you from on-high;
Rejoice, as the spirits of evil slander
run from those who call upon you.
Rejoice, for you boldly bring all prayers
to the Most High;
Rejoice, for you protect all who are in
need and sorrows.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 11
An angelic
chanting was heard in your divine repose, O Father, your holy and most pleasing
to God soul, was gloriously ascending into the heavenly abodes, the powers of
heaven were marveling, singing: Hallelujah.
Ikos 11
Your face is
bright after the repose, O Father, Paphnutius the saint was amazed. Dividing his
cassock into two parts, he covered your relics and buried you honestly with the
lions. This I also venerate reverently in spirit, and I cry out thus:
Rejoice, for God has consecrated all of
you;
Rejoice, for you have kept the Divine laws
well.
Rejoice, for you have foreseen your
departure from life;
Rejoice, having ended your feats in the
warm love of God and multi-labor reverence.
Rejoice, having been venerated in repose by
a wonderful fragrance, like heavenly;
Rejoice, having been glorified by lightnings
then and wondrous shining.
Rejoice, having had your relics surrounded
by angelic faces with chanting, censers and candles;
Rejoice, for the on-high force have opened
the [heavenly] gates for him.
Rejoice, for in that same hour a great
radiance was seen that covered you [all] over;
Rejoice, for a sweet voice was heard,
calling you to the reception of eternal bliss.
Rejoice, for Christ, the crown-giver,
gloriously received your soul in the on-high abodes;
Rejoice, for now you are abundantly
enjoying eternal joy.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 12
No one
from earth can ever spell out the grace given to you, and your exploits, O
Father Onuphrius: in the desert, you were unacquisitively alive, for food you
had angelic bread, running away from men, you conversed with God and Angels.
For this sake, you are rejoicing in heavenly adobes and chant a song: Hallelujah.
Ikos 12
We sing of
your valiant exploits, we praise and glorify your laudable death, we also venerate
your sacred memory, O Reverend, in it and for you alone of the twenty-four
elders surrounding the Throne of the Most High, who presides [them], we chant a
song of praise thus:
Rejoice, having lived strangely on earth;
Rejoice, having also inherited strange death.
Rejoice, for you have entered into the
non-evening light with your bright exploits;
Rejoice, for you have acquired [cherished]
a most peaceful inheritance in a rich way.
Rejoice, you successor of unspeakable
blessings;
Rejoice, you companion of the reverend and
the righteous.
Rejoice, for now you have been allowed to see
the Holy Trinity directly at firsthand;
Rejoice, for in your memory the Church of
Christ rejoices in an unspeakable way.
Rejoice, for by you fasters and
desert-dwellers are strengthened for exploit;
Rejoice, for the faithful are vouchsafed
by your intercession all blessings from on-high.
Rejoice, Fr. Onuphrius, brightest luminary
of the whole universe.
Kontakion 13
O all-praiseful and marvelous pleaser of
Christ, Father Onuphrius, pray and cry out with all sincerity: accept this
small prayer I offer and strive soon to beg the merciful God and Master, that
He may save me from all troubles and that He would wipe out torment in the
future, crying out: Hallelujah.
(This Kontakion is read thrice, followed
by Ikos 1 and Kontakion 1)
Prayer to Rev. Onuphrius,
the great desert-dweller,
prince of Persia
O most graceful
and greatest desert-dweller, reverend Fr. Onuphrius!
I praise your inexpressible wonderworking and your bright-most life, that you
have [lived and] passed on from your [very] youth, even through to [your] old
age: no one can possibly enumerate your patience and exploits, you most honest
[one]. St. Paphnutius marveled at your cruel living in the desert, and at the
same time he rejoiced greatly, having found you to be an image of only great exploits
and perfection. For this sake, he truly tested you about your holy labors and
about how much you had of the temporary living. That was also why he wrote that
you had been in diligence for sixty three years, enduring frost and swelter in
nakedness, that you lived dwelling in a deep desert with animals and birds, praying
incessantly. For this sake, I am now bringing you joy from my unworthy lips,
reverend Father, you great joy to reverend Paphnutius (you became worthy for
lions to serve you at the end, to bury your body and live with you in heaven), you
zealot of Elijah of Thesbite, heir of John the Baptist, friend of Christ and veritable
co-heir, you clever beauty of Egypt, great luminary of Thebia, the wonderful
kindness of Libya, red-blooming phoenix, stilted eagle flying in the under-heaven,
having gaining citizenship in heaven, where you are installed at the Throne of
the Lord of Glory, finding an adobe with twenty-four elders, and abiding with
them. And I am now praying to you, O most wonderful citizen of heaven, you fellow-worker
of the holy angelic ranks, hear me the sinful and unworthy servant of yours, at
this hour and accept this little Akathist prayer of mine, Oh great intercessor,
quick helper to those who diligently venerate you. Make amends to the
handwriting of my filthy and unclean deeds that are kept by demonic regiments.
Cover me with your intercession, reckon me as [one] belonging to the bright
place prepared by your prayers and vouchsafe me the on-high Jerusalem, for after
our Most Blessed Lady Theotokos and Ever-Virgin Mary, I honor you amongst my
warmest helpers, men-of-prayer and intercessors. Do visit and give a helping
hand to those who venerate you in your temple and everywhere. In this way, now I,
the unworthy, am praying to you and calling unto you: implore the merciful God
to forgive all transgressions of mine, voluntary and involuntary, all of them perpetrated
by my evil doings, and that through your intercession God may deliver me from
eternal torment, teach me to do good deeds, instruct me on the path to genuine
salvation and vouchsafe me to enjoy eternal joy together with all the saints,
now and forever, and unto the ages, Amen.
Another Prayer
O most wonderful and most blessed pleaser
of Christ and Abba of ours, Onuphrius the Great! You have shown wondrous love
for your Lord, and you have been strengthened for wondrous deeds by His grace,
and for this sake you have been vouchsafed with great boldness towards Him:
many miracles and signs of the power of God have appeared to people about you.
Look now, as well, O most wondrous Father, with the compassionate eye of your
love on us unworthy servants, and grant to everyone accordingly to one’s need,
faith and hope: give joy to those grieving, comfort those weeping, heal those
who are ailing, help those who labor, strengthen and bless those who fight with
passions and slanders of the enemy, support those who pine away, protect your
abode and all of us against visible enemies and against all evil. Magnify the
holy Orthodox faith in our fatherland, convert those erring, enlighten those
fallen away, confirm those who hesitate, soften those who are stubborn,
enlighten the infidels, and bring all to the quiet haven of the Heavenly
Fatherland. O marvelous word of the monastics and consolation to all the
faithful! through your glorious exploits and through the sweet contemplation of
your miraculous image illuminate us, as well, and strengthen us for all [sorts
of] exploit, work and patience for the glory of the Name of God, so we may be vouchsafed
salvation with you and with all the saints of the Eternal and Most Blessed
Kingdom of the glory of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit unto the
ages. Amen.
Still another Prayer
O Most Reverend Father Onuphrius! We pray
to you: do hear us, sinful and unworthy servants of God (names), at this hour.
And accept this small prayer of ours: erase the handwriting of our filthy and
unclean doings with your prayer, cover us for good with your intercession and
bring us with your prayers to the bright chamber prepared for the faithful by
your prayers; and beg the Merciful God that He may forgive all our sins,
voluntary and involuntary, and all the evil doings that we have perpetrated,
and that He may deliver us from eternal torment by your intercession and vouchsafe
us to enjoy eternal joy, together with all the saints, unto the ages. Amen.
Troparion, Tone 1
You have reached the desert with spiritual
desire, Oh God-wise Onuphrius, and as if being incorporeal you diligently
labored in it for many years, competing [in zeal] with the prophets Elijah and
the Baptist: and enjoying from the angelic hand divine mysteries, now in the
light of the Holy Trinity, you are rejoicing together with them. Pray that we,
who venerate your memory, may be saved.
16 December 2011
Letter 99 The Responses of Pope Nicholas I to the Questions of the Bulgars, A.D. 866
URL адрес MIME тип
http://www.pravoslavieto.com/docs/eng/history_of_the_bulgarian_orthodox_church.htm text/html
http://members.multimania.co.uk/berberian77/bulgaria_runciman1.pdf application/pdf
http://www.pravoslavieto.com/history/19/1881_arhiep_Serafim_Sobolev/index.htm text/html
http://pravoslavie.domainbg.com/20/index.html text/html
http://www.pravoslavie.domainbg.com/11/index.html text/html
http://www.pravoslavieto.com/life/02.06_sv_Fotij.htm#послание text/html
http://www.pravoslavieto.com/history/09/866_responce_pope_Nicholas_I.htm text/html
http://www.pravoslavieto.com/history/09/Chernorizets_Hrabur/index.htm#ватикански text/html
Click on the links above to read [in English mostly]
21 November 2010
I am with Christ forever - every moment on His narrow path
I am with Christ forever -
every moment on His narrow path
And my home is on this narrow countryside Road of Christ -
at 8, November - some Authorities and Kingdoms [Dominions]
would have it changed - to 21, November - but our home is
still the very same! Call us at our house number 8[OS]/21[NS].
Those Authorities and Kingdoms [Dominions] have been demoted -
rest assured! - and authorities and kingdoms are they no more! -
For I have the Powers - and the Will of the Living Word!
And the Thrones are being submerged - lest they be defiled by
Antichrist, who knows all lies.
Archangel Michael
and the Seventh Day was attributed to honor the Creator.
And so the cycle started running in time...
It is called Genesis, week, calendar...
And on the Eighth Day
the hope for salvation,
the beginning of our salvation was born on the Eighth Day of the indiction
(and through Her – the Most Holy Theotokos, Ever Virgin Miriam –
coming to this world was also our Savior),
subsequently (probably) still on that Eighth day
there will come our very salvation...
(For early Christian Fathers the spiritual "Eighth Day"
is Christ's resurrection) or the end of the world...
But is our salvation an end –
[Yes, of course - in English -
yes, this is our ultimate objective!]
or our salvation is an end of the world, of this world?!?
"Chapter 16. The spiritual temple of God
Moreover, I will also tell you concerning the temple, how the wretched [Jews], wandering in error, trusted not in God Himself, but in the temple, as being the house of God. For almost after the manner of the Gentiles they worshipped Him in the temple. But learn how the Lord speaks, when abolishing it: "Who has meted out heaven with a span, and the earth with his palm? Have not I?" Isaiah 40:12 "Thus says the Lord, Heaven is My throne, and the earth My footstool: what kind of house will you build to Me, or what is the place of My rest?" Isaiah 66:1 You perceive that their hope is vain. Moreover, He again says, "Behold, they who have cast down this temple, even they shall build it up again." It has so happened. For through their going to war, it was destroyed by their enemies; and now: they, as the servants of their enemies, shall rebuild it. Again, it was revealed that the city and the temple and the people of Israel were to be given up. For the Scripture says, "And it shall come to pass in the last days, that the Lord will deliver up the sheep of His pasture, and their sheep-fold and tower, to destruction." And it so happened as the Lord had spoken. Let us inquire, then, if there still is a temple of God. There is— where He himself declared He would make and finish it. For it is written, "And it shall come to pass, when the week is completed, the temple of God shall be built in glory in the name of the Lord." Daniel 9:24-27; Haggai 2:10 I find, therefore, that a temple does exist. Learn, then, how it shall be built in the name of the Lord. Before we believed in God, the habitation of our heart was corrupt and weak, as being indeed like a temple made with hands. For it was full of idolatry, and was a habitation of demons, through our doing such things as were opposed to [the will of] God. But it shall be built, you observe, in the name of the Lord, in order that the temple of the Lord may be built in glory. How? Learn [as follows]. Having received the forgiveness of sins, and placed our trust in the name of the Lord, we have become new creatures, formed again from the beginning. Wherefore in our habitation God truly dwells in us. How? His word of faith; His calling of promise; the wisdom of the statutes; the commands of the doctrine; He himself prophesying in us; He himself dwelling in us; opening to us who were enslaved by death the doors of the temple, that is, the mouth; and by giving us repentance introduced us into the incorruptible temple. He then, who wishes to be saved, looks not to man, but to Him who dwells in him, and speaks in him, amazed at never having either heard him utter such words with his mouth, nor himself having ever desired to hear them. This is the spiritual temple built for the Lord."
Homily XI by St. John of Kronstadt
On the Day of St. Archistratigue Michael and the Synaxis of all Heavenly Bodiless Powers
November 8, 1907
We keep praising Thee, O Christ, Who has most wisely joined the sky with the earth and has made one Church of angels and men. (Stichira for small vespers).
We celebrate, dear brethren, the bright holiday of the thunder-like Archangel Michael and the other heavenly bodiless powers.
The history of the Church’s establishing of this holiday is long and we will not tell it now; let those wishing to know it read about it in the church book "Lives of the Saints" [Chetyi-Minhei], and now let us talk about the spiritual countless world of angels, about their features, about their order of lines and about the immeasurable God’s sweetness, Who has associated us, Orthodox Christians, with this angelic Synaxis and Who has constituted one Church out of the angels and men, and then about our obligation to honor them according to dignity and to imitate them in force, as the future fellow citizens of ours in the heavenly fatherland; about which we pray to the Lord God, our common Creator.
St. Cyril of Alexandria says (see Macarius’s Theology on Angels): if our earth, and it – as just one point in-between the worlds – bears on it such a countless number of people and all [kinds of] beings, then [imagine] how many times more inhabitants abide in the immaterial heaven, so great and beyond limits [comprehension] for any mind?
Angels have a spiritual, immaterial, subtle, immortal nature – free from any mortality, but a limited one – not like that of the Lord Himself, the Spirit – everywhere consubstantial and one, without beginning and all-pervading. He brought Angels out of non-being into being, sanctified them by His word, and for [the purpose of] intransigence against evil He strengthened them up by the Holy Spirit in a non-falling manner (i.e. they can no longer fall into sin), their nature is full of the wonderful, unquenchable light, holiness, goodness, beauty, [utter] wisdom, power, immortality, ardent love for the Creator and for each other and for men, about whose salvation they rejoice and are [but] willing to have them as their eternal fellow citizens in the country of eternal light and immortality, of peace and joy. St. Dionysius the Areopagite, a disciple of Apostle Paul, whom the Holy Spirit raised up [in admiration] to the third sky, heard from Him the mysterious teaching on the world of angels, [he] wrote it down and handed it to the Church (Dionysius the Areopagite on the Church Hierarchy).
The Angelic world divides into nine orders, and these – each [divides] into three lines. The first and brightest-seen angels (Michael and Gabriel) as a bright illumination of the Trinity without beginning, wait immediately on the flaming throne of God, being enlightened by His unapproachable light, and handing down enlightenment and knowledge of God’s mysteries to the their lower lines; and the lower lines are being controlled in a most peaceful manner by the higher [ones]. Such heavenly citizenship, such most peaceful, holy, most bright, gracious Synaxis of the celestial residents is called Heavenly Hierarchy, in line with the earthly hierarchy or the hierarchy of the Orthodox Church.
Let us marvel at the all-good God and at [His] most wise providence, at His boundless goodness, intending us to our co-interning and bliss without end – along with Angels – in the future fatherland of ours and constituting one Church of Angels – most bright and incorruptible, and men chosen and worthy. What indescribable by any language bliss awaits the faithful Christians, if through the end they abide in faithfulness to their Christian calling! In order for us to qualify for eternal cohabitation and blissful life together with the angels in heaven, we must try and honor them, imitate their holiness, humility, love and wholehearted devotion to God, elevation of thoughts, abstinence, prayer and fasting, mercy and compassion to each other, hot mutual love.
The holy God-inspired audiences of God’s mysteries and of the angelic visions, the prophets and evangelists have seen how the angels in mysterious visions face each other in a friendly manner and praise consortingly the Holy Trinity. This teaches us, too, to treat each other with warm love and to live in one mind, ardently serving our common-for-all Creator.
The glory of the infinite goodness of God, Who has prepared eternal kingdom for us, a kingdom of unquenchable light, peace and unfailing bliss, together with the countless Synaxis of Angels.
Let us make use of the little time here towards prosperity in Christian virtues, so we may inherit this everlasting bliss, which may the Lord grant us all by grace, through His generosity and love for men, through the intercession of the Most Pure Mother of God and through the waiting [intercession] of the honest bodiless heavenly powers, especially the radiant thunder-like Michael and Gabriel, and the holy Angels – our guardians. Amen!
A number or a day, or the year...? What prompted me to publish this? - I cannot understand. Perhaps Vladyka Philaret’s date of demise? Indeed, it has been 25 years now.
…
"Let me remind you of a portentous vision given to Joseph in the night of 20th against the 21st November 1985 – just a few hours before Metropolitan Philaret died.
You were the first person whom Joseph told about this vision of his shortly after the news came of the Metropolitan Philaret’s demise.
On November 24th (the Iberon icon’s feast day) 1985 Metropolitan Philaret was buried. Immediately thereafter Joseph came to us in Washington for a few days [stay] and on the very first evening, under the fresh impression of the vision he told us about it in details. This was also attended by Fr. Theodore Shevtsov.
In the words of Joseph on the night of November 20th he felt very tired and went to bed. The holy Icon hanged on the wall opposite his bed – so that when lying he could gaze at it. Soon after he lied down, the icon-lamp hanging in front of the icon went out. He lit it up again but it went out for the second time. Then Joseph changed the oil, the wick, washed the lamp-glass, and filled it up again. But soon the lamp went out for a third time... This upset him, because he felt that the Mother of God intimately suggested to him that something significant was going to happen, since shortly before that the lamp in front of the Iberon Icon went out on three occasions – before the terrible earthquake in Mexico and before the eruption of the volcano in Colombia, in result to which thousands were killed. Joseph stood up for prayer. Under the icon, by the wall there was a [small] bench. Joseph knelt down to his knees, leaned against the bench and began praying. During the prayer he fell asleep.
In the dream, a panoramic view opened to him – very much like a huge wide screen – and he was presented one such vision. Wooded nature with rocky soil. On the trail he saw – standing on his knees with a haggard face – Metropolitan Philaret. On the back of the Vladyka and on his right shoulder there lay a large heavy cross. The cross look was terrible – iron and cold (it lacked any life-giving heat, which gently emanates out of a wooden cross), it was an ugly color – dark green-brownish. Metropolitan Philaret was falling under the weight of the cross and was unable to budge. But, suddenly, unexpectedly, Metropolitan Philaret bent forward and with a decisive movement from right to left he dropped the cross onto the ground (the motion was strange as the Metropolitan could simply drop his right shoulder down and the cross would slide to the ground).
Once the cross touched the ground, the Metropolitan disappeared. Joseph was seized with fear by what he had seen and out of horror he hid his face with his hands. When he finally dropped his hands before another picture appeared to him. He saw a land that has turned into a desert due to a terrible disaster. Instead of Metropolitan Philaret – standing on his knees was Vladyka Vitaliy with that same cross on his back, only the cross was more terrible, darker and heavier. Although with enormous labors, but still somehow the Vladyka budged little by little on.
In a last, third part, of the vision Joseph saw a cross – purely black in color in that same desert, and crucified on it was – in full vestment, with miter – Bishop Vitaliy...”.
…
A few hours after this vision the world learned of the repose of Metropolitan Philaret... Maybe this vision – sent to Joseph – was the most significant of all signs of the Iberon Myrrh-streaming Icon. Maybe by this prophetic vision the Mother of God warns us about what might happen – lest it happens. Maybe we are currently witnessing the last part of the/a vision. God forbid! When at your insistence Joseph told You about his vision, tears came into Your eyes and You told him that the first part of the vision was clear, but the next [one] You did not want to interprete and preferred not to think about [it]... "(an excerpt from a letter bt Fr. N. to M. V.)
== CLICK BELOW за БЪЛГАРСКИ===
и всеки миг съм на тесния Му път
ноември, № 8 - някои Власти и Царства (Господства) пожелаха
да се промени - на ноември, № 21 - но домът ни си е все така
същият! Посетете ни на номер 8 [ст.ст.] / 21[н.ст.].
Онези Власти и Царства (Господства) бидоха наказани и понижени -
бъдете спокойни! - и вече власти и царства не са! -
Защото имам Сили - и Волята на Живото Слово!
А Престолите биват потопявани - да не би да бъдат омърсени от
антихриста, който познава всички лъжи.
Архангел Михаил
Светът е сътворен в Шест Дни,
а Седмият бе определен за прослава на Твореца.
И така цикълът се завъртя във времето...
Наричат го Битие, седмица, календар...
А на Осмия ден дойде
надеждата за спасение,
началото на нашето спасение се роди на Осмия ден от индикта
(а чрез нея - Пресвета Богородица, Вечната Дева Мариам -
дойде на този свят и нашият Спасител),
впоследствие (вероятно) пак на този Осми ден
ще дойде и самото наше спасение...
(За ранните християнски отци духовният "Осми Ден"
е Христовото възкресение) или краят на света...
Но край ли е нашето спасение -
[на английски - ЦЕЛ - да разбира се,
това е към което се стремим в крайна сметка!]
или нашето спасение е край на света, на този свят?!?
Число или ден, или година...? Какво ме накара да публикувам това? – Не мога да разбера. Може би датата на смъртта на епископ Филарет? Все пак изминаха 25 [пълни] години.
...
"Позволете ми да ви напомня за едно знаменателно видение, дадено на Йосиф в нощта на 20-ти срещу 21-ви ноември 1985 г. – [само] няколко часа преди кончината на митрополит Филарет.
Вие бяхте първият човек, на когото Йосиф разказа за това свое видение скоро след като дойде новината за смъртта на митрополит Филарет.
На 24 ноември (на празника на Иверската икони) 1985 г. се състоя погребанието на митр. Филарет. Веднага след това Йосиф дойде при нас във Вашингтон за няколко дни и още на първата вечер ни разказа – по свежите си впечатления от видението – подробно за него. На това присъстваше също и отец Теодор Шевцов.
По димите на Йосиф вечерта на 20-ти ноември той почувствал голяма умора и си легнал да спи. Светата икона висяла на стената срещу леглото му – така че докато лежал той можел да се взира в нея. Скоро след като си легнал, изгаснало висящото пред иконата кандило. Той го притоплил [запалил] отново, но то изгаснало втори път. Тогава Иосиф сменил олиото, фитила, стъкълцето на кандилото, и отново го напълнил [и запалил]. Но скоро кандилото излгаснало за трети път... Това го разстроило, защото почувствал, че Божията Майка съкровено му внушава, че ще се случи нещо значително, тъй като малко преди това кандилото пред Иверската Икона изгасвало на три пъти [–] непосредствено преди страшното земетресение в Мексико и преди изригването на вулкан в Колумбия, в резултат на които загинаха хиляди хора. Йосиф застанал на молитва. Под иконата, до стената имало скамейка. Йосиф се спуснал на колене, прислонил се на скамейката и започнал молитвослов. По време на молитва заспал.
Насъне му се открила картина-панорама, буквално един огромен широк екран, и му било представено такова видение. Гориста природа с камениста почви. На пътека той видял да стои на колене с измъчено лице митрополит Филарет. На гърба на владиката и на дясното му рамо лежал голям тежък кръст. Кръстът изглеждал страшен – железен и хладен (в него отсъствала животворящата топлина, която леко навява от дървен кръст), цветът му бил некрасив – тъмно зелено-кафеникаво. Митрополит Филарет падал под тежестта на този кръст и не можел да помръдне от мястото си. Но, изведнъж, неочаквано, митрополит Филарет се привел напред и с едно решително движение от дясно на ляво захвърлил кръста на земята (движението било странно, тъй като митрополитът можел просто да спусне дясното си рамо и кръстът би се приплъзнал на земята).
Веднага щом кръста се докоснал до земята, митрополитът изчезнал. Йосиф бил обхванат от страх от водяното и от ужас закрил лицето си с ръце. Когато най-сетне спуснал ръце, пред себе се представила друга картина. Той видял земята, преврната в пустиня вследствие на страшно бедствие. Вместо митрополит Филарет, на колене стоял Владика Виталий със същия кръст на гърба си, но кръстът бил по-страшен, по-тъмен и тежтк. Макар и с огромен мъки, но все пак по някакъв начин Владиката се придвижвал по не много.
В последната, трета част на видението Йосиф видял кръст с чисто черен цвят в същата пустиня, и на него бил разпнат, в пълно онлачение, с митра Владика Виталий...”.
...
Няколко часа след това видение светът научил за смъртта на митрополит Филарет... Може би това видение, изпратено на Йосиф е най-значителното от всички знамения на Иверската Мироточива Икона. Може би с това пророческо видение Майката Божия ни предупреждава за това, което може да се случи, да не би то да се случи. Може би сега ставаме свидетели на последната част от видението. Боже опази! Когато на ваше настояване, Йосиф Ви разказа за своето видение, Вие се просълзихте и му казах, че първата част от видението е понятна, а следващата Вие не искате да разтълкувате и предпочитате да не мислите за нея... " (Откъс от писмо на о. Н. до М. В.)