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понедельник, 29 января 2018 г.

• συνοδικός • January 29 / January 16 •

συνοδικός

January 29 / January 16
2018 (7526)
• Martyr ELPIDIUS and Martyress HELENA
• Holy Martyrs triplets brothers SPEUSIPPUS (also Pevsippos) 斯佩弗西普, ELEUSIPPUS (also Elasippos) 艾勒弗西普, MELEUSIPPUS (also Mesippos or Melasippus) 麦勒弗西普 and their grandmother LEONILLA (also Neonilla) 莱奥尼拉; and with them, NEON (also Neo or Neonos) 奈翁; TURBO 图尔伯; and JONILLA (also Junilla, Vovilla or Jovilla) 约尼拉 and her infant (161-180) suffered for Christ in France
Οἱ Ἅγιοι Πεύσιππος, Ἐλάσιππος καὶ Μέσιππος οἱ Μάρτυρες οἱ αὐτάδελφοι
Ἡ Ἁγία Νεονίλλη ἡ Μάρτυς
• Holy 6 Hieromartyrs Monks of the Desert (749)
Οἱ Ἅγιοι Ἕξι Πατέρες
• Venerable schemaabbot ROMIL 罗弥洛 called Romanus the Good, monk of Mt Athos and of Monastery Ravanica in Serbia (1375) the Sinaite, the Hesychast, monk of Mount Athos, disciple of St Gregory Sinaite; and Hosiosmartyrs NESTOR 奈斯托尔, MARTINIUS 玛尔提尼, DANIEL 但以理, SISOES 息所伊斯, ZOSIMAS 佐西玛, and GREGORY 格里高利 with Romil
Ὁ Ὅσιος Ρωμύλος καὶ οἱ σὺν αὐτῷ
Νέστορας, Μαρτῖνος, Δανιήλ, Σισώη, Ζωσιμὰς καὶ Γρηγόριος
Even after his death, Saint Romilus performed great miracles, casting out demons, and healing all sorts of diseases and suffering. Through his holy prayers, may we obtain the forgiveness of our sins and great mercy from Christ our God, to Whom is due all glory, honor and worship, together with His unoriginate Father, and the Most Holy, good, and life-giving Spirit, now and ever, and unto ages of ages. Amen.
BARSANUPHIUS and EURETUS

NEW MARTYRS AND CONFESSORS in the 20th century
• New hieromartyr IOANN Pettaj, presbiter, priest in Estonia (1894-1919) day of martyrdom, shoted
• New hieromartyr priest TROFIM Kuznetsov (1885-1919) day of martyrdom, brutally tortured and killed in Birilüssy village of Achinsk, at Krasnojarsk; the executioners brought Father Trofim to the cemetery, tied him to a birch tree and then each shot him
• Repose of Elder THEODORE of Irkutsk (1923)
• Repose of Priest DEMETRIUS Gagastathis of Platanos, Trikala (1975)

• Martyr ACHATIUS (Agathius) the Soldier of Byzantium (304)
BARTANUBA, Nun near Constantinople (4th c.)
• Hosiosmartyr abbot DAMASKIN 达玛斯基诺 the New, of Hilandar on Mt Athos and of Gabrovo in Bulgary (1771)
Ὁ Ἅγιος Δαμασκηνὸς ὁ Ἱερομάρτυρας
However, following the death of the Saint, divine justice avenged those iniquitous manslayers. As they were crossing the Danube River, they drowned in its currents and received as retribution everlasting damnation. May we be delivered from such an end and be made worthy of the Kingdom Of The Heavens, through the intercessions of the Holy Hieromartyr Damaskenos. Amen.
• Martyr DANAX (Danaktos) 达那克斯 the Reader of Illyria (i.e. Albania) (111) served as reader at a church in the locale of Auleneia (i.e. Vlore) in Macedonia
Ὁ Ἅγιος Δάναξ ὁ Ἀναγνώστης
During an invasion by pagans, the saint took the church vessels and intended to hide them, but he was seized by soldiers. Refusing to worship their loathsome idols, he was stabbed with a sword.
DUNCHAID O'Braoin (988) Abbot of Clonmacnoise, Ireland
Born in Westmeath; died at Armagh, 988. Saint Dunchaid was an anchorite until 969, when he was chosen abbot of Clonmacnoise Monastery. In his old age he retired to Armagh, where he died.
FERREOLUS (also known as Fergéol) bishop of Grenoble (670) France
FULGENTIUS of Ecija (633)
Brother of Saints Isidore of Seville, Leander, and Florentina, Saint Fulgentius was bishop of Ecija, Andalusia, Spain, and one of the leaders of the Spanish Church at that time. He is often confused with Saint Fulgentius of Ruspe. In art, Saint Fulgentius is likely to be shown with his brothers and sister.
• Abbot FURSEY (also known as Fursa of Pérrone) 福尔赛 of Burgh Castle, enlightener of East Anglia and Langy, Abbot of Burgh Castle, and Peronne Monastery in France (648) the best known of the Irish monastic missioners abroad in the earlier middle ages, Pilgrim For Christ
Saint Fursey was an Irish monk who had various visions of heaven and hell. He spent some years evangelising in Ireland. He then went, with his two brothers St Foillan and St Ultan to evangelise East Anglia in the 630’s. This makes him the first recorded Anglo-Saxon missionary, even before St Aidan. He heard the angels singing the "Holy, Holy, Holy" in Heaven. His relics are to be found in Amiens cathedral.
GALATIAN
GERASIMUS II Palladas, Patriarch of Alexandria (1714)
Ὁ Ἅγιος Γεράσιμος ὁ Παλλαδὰς Πατριάρχης Ἀλεξανδρείας
• Sainted HONORATUS (also known as Honore) 奥诺拉特 archbishop of Arles and founder of Lérins Abbey (350-429)
Ὁ Ὅσιος Ὀνωρᾶτος Ἀρχιεπίσκοπος Ἀρελάτης
The saint depleted his youthful vigor through fasting and asceticism, and so "the powers of the body made way for the power of the spirit." Though in poor health, he managed to follow the same rule of fasting and keeping vigil as those who were younger and stronger than he. He would visit the sick when he was even sicker than they were, offering consolation for body and soul. Then, fearing he had not done enough for them, he would review each case in his mind to determine how he could ease their suffering. Adorned with virtues, Saint Honoratus treated a variety of spiritual diseases, freeing many from their enslavement to vice. His insight into each person’s character enabled him to apply the appropriate remedies for restoring souls to spiritual health.
• Abbot HONORATUS of Fondi (6th c.) the abbot-founder of the monastery of Fondi on the confines of Latium and Campania in present-day Italy. Saint Gregory the Great gives a pleasing, though all too short, account of his life in Dialogos, Book I
HONORE (Honoratus, Honorius) of Amiens (600) the Patron of bakers of holy wafers and others, confectioners, candle-makers, florists, flour merchants, oil refiners, and pastry chefs // MAY 16 //
JAMES 雅各 of Tarentaise (429) a disciple of Saint Honoratus at Lérins and venerated at Chambery as an apostle of Savoy and the first bishop of Tarentaise
• Martyress JUNILLA of Cappadocia
LIBERATA of Pavia, Solitary (5th c.) Sister of St Epiphanius of Pavia in Italy and St Honorata
MACARIUS the Elder, of Egypt (390)
• Hierodeacon MAKARIOS of Kalogeras, of Patmos (1737)
• Hieromartyr MARCELLUS I (309) Pope of Rome from 308 to 309 and suffered for confessing the faith
MELAS (also known as Melantius) the Bishop (385)
• Blessed Righteous priest MAXIMUS 玛克西默 of Totma, Fool For Christ (1650) Vologda
Ὁ Ἅγιος Μάξιμος ὁ διὰ Χριστὸν Σαλός καὶ Θαυματουργὸς τῆς Τότμα
MONOA
• New Hieromartyr NICHOLAS 尼科拉 of Mitylene of Lesvos in Greece (1771)
Ὁ Ἅγιος Νικόλαος ὁ Νεομάρτυρας
• Hosiosmartyr monk PAMBO
• Veneration of the Precious Chains (Shackles) of the Holy and All-Glorious Foremost PETER 彼得 (Simon, Cephas) the Apostle (67) of the Twelve Apostles
Ἡ προσκύνησις τῆς Τιμίας ἁλύσεως τοῦ Ἁγίου καὶ ἐνδόξου Ἀποστόλου Πέτρου
Saint Peter is commemorated on this day because of the chains by which he was shackled by the lawless Herod and which during the appearance of an angel in prison fell from him, "Suddenly the angel of the Lord stood by him and a light shone in the cell. He tapped Peter on the side and awakened him, saying, "Get up quickly." The chains fell from his wrists" (Acts of the Apostles 12:7). The chains were preserved by Christians as much for the memory of this great apostle as well as for their healing power, for many of the sick were healed by touching them as well as with the towel of the Apostle Paul, "then when the face cloths or aprons that touched his skin were applied to the sick, their diseases left them and the evil spirits came out of them" (Acts of the Apostles 19:12). St. Juvenal, the Patriarch of Jerusalem gave these chains as a gift to the Empress Eudocia, the exiled wife of the Emperor Theodosius the Younger. She divided them into two and sent one half to the Church of the Holy Apostle in Constantinople and the other half to her daughter Empress Eudoxia in Rome, the wife of Valentian. Eudoxia built the Church of St Peter and deposited these chains in it, together with those chains with which Peter was shackled before his death under Emperor Nero. The chains which fell from his hands were collected by Christians and passed down through the generations as precious relics, finally coming to Constantinople and being placed in the Church of St Peter, where they worked many miracles and healings.
There is nothing superstitious about the veneration of clothing and other objects belonging to the Saints; the Acts of the Apostles describes how handkerchiefs or aprons that had touched the Apostle Paul would heal the sick (ch. 19), and that even the shadow of the Apostle Peter healed those on whom it fell (ch. 5). In the twentieth century, a shirt worn by St Nektarios on his death-bed healed a paralyzed man. The sanctity of those united to God extends not only to their bodies but at times to their garments.

PRISCILLA (also known as Prisca), Matron (98) who hosted St Peter
Saint Priscilla, was the widow of Mancius Aeilius Glabrio, who was executed by Domitian most likely because he was a Christian. She was probably the mother of Saint Pudens, the senator. Tradition has it that she was the Roman hostess to Saint Peter, who used her home on Via Salaria as his headquarters in Rome. The catacomb of Priscilla under her home was named after her.
SOPHIA, W., Nun at Jerusalem (4th c.)
• Martyr SIGEBERT 西格博尔特 King of the East Angles (635)
TATIAN (also known as Titian) (650) for 30 years Saint Tatian was a bishop in the neighborhood of Venice. The seat of his bishopric (Opitergium or Oderzo) has since been destroyed
TRIVERIUS (Trevor) (550) Hermit near Thérouanne monastery until he moved to Dombes. He is honored at Lyons and in the diocese of Belley. He has given his name to the village of Saint-Trivier
• Sainted TOZZO Bishop of Augsburg (778)
VALERIUS of Sorrento (453) another of the hermit saints called by God and His people to another life; taken from his solitude by the people of Sorrento, he became bishop of Sorrento, Italy

LIST OF BISHOPS
Athens: Hierotheus in 52; DIONYSIUS the Areopagite in 58; Narcissus in 67; Publius in 118-124; Quadratus, who presented Apology to Hadrian, in 126
Toledo: Eugenius in 69-121; Melantius; Pelagius; Patrummus; Eusebius; Quintus; Vincentius; Eugenius; Marcellus was consecrated at Arles by Dionysius the Areopagite, in 68-69
The list at Toledo is as complete as the list at Milan.
Paris: Dionysius the Areopagite in 70-119; Mallo; Martianus; Victor; Maurianus; Martinus
Arles: St TROPHIMUS c. 46; Dionysius the Areopagite 68–70; St REGULUS; St FELIX 140; Gratius 160; Ambrosius; Anastinus; Ingenuus; Augustinus; Hieronymus; Savitius; Martianus 282; St Marin 314
Milan: Anotolone 51–64; Cajo 64–85; Castrinziano 97–137; Calivero 138–190; St MONA 192–250; St MATERNO 252–304; St MIROCLE 304–325; St AMBROSE 11th Bishop 374–397
• Metropolitans of London: Theonus, in time of King Lucius (186–193). He built the church of St Peter, Cornhill • Elvanus, messenger from Lucius to Eleutherus, Bishop of Rome, by whom he was consecrated • Cadwr, or Cadoc. Name occurs at Caerleon • Obinus • Conan • Palladius the Bishop of Britain • Stephanus • Iltutus, Abbot of the School of Llandaff • Theodwin, or Dedwin • Theodred • Hilarius • Restitutus, who attended Council of Arles, A.D. 314 • Guitelinus • Vodinus. Put to death, 453 • Theonus 2nd • Fastidius, Bishop of Britain, A.D. 431
• Metropolitans of York: Sampson, appointed by King Lucius • Taurinus, Bishop of Evreux, "Ebroicensis" • Eborius, at Arles, A.D. 314 • Sampson, or Saxo, expelled by Saxons, and transferred his pall to Dol in Brittany; consecrated, 490 • Pirah, appointed by King Arthur, A.D. 522, in place of Sampson, A.D. 522 • Thadiacus fled to Wales, A.D. 586
• Isle of Man: Amphibalus was Bishop of Man before a.d. 447, in which year St Patrick consecrated Germanus to Man
Whithern: St NINIAN Bishop of Whithern (subsequently in the Province of York), was consecrated by Pope Siricius, a.d. 394; retired to Ireland, 420; died, 432
• Province of Caerleon: Dyfan (Missionaries of Eleutherus) • Ffagan • Elldyrn • Edyfield. Adelfius at Aries in 314. He is claimed also by Colchester and Lincoln • Cadwr • Cynan • Ilan • Llewyr • Cyhelyn • Guitelin • Tremorinus, died about 490, and was succeeded by Dubritius of Llandaff, after which the Primacy seems to have wavered between Llandaff and Menevia • Dubritius consecrated in 449 (Benedict of Gloster); in 490 (Geoffrey), Bishop of Llandaff, and became Metropolitan on the death of Tremorinus, as stated' above, but his seat remained at Llandaff • St DAVID 1st Bishop of Menevia, was consecrated at Jerusalem, with two companions 284 , a.d. 519, and succeeded as Metropolitan on the death of Dubritius, but his seat remained at St David's • After him came Teilo, consecrated at the same time as St David, at Jerusalem, A.D. 519, to Llandaff. He succeeded to the Metropolitan's office on St David's death, retaining Llandaff, and consecrating Ismael to St David's as a Suffragan Bishop
SIMON the Cananite, afterwards Bishop of Jerusalem, having preached the Gospel in Britain, as also ARISTOBULUS, ordained by St Paul "Bishop for Britain"; there must have been many Bishops in Britain before King Lucius was able to supersede the Druid by the Christian organisation. Within ten years after the arrival of JOSEPH of Arimathea, the first-fruit of Britain was sent to Rome, for instruction and consecration. He founded a Church in Beatenberg, Switzerland
In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
O God, be merciful to me, a sinner.
愿上帝怜恤我罪人
O Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God,
for the sake of the prayers
of Thy most pure Mother,
our holy and God-bearing fathers and all the saints, have mercy on us.
Amen.



Blessed be God.

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