Lenten Services,
Readings, and
the Saint of the Day
Friday, April 4, 2008
Part 2: Saint of the Day

1. VENERABLE JOSEPH THE HYMNOGRAPHER
Joseph was born in Sicily
of pious and virtuous parents, Plotinus and Agatha. After the death of his
parents, Joseph moved to Thessalonica where he was tonsured a monk. As a monk,
he was a model to all in fasting, extreme restraint, ceaseless prayer, chanting
of the Psalms, vigils and labor. The bishop of Thessalonica ordained him a
priest [Heiromonk]. While visiting Thessalonica the
distinguished Gregory Decapolis was so impressed with Joseph, because of his
rare character, that he invited him to his monastery in Constantinople.
When the flame of the Iconoclastic heresy erupted again under Leo V, the
Armenian, Joseph was sent to Rome
to call upon the Pope and the Roman Church to battle for Orthodoxy. While enroute, Joseph was captured by
pirates and taken to Crete where the heretics
detained him in prison for six years. Joseph rejoiced that he was made
worthy to suffer for Christ and, for that, he continually praised God, considering
the iron chains on him as an adornment of gold.
Early in the morning on Christmas day, in the sixth year of Joseph's
imprisonment, the wicked Emperor Leo was slain in church while attending
Matins. At that same moment, St. Nicholas appeared to Joseph in prison and said
to him:"Arise and follow me!" Joseph felt
himself being elevated in the air and, all at once, found himself before the
gates of Constantinople. All true believers
rejoiced at his coming. He composed canons and hymns for many saints. He
possessed the "gift of discernment" for which Patriarch Photius appointed him the spiritual father and confessor
for priests recommending him as, "A man of God, an angel in the flesh and
father of fathers." In extreme old age, Joseph gave up his soul to the
Lord Whom he faithfully served both in words and in hymns. He died peacefully
on the eve of Holy and Great Thursday in the year 883
A.D.
2. THE HOLY MARTYR PHERBUTHA, HER WIDOWED
SISTER AND THEIR SLAVE
During the reign of the Persian Emperor Saborius,
St. Simeon, the bishop, was slain. At the wish of the empress, Pherbutha, the sister of Bishop Simeon, was taken to the
palace. Pherbutha was exceptionally beautiful and
because of that many suitors thronged to her among whom
were many pagan priests and soothsayers. Pherbutha
rejected them all and provoked much anger against herself.
At that time, the empress became ill and all the pagan priests explained to the
emperor that the empress was poisoned by Pherbutha
and, as a cure for the ailing empress, they recommended the following: that Pherbutha, her sister and their slave, as Christians, be
sawn and that three parts of their bodies be placed on one side and three parts
on the other side and that the empress should be borne between them. The
emperor agreed to the recommendation of these blood-thirsty pagan priests. Pherbutha, together with her sister and their slave,
suffered for Christ in the year 343 A.D., thereby earning the incorruptible
wreath in the eternal kingdom of their Lord.
3. THE VENERABLE ZOSIMUS
Zosimus was a monk of the Jordanian monastic
community during the reign of Emperor Theodosius the Younger. It was he who
discovered, administered Holy Communion to and buried the body of St. Mary the
Egyptian. He died in the Lord in his hundredth year in the sixth century.
4. THE VENERABLE MARTYR NICETAS
Nicetas was a Slav from Albania. As a monk of the Holy Mountain
(Mt. Athos), he went to Serres
where he debated with the Mullahs about religion. Being that they could not
overcome him with reason, the Turks subjected him to torture under which Nicetas, the holy one, died and gave up his soul to his God
in the year 1808 A.D.
HYMN OF
PRAISE
THE HOLY FEMALE MARTYR
PHERBUTHA
The handmaiden of the Lord, the
virgin Pherbutha,
As an innocent lamb, to the
slaughter, remained silent,
Neither says she: Woe! Nor says, woe is me!
But with joy received and endured the
suffering.
She despised earthly illusions and
falsehoods,
For to her, the Lord was more dear than the whole world,
In the royal court: sickness and
emptiness
Without wondrous faith in the Son of
God;
Among the soothsayers; the cursed
darkness
Without the
knowledge of the Creator and the heavenly world.
The beauty of the flesh - a stumbling
block,
Without God's love, faith and hoping
Therefore, Pherbutha
totally sacrificed herself for Christ,
To the world she surrendered all,
except her pure soul.
Her bodily cage, the tormentor
crushed
But the living soul, he cannot
enslave;
The cage [her body] was cut up; the
soul to Paradise flees,
Into true freedom
from false freedom.
The blood splattered upon the earth,
and the body became earth,
And, in eternity, Pherbutha
remained alive.
REFLECTION
He who glorifies God, God also glorifies him. This was clearly and
abundantly shown in the lives of the saints. St.
Joseph the Hymnographer, indeed, glorified God in
works, in sufferings and in hymns. God glorified him both in this life and
after death. During his life, the Holy Father Nicholas appeared to him in
prison and freed him. When St. Joseph
wondered whether he should compose a Canon to the Apostle Bartholomew, this
apostle appeared to him in radiant vestments and said to Joseph that it is
well-pleasing to God that he compose this Canon. When St. Joseph died, a citizen of Constantinople
learned of the glory by which God glorified His chosen one. This man had come
into the church
of St. Theodore Phanariot
to beseech the saint to reveal to him where one of his escaped servants had
hidden. Because St. Theodore was known among the people as a saint who reveals
where something is that had been lost or stolen, he was called Phanariot, which means The Revealer. For
three days and three nights, this man prayed and when he received no response
from the saint, wanted to leave. At that moment, St. Theodore appeared to him
in a vision saying: "Why do you become angry O man? Joseph the Hymnographer's soul was being separated from his body and
we were with him. When he died this night, all of us whom he glorified in hymns, translated his soul to the heavens and placed it
before the Face of God. That is why
I was tardy in not appearing to you."
CONTEMPLATION
To contemplate the Resurrection of the Lord Jesus:
1. How His soul returned again from Hades into His body;
2. How He, through His Divine Power, by which He resurrected other dead
bodies, resurrected His own body.
HOMILY
About the Church as the Body of the Lord
"Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up"
(St. John
2:19).
Thus spoke the Lord to the wicked Jews about "the Temple
of His body" (St. John
2:21). But since it was not given to the wicked to
understand anything, so also the Jews did not understand and mocked Him.
The Lord did not rebuke them for that but that which He spoke,
occurred. The Jews destroyed His
body but He restored it again and raised it in glory and power. The wicked
punished God with destruction but God reprimanded the wicked by restoration. It
is satisfying to the wicked ones to be able to show their power by killing but,
to God, there was joy to show His power by giving life. There is nothing as short-lived as the triumph of evil nor nothing
as lasting as the triumph of truth.
"Destroy this temple." The Lord referred to His body as the
Church. Destroyed, that Church was crowded into a dark tomb and by means of a
heavy stone prevented light from having access to it. But, that Church was not
in need of the light of the sun. It had its own light, its own Sun of
Righteousness, Who shone from within. The tender Heavenly Hand removed the
stone from the tomb and the Lord resurrected in glory and in power. That which
once occurred to the All-Pure Body of Christ, occurred many times later to the
Church of the holy ones on earth. The enemies of the Church cruelly persecuted and
tormented it, demolished it and buried it in darkness. But, the Church after
such bruises and confinement, resurrected again with greater glory and power.
Just as the Church
of His Body resurrected,
so it will at the end of time, the Church of His holy ones will resurrect in
fullness and perfection.
O resurrected Lord, do not give us over to decay
and eternal death, but resurrect us to life eternal.
To You be glory and thanks always. Amen.