Lenten Services,
Readings, and
the Saint of the Day
Monday, March 31, 2008
Part 1: 6th Hour and Vespers Readings
Part 2: Saint of the Day

1. THE PRIESTLY-MARTYR HYPATIUS THE BISHOP OF
GANGRA
Hypatius was born in Cilicia
and was the bishop of Gangra. He was present at the
First Ecumenical Council [Nicaea,
325. A.D.] and was renowned
throughout because of his pious and saintly life and his miracle-working. The
Emperor Constantius ordered that a likeness of Hypatius be made during the saint's lifetime. The emperor
kept this likeness in his palace as a weapon against all adverse powers. Once
upon returning from Constantinople, Hypatius was attacked in a narrow gorge by Novatian heretics and, along with others, was hurled to the
ground in mud. At that moment a
woman from that group struck him in the head with a stone and, thus, the saint
died. Immediately that woman went
insane and took that same stone and struck herself with it. When they took her
to the grave of St. Hypatius, he interceded before
God on her behalf. She was healed by the great compassionate soul of Hypatius and lived the remainder of her life in repentance
and prayer. St. Hypatius died and took up habitation
in the eternal Kingdom
of Christ the God, in the
year 326 A.D.
2. SAINT JONAH, METROPOLITAN OF MOSCOW
Jonah was born in the province
of Kostrom.
In his twelfth year he was tonsured a monk and as such lived for a long time in
the Simonov Monastery in Moscow.
At the time of Metropolitan Photius, Jonah became
Bishop of Ryazn. When Photius
died, Jonah was elected as metropolitan and sent to the patriarch in Constantinople for approval and consecration. At the same
time, Isidorus, a Bulgarian by descent, outwitted
Jonah and arrived before him in Constantinople
and was consecrated as the Metropolitan of the Russians. Jonah returned to his
cathedral in Ryazn. Isidorus,
the malicious one, ended his incumbency of the Metropolitan See nefariously. Isidorus attended the Council of Florence [1439 A.D.] and
then, after three years, returned to Moscow.
Everyone attacked him as an apostate from Orthodoxy and banished him. It is
unknown where he ended his life. Jonah, the good and wise shepherd, ascended
the throne of the Metropolitan See. He was a great worker of miracles, "a
discerner," and a spiritual director. When the Agarians
surrounded Moscow,
Jonah repelled them through his prayers. In his later years he wished that he
could be afflicted by an illness so that he could suffer pain and that, through
pain, completely purify himself before his departure to the other world. According to his wishes, God permitted a sore on
his foot ,which was preceded by a vision to a certain
priest, James. The saint died from these wounds and took up habitation among
the heavenly citizens on March 31, 1461 A.D. Many miracles have occurred over
his relics. A certain mute, John by name, was brought before the relics of the
saint. John kissed the hand of Jonah and, as he related later, the hand grabbed
him by the tongue and he felt a sharp pain. When the hand released his tongue,
John returned to those people who brought him and began to talk as though he
was never a mute.
3. THE PRIESTLY-MARTYR AUDAS
Audas was a bishop of the city of Susa. He was beheaded for
Christ in the year 418 A.D. in Persia
by Emperor Yezdegird.
His deacon, St. Benjamin, was released by the tormentors with the understanding
that he would never preach the Gospel again. In the beginning he agreed,
but Benjamin could not sustain this in his heart and continued to spread the
truth of Christ among the people. For this Benjamin was captured and killed
three years after St. Audas in the year 421 A.D.
4. THE VENERABLE APOLLONIUS
Apollonius was a renowned Egyptian ascetic. In his fifteenth year he
renounced the world and withdrew to a mountain where he lived for forty years
feeding on vegetation. After that, he established a monastery in which
five-hundred monks lived. He died
peacefully in the year 395 A.D.
HYMN OF
PRAISE
TRUTH
Know the truth, the Lord commands,
Who knows the truth,
himself does not allow to be enslaved.
To the faithful, truth gives freedom,
And by truth, the faithful rule over
the world.
Falsehood and bondage are as a source
and river,
Falsehood, forever in bondage, holds
the liar.
Falsehood is the midnight darkness
which leads astray
And by this wayward path leads men
into the abyss.
Falsehood shackles one with fear,
fear from everyone,
From men and the
world and demons evil.
Truth is the light which disperses
darkness
And grants freedom to the despondent
slave,
Freedom from men, freedom from the
world,
Freedom from fear and demons cursed.
Who recognizes truth, freedom, that
one receives,
With freedom, even authority over all
adversaries.
The cradle for freedom, truth
prepares,
For without truth, there is not true
freedom.
REFLECTION
St. John of
the Ladder says: "He who in his heart is proud of his tears and
secretly condemns those who do not weep is like a man who asks the king for a
weapon against his enemy and then commits suicide with it" (Step 7).
If your heart is softened, be it from repentance before God or be it from
knowing the boundless love of God toward you, do not become proud toward those
whose hearts are still hard and calloused. Remember how long it has been since you had a
hard and calloused heart. There were seven brothers who were ailing in a
hospital. One of them was restored to health and rose to his feet. He hurried
to serve his other brothers with fraternal love and concern so that they too
would recover. You be like that brother also. Consider that all men are your
brothers, sick brothers. If you feel that God has given you health before them,
know that it was given to you through mercy, so that even you as a healthy
person may serve others who are sick. Of what do we have to be proud? As though
good health comes from ourselves alone and not from God. As though a mud hole can
cleanse itself and not from a source deeper and cleaner.
CONTEMPLATION
To contemplate the Lord Jesus in death:
1. How His body lies peacefully in a grave;
2. How He descended in the Spirit to the souls in Hades in order to redeem
the souls of the forefathers.
HOMILY
About joy after sorrow
"So you also are now in anguish. But I will see you again, and your
hearts will rejoice" (St.
John 16:22).
The father steps up to the gallows and his sons are crying around him.
Instead of the sons comforting him, he comforts his sons. Something similar to
this happened to the Lord and His disciples. Walking toward His bitter death,
the Lord is more saddened because of the grief of His disciples, rather than by
that which He has to endure. He caresses them with consolation and encourages
them with the prophecy of the new and impending vision: "But I will see
you again." This is a prophecy about the resurrection. Many times our
Lord prophesied His death, but when He prophesied His death, He also prophesied
His resurrection. Nothing unforeseen ever did happen to Him. He did not
prophesy about Himself only, but also about them [the disciples]. They will be
in great sorrow as a woman when she gives birth and endures pain. As a woman
forgets her pain and rejoices when she gives birth "for a child has
been born into the world" (St.
John 16:22), so will it be with them. In
their consciousness Christ the Lord was not completely in the form of the
God-Man. As long as they had known Him as a sufferer and mortal man, they only
knew Him partially; until then, the pain of birth lasts in their souls. But when
they see Him again, resurrected and alive, miraculous and almighty, Lord over
all things in heaven and on earth, the pain and sorrow will cease and
joy will appear in their hearts. For Christ will be completely formed in their
consciousness as the God-Man and then they will know Him in His fullness and in
His totality. Only then will He be totally born for them.
So with us brethren, as long as we know Him only from His birth to His death
on Golgotha, we know the Lord Jesus partially.
We will know Him completely only when we know Him as the Resurrected One, the
Victor over death.
O Lord All-victorious, have mercy on us and by Your
resurrection cause us to rejoice as You comforted and made joyful Your
disciples.
To You be glory and thanks always. Amen.