Martyr Eudocia of Heliopolis (160-170).
Martyr Antonina of Nicaea (3rd c.-4th c.). Martyrs Nestorianus (Nestor), Tribimius, Marcellus, and Anthony, of Perge in Pamphylia (249-251). Virgin Domnina, ascetic, near Cyrrhus (450-460). St. Martyrius, founder of Zelenets Monastery (Novgorod) (1603).
New Hieromartyrs Anthony (Korzh), hierodeacon of Kiziltash Monastery (Crimea), Peter Lyubimov, archpriest, of Kishkino (Moscow), and Benjamin Famintsev, archpriest, of Meshcherino (Moscow) (1938). New Martyr Abbess Antonina of Kizliar (1924).
St. Albinus, bishop of Angers (550). St. David of Wales, bishop (6th c.). St. Suitbert (Swidbert), bishop in southern Westphalia and monastic founder on the Rhine River (713). St. Leo-Luke of Corleone, Sicily (ca. 900). St. Agapius of Kolitsou Skete of Vatopedi, Mt. Athos, and his four companions (13th c.). New Martyr Paraskevas of Trebizond (1659).
Thursday.
Fear the Lord, and depart from evil
(Prov. 3:7). Set this as the goal of your preparation for
Holy Communion, so that at the end of this preparation the
fear of God will dwell in you, and a firm intention to
avoid every evil will take root, even if you should have
to lose everything, including your life, in order to do
so. Do not limit yourself to an external routine of
preparation alone, but focus in particular on yourself,
enter within yourself and examine your views, whether they
are in agreement in all things with the true word of God.
Examine your inclinations and dispositions, whether they
are what the Lord demands of you in the Gospels. Examine
your whole life, whether it agrees with God’s
commandments in every way. Mourn and hate whatever is
offensive to God, and set in your mind never to do it
again. If you do this, you will be most wise; but you
would most unwise not to do this.