Holy Apostles Bartholomew and Barnabas (1st c.).
St. Barnabas, ascetic of Vetluga (1445). Translation of the relics of St. Ephraim, founder of the Sts. Boris and Gleb Monastery (Novotorzhok) (1572). St. Arcadius, monk, of Vyasma (ca. 1592).
Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos “It Is Truly Meet” (Axion Estin) (10th c.).
Commemoration of the appearance of the Archangel Gabriel to a monk on Mt. Athos, and the revelation of the hymn “It Is Truly Meet” (Axion Estin) (982). St. Barnabas of Basa near Limasol on Cyprus.
Repose of the recluse Melania of Eletz and Zadonsk (1836) and Ivan Vasilievich Kireyevsky, philosopher and Patristic translator (1856).
Monday. [Rom. 2:28–3:18; Matt. 6:31–34;
7:9–11]
Take no thought (Matt.
6:31). Then how is one to live? We have to eat, drink, and
wear clothes. But the Saviour does not say, “do
nothing,” but rather, take no thought. Do not
weary yourself with care that consumes you both day and
night, and gives you not a moment of peace. Such care is a
sinful disease. It shows that a man is relying upon
himself and has forgotten God; that he has lost hope in
the Providence of God, wants to arrange everything for
himself solely by his own efforts, to procure all that is
necessary, and to preserve what he has procured by his own
means. He has become chained in his heart to his property,
and thinks to rest on as if it were a solid foundation.
Love of possessions has bound him and he only thinks of
how to get more into his hands. This mammon has replaced
God for him. Work by all means, but do not weary yourself
with evil cares. Hope for every success from God and
commit your lot into His hands. Accept all that you obtain
as a gift from the Lord’s hand, and wait with a firm
hope that He continue His generous giving. Know that if
God so desires, a rich man can lose all he has in one
minute. All is decay and dust. Is it worth it to weary
yourself for that? So, take no care!