Martyrs Agathonicus of Nicomedia and his companions Zoticus, Theoprepius, Acindynus, Severian, Zeno, and others, who suffered under Maximian (305-311). St. Isaac I (Antimonov), archimandrite, of Optina Monastery (1894).
New Hieromartyr Gorazd (Pavlick), bishop of Prague (1942).
Hieromartyr Athanasius, bishop of Tarsus in Cilicia (270-275), St. Anthusa of Seleucia (298), and Martyrs Charesimus and Neophytus (270-275). Virgin-martyr Eulalia of Barcelona (303). St. Bogolep of St. Paisius of Uglich Monastery (16th c.).
New Hieromartyr Macarius (Gnevushev), bishop of Orel (1918). New Hieromartyrs Andrew (Ukhtomsky), archbishop of Ufa and Menzelin, Alexis (Orlov), archbishop of Omsk, Theodore (Smirnov), bishop of Penza (1937). New Hieromartyrs John (Troyansky), bishop of Veliki Luki, Hierotheus (Glazkov), hieromonk, of Lyubim (Yaroslasvl), John (Laba) and Hilarion (Tsurikov), hieromonks, of Mirzoyan (Kazakhstan) (1937).
Georgian Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos (Moscow) (1650).
St. Symphorian of Autun (2nd c.). Martyr Julian of Heliopolis in Syria (ca. 362). St. Ariadne (515), daughter of Emperor Leo I. St. Sigfrid, abbot, of Wearmouth (ca. 688).
Wednesday. [II Cor. 6:11-16; Mark 1:23-28]
The demon praised the Saviour, but the
Saviour said to him: Hold thy peace, and come out of
him. Demons never say anything or do anything with a
good purpose—they always have something evil in
mind. So it was here. The Lord, not exposing their crafty
designs, decided it with a word: hold thy peace and come
out. He did not want to converse long with an evil spirit.
Here is a lesson for us. A person manages to do very
little of something good before a demon sits nearby and
begins to trumpet in his ears: “You are this and
that.” Do not listen and do not enter into
conversation with this flatterer, but immediately say
point blank: “Hold thy peace and come out,”
and erase his tracks with sighs and self-reproach, then
incense that place where he was with contrite prayer. He
wants to give rise to self-opinion and self esteem, and to
fan self-praise and vainglory from them—all of those
thoughts and feelings are the spiritual life the same as
thieves in everyday life. Like thieves that enter a house
to rob its goods, so these demons, taking root in a soul,
destroy all that is good in that soul and cast it away, so
that nothing remains for the Lord to praise later.