St. Thomas of Mt. Maleon (10th c.). St. Acacius, who is mentioned in The Ladder (6th c.).
St. Eudocia, in monasticism Euphrosyne, grand duchess of Moscow (1407). Martyrs Peregrinus, Lucian, Pompeius, Hesychius, Pappias, Saturninus, and Germanus, of Dyrrachium in Macedonia (2nd c.). Hieromartyr Evangelus, bishop of Tomis in Moesia (ca. 284-305). Martyr Cyriaca (Dominica, or Nedelja) of Nicomedia (305-311). Hieromartyr Epictetus, priest, and Monk-martyr Astion, at Halmyris in Scythia Minor (Romania) (290).
St. Pantaenus the Confessor, of Alexandria (203). St. Hedda, bishop of the West Saxons (705). St. Willibald, bishop of Eichstatt, Anglo-Saxon missionary to the Germans (781-787). St. Maelruain of Tallaght (Ireland) (787).
Repose of Archimandrite Paisius (Tanasijevic) of the St. Prochorus of Pchinja Monastery, Serbia (2003).
Monday. [I Cor. 5:9-6:11; Matt. 13:54-58]
The Nazarenes did not believe the word
of the Lord, because when He lived in amongst them, He had
no attractive lustre or outward dignity that would command
involuntary respect from all. “We know who He
is,” they said; “there can’t be anything
extraordinary about Him.” Their reaction, however,
did not induce the Lord to assume an imposing appearance.
He remained extremely simple in appearance; later the
Apostles bore themselves the same way, as did all of those
who truly followed and emulated them. Why is this so?
Because it is there is no man-made lustre that could fully
correspond to the light of life in Jesus Christ. Moreover,
we recognize that it is better to relegate external
appearance the lowest value, so that it does not block
what is within. Let him who has eyes to see look directly
at the latter, without arresting his attention upon the
former. The holy Apostle Paul expressed it like this:
We have this treasure in earthen vessels (II Cor.
4:7). If we could see what was the outward appearance of
those persons whom we now revere and call upon in prayer,
we would not believe our eyes—they were so simple.
But to this day, those who have come to know the life in
Jesus Christ abandon care for their outward appearance and
turn fully within. That is why the former falls away on
its own, but the latter is raised up and grows. It often
happens that nobody even notices this inner brightness,
not even the one who possesses it. The human eye is evil;
it is not shown what is truly good, if this good can harm
it.
Tuesday. [I Cor. 6:20-7:12; Matt. 14:1-13]
A rumour of the works of the Lord
reached Herod; he immediately concluded: it is John
resurrected. One could have thought anything. Yet he did
not think of anyone except John. Who gave such a direction
to his thoughts? His conscience. From it you cannot hide
unconscionable deeds; you cannot correct its judgement
with anything. Herod assumed the right to behead John, and
others did not deny that he had the right, but his
conscience spoke, and he could not muffle its words with
anything. That is why he immediately saw John. How many
similar instances do we know where the conscience pursues
a sinner and paints the subject and deed of a sin so that
he sees them even outside himself! There is a voice in us
that we must acknowledge is not our voice. Whose is it?
God’s. He who gives us our nature, gives us this
voice. If it is God’s voice, we must obey it, for
creatures dare not contradict the Creator. This voice says
that God exists, that we completely depend upon Him, and
therefore we cannot not but have a reverent fear of God;
having this fear, we must fulfil God’s will, which
conscience indicates. All of this makes up the word of
God, written in our nature, read and offered to us. And we
see that people of all times and all countries hear this
word and heed it. Everywhere people believe in God,
everywhere they listen to their conscience and await the
future life. Only now has it somehow become fashionable to
not acknowledge these truths. This is how the naturalists
behave; which means that the teaching which the
naturalists preach is unnatural.