St. Sabbas the Sanctified (532).
St. Karion (Cyrion) and his son St. Zachariah the Recluse, of Egypt (4th c.). St. Gurias, archbishop of Kazan (1563).
New Hieromartyrs Elias Chetverukhin, archpriest, of Moscow (1932) and Gennadius (Petlyuk), hieromonk of the Belogostitsky Monastery (Yaroslavl) (1941).
Monk-martyr Justinian of Ramsey Island, South Wales (560). St. Nicetius, bishop of Trier (566). St. Cosmas of Vatopedi (1276) and the monks of Karyes, Mt. Athos, all martyred by the Latins (1283). St. Nectarius of Bitol (1500), and his elder, St. Philotheus (late 15th c.), of Karyes Skete, Mt. Athos.
Friday. [Tit. 1:15-2:10; Luke 20:19-26]
Render therefore unto Caesar the things which be
Caesar’s, and unto God the things which be
God’s. This means that each gets what is his
own. In our times, instead of “the things which be
Caesar’s” we should say, “the things
which are earthly.” Also, earthly things have their
turn, while Godly things have theirs. But everyone has
rushed toward earthly things alone, and they leave the
Godly things behind. That is why Godly things not only are
left out of their proper place—that is, the first
priority—but are completely forgotten. A consequence
of this as if unintentional forgetfulness is that the
Godly is darkened over in one’s consciousness, and
then both its content and foundation become unclear. From
this come weakness of conviction and unsteadiness of
faith; and then alienation from faith, and influence of
the winds of various of teachings. Everyone goes down this
path when they begin to be careless about Godly things;
society takes this path when it begins to ignore what God
requires of it. When Godly things are left in the
background, then emancipation from Godly requirements
begins to set into society, in the intellectual, moral and
aesthetic sense. Secularization (serving the spirit of the
time) occurs of politics, customs, entertainment, and then
of education and all institutions. At the current time,
people do not think, speak, write or even keep Godly
things in mind—not in any of their undertakings. Is
it surprising, given such a mood, that teachings contrary
to the faith find access to society and that society is
inclined toward total unbelief?
Saturday. [Eph. 1:16-23; Luke 12:32-40]
Let your loins be girded about, and your lights
burning. We must be ready at every hour—one does
not know when the Lord will come, either for the Last
Judgment, or to take you from here; they are the same for
you. Death decides everything. After it comes the results
of your life, you can be content with what you have sought
to gain for all of eternity. If you sought what is good,
your lot will be good; if you sought what is evil, then
your lot will be evil. This is as true as it is true that
you exist. All of this could be decided this
moment—here at this very moment, as you read these
lines, and then—the end to all: a seal will be set
to your existence, which nobody can remove. This is
something to think about! But one never ceases to be
amazed at how little people think about it. What is this
mystery wrought over us! We all know that death is around
the corner, that it is impossible to escape it, but
meanwhile almost nobody thinks about it—and it will
come suddenly and seize us. Even then.… Even when a
fatal disease seizes a person he still does not think that
the end has come. Let psychologists decide this from a
scientific aspect; from the moral aspect it is impossible
not to see here an incomprehensible self-delusion, alien
only to one who is heedful of himself.