ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY Orthodox Calendar
Orthodox Calendar 2021
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Святитель Евфимий Новгородский Святитель Софроний Иерусалимский Мученик Епимах
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Old Style
March 11
Wednesday
New Style
March 24
2nd Week of Great Lent. Tone 8.
Great Lent.
Monastic rule: xerophagy (bread, uncooked fruits and vegetables).

Cовершается служба, не отмеченная в Типиконе никаким знакомSt. Sophronius, patriarch of Jerusalem (638-644). Совершается служба со славословиемSt. Euthymius, archbishop of Novgorod (1458).

Hieromartyr Pionius, priest, of Smyrna, and those with him: Asclepiades, Macedonia, Linus, and Sabina (250). St. Sophronius, recluse of the Kiev Caves (13th c.). St. Sophronius, bishop of Vratsa (Bulgaria) (1813). Translation to Constantinople of the relics of Martyr Epimachus of Pelusium. St. Alexis of Goloseyevsky Skete, Kiev Caves (1917).

New Hiero-confessors Patrick (Petrov), hieromonk of Valaam Monastery (1933) and Michael (Galushko), schema-archimandrite, of Svyatogorsk Monastery (1961).

St. George, abbot of Sinai (ca. 545), brother of St. John Climacus. St. Oengus (Angus) the Culdee, bishop, of Clonenagh (Ireland) (824). Hieromartyr Eulogius, metropolitan of Cordoba (859). St. George the New, wonderworker of Constantinople (ca. 970). St. Theodora, queen of Arta, wife of Despot Michael II of Epirus (ca. 1275). Hieromartyrs Trophimus and Thalus, priests, of Laodicea (300).

Slaying of Emperor Paul I of Russia (1801).

Thoughts for Each Day of the Year
According to the Daily Church Readings from the Word of God
By St. Theophan the Recluse

St. Theophan the Recluse

Wednesday.

   When Moses and Aaron began to intercede before Pharaoh to let their people go, the answer to this was increased work for oppressed Israelites, to the point that they raised an outcry against their intercessors: ye have made our savour to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh (Ex. 5:21). This is exactly what the soul of a repentant sinner experiences. When the fear of God and one’s conscience—the inner Moses and Aaron—begin to inspire a soul to finally rise up onto its feet and shake off the yoke of sinful slavery, joy passes through all of its members. But the enemy does not sleep; he heaps mountains of mental obstacles—thoughts that sin is insurmountable, and brings in fear from all sides—fear for one’s prosperity, for external relationships, for one’s influence, even for one’s life. It even happens that one stops having only just begun. Be inspired brother! The Lord of hosts shall be exalted in judgement, and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness (Is. 5:16). God is stronger than the enemy. Cry out to Him, and you will hear the same thing that Moses heard then: Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharaoh (Ex. 6:1).

   The enemy does not have power over a soul; he only can frighten it with illusory terrors. Do not give in, endure, go forward courageously, saying to yourself: I will not give in even unto death, and I will go bravely wherever the Lord calls me, with the spirit of repentance which now acts in me.

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