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).
Saturday. [I Cor. 1:3-9; Matt. 19:3-12]
The Lord says that originally God
Himself blessed the marriage union, and put this law into
our nature. About those who do not want to get married He
said: He that is able to receive it, let him receive
it. It is clear that although He admitted that
marriage is a natural law, it is not so indispensable and
inescapable that there is no room for celibacy. He allows
celibacy, but guards it with a condition which brings it
nearer to the law of nature. A eunuch from birth is
celibate according to a natural law; but he who by his own
will puts himself in the same state as that of the natural
eunuch’s by birth without the participation of will,
moves onto one level with him in relation to natural
needs. Consequently, in this sense, both the former and
the latter are natural celibates. Why is the state of a
spiritual eunuch—self-imposed
celibacy—considered unnatural? Because people do not
understand nature. For them “natural” means
what is natural for the body, but what is natural for the
spirit, and what becomes natural [for the body] as a
consequence of the spirit’s influence, people do not
want to consider natural. It would be a different matter
if these were all materialists, but this is not so.
Discuss some other subject with them and they will speak
reasonably.