Great-martyr Catherine of Alexandria (305-313). Great-martyr Mercurius of Caesarea in Cappadocia (ca. 259). Martyr Mercurius of Smolensk (1238).
Martyrs Augusta (Faustina) the Empress, Porphyrius Stratelates, and 200 soldiers, at Alexandria with Great-martyr Catherine (305-313). St. Mercurius the Faster, of the Far Caves in Kiev (14th c.). St. Simon, founder of Soiga Monastery (Vologda) (1561). St. Luke, steward of the Kiev Caves (13th c.).
New Hieromartyr Eugraphus Yevarestov, archpriest, of Ufa (1919). New Hieromartyrs Mitrophan Kornitsky and Alexander Levitsky, archpriests, of Starodub (Bryansk) (1937).
St. Hermogenes, bishop of Agrigentum (ca. 260). St. Romanus of Bordeaux (382). St. Gregory, founder of the monastery of the Golden Rock in Pontus. St. Portianus of Arthone (Gaul) (527). St. Protasius, hermit, of Auvergne (Gaul) (6th c.). Martyrs Flora and Maria, at Cordoba (851). St. Nicodemus the Younger, of Philokalos Monastery in Thessalonica (ca. 1305). Hieromartyr Clement, pope of Rome (101). Hieromartyr Peter, archbishop of Alexandria (311). St. Malchus of Chalcis in Syria (4th c.).
Tuesday. [I Tim. 5:11-21; Luke 17:26-37]
Whosoever shall seek to save his
life shall lose it; and whosoever shall lose his life
shall preserve it. One must understand it this way: to
save your life means to pity yourself, while to lose your
life means not pitying yourself—that is, on the path
of the Lord’s commandments, or in working for the
Lord. So, it is like this: he who works for the Lord,
fulfilling His commandments without pitying himself, is
saved; but he who pities himself, perishes. If you pity
yourself you will unfailingly be found as a transgressor
of the commandments and, consequently, an unprofitable
servant; and what is the sentence for an unprofitable
servant? Cast ye the unprofitable servant into outer
darkness: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth
(Matt. 25:30). Make an effort to watch yourself if only
for a single day, and you will see that self-pity distorts
all of our [good] deeds and kills the desire to do them.
Without labour and effort, you will not be able to do
anything; but if you regret forcing yourself—it all
stops there. There are things which you must do, whether
you want to or not. Such things are done without fail,
difficult as they may be. But here self-pity is overcome
by self-pity. If you don’t do them, there will be
nothing to eat. But since what is required by the
commandments are not of such nature, they are always
omitted out of s elf-pity. You make condescensions to
yourself when it comes to bad deeds, also out of
self-pity. You hate to refuse yourself what you want and
so the desire is fulfilled, even though it is either
outright sinful, or will lead to sin. Thus it always goes
with one who pities himself—what he should do, he
does not, and what he should not do, he indulges himself
in doing; and he ends up good for nothing. What salvation
can there be here?