St. Poemen the Great, of Egypt (ca. 450).
St. Hosius (Osia) the Confessor, bishop of Cordoba (359). St. Liberius the Confessor, pope of Rome (366). St. Poemen of Palestine (ca. 602). Hieromartyr Kuksha and St. Pimen the Faster, of the Near Caves in Kiev (after 1114). St. Sabbas, monk, of Benephali. Uncovering of the relics of St. John Gashkevich, archpriest, of Korma (1991).
and Stephen Nemkov, priest (with 18 other martyrs) (1918), all of Nizhni-Novgorod. New Hieromartyr Methodius (Ivanov), abbot, of Sukovo (Moscow) (1937).
St. Praulius, archbishop of Jerusalem (422). St. Caesarius, bishop of Arles (543). Great-martyr Phanurius the Newly Appeared, of Rhodes.
Slaying of Archimandrite Symeon (Kholmogorov), spiritual writer (1937), and repose of Archimandrite Sergius (Ozerov) of New Valaam Monastery in Siberia (1937).
Friday. [II Cor. 11:5-21; Mark 4:1-9]
Behold, there went out a sower to
sow. Since the time that this sower went out to sow,
he has not ceased to sow. In the beginning he personally
sowed, then through the apostles and at last through
Divine Scripture and divinely-wise teachers. To this day
the word of God’s truth is being sown everywhere.
Just be prepared to show yourself as good ground and
without fail you will be sown. God will raise up what has
been sown. How do you make yourself into good ground? With
attention and study of the word of God, sympathy and love
toward it, and readiness to immediately carry out what you
learn. With such a mindset, not a single word will lie on
the surface of your soul, but all will pass within.
Uniting there with the elements of the spirit which are
native to it, it will take root and sprout. Being
nourished then—from above through spiritual
inspirations, and from below through good desires and
labours—it will grow into a tree, give flower and
fruit. God Himself arranged everything around us this way,
and this is why we cannot but be amazed at our
fruitlessness. But all of this is due to our
inattentiveness and carelessness.