Apostle Aquila of the Seventy (1st c.), and St. Priscilla (1st c.)
Martyr Justus, at Rome (1st c.). St. Onesimus, monk and wonderworker, of Magnesia (ca. 284-305). St. Ellius (Hellius) of Egypt (4th c.). St. Stephen, founder of Makhrishche Monastery (Vologda) (1406). St. Nicodemus of Mt. Athos, spiritual writer (1809). New Martyr John of Merv (Turkmenistan).
New Hieroconfessor Nicholas Poretsky, archpriest, of Vlakhernskoye (Moscow) (1933).
St. Heraclius, patriarch of Alexandria (246). St. Marcellinus, priest, of Utrecht (8th c.). St. Joseph the Confessor, archbishop of Thessalonica (832). St. Longinus, hieroschemamonk of Svyatogorsk Monastery (1882). Uncovering of the relics of St. Theophilus, fool-for-Christ, of Kiev (1993).
Thursday. [I Cor. 10:28-11:7; Matt. 16:24-28]
The Lord demands decisive self-denial
of those who want to follow Him: Let him deny
himself, He says. It could be expressed like this:
Cast aside your interests and pursue only the interests of
the Lord. You will be fulfilling this when you always do
what is pleasing to Him. How can one do this? Mind
carefully what is in you, and what around you on the
outside, and discern strictly in one or another situation,
be it internal or external, how to act in the way that is
most pleasing to God—then, not pitying yourself and
not inserting your own calculations, act accordingly, with
complete self-denial. You say, “It is hard to
determine this.” No, it is not hard. We have been
given clear and fixed commandments— they express
what we can do to be pleasing to the Lord. All that
remains is to apply them to the given situation, and this
does not present any great problem. Having common sense is
enough. If you cannot figure something out, ask your
spiritual father or someone else whose words you respect,
and act according to his directions. But it is always
better to sharpen your discernment through reading the
word of God and writings of the fathers, so that you will
always have a decision-maker with you.
Friday. [I Cor. 11:8-22; Matt. 17:10-18]
Concerning John the Baptist the Lord said: Elias
is come already, and they knew him not. Why was
this? Because they did not heed the paths of God and were
not interested in them: they had a different mentality,
different tastes, different views on things. Outside the
range of Divine things, their shrewdness was in play, but
within this range they did not understand anything due to
their estrangement from it. One’s inner mentality
forms a feeling for things, which immediately notices and
determines what is familiar to it, no matter how concealed
it may be. An artist, scientist and economist look at one
thing with equal attention, but each makes a judgment
about it in his own way—one according to its beauty,
the second according to causal relations, the third
according to gains from it. So with the Jews: as was their
disposition, so they judged about John, and then about the
Saviour; but since they were disposed not according to
God, they did not understand them, who carried out the
work of God. Similarly, now people have begun to not
understand the Forerunner and the Lord—and do with
them what they like. A hidden persecution of Christianity
has arisen, which has begun to openly break through, like
recently in Paris. What was done there on a small scale,
is what we must expect with time in big
proportions…Save us, O Lord!