Martyr Eudocia of Heliopolis (160-170).
Martyr Antonina of Nicaea (3rd c.-4th c.). Martyrs Nestorianus (Nestor), Tribimius, Marcellus, and Anthony, of Perge in Pamphylia (249-251). Virgin Domnina, ascetic, near Cyrrhus (450-460). St. Shio of Mgvime, monk, of Georgia (6th c.). St. Martyrius, founder of Zelenets Monastery (Novgorod) (1603).
New Martyr Abbess Antonina of Kizliar (1924). New Hieromartyrs Anthony (Korzh), hierodeacon of Kiziltash Monastery (Crimea), Peter Lyubimov, archpriest, of Kishkino (Moscow), and Benjamin Famintsev, archpriest, of Meshcherino (Moscow) (1938).
St. Albinus, bishop of Angers (550). St. David of Wales, bishop (6th c.). St. Suitbert (Swidbert), bishop in southern Westphalia and monastic founder on the Rhine River (713). St. Leo-Luke of Corleone, Sicily (ca. 900). St. Agapius of Kolitsou Skete of Vatopedi, Mt. Athos, and his four companions (13th c.). New Martyr Paraskevas of Trebizond (1659).
Thursday. [Jude 1:11–25; Luke 23:1–34,
44–56]
Woe, proclaims the Holy Apostle Jude, to them who
conduct themselves temptingly in society, who without fear
fatten themselves at feasts, who foam out their own shame,
walk after their own lusts, speak great swelling words and
separate themselves from the unity of the faith. Woe! For
behold, the Lord will come with ten thousands of His holy
angels, to execute judgement upon all, and to expose all
that are ungodly in all their ungodly deeds which their
ungodliness has committed (cf. Jude 1:11–19).