St. Epiphanius, bishop of Cyprus (403). St. Germanus, patriarch of Constantinople (740). Glorification of St. Hermogenes, patriarch of Moscow and all Russia (1913).
St. Sabinus, archbishop of Cyprus (5th c.). St. Polybius of Cyprus, bishop of Rinokyr in Egypt (5th c.). New Martyr John of Wallachia, at Constantinople (1662). St. Dionysius of Radonezh (1633), and St. Anthony (Medvedev) (1877), archimandrites, of St. Sergius Lavra. Second translation of the relics of Righteous Symeon of Verkhoturye (1992). Synaxis of the Saints of the Sofroniev-Molchensk Monastery (Ukraine): Archimandrite Theodosius (Maslov), Hieromonk Serapion, Monk Sophronius (Batovrin), and Novice Sergius (Tikhonov), fool-for-Christ.
Synaxis of New Martyrs of Izyum (Ukraine). New Martyr Athanasia (Lepeshkin), abbess of the Smolensk Hodigitria Convent near Moscow (1931).
Martyr Pancratius of Rome (304). St. Philip of Agira, Sicily (5th c.). St. Theodore of Cythera, monk (922). New Martyr John of Serres (15th-16th c.).
Commemoration of Monk Dorotheus, disciple of St. Dionysius of St. Sergius Lavra (1622).
Saturday. [Acts 9:20–31; John 15:17–16:2]
When Saint Paul began to preach in
Damascus, all were amazed, saying: Is not this he that
destroyed them which called on this name? (Acts 9:21).
Isn’t it always this way? Those close to someone who
converts from unbelief to belief, or from sin to virtue,
marvel over what happened has with this person. He did
everything our way and now suddenly everything has
changed: his words and his gaze, his step and his thoughts
are not the same, and his undertakings are different, and
the places where he goes are different. It is as if one
were walking toward the west, and then suddenly turned
around to the east. These two lives are contradictory and
mutually exclude one another. He who wants to combine
them, or to make a whole life with part from the one, and
part from the other, will waste both time and effort with
no success. What can these lives have in common?! Only
those who do not understand things can say, “Why
does it have to be so drastic!”