Hieromartyrs Patrick, bishop of Prusa, and his companions: priests Acacius, Menander, and Polyenus (ca. 100). St. Cornelius, founder of Komel Monastery (Vologda) (1537). St. Demetrius Donskoy, great prince of Moscow (1389). and his wife St. Eudocia, in monasticism Euphrosyne, princess of Moscow (1407).
Martyr Acoluthus of Hermopolis, Egypt (284-303). St. John, bishop of Gothia in the Crimea (790). St. Cornelius, founder of Paleostrov Monastery (Karelia) (ca. 1420) and his disciple Abramius (15th c.). St. John, prince of Uglich, tonsured as Ignatius (Vologda) (1523). St. Sergius, monk, of Shukhtom (1609). Right-believing Prince Vladimir II (Basil) Monomakh of Kievan Rus (1125). St. Nicholas Rynin, fool-for-Christ, of Vologda (1837).
Synaxis of the Russian New Martyrs Who Suffered at Butovo. New Hieromartyrs Anthony (Pankeyev), bishop of Belgorod, and with him priests Mitrophan, Alexander, Michael, Matthew, Hippolytus, Nicholas, Basil, Nicholas, Maxim, Alexander, Paul, and Paul; and Martyrs Michael and Gregory (1938). New Hieromartyr Onuphrius (Gagaliuk), archbishop of Kursk and Oboyansk (1938). New Hieromartyr Valentin (Lukianov), hieromonk, of Romashkovo (Moscow) (1940). New Hiero-confessor Seraphim (Zagorovsky), hieromonk, of Kharkov (1943). Synaxis of the Hieromartyrs of Kharkov.
Martyrs Parthenius and his brother Calogerius at Rome (250). St. Theotima of Nicomedia (311). Entrance into Georgia of St. Nina (Nino), Equal-to the-Apostles (323). St. Dunstan, archbishop of Canterbury (988). Monk-martyrs and confessors John, Conon, Jeremiah, Cyril, Theoctistus, Barnabas, Maximus, Theognostus, Joseph, Gennadius, Gerasimus, Mark, and Herman, of Kantara Monastery on Cyprus, who suffered under the Latins (1231).
Commemoration of the ascetics of St. Athanasius of Syandem Monastery: Elias (also of Valaam), Theophanes, and Dionysius. Repose of Elder Cleopas of Valaam, disciple of St. Paisius (Velichkovsky) (1816).
Saturday. [Acts 12:1–11; John 8:31–42]
The Lord said: If the Son therefore
shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed (John
8:36). Here is where freedom is! The mind is bound with
bonds of ignorance, delusions, superstitions, and
uncertainties; it struggles, but cannot get away from
them. Cleave to the Lord and He will enlighten your
darkness (cf. Ps. 18:28) and dissolve all the bonds in
which your mind languishes. The passions bind the will,
and do not give it space in which to act; it struggles,
like one bound hand and foot, and cannot get away. But
cleave to the Lord and He will give you the strength of
Samson, and will dissolve all the bonds of untruth binding
you. Constant worries surround the heart and do not give
it peace. But cleave to the Lord, and He will soothe you;
then, at peace, and seeing clearly everything around you,
you will march in the Lord without hindrance or stumbling
through the gloom and darkness of this life, to the
all-blessed, complete joy and spaciousness of
eternity.