Martyr Julian of Tarsus in Cilicia (ca. 284-305). Uncovering of the relics of St. Maximus the Greek, of Russia (1996).
Hieromartyr Tertius (Terence) apostle of the Seventy, bishop of Iconium (1st c.). St. Julius, priest, of Novara, and his brother St. Julian, deacon (5th c.). Martyrs Archil II (744) and Luarsab II (1622), kings of Georgia. Martyr Theodore, right-believing prince of Starodub (1330).
New Hieroconfessor George (Lavrov), archimandrite, of Kaluga (1932). New Hieromartyr Nicholas Rozanov, archpriest, of Zvenigorod (1938). New Hieromartyr Jonah (Sankov), hieromonk, of Alpatievo (Moscow) (1938).
St. Cormac of the Sea, abbot, of Durrow Monastery (Ireland) (ca. 590). St. Raoul (Rudolph or Ralph), abbot, and archbishop of Bourges (Gaul) (866). Martyr Aphrodisius in Cilicia. New Martyr Nicetas of Nisyros, near Rhodes, at Chios (1732). Martyr Julian and his wife Basilissa, and with them Martyrs Celsius, his mother Marcianilla, Anastasius, the priest Anthony, seven brothers, and twenty prison guards, of Antinoe in Egypt (283- 305).
Repose of Schemamonk John “the Muscovite,” of Valaam (1933).
Friday. [Rom. 11:25-36; Matt. 12:1-8]
If ye had known what this meaneth, I
will have mercy, and not sacrifice, ye would not have
condemned the guiltless. Thus, in order to be saved
from the sin of condemnation, we must obtain a merciful
heart. A merciful heart not only does not condemn a
seeming infringement of the law, but neither will it
condemn an obvious one. Instead of judgment it feels pity,
and would sooner weep than reproach. Truly the sin of
condemnation is the fruit of an unmerciful, malicious
heart that takes delight in debasing its neighbor, in
blackening its neighbor’s name, in trampling his
honor underfoot. This is a murderous affair, and is done
in the spirit of the one who is a murderer from the
beginning [John 8:44]. Here there occurs much slander as
well, which comes from the same source—for that is
what the devil is, a slanderer, spreading slanderousness
everywhere. Hurry to arouse pity in yourself every time
the evil urge to condemn comes over you. Then turn in
prayer to the Lord with a compassionate heart, that He
might have mercy upon all of us, not only upon the one
whom we wanted to condemn, but upon us as
well—perhaps even more so upon us—and the evil
urge will die.