god and spiritual

Holy Martyrs Marcian and Martyrius




god and spiritual

Holy, Glorious, and Great Martyr Demetrius the Outpourer of Myrrh




god and spiritual

Holy Virgin Martyr Anastasia of Rome




god and spiritual

Holy Martyrs Zenobius and his sister Zenobia




god and spiritual

Holy Apostles Stachys, Apelles, Amplias, Urban, Narcissus and Aristobolus




god and spiritual

Holy and Wonderworking Unmercenaries Cosmas and Damian of Asia




god and spiritual

Holy Martyrs Acindynus, Pegasius, Aphthonius, Elpidophorus, and Anempodistus of Persia




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Gregory the Confessor, Patriarch of Alexandria




god and spiritual

Paul the Confessor, Archbishop of Constantinople




god and spiritual

St Hieron and His Thirty-three Companions, Martyred at Melitene




god and spiritual

Synaxis of the Chief Captains of the Heavenly Host




god and spiritual

Our Holy Mother Matrona




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Nilus the Ascetic of Sinai




god and spiritual

Our Father Among the Saints John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople




god and spiritual

Holy Apostle Philip




god and spiritual

Our Venerable Father Paisius Velichkovsky




god and spiritual

Holy Apostle and Evangelist Matthew




god and spiritual

Holy Martyr Barlaam of Antioch




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Gregory of Decapolis




god and spiritual

The Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple in Jerusalem




god and spiritual

Holy Apostle Philemon and Sts Apphia, Archippus, and Onesimus




god and spiritual

St. Alexander Nevsky




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Innocent, Bishop of Irkutsk




god and spiritual

Holy Great Martyr James the Persian




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father, Confessor, and Martyr Stephen the New




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Pitirim of Egypt




god and spiritual

Holy, Glorious, and Illustrious Apostle Andrew the First-Called




god and spiritual

Our Venerable Father John the Silent, Bishop of Colonia




god and spiritual

Holy Great Martyr Barbara




god and spiritual

St. Cosmas the Protos of Mount Athos and His Companions




god and spiritual

Our Father Among the Saints Nicholas the Wonderworker, Archbishop of Myra




god and spiritual

Our Father Among the Saints Ambrose, Bishop of Milan




god and spiritual

Holy Martyrs Menas, Hermogenes and Eugraphus




god and spiritual

Our Venerable Father Daniel the Stylite




god and spiritual

St. Finian of Clonard




god and spiritual

Martyrs Eustratius, Auxentius, Eugene, Mardarius, and Orestes at Sebaste




god and spiritual

Holy Martyrs Philemon, Apollonius, Arian, and Those with Them




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Dionysius the New of Zakinthos




god and spiritual

Holy Hieromartyr Modestus I, Archbishop of Jerusalem




god and spiritual

Holy Martyr Boniface




god and spiritual

Holy Hieromartyr Ignatius the God-bearer, Bishop of Antioch




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Peter, Metropolitan of Moscow




god and spiritual

Holy Virgin and Martyr Eugenia and Her Companions




god and spiritual

The Nativity According to the Flesh of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Constantine of Synnada




god and spiritual

Holy First Martyr and Archdeacon Stephen




god and spiritual

Our Holy Father Simon the Outpourer of Myrrh, Founder of Simonopetra Monastery, Mt Athos




god and spiritual

Our Holy Mother Melania the Younger of Rome (439)

She was born in 383 in Rome, to a very wealthy family with large estates in Italy, Africa, Spain and even Britain. She was the grand- daughter of St Melania the Elder (June 8) and a pious disciple of Christ from a young age. She was married against her will at the age of fourteen, to a relative named Apinianus. They had two children, both of whom died in early childhood. Henceforth Melania and her husband dedicated themselves entirely to God. They had both dreamed of a high wall that they would have to climb before they could pass through the narrow gate that leads to life, and soon began to take measures to dispose of their wealth. This aroused opposition from some of the Senate, who were concerned that the selling off of such huge holdings would disrupt the economy of the State itself.   With the support of the Empress, though, Melania was able to free 8000 of her slaves and give each a gift of three gold pieces to begin life as freedmen. She employed agents to help fund the establishment of churches and monasteries throughout the Empire, donated many estates to the Church, and sold many more, giving the proceeds as alms. When Rome fell to the Goths under Alaric in 410, Melania and Apinianus moved to Sicily, then to Africa, where they completed the sale of their propery, donating the proceeds to monasteries and to aiding victims of the barbarians.   In Africa Melania, now aged about thirty, took up a life of the strictest asceticism: she kept a total fast on weekdays, only eating on Saturday and Sunday; she slept two hours a night, giving the rest of the night to vigil and prayer. Her days were spent in charitable works, using the remainder of her wealth to relieve the poor and benefit the Church. After seven years in Africa, Melania, her mother and her husband left on pilgrimage to the Holy Land. There they founded a monastery on the Mount of Olives, which grew to a community of ninety nuns. Melania's mother died in 431, then her husband and spiritual brother Apinianus ; she buried them side by side.   Save for one visit to Constantinople, Melania continued to live in reclusion in a small cave on the Mount of Olives; she became an advisor to the Empress Eudocia, who sought her expert counsel on her gifts to churches and monasteries.   Melania fell ill keeping the Vigil of Nativity in 439, and fell asleep in the Lord six days later; her last words were 'As it has pleased the Lord, so it has come to pass.' Her monastery was destroyed in 614 by the Persians, but her cave hermitage on the Mount of Olives is still a place of pilgrimage and veneration.




god and spiritual

Our Father among the Saints Basil the Great (379)




god and spiritual

St Seraphim of Sarov (1833)

Saint Seraphim was born in the town of Kursk in 1759. From tender childhood he was under the protection of the most holy Mother of God, who, when he was nine years old, appeared to him in a vision, and through her icon of Kursk, healed him from a grave sickness from which he had not been expected to recover. At the age of nineteen he entered the monastery of Sarov, where he amazed all with his obedience, his lofty asceticism, and his great humility. In 1780 the Saint was stricken with a sickness which he manfully endured for three years, until our Lady the Theotokos healed him, appearing to him with the Apostles Peter and John. He was tonsured a monk in 1786, being named for the holy Hieromartyr Seraphim, Bishop of Phanarion (Dec. 4), and was ordained deacon a year later. In his unquenchable love for God, he continually added labours to labours, increasing in virtue and prayer with titan strides. Once, during the Divine Liturgy of Holy and Great Thursday he was counted worthy of a vision of our Lord Jesus Christ, Who appeared encompassed by the heavenly hosts. After this dread vision, he gave himself over to greater labours.   "In 1794, Saint Seraphim took up the solitary life in a cell in the forest. This period of extreme asceticism lasted some fifteen years, until 1810. It was at this time that he took upon himself one of the greatest feats of his life. Assailed with despondency and a storm of contrary thoughts raised by the enemy of our salvation, the Saint passed a thousand nights on a rock, continuing in prayer until God gave him complete victory over the enemy. On another occasion, he was assaulted by robbers, who broke his chest and his head with their blows, leaving him almost dead. Here again, he began to recover after an appearance of the most Holy Theotokos, who came to him with the Apostles Peter and John, and pointing to Saint Seraphim, uttered these awesome words, 'This is one of my kind.'   "In 1810, at the age of fifty, weakened by his more than human struggles, Saint Seraphim returned to the monastery for the third part of his ascetical labours, in which he lived as a recluse, until 1825. For the first five years of his reclusion, he spoke to no one at all, and little is known of this period. After five years, he began receiving visitors little by little, giving counsel and consolation to ailing souls. In 1825, the most holy Theotokos appeared to the Saint and revealed to him that it was pleasing to God that he fully end his reclusion; from this time the number of people who came to see him grew daily. It was also at the command of the holy Virgin that he undertook the spiritual direction of the Diveyevo Convent. He healed bodily ailments, foretold things to come, brought hardened sinners to repentance, and saw clearly the secrets of the heart of those who came to him. Through his utter humility and childlike simplicity, his unrivalled ascetical travails, and his angel-like love for God, he ascended to the holiness and greatness of the ancient God-bearing Fathers and became, like Anthony for Egypt, the physician for the whole Russian land. In all, the most holy Theotokos appeared to him twelve times in his life. The last was on Annunciation, 1831, to announce to him that he would soon enter into his rest. She appeared to him accompanied by twelve virgins martyrs and monastic saints with Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Theologian. With a body ailing and broken from innumerable hardships, and an unspotted soul shining with the light of Heaven, the Saint lived less than two years after this, falling asleep in peace on January 2, 1833, chanting Paschal hymns. On the night of his repose, the righteous Philaret of the Glinsk Hermitage beheld his soul ascending to Heaven in light. Because of the universal testimony to the singular holiness of his life, and the seas of miracles that he performed both in life and after death, his veneration quickly spread beyond the boundaries of the Russian Empire to every corner of the earth. See also July 19." (Great Horologion)   July 19 is the commemoration of the uncovering of St Seraphim's holy relics, which was attended by Tsar Nicholas II.   Saint Seraphim's life became a perpetual celebration of Pascha: in his later years he dressed in a white garment, greeted everyone, regardless of the season, with "Christ is Risen!" and chanted the Pascha service every day of the year.