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Church of Saint Simeon Stylites in Aleppo, Syria
Syrian vintage postcard
#ephemera#saint#photography#simeon#vintage#briefkaart#syria#carte postale#postcard#photo#sepia#stylites#ansichtskarte#postkarte#church#church of saint simeon stylites#aleppo#postkaart#syrian#postal#tarjeta#historic
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Medieval Hermitage atop Katskhi Pillar, in Georgia (South Caucasus), c. 800-900 CE: this church was built during the Middle Ages, and it sits atop an enormous limestone column that has been venerated as a "Pillar of Life" for thousands of years
Known as Katskhi Pillar (or Katskhis Sveti), this giant block of limestone is located in western Georgia (the country, not the state), about 10km from the town of Chiatura.
The church that stands atop Katskhi Pillar was originally constructed during the 9th-10th centuries CE. It was long used as a hermitage for Stylites, who are sometimes referred to as "Pillar Saints" -- Christian ascetics who lived, prayed, and fasted atop pillars, often in total isolation, in an effort to bring themselves closer to God. The Stylite tradition originated in Syria during the 5th century CE, when a hermit known as Simeon the Elder purportedly climbed up onto a pillar and then stayed there for nearly 40 years, giving rise (no pun intended) to Christian Stylitism.
Stylitism managed to survive for about 1,000 years after its inception, but it began to die out during the late Middle Ages, and by the end of the 16th century, it had essentially gone extinct.
Researchers don't really know how the monks who built this Medieval church originally gained access to the top of Katskhi Pillar, or how they were able to transport their building materials up to the top of the column. Evidence suggests that there were still monks/Stylites living atop Katskhi Pillar up until the 1400s, but the site was abandoned shortly thereafter. Georgia fell under Ottoman rule during the same period, but it's unclear whether or not that may have played a role in the abandonment of the site.
The hermitage at the top of Katskhi Pillar lay abandoned for nearly 500 years after that; no one was able to reach the top of the pillar, and very little was known about the ruins that lay scattered at the top, as knowledge of the site's origin/history was gradually lost over time. There are many local legends that ultimately arose in order to fill in those blanks.
The abandoned hermitage was not visited again until July 29th, 1944, when a mountaineer finally ascended to the top of the column with a small team of researchers, and the group was able to perform the first archaeological survey of the ruins. They found that the structure included three hermit cells, a chapel, a wine cellar, and a small crypt; within the crypt lay a single set of human remains, likely belonging to one of the monks who had inhabited the site during the Middle Ages.
A metal ladder (the "stairway to Heaven") was ultimately installed into the side of the pillar in order to make it easier for both researchers and tourists to gain access to the ruins.
The hermitage at the top of Katskhi Pillar actually became active again in the early 1990's, when a small group of monks attempted to revive the Stylite tradition. A Georgian Orthodox monk named Maxime Qavtaradze then lived alone at the top of Katskhi Pillar for almost 20 years, beginning in 1995 and ending with his death in 2014. He is now buried at the base of the pillar.
The hermitage is no longer accessible to the public, and it's currently uninhabited, but it is still visited by local monks, who regularly climb up to the church at the top of the pillar in order to pray. There is also an active monastery complex at the base of the pillar, where a temple known as the Church of the Simeon Stylites is located.
The Church of the Simeon Stylites: this church is located within an active monastery complex that has been built at the base of the pillar; several frescoes and religious icons decorate the walls of the church, and a small shrine containing a 6th century cross is located in the center
There are many lingering questions about the history of Katskhi Pillar, particularly during the pre-Christian era. There is at least some evidence suggesting that it was once the site of votive offerings to pagan deities, as a series of pre-Christian idols have been found buried in the areas that surround the pillar. According to local tradition, the pillar itself was once venerated by the pagan societies that inhabited the area, but it's difficult to determine whether or not those claims may simply be part of the mythos that surrounds Katskhi Pillar, particularly given its mysterious reputation.
Sources & More Info:
BBC: Georgia's Daring, Death-Defying Pilgrimage
CNN: Katskhi Pillar, the Extraordinary Church where Daring Monks Climb Closer to God
Radio Free Europe: Georgian Monk Renews Tradition, Lives Atop Pillar
Architecture and Asceticism (Ch. 4): Stylitism as a Cultural Trend Between Syria and Georgia
Research Publication from the Georgian National Museum: Katskhi Pillar
Journal of Nomads: Katskhi Pillar, the Most Incredible Cliff Church in the World
Georgian Journal: Georgia's Katskhi Pillar Among World's 20 Wonderfully Serene and Secluded Places
#archaeology#history#anthropology#artifacts#medieval architecture#medieval church#Stylites#asceticism#georgia#sakartvelo#katskhi pillar#religion#travel#monastery#paganism#caucasus#christianity#strange places#ruins#medieval europe#weird history
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Holidays 9.3
Holidays
Andrew Luck Day (Indiana)
Anniversary of the End of the Second World War (Russia)
Another Luck Unlimited Day
Armed Forces Day (Taiwan)
Beslan Remembrance Day
Brazilian Day
Broadcast Day (South Korea)
Civil Aviation Day (Tajikistan)
Cromwell’s Day
Day of Universal Alarm
Day to Mourn All Manifestations of Sexism
Drexciya Day
Feast of Atqksak (Baffin Land)
Flag Day (Australia)
Foundation Day (San Marino)
Gaura Parba (Nepal)
Harvest Bell Day (a.k.a. Hare Bell)
Levy Mwanawasa Day (Zambia)
Lost Day
Lower Case Letter Day
Memorial Day (Tunisia)
Merchant Navy Day (UK)
Merchant Navy Remembrance Day (Canada)
National Army Day (Moldova)
National Dahlia Day
National Day of Prayer for the Victims of Hurricane Harvey
National Guard Day (Tajikistan)
National High Heels Day
National Holiday of Commemoration (Tunisia)
National Shoot Your Shot Day
National Stephen Day
National Wilderness Day
903 Day (Texas)
Penny Press Day
Richard the Lionheart Day (UK)
Skyscraper Day
Solidarity Against Terrorism Day (Russia)
Tales and Tallows Day (Elder Scrolls)
Teasel Day (French Republic)
That Day I’ll Always Remember (in the song “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone,” by The Temptations)
Tokehega Day (Tokalau, New Zealand)
U.S. Bowling League Day
V-J Day (China)
World Day of Hygiene
Yamashita Surrender Day (Philippines)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Afternoon Tea Time Day
International Rosé Day
National Barbecue Baby Back Ribs Day
National Welsh Rarebit Day
Independence & Related Days
Bir Tawil (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Day of Liberation of Monaco (Monaco)
Irida City Foundation Day (Philippines)
Mexico (Formally Recognized by US; 1923)
Qatar (from UK, 1971)
San Marino (Founded; 301 C.E.)
United States (Formally Recognized by Great Britain; 1783)
Yeesland (Declared; 2017) [unrecognized]
1st Tuesday in September
Another Look Unlimited Day [Tuesday after 1st Monday]
Camo Tuesday [1st Tuesday]
Play Days begin [Tuesday through Saturday after 1st Monday]
Protect Your Groundwater Day [1st Tuesday]
Taco Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Takeout Tuesday [1st Tuesday of Each Month]
Target Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Tater Tot Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Telephone Tuesday [Tuesday after 1st Monday]
To-Do List Tuesday [1st Tuesday of Each Month]
Tranquil Tuesday [1st Tuesday of Each Month]
Trivia Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Two For Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
World Art Drop Day [1st Tuesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning September 3 (1st Full Week of September)
Play Days (thru 9.7] [Tuesday thru Saturday after Labor Day]
Festivals Beginning September 3, 2024
Barbera Festival (Plymouth, California)
Bigsound (Brisbane City, Australia) [thru 9.5]
Tennessee Soybean Festival (Martin, Tennessee) [thru 9.7]
Van Buren County Livestock Show & Fair (Clinton, Arkansas) [thru 9.7]
Feast Days
Aigulf (Christian; Martyr)
Akwambo (Path Clearing Festival; Akan People of Ghana)
Alison Lurie (Writerism)
Armand Vaillancourt (Artology)
Baile and Ailinn (Celtic Book of Days)
Barkley (Muppetism)
Bengt Lindström (Artology)
Bernard de Pailissy (Positivist; Saint)
Cuthburga (Christian; Saint)
Day of Mimi’s Well (Pagan)
Day of Universal Alarm (Shamanism)
Drexciya Day
Gregory I, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Gregory the Great (Christian; Saint)
Hildelitha (Christian; Saint & Virgin)
John Picacio (Artology)
Joseph Wright (Artology)
Lawrence Clark Powell (Writerism)
Lawrence Welk Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Macnisius of Ireland (Christian; Saint)
Maidens of the Four Directions (Hopi Native Americans)
Malcolm Gladwell (Writerism)
Mansuetus of Toul (Christian; Saint)
Marinus (Christian; Saint)
Mort Walker (Artology)
Paul Kane (Artology)
Phoebe (Christian; Saint)
Pius X, pope (Christian; Saint)
Remaclus (Christian; Saint)
Prudence Crandall (Episcopal Church (USA))
Sarah Orne Jewett (Writerism)
Say No to Haggis Day (Pastafarian)
Simeon Stylites the Younger (Christian; Saint)
Wendy O. Williams Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Dismal Day (Unlucky or Evil Day; Medieval Europe; 17 of 24)
Egyptian Day (Unlucky Day; Middle Ages Europe) [17 of 24]
Fatal Day (Pagan) [17 of 24]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [49 of 71]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [40 of 60]
Premieres
Bosko the Lumberjack (WB LT Cartoon; 1932)
Cartoons Ain’t Human (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1943)
The Cat and the Mermouse (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1949)
Dime to Retire (WB LT Cartoon; 1955)
Do You Really Want To Hurt Me?, by Culture Club (UK Song; 1982)
Fantastic Voyage, by Isaac Asimov (Novel; 1966)
From Hare to Heir (WB MM Cartoon; 1960)
Funf Orchesterstucke (Five Pieces for Orchestra), by Arnold Schoenberg (1912)
Funny Business in the Books or The Library Card (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 210; 1963)
Going the Distance (Film; 2010)
The Gold Rush, featuring Flip the Frog (MGM Cartoon; 1932)
Goodnight Moon, by Margaret Wise Brown (Children’s Book; 1947)
Johnny Got His Gun, by Dalton Trumbo (Novel; 1939)
Listen Without Prejudice, by George Michael (Album; 1990)
Machete (Film; 2010)
The Man in the Queue, by Josephine Tey (Novel; 1929) [Alan Grant #1]
Mister and Mistletoe (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1955)
Never Go Back, 18th Jack Reacher book, by Lee Child (Novel; 2013)
Old Smokey, featuring the Captain and the Kids (MGM Cartoon; 1938)
The Prisoner of Zenda (Film; 1937)
Roll the Bones, by Rush (Album; 1991)
The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea, by Yukio Mishima (Novel; 1963)
Scooby-Doo! In Arabian Nights (WB Animated Film; 1994)
Scooby-Doo! Return to Zombie Island (WB Animated Film; 2019)
Search for Tomorrow (TV Soap Opera; 1951)
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (Film; 2021)
The Sky Scrapper (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Disney Cartoon; 1928)
Snow Place Like Home (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1948)
Something Happened, by Joseph Heller (Novel; 1974)
Special Delivery Stomp, recorded by Artie Shaw (Song;1940)
Tenet (Film; 2020)
Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry (WB Animated Film; 2005)
Topsy Turvy World, Part 1 (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 209; 1963)
The Trouble with Girls (Elvis Presley Film; 1969) [#30]
The Villain Still Pursued Her (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1937)
Ye Happy Pilgrims (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1934)
Today’s Name Days
George, Gregor, Silvia, Sophie (Austria)
Gordana, Grga, Grgur (Croatia)
Bronislav (Czech Republic)
Seraphia (Denmark)
Solveig, Veegi (Estonia)
Soila, Soile, Soili (Finland)
Grégoire (France)
Gregor, Phoebe, Silvia, Sonja (Germany)
Anthimos, Arhontia, Arhontion, Aristea, Ariston, Phoebe, Phoebi, Phevos, Polydoros (Greece)
Hilda (Hungary)
Fausto, Felice, Gregorio, Lorenzo, Marino, Rosa, Teodoro (Italy)
Bella, Berta, Klaudija, Klaudijs, Slaida (Latvia)
Bronislova, Bronislovas, Mirga, Sirtautas (Lithuania)
Alise, Alvhild, Vilde (Norway)
Antoni, Bartłomiej, Bazylissa, Bronisław, Bronisz, Erazma, Eufemia, Eufrozyna, Izabela, Jan, Joachim, Joachima, Manswet, Mojmir, Szymon, Wincenty, Zenon, Zenona (Poland)
Antim, Meletie, Neofit (Romania)
Belo (Slovakia)
Basilisa, Gregorio (Spain)
Alfhild, Alva (Sweden)
Page, Paige, Phebe, Phoebe, Phoebus (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 247 of 2024; 119 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of Week 36 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Muin (Vine) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Guy-You), Day 1 (Geng-Wu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 30 Av 5784
Islamic: 28 Safar 1446
J Cal: 7 Gold; Sevenday [6 of 30]
Julian: 21 August 2024
Moon: 1%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 23 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Riquet]
Runic Half Month: Rad (Motion) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 76 of 94)
Week: 1st Full Week of September
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 13 of 32)
Calendar Changes
桂月 [Guìyuè] (Chinese Lunisolar Calendar) [Month 8 of 12] (Osmanthus Month) [Earthly Branch: Rooster Month] (Bāyuè; Eighth Month)
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Saints&Reading: Sunday, December 24, 2023
december 11_december 24
Week of Holy Forefathers:
The Sunday that falls between December 11-17 is known as the Sunday of the Holy Forefathers. These are the ancestors of Christ according to the flesh, who lived before the Law and under the Law, especially the Patriarch Abraham, to whom God said, “In thy seed shall all of the nations of the earth be blessed” (Gen. 12:3, 22:18).
VENERABLE DANIEL THE STYLITE OF CONSTANTINOPLE (490)
Saint Daniel the Stylite was born in the village of Bethara, near the city of Samosata in Mesopotamia. His mother Martha was childless for a long while and in her prayers she vowed that if she had a child, she would dedicate him to the Lord. Her prayers were heard, and Martha soon gave birth to a son, who was without a name until he was five years of age.
The boy’s parents desired that since he was born through the good-will of God, he should also receive his name from God. They took their son to a monastery located nearby and approached the igumen. The igumen gave orders to take down one of the service books, and unrolled it at random. He found the Prophet Daniel (December 17) mentioned in it. Thus did the boy receive his name. The parents asked that he might remain at the monastery, but the igumen would not accept him, since he was still only a small boy. At twelve years of age, saying nothing to anyone, the child left home for the monastery.
His parents were happy when they learned where their son was, and they went to the monastery. Seeing that he was still going about in his worldly clothes, they besought that the igumen should clothe him in the angelic garb. That Sunday the igumen fulfilled their request, but permitted them often to visit their son. The brethren of the monastery were astonished at the saint’s ascetical efforts.
Once, Saint Simeon the Stylite (September 1) visited the monastery. He foretold to the young monk that he too would undertake the feat of pillar-dwelling. Saint Daniel continued with his ascetic life in seclusion. When the place of a new exploit was revealed to him in a vision, he withdrew into the Thracian wilderness together with two disciples. They set up a pillar, upon which Saint Daniel dwelt for 33 years. People thronged to the pillar, the unfortunate and those who were sick, and all received help and healing from Saint Daniel. Byzantine emperors also sought the prayers of the holy ascetic. The most notable of the saint’s predictions was about a great fire in Constantinople. Saint Daniel possessed also the gift of gracious words. He guided many onto the path of correcting their lives. The monk reposed in his eightieth year.
Source: Orthodox Church in America_OCA
St NICON THE DRY OF THE KIEV NEAR CAVE( 1101)
Saint Nikon the Dry, the son of rich and illustrious parents, gave up everything for Christ and became a monk at the Kiev Caves monastery. In the year 1096, during the incursions of Khan Bonyak, he was taken into captivity with some other monks. The captors treated Saint Nikon harshly, while waiting for a ransom to be paid. When the saint refused to be ransomed, his masters began to torment him with hunger, and left him exposed in the heat of summer and the cold of winter. He was mistreated and beaten every day for about three years, for his captors thought he would change his mind and send word to his relatives, asking to be ransomed.
The saint gave thanks to God for everything, and once said to his tormentor that the Lord, through the prayers of Saints Anthony and Theodosius would return him to his monastery within three days, as Saint Eustratius (March 28) had predicted while appearing to him.
The captor cut the tendons in Saint Nikon’s legs and set a strong guard over him. But suddenly, on the third day at the sixth hour, the holy captive became invisible. At the moment the guard heard the words, “Praise the Lord from the Heavens” (Ps. 148).
Saint Nikon was transported to the Dormition church, where the Divine Liturgy was being served. The brethren surrounded him and began to ask how he got there. Saint Nikon wanted to conceal the miracle, but the brethren implored him to tell the truth.
Saint Nikon did not want to have his fetters removed, but the igumen said, “If the Lord had wanted you to remain fettered, He would not have delivered you from captivity.”
After a long while Saint Nikon’s former master came to the Kiev Caves monastery and recognized his former captive, who was withered from hunger and the loss of blood from his wounds. He came to believe in Christ, and accepted Baptism. After receiving monastic tonsure, he became a novice under Saint Nikon’s direction.
Saint Nikon died at the beginning of the twelfth century and was buried in the Near Caves. Though he did not enjoy good health in this life, his holy relics were glorified by incorruption. His memory is celebrated also on September 28 and on the second Sunday of Great Lent.
COLOSSIANS 3:4-11
4 When Christ who is our life appears, then you also will appear with Him in glory. 5 Therefore put to death your members which are on the earth: fornication, uncleanness, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry. 6 Because of these things the wrath of God is coming upon the sons of disobedience, 7 in which you yourselves once walked when you lived in them. 8 But now you yourselves are to put off all these: anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy language out of your mouth. 9 Do not lie to one another, since you have put off the old man with his deeds, 10 and have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of Him who created him, 11 where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave nor free, but Christ is all and in all.
LUKE 14:16-24
16 Then He said to him, "A certain man gave a great supper and invited many, 17 and sent his servant at supper time to say to those who were invited, 'Come, for all things are now ready.' 18 But they all with one accord began to make excuses. The first said to him, 'I have bought a piece of ground, and I must go and see it. I ask you to have me excused.' 19 And another said, 'I have bought five yoke of oxen, and I am going to test them. I ask you to have me excused.' 20 Still another said, 'I have married a wife, and therefore I cannot come.' 21 So that servant came and reported these things to his master. Then the master of the house, being angry, said to his servant, 'Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in here the poor and the maimed and the lame and the blind.' 22 And the servant said, 'Master, it is done as you commanded, and still there is room.' 23 Then the master said to the servant, 'Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled. 24 'For I say to you that none of those men who were invited shall taste my supper.' "
Commentary of the Church's Father:
Theophylact of Ochrid AD 1107 : Because the man who sat at table with Him had said, Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the kingdom of God, the Lord teaches him at some length what it means to feast with God, and tells this parable. By a certain man the Lord means His Father, the Lover of man. Whenever Scripture alludes to God's power to punish, He is called a panther, a leopard, or a bear [Hos. 13:7-8].
But whenever it alludes to God's love for man, He is presented as a man, as is the case here. Since the parable treats of God's extreme love for man and the divine economy of the Incarnation which He worked in us, making us sharers of the Flesh of His Son, the parable calls God a man and this divine economy a great supper. It is a supper because the Lord came in the last days, as it were at the evening of this age. And this supper is great because great indeed, we confess, is the mystery of our salvation. [I Tim. 3:16]
And he sent his servant at supper time. Who is this servant? The Son of God, Who assumed the form a servant and became man, and as a man is said to have been sent forth. Notice how He did not say "a servant," but instead, using the definite article, the servant [of his.] Christ is the One and only Servant Who in His human nature was perfectly obedient and pleasing to God. For Christ is pleasing to the Father not only as Son and God, but also as Man. He is the only Sinless One Who carried out all the counsels and commandments of the Father and fulfilled all righteousness, and in this sense is said to serve God the Father. He alone can be called the true Servant of God. He was sent at supper time, that is, at the appointed and proper time.
For there was no other time more opportune for our salvation than the reign of Caesar Augustus, when iniquity had reached its peak and it was critical that it be cleansed. Just as physicians allow a festering and malignant boil to burst and release all its foul pus, and only then apply the medication, so too it was necessary that sin first display all its forms, and then the Great Physician applied His medicine. For this very reason the Lord waited for the devil to fill the full measure of iniquity, and then the Son of God took flesh and healed every form of iniquity by every aspect of His holy life. Therefore He was sent at that hour, that is, at that comely and opportune season of which David says, Gird Thy sword upon Thy thigh, 0 Mighty One, in Thy comeliness. (2)
Certainly the sword here signifies the Word of God [Heb. 4:12], while the words upon Thy thigh indicate His Nativity in the flesh which was in comeliness, that is, when the time was right and seemly. He was sent to speak to those who had been called. Who are those that were called? Perhaps this refers to all men. For God has called all to the knowledge of Him, by means of the order and harmony of visible creation, and by means of the natural law. But those that were called are also, more specifically, the children of Israel, who were called through the law and the prophets. In the first place, then, the Lord was sent to the sheep of the house of Israel. [Mt. 15:24] The Lord was saying to all the Jews, Come, for all things are now ready, when He proclaimed the good tidings that the kingdom of heaven is at hand [Mt. 4:17], and among you [Lk. 17:21].
And they all with one accord began to make excuse, that is, as if at a signal. For all the leaders of the Jews refused to have Jesus as their King, and thus were found unworthy of the supper, one because of his love of wealth, and another because of his love of pleasure. The man who bought a piece of ground and the man who bought the five yoke of oxen signify those who love wealth, while the man who married a wife signifies those who love pleasure. Furthermore, the man who bought a piece of ground signifies the man who cannot accept the mystery of faith because he is governed by the wisdom of this world. The piece of ground represents the world and, in general, nature, and the man who must go and see his piece of ground is he who sees only nature, and cannot accept what is beyond nature.
Therefore the Pharisee, for example, "sees his piece of ground," that is, he looks only at the laws of nature and cannot accept that a Virgin gave birth to God, because that is beyond nature. Because they are examining this "piece of ground," that is, nature, none of those who boast in external wisdom have recognized Jesus Who made nature new. The man who bought five yoke of oxen, and tested them, also represents a man who loves the material world. He has yoked the five senses of the soul to the five senses of the body and has made the soul into flesh. For this reason he is concerned only with the earth and does not desire to commune of the rational Supper, for as Wisdom says, How can he get wisdom that holdeth the plough? [Eccles. (Wis. of Sirach) 38:25]
He who stays behind because of a wife is a lover of pleasure who has devoted himself to the flesh, the mate of the soul. By cleaving to the flesh he cannot please God. You may also understand these things literally. We also fall away from God because of fields, because of yokes of oxen, because of marriages, when we become so attached to them that they consume our whole life and we are carried away even to the point of shedding blood over them. Then there is no divine thought or word that we can practice, or even comprehend
#orthodoxy#orthodoxchristianity#easternorthodoxchurch#originofchristianity#spirituality#holyscriptures#gospel#bible#wisdom#saints
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Holidays 1.5
Holidays
American Divorce Day
Apple Howling Day
Carnival begins (Old Bohemia)
Carnaval Blancos Negros, Day 2: The Day of the Blacks (Colombia)
Dia de la Toma (Spain)
Eve of Wonder
Fair Deal Day
Fathers' Day (Оци; Serbia)
501st Legion Day (UK)
Flint Day (French Republic)
FM Radio Day
George Washington Carver Day
Get on the Computer Day
International Declutter Day
International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival (Harbin, China)
Joma Shinji (Kamakura, Japan)
Kappa Alpha Psi Day
Little Cold begins (Chinese Farmer’s Calendar)
Monopoly Game Day
Mr. Ed Day
National Bird Day
National Day of Dialogue
National Don’t Talk Day
National Ellen Day
National Screenwriters Day
National Second-Hand Wardrobe Day
Nellie Ross Day (Wyoming)
Night of the Magic Camel (Southern Syria)
Red Hackle Anniversary Day of the Black Watch
Review Your Wrestling Holds Day
Right of Self Determination Day (Pakistan)
Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day (Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney; Australia)
Tucindan (Serbia, Montenegro)
Turn Up the Heat Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Can Opener Day
Granny Smith Day
National Keto Day
National Whipped Cream Day
Sausage Day (UK)
Strawberry Day (Ichigo No Hi; Japan)
Take the Cake Day
Whipped Cream Day
1st Friday in January
Gals Night Out [1st Friday]
Thermopolis Day (Wyoming) [1st Friday]
Independence & Related Days
Ajdinland (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Monarchy of Craztonia (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Pitchfork Union (Declared; 2016) [unrecognized]
Seirlandia (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Avian Day (Pagan)
Befana (Ancient Roman Goddess)
Burning of the Evergreen (Pagan)
Charles of Mount Argus (Christian)
The Eve of Epiphany (Christian; Transition Between Christmas & Carnival Season)
Feast of Poseidon (Ancient Greece)
Festival of Kore (Greek Goddess of Good Fortune & Zeal)
Festival of Lares Compitales (Ancient Rome)
Festival of Pyrotechnics
Gerlac of Valkenberg (Christian; Saint)
Hayao Miyazaki (Jayism)
Hoots the Owl (Muppetism)
International Sarcasm Day (Pastafarian)
John Neumann (Catholic Church)
Ludwig II Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lycurgus (Positivist; Saint)
Mungday (aka Hung Mung’s Day; Discordian)
Nicolas de Staël (Artology)
Noche De Reyes (Three Wise Men; Mexico)
Nones of January (Ancient Rome)
Old Christmas Eve
Simeon Stylites (Latin Church)
Telesphorus, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Trettondagsafton (Epiphany Eve; Sweden)
Tucindan (Old Serbian Pagan Folk Festival)
Twelfth Day of Christmas
Twelfth Night
Twelve Holy Days #11 (Aquarius, the lower limbs; Esoteric Christianity)
Twelvetide, Day #12 (a.k.a. the Twelve Days of Christmas or Christmastide) [until 1.5]
Ullr Festival (Norse)
Umberto Eco (Jayism)
Verbal Abuse Day (Pastafarian)
The Voyage of Hathor to See Her Seven Sisters (Ancient Egypt)
Yves Tanguy (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Butsumetsu (仏滅 Japan) [Unlucky all day.]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [4 of 71]
Perilous Day (13th Century England) [4 of 32]
Prime Number Day: 5 [3 of 72]
Very Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [4 of 60]
Premieres
All My Children (TV Soap Opera; 1970)
Any Rags? (Betty Boop Cartoon; 1932)
Armed Forces, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1979)
Buddy the Gob (WB LT Cartoon; 1934)
Cavalcade (Film; 1933)
Chica Chica Boom Chic, by Carmen Miranda (Song; 1941)
Come Dance with Me!, by Frank Sinatra (Album; 1959)
The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies, by Clark Ashton Smith (Short Stories; 1935)
Desire, by Bob Dylan (Album; 1976)
Dog, Cat and Canary (Color Rhapsody Cartoon; 1945)
The Dud Avocado, by Elaine Dundy (Novel; 1958)
Giasone, by Francesco Cavalli (Opera; 1649)
Greetings From Asbury Park, by Bruce Springsteen (Album; 1973)
Happily N’Ever After (Animated Film; 2007)
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (UK TV Series; 1981)
In the American Grain, by William Carlos Williams (History Book; 1925)
Lion Down (Disney Cartoon; 1951)
Lyrical Ballads, by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Book of Poetry; 1798)
Maze Craze (Atari 2600 Video Game; 1980)
Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (TV Series; 1976)
Nixon (Film; 1996)
The Shannara Chronicles (TV Series; 2016)
Stop! In The Name Of Love, recorded by The Supremes (Song; 1965)
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Novel; 1886)
The Swiss Summer, by Stella Gibbons (Novel; 1951)
Three Little Bops (WB LT Cartoon; 1957)
Tiger Trouble (Disney Cartoon; 1945)
The Tortoise and the Hare (Disney SS Cartoon; 1935)
Waiting for Godot, by Samuel Beckett (Play; 1953)
What’s Sweepin’ (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1953)
Who’s Kitten Who? (WB LT Cartoon; 1952)
The Wiz (Broadway Musical; 1975)
Today’s Name Days
Emilia, Johann (Austria)
Emilijana, Gaudencije, Miljenko, Radoslavl (Croatia)
Dalimil (Czech Republic)
Simeon (Denmark)
Lea, Leana, Liia (Estonia)
Lea, Leea (Finland)
Édouard (France)
Emilia, Johann (Germany)
Syglitiki, Theoni, Theopemptos (Greece)
Simon (Hungary)
Amelia (Italy)
Sīmanis, Zintis (Latvia)
Gaudentas, Telesforas, Vytautas, Vytautė (Lithuania)
Hanna, Hanne (Norway)
Edward, Emilian, Emiliusz, Hanna, Symeon, Szymon, Telesfor, Włościbor (Poland)
Sinclitichia, Teona, Teotempt (Romania)
Andrea (Slovakia)
Amelia, Emiliana, Juan, Simeón, Telesforo (Spain)
Hanna, Hannele (Sweden)
Apollinaria, Teon (Ukraine)
Ladarius, Ladd, Laird, Lamont, Lane, Tania, Tanya, Tatiana, Tatyana, Tawni, Tawnya, Tia, Tiana, Tianna, Tonya (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 5 of 2024; 361 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 1 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Beth (Birch) [Day 11 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Jia-Zi), Day 24 (Wu-Chen)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 24 Teveth 5784
Islamic: 23 Jumada II 1445
J Cal: 5 White; Fryday [5 of 30]
Julian: 23 December 2023
Moon: 35%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 5 Moses (1st Month) [Lycurgus]
Runic Half Month: Eihwaz or Eoh (Yew Tree) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 16 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 15 of 31)
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SAINT OF THE DAY (January 11)
Born to a pious family in 423 A.D., Theodosius began his studies at an early age and became a lector while still an adolescent.
The example of Abraham led him to leave home in order to properly follow God.
He met Saint Simeon Stylites in Antioch. Simeon recognized him as a holy man and leader. He then invited Theodosius onto his pillar for prayer, blessing, and advice.
He traveled to Jerusalem where legend says he worked with Saint Longinus, who would have been nearly 500 years old at the time.
After a time, he was given charge of a small church near Bethlehem, however, his time there did not last long.
Dreading the vanity that comes from the esteem of men and unable to live in solitude with the multitude of admirers, he retired to a cave in the desert of Judah where he led a hermit's life.
Word of his holiness began to attract disciples, and Theodosius built a monastery at Cathismus to house them.
So many came that there had to be sections built for Greeks, for Armenians, for Persions, etc., but they all happily worked and prayed together.
Next to the monastery, he built a hospital for the sick, a hospice for the aged, and a mental hospital.
He became a friend and co-worker with Saint Sabbas. He was later appointed visitor to all cenobitical communities of Palestine, the patriarch of Jerusalem.
He opposed heresies, including Eutychianism and Monophysitism.
Emperor Anastatius, a supporter of Eutychianism, once sent Theodosius a large bribe, hoping to sway the influential monk to his thinking.
However, Theodosius distributed the money to the poor and continued to preach against heresy.
Because of his orthodox views, Anastatius removed him from his position in 513, but he soon resumed his duties under emperor Justinian.
He continued to work until his health gave out and spent the rest of his time praying for his community. He died at the age of 105.
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September 1st:
Saint Simeon Stylites, the Elder
Saint Simeon the Stylite was born in the Cappadocian village of Sisan of Christian parents, Sisotian and Martha. At thirteen years of age he began to tend his father’s flock of sheep. He devoted himself attentively and with love to this, his first obedience.
Once, after he heard the Beatitudes in church, he was struck by their profundity. Not trusting to his own immature judgment, he turned therefore with his questions to an experienced Elder. The Elder readily explained to the boy the meaning of what he had heard. The seed fell on good soil, and it strengthened his resolve to serve God.
When Simeon was eighteen, he received monastic tonsure and devoted himself to feats of the strictest abstinence and unceasing prayer. His zeal, beyond the strength of the other monastic brethren, so alarmed the igumen that he told Simeon that to either moderate his ascetic deeds or leave the monastery.
Saint Simeon then withdrew from the monastery and lived in an empty well in the nearby mountains, where he was able to carry out his austere struggles unhindered. After some time, angels appeared in a dream to the igumen, who commanded him to bring back Simeon to the monastery.
The monk, however, did not long remain at the monastery. After a short while he settled into a stony cave, situated not far from the village of Galanissa, and he dwelt there for three years, all the while perfecting himself in monastic feats. Once, he decided to spend the entire forty days of Great Lent without food or drink. With the help of God, the monk endured this strict fast. From that time he abstained from food completely during the entire period of the Great Lent, even from bread and water. For twenty days he prayed while standing, and for twenty days while sitting, so as not to permit the corporeal powers to relax.
A whole crowd of people began to throng to the place of his efforts, wanting to receive healing from sickness and to hear a word of Christian edification. Shunning worldly glory and striving again to find his lost solitude, the monk chose a previously unknown mode of asceticism. He went up a pillar six to eight feet high, and settled upon it in a little cell, devoting himself to intense prayer and fasting.
Reports of Saint Simeon reached the highest church hierarchy and the imperial court. Patriarch Domninos II (441-448) of Antioch visited the monk, celebrated Divine Liturgy on the pillar and communed the ascetic with the Holy Mysteries.
Elders living in the desert heard about Saint Simeon, who had chosen a new and strange form of ascetic striving. Wanting to test the new ascetic and determine whether his extreme ascetic feats were pleasing to God, they sent messengers to him, who in the name of these desert fathers were to bid Saint Simeon to come down from the pillar.
In the case of disobedience they were to forcibly drag him to the ground. But if he was willing to submit, they were to leave him on his pillar. Saint Simeon displayed complete obedience and deep Christian humility. The monks told him to stay where he was, asking God to be his helper.
Saint Simeon endured many temptations, and he invariably gained the victory over them. He relied not on his own weak powers, but on the Lord Himself, Who always came to help him. The monk gradually increased the height of the pillar on which he stood. His final pillar was 80 feet in height. Around him a double wall was raised, which hindered the unruly crowd of people from coming too close and disturbing his prayerful concentration.
Women, in general, were not permitted beyond the wall. The saint did not make an exception even for his own mother, who after long and unsuccessful searches finally succeeded in finding her lost son. He would not see her, saying, “If we are worthy, we shall see one another in the life to come.” Saint Martha submitted to this, remaining at the foot of the pillar in silence and prayer, where she finally died. Saint Simeon asked that her coffin be brought to him. He reverently bid farewell to his dead mother, and a joyful smile appeared on her face.
Saint Simeon spent 80 years in arduous monastic feats, 47 years of which he stood upon the pillar. Many pagans accepted Baptism, struck by the moral staunchness and bodily strength which the Lord bestowed upon His servant.
The first one to learn of the death of the saint was his close disciple Anthony. Concerned that his teacher had not appeared to the people for three days, he went up on the pillar and found the dead body stooped over at prayer. Patriarch Martyrius of Antioch performed the funeral before a huge throng of clergy and people. They buried him near his pillar. At the place of his ascetic deeds, Anthony established a monastery, upon which rested the special blessing of Saint Simeon.
Troparion / Tone 1
You were a pillar of patient endurance, / having imitated the forefathers, O Venerable One: / Job in suffering, and Joseph in temptations. / You lived like the bodiless ones while yet in the flesh, O Simeon, our Father. / Beseech Christ God that our souls may be saved.
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Saint Simeon Stylites was a Syrian Christian ascetic from the 4th century who is most known for living atop a pillar for 40 years. he tied himself with rough rope, which dug into his skin and caused him to harbor maggots in his flesh. maggots that if fallen out were said to turn into pearls. at first he was a part of a monastary, but his piousness was too much for his peer monks and was asked to practice his ascetism elsewhere. at first he lived in a secluded shack, but people visited him there. he tried living in a cave up in a mountain, but people visited him there. he then tried praying atop a 3 meter tall pillar in these ruins, but people visited him there. eventually he for the rest of his life lived atop a 15 meter tall pillar.
his only nourishment was offered by visitors, which he recieved through a pully system, allegedly. he still got pilgrims, either to watch him self flagellate or preach. and he actually wrote many letters. some that still survive. various emperors seeked his advice on political affairs. he died at the age of 70, still hunched over in prayer.
in the 4th century a church was built around the pillar, as pilgrims continued to visit it for prayer. but over the centuries it was worn down. i cant find if there are any images of the pillar. while designated as an UNESCO heritage site in 2011, in 2016 during the Syrian civil war various groups used it as a shelter during the conflict. Russian airforce fired missles at the old church, destroying whatever remained of the pillar and a lot of the church. a chunk of the pillar now rests like a boulder on the small base of where it used to be.
i like how most paintings depict him looking like he’s sitting in an egg cup
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Plaque of Saint Simeon (Symeon) the Stylites (also called Simeon the Elder), end of the 6th century, originally apart of the treasure of the church of Maarat al-Numaan in northeastern Syria. Now in the Louvre Museum.
Saint Simeon the Stylites was known for living on top of a pillar for many years in order to avoid the temptations of the world, which is most likely what the snake represents. Despite having a feast day in Western Christianity (January 5th) he is not that well know, although he remains an important figure for Syriac Christians.
To see translations of three different biographies of Saint Simeon see the collection The Lives of Simeon Stylites. Translated by Robert Doran. Cistercian Publications: Kalamazoo, MI, 1992.
~Hasmonean
#saints#ane#ane studies#ancient near east#syria#syriac christianity#mesopotamia#mesopotamian#saint simeon stylites#saint symeon stylites#middle east#early christianity#christianity#art#artifacts#snakes
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Best Ever Tour Guide on Church of Saint Simeon Stylites, Dead Cities
If you're interested in ancient history, then a visit to the Church of Saint Simeon Stylites in Dead Cities, Syria is a must. This incredible site is home to the remains of a 6th-century Christian monastery, and is one of the best-preserved examples of early Syrian architecture. The church was built in honor of Saint Simeon, a Christian hermit who lived atop a pillar in the nearby city of Aleppo for 37 years. Saint Simeon is said to have inspired a number of other stylite hermits, and his example helped to spread the practice of stylitism throughout the Byzantine Empire. The church itself is a beautiful example of early Syrian architecture, and is adorned with intricate carvings and mosaics. The site also includes a number of other ruins, including a bathhouse and a number of dwellings. If you're interested in learning more about the history of the Church of Saint Simeon Stylites, or of early Syrian architecture, then a visit to Dead Cities is a must. This incredible site is sure to leave you with a new appreciation for the past. Read the full article
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Saints of the day for Tuesday Jan 11, 2022
Saints of the day for Tuesday Jan 11, 2022
1) St. Theodosius the Cenobiarch Born at Garissus, Cappadocia (modern Turkey), in 423, he undertook a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and after meeting with the famed St. Simeon Stylites, he entered a monastery. Later, he was named the head of a church between Jerusalem and Bethlehem, but departed to live as a hermit near the Dead Sea. As he attracted a large number of followers, Theodosius established…
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Holidays 1.5
Holidays
American Divorce Day
Apple Howling Day
Carnival begins (Old Bohemia)
Carnaval Blancos Negros, Day 2: The Day of the Blacks (Colombia)
Dia de la Toma (Spain)
Eve of Wonder
Fair Deal Day
Fathers' Day (Оци; Serbia)
501st Legion Day (UK)
Flint Day (French Republic)
FM Radio Day
George Washington Carver Day
Get on the Computer Day
International Declutter Day
International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival (Harbin, China)
Joma Shinji (Kamakura, Japan)
Kappa Alpha Psi Day
Little Cold begins (Chinese Farmer’s Calendar)
Monopoly Game Day
Mr. Ed Day
National Bird Day
National Day of Dialogue
National Don’t Talk Day
National Ellen Day
National Screenwriters Day
National Second-Hand Wardrobe Day
Nellie Ross Day (Wyoming)
Night of the Magic Camel (Southern Syria)
Red Hackle Anniversary Day of the Black Watch
Review Your Wrestling Holds Day
Right of Self Determination Day (Pakistan)
Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day (Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney; Australia)
Tucindan (Serbia, Montenegro)
Turn Up the Heat Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Can Opener Day
Granny Smith Day
National Keto Day
National Whipped Cream Day
Sausage Day (UK)
Strawberry Day (Ichigo No Hi; Japan)
Take the Cake Day
Whipped Cream Day
1st Friday in January
Gals Night Out [1st Friday]
Thermopolis Day (Wyoming) [1st Friday]
Independence & Related Days
Ajdinland (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Monarchy of Craztonia (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Pitchfork Union (Declared; 2016) [unrecognized]
Seirlandia (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Avian Day (Pagan)
Befana (Ancient Roman Goddess)
Burning of the Evergreen (Pagan)
Charles of Mount Argus (Christian)
The Eve of Epiphany (Christian; Transition Between Christmas & Carnival Season)
Feast of Poseidon (Ancient Greece)
Festival of Kore (Greek Goddess of Good Fortune & Zeal)
Festival of Lares Compitales (Ancient Rome)
Festival of Pyrotechnics
Gerlac of Valkenberg (Christian; Saint)
Hayao Miyazaki (Jayism)
Hoots the Owl (Muppetism)
International Sarcasm Day (Pastafarian)
John Neumann (Catholic Church)
Ludwig II Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lycurgus (Positivist; Saint)
Mungday (aka Hung Mung’s Day; Discordian)
Nicolas de Staël (Artology)
Noche De Reyes (Three Wise Men; Mexico)
Nones of January (Ancient Rome)
Old Christmas Eve
Simeon Stylites (Latin Church)
Telesphorus, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Trettondagsafton (Epiphany Eve; Sweden)
Tucindan (Old Serbian Pagan Folk Festival)
Twelfth Day of Christmas
Twelfth Night
Twelve Holy Days #11 (Aquarius, the lower limbs; Esoteric Christianity)
Twelvetide, Day #12 (a.k.a. the Twelve Days of Christmas or Christmastide) [until 1.5]
Ullr Festival (Norse)
Umberto Eco (Jayism)
Verbal Abuse Day (Pastafarian)
The Voyage of Hathor to See Her Seven Sisters (Ancient Egypt)
Yves Tanguy (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Butsumetsu (仏滅 Japan) [Unlucky all day.]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [4 of 71]
Perilous Day (13th Century England) [4 of 32]
Prime Number Day: 5 [3 of 72]
Very Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [4 of 60]
Premieres
All My Children (TV Soap Opera; 1970)
Any Rags? (Betty Boop Cartoon; 1932)
Armed Forces, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1979)
Buddy the Gob (WB LT Cartoon; 1934)
Cavalcade (Film; 1933)
Chica Chica Boom Chic, by Carmen Miranda (Song; 1941)
Come Dance with Me!, by Frank Sinatra (Album; 1959)
The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies, by Clark Ashton Smith (Short Stories; 1935)
Desire, by Bob Dylan (Album; 1976)
Dog, Cat and Canary (Color Rhapsody Cartoon; 1945)
The Dud Avocado, by Elaine Dundy (Novel; 1958)
Giasone, by Francesco Cavalli (Opera; 1649)
Greetings From Asbury Park, by Bruce Springsteen (Album; 1973)
Happily N’Ever After (Animated Film; 2007)
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (UK TV Series; 1981)
In the American Grain, by William Carlos Williams (History Book; 1925)
Lion Down (Disney Cartoon; 1951)
Lyrical Ballads, by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Book of Poetry; 1798)
Maze Craze (Atari 2600 Video Game; 1980)
Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (TV Series; 1976)
Nixon (Film; 1996)
The Shannara Chronicles (TV Series; 2016)
Stop! In The Name Of Love, recorded by The Supremes (Song; 1965)
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Novel; 1886)
The Swiss Summer, by Stella Gibbons (Novel; 1951)
Three Little Bops (WB LT Cartoon; 1957)
Tiger Trouble (Disney Cartoon; 1945)
The Tortoise and the Hare (Disney SS Cartoon; 1935)
Waiting for Godot, by Samuel Beckett (Play; 1953)
What’s Sweepin’ (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1953)
Who’s Kitten Who? (WB LT Cartoon; 1952)
The Wiz (Broadway Musical; 1975)
Today’s Name Days
Emilia, Johann (Austria)
Emilijana, Gaudencije, Miljenko, Radoslavl (Croatia)
Dalimil (Czech Republic)
Simeon (Denmark)
Lea, Leana, Liia (Estonia)
Lea, Leea (Finland)
Édouard (France)
Emilia, Johann (Germany)
Syglitiki, Theoni, Theopemptos (Greece)
Simon (Hungary)
Amelia (Italy)
Sīmanis, Zintis (Latvia)
Gaudentas, Telesforas, Vytautas, Vytautė (Lithuania)
Hanna, Hanne (Norway)
Edward, Emilian, Emiliusz, Hanna, Symeon, Szymon, Telesfor, Włościbor (Poland)
Sinclitichia, Teona, Teotempt (Romania)
Andrea (Slovakia)
Amelia, Emiliana, Juan, Simeón, Telesforo (Spain)
Hanna, Hannele (Sweden)
Apollinaria, Teon (Ukraine)
Ladarius, Ladd, Laird, Lamont, Lane, Tania, Tanya, Tatiana, Tatyana, Tawni, Tawnya, Tia, Tiana, Tianna, Tonya (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 5 of 2024; 361 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 1 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Beth (Birch) [Day 11 of 28]
Chinese: Month 12 (Jia-Zi), Day 24 (Wu-Chen)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 24 Teveth 5784
Islamic: 23 Jumada II 1445
J Cal: 5 White; Fryday [5 of 30]
Julian: 23 December 2023
Moon: 35%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 5 Moses (1st Month) [Lycurgus]
Runic Half Month: Eihwaz or Eoh (Yew Tree) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Winter (Day 16 of 89)
Zodiac: Capricorn (Day 15 of 31)
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Saints&Reading: Thursday, June 6, 2024
_june 6_may 24
VENERABLE SYMEON STYLITES THE YOUNGER OF THE WONDERFUL MOUNTAIN (596)
Saint Simeon the Stylite was born in the year 521 in Antioch, Syria of pious parents John and Martha. From her youth Saint Martha (July 4) prepared herself for a life of virginity and longed for monasticism, but her parents insisted that she marry John. After ardent prayer in a church dedicated to Saint John the Forerunner, the future nun was directed in a vision to submit to the will of her parents and enter into marriage.
As a married woman, Saint Martha strove to please God and her husband in everything. She often prayed for a baby and promised to dedicate him to the service of God. Saint John the Forerunner revealed to Martha that she would have a son who would serve God. When the infant was born, he was named Simeon and baptized at two years of age.
When Simeon was six years old, an earthquake occurred in the city of Antioch, in which his father perished. Simeon was in church at the time of the earthquake. Leaving the church, he became lost and spent seven days sheltered by a pious woman. Saint John the Baptist again appeared to Saint Martha, and indicated where to find the lost boy. The saint’s mother found her lost son, and moved to the outskirts of Antioch after the earthquake. Already during his childhood the Lord Jesus Christ appeared several times to Saint Simeon, foretelling his future exploits and the reward for them.
The six-year-old child Simeon went into the wilderness, where he lived in complete isolation. During this time a light-bearing angel guarded and fed him. Finally, he arrived at a monastery, headed by the igumen Abba John, who lived in asceticism upon a pillar. He accepted the boy with love.
After a time, Saint Simeon asked the Elder John to permit him also to struggle upon a pillar. A new pillar was raised by the brethren of the monastery with the blessing of the igumen, near his pillar. Having completed the initiation of the seven-year-old boy into monasticism, Abba John placed him upon this pillar. The young ascetic, strengthened by the Lord, quickly grew spiritually, in his efforts surpassing even his experienced instructor. For his efforts, Saint Simeon received from God the gift of healing.
The fame of the young monk’s deeds began to spread beyond the bounds of the monastery. Monks and laypeople began to come to him from various places, desiring to hear his counsel and receive healing from their infirmities. The humble ascetic continued to pursue asceticism with instructions from his spiritual mentor Abba John.
When he was eleven, Simeon decided to pursue asceticism upon a higher pillar, the top of which was forty feet from the ground. The bishops of Antioch and Seleukia came to the place of the monk’s endeavors, and ordained him as a deacon. Then they permitted him to ascend the new pillar, on which Saint Simeon labored for eight years.
Saint Simeon prayed ardently for the Holy Spirit to descend upon him, and the holy prayer of the ascetic was heard. The Holy Spirit came upon him in the form of a blazing light, filling the ascetic with divine wisdom. Along with oral instructions, Saint Simeon wrote letters about repentance, monasticism, about the Incarnation of Christ, and about the future Judgment.
After the death of his Elder, Saint Simeon’s life followed a certain pattern. From the rising of the sun until mid-afternoon he read books and copied Holy Scripture. Then he rose and prayed all night. When the new day began, he rested somewhat, then began his usual Rule of prayer.
Saint Simeon concluded his efforts on the second column, and by God’s dispensation, settled upon the Wonderful Mountain, having become an experienced Elder to the monks in his monastery. The ascent to Wonderful Mountain was marked by a vision of the Lord, standing atop a column. Saint Simeon continued his efforts at this place where he saw the Lord, at first upon a stone, and then upon a pillar.
Future events were revealed to Saint Simeon, and so he foretold the death of Archbishop Ephraim of Antioch, and the illness of Bishop Domnus, which overtook him as punishment for his lack of pity. Finally, Saint Simeon predicted an earthquake for the city of Antioch and urged all the inhabitants to repent of their sins.
Saint Simeon established a monastery on Wonderful Mountain,where the sick people he healed built a church in gratitude for the mercy shown them. The saint prayed for a spring of water for the needs of the monastery, and once during a shortage of grain, the granaries of the monastery were filled with wheat by his prayers.
In the year 560 the holy ascetic was ordained to the priesthood by Dionysius, Bishop of Seleukia. At age seventy-five Saint Simeon was warned by the Lord of his impending end. He summoned the brethren of the monastery, instructed them in a farewell talk, and peacefully fell asleep in the Lord in the year 596, having toiled as a stylite for sixty-eight years.
After death, the saint worked miracles just as he had when alive. He healed the blind, the lame and the leprous, saving many from wild beasts, casting out devils and raising the dead.
SAINT VINCENT OF LERINS (ca 450)
Information about the life of Saint Vincent is very scarce. Our primary source for him is the work of Gennadius of Massilia "On Famous Men" (Latin: De viris illustribus), composed about 495 as a continuation of the work of the same title by Saint Jerome of Stridon (June 15).
Vincent was born in the city of Toul, in the northeast of what is now France, and was the brother of Saint Lupus.of Troyes (July 29). After serving in the army (Latin: secularis militia), he entered the monastery of Saint Honoratus (January 16) at Lerins (Lérins), where he was tonsured and ordained to the priesthood.
In 434, under the pseudonym Peregrinus, Saint Vincent wrote his most famous work: "Commentary Against Heretics" (Latin: Commonitorium adversus Hæreticos) which he composed in 434, three years after the Third Ecumenical Council of Ephesus had condemned the Nestorians. In this book he differentiated between the Church's teachings and the heresies of his time. He is remembered for saying that Christians must follow the true Faith which has been held “everywhere, always, and by all.” He also defended the term “Theotokos” being applied to the Mother of God, in opposition to the teachings of Nestorius which were condemned at the Third Ecumenical Council.
He reposed during the reign of Emperors Theodosios II and Valentinian III, i.e. in the year 450 or earlier. Saint Vincent was much appreciated by his contemporaries. Saint Eucherius of Lyons (November 16) calls him a holy man, conspicuous for his eloquence and knowledge. On the other hand, Saint Vincent humbly describes himself as "the least of all the servants of God, and less than the least of all the Saints, and unworthy to bear the holy name of a Christian."
Saint Vincent fell asleep in the Lord about 445.. His holy relics are preserved at Lerins.
Source: Orthodox Church in America_OCA
ACTS 14:20-27
20 However, when the disciples gathered around him, he rose up and went into the city. And the next day he departed with Barnabas to Derbe. 21 And when they had preached the gospel to that city and made many disciples, they returned to Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch, 22 strengthening the souls of the disciples, exhorting them to continue in the faith, and saying, "We must through many tribulations enter the kingdom of God." 23 So when they had appointed elders in every church, and prayed with fasting, they commended them to the Lord in whom they had believed. 24 And after they had passed through Pisidia, they came to Pamphylia. 25 Now when they had preached the word in Perga, they went down to Attalia. 26 From there they sailed to Antioch, where they had been commended to the grace of God for the work which they had completed. 27 Now when they had come and gathered the church together, they reported all that God had done with them, and that He had opened the door of faith to the Gentiles.
JOHN 9:39-10:9
39 And Jesus said, "For judgment I have come into this world, that those who do not see may see, and that those who see may be made blind." 40 Then some of the Pharisees who were with Him heard these words, and said to Him, "Are we blind also?" 41 Jesus said to them, "If you were blind, you would have no sin; but now you say, 'We see.' Therefore your sin remains.
1 Most assuredly, I say to you, he who does not enter the sheepfold by the door, but climbs up some other way, the same is a thief and a robber. 2 But he who enters by the door is the shepherd of the sheep. 3 To him the doorkeeper opens, and the sheep hear his voice; and he calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. 4 And when he brings out his own sheep, he goes before them; and the sheep follow him, for they know his voice. 5 Yet they will by no means follow a stranger, but will flee from him, for they do not know the voice of strangers. 6 Jesus used this illustration, but they did not understand the things which He spoke to them. 7 Then Jesus said to them again, "Most assuredly, I say to you, I am the door of the sheep. 8 All who ever came before Me are thieves and robbers, but the sheep did not hear them. 9 I am the door. If anyone enters by Me, he will be saved, and will go in and out and find pasture.
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Holidays 9.3
Holidays
Andrew Luck Day (Indiana)
Anniversary of the End of the Second World War (Russia)
Another Luck Unlimited Day
Armed Forces Day (Taiwan)
Beslan Remembrance Day
Brazilian Day
Broadcast Day (South Korea)
Civil Aviation Day (Tajikistan)
Cromwell’s Day
Day of Universal Alarm
Day to Mourn All Manifestations of Sexism
Drexciya Day
Feast of Atqksak (Baffin Land)
Flag Day (Australia)
Foundation Day (San Marino)
Gaura Parba (Nepal)
Harvest Bell Day (a.k.a. Hare Bell)
Levy Mwanawasa Day (Zambia)
Lost Day
Lower Case Letter Day
Memorial Day (Tunisia)
Merchant Navy Day (UK)
Merchant Navy Remembrance Day (Canada)
National Army Day (Moldova)
National Dahlia Day
National Day of Prayer for the Victims of Hurricane Harvey
National Guard Day (Tajikistan)
National High Heels Day
National Holiday of Commemoration (Tunisia)
National Shoot Your Shot Day
National Stephen Day
National Wilderness Day
903 Day (Texas)
Penny Press Day
Richard the Lionheart Day (UK)
Skyscraper Day
Solidarity Against Terrorism Day (Russia)
Tales and Tallows Day (Elder Scrolls)
Teasel Day (French Republic)
That Day I’ll Always Remember (in the song “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone,” by The Temptations)
Tokehega Day (Tokalau, New Zealand)
U.S. Bowling League Day
V-J Day (China)
World Day of Hygiene
Yamashita Surrender Day (Philippines)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Afternoon Tea Time Day
International Rosé Day
National Barbecue Baby Back Ribs Day
National Welsh Rarebit Day
Independence & Related Days
Bir Tawil (Declared; 2022) [unrecognized]
Day of Liberation of Monaco (Monaco)
Irida City Foundation Day (Philippines)
Mexico (Formally Recognized by US; 1923)
Qatar (from UK, 1971)
San Marino (Founded; 301 C.E.)
United States (Formally Recognized by Great Britain; 1783)
Yeesland (Declared; 2017) [unrecognized]
1st Tuesday in September
Another Look Unlimited Day [Tuesday after 1st Monday]
Camo Tuesday [1st Tuesday]
Play Days begin [Tuesday through Saturday after 1st Monday]
Protect Your Groundwater Day [1st Tuesday]
Taco Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Takeout Tuesday [1st Tuesday of Each Month]
Target Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Tater Tot Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Telephone Tuesday [Tuesday after 1st Monday]
To-Do List Tuesday [1st Tuesday of Each Month]
Tranquil Tuesday [1st Tuesday of Each Month]
Trivia Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Two For Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
World Art Drop Day [1st Tuesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning September 3 (1st Full Week of September)
Play Days (thru 9.7] [Tuesday thru Saturday after Labor Day]
Festivals Beginning September 3, 2024
Barbera Festival (Plymouth, California)
Bigsound (Brisbane City, Australia) [thru 9.5]
Tennessee Soybean Festival (Martin, Tennessee) [thru 9.7]
Van Buren County Livestock Show & Fair (Clinton, Arkansas) [thru 9.7]
Feast Days
Aigulf (Christian; Martyr)
Akwambo (Path Clearing Festival; Akan People of Ghana)
Alison Lurie (Writerism)
Armand Vaillancourt (Artology)
Baile and Ailinn (Celtic Book of Days)
Barkley (Muppetism)
Bengt Lindström (Artology)
Bernard de Pailissy (Positivist; Saint)
Cuthburga (Christian; Saint)
Day of Mimi’s Well (Pagan)
Day of Universal Alarm (Shamanism)
Drexciya Day
Gregory I, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Gregory the Great (Christian; Saint)
Hildelitha (Christian; Saint & Virgin)
John Picacio (Artology)
Joseph Wright (Artology)
Lawrence Clark Powell (Writerism)
Lawrence Welk Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Macnisius of Ireland (Christian; Saint)
Maidens of the Four Directions (Hopi Native Americans)
Malcolm Gladwell (Writerism)
Mansuetus of Toul (Christian; Saint)
Marinus (Christian; Saint)
Mort Walker (Artology)
Paul Kane (Artology)
Phoebe (Christian; Saint)
Pius X, pope (Christian; Saint)
Remaclus (Christian; Saint)
Prudence Crandall (Episcopal Church (USA))
Sarah Orne Jewett (Writerism)
Say No to Haggis Day (Pastafarian)
Simeon Stylites the Younger (Christian; Saint)
Wendy O. Williams Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Dismal Day (Unlucky or Evil Day; Medieval Europe; 17 of 24)
Egyptian Day (Unlucky Day; Middle Ages Europe) [17 of 24]
Fatal Day (Pagan) [17 of 24]
Lucky Day (Philippines) [49 of 71]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Unlucky Day (Grafton’s Manual of 1565) [40 of 60]
Premieres
Bosko the Lumberjack (WB LT Cartoon; 1932)
Cartoons Ain’t Human (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1943)
The Cat and the Mermouse (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1949)
Dime to Retire (WB LT Cartoon; 1955)
Do You Really Want To Hurt Me?, by Culture Club (UK Song; 1982)
Fantastic Voyage, by Isaac Asimov (Novel; 1966)
From Hare to Heir (WB MM Cartoon; 1960)
Funf Orchesterstucke (Five Pieces for Orchestra), by Arnold Schoenberg (1912)
Funny Business in the Books or The Library Card (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 210; 1963)
Going the Distance (Film; 2010)
The Gold Rush, featuring Flip the Frog (MGM Cartoon; 1932)
Goodnight Moon, by Margaret Wise Brown (Children’s Book; 1947)
Johnny Got His Gun, by Dalton Trumbo (Novel; 1939)
Listen Without Prejudice, by George Michael (Album; 1990)
Machete (Film; 2010)
The Man in the Queue, by Josephine Tey (Novel; 1929) [Alan Grant #1]
Mister and Mistletoe (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1955)
Never Go Back, 18th Jack Reacher book, by Lee Child (Novel; 2013)
Old Smokey, featuring the Captain and the Kids (MGM Cartoon; 1938)
The Prisoner of Zenda (Film; 1937)
Roll the Bones, by Rush (Album; 1991)
The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea, by Yukio Mishima (Novel; 1963)
Scooby-Doo! In Arabian Nights (WB Animated Film; 1994)
Scooby-Doo! Return to Zombie Island (WB Animated Film; 2019)
Search for Tomorrow (TV Soap Opera; 1951)
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (Film; 2021)
The Sky Scrapper (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Disney Cartoon; 1928)
Snow Place Like Home (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1948)
Something Happened, by Joseph Heller (Novel; 1974)
Special Delivery Stomp, recorded by Artie Shaw (Song;1940)
Tenet (Film; 2020)
Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry (WB Animated Film; 2005)
Topsy Turvy World, Part 1 (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 209; 1963)
The Trouble with Girls (Elvis Presley Film; 1969) [#30]
The Villain Still Pursued Her (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1937)
Ye Happy Pilgrims (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1934)
Today’s Name Days
George, Gregor, Silvia, Sophie (Austria)
Gordana, Grga, Grgur (Croatia)
Bronislav (Czech Republic)
Seraphia (Denmark)
Solveig, Veegi (Estonia)
Soila, Soile, Soili (Finland)
Grégoire (France)
Gregor, Phoebe, Silvia, Sonja (Germany)
Anthimos, Arhontia, Arhontion, Aristea, Ariston, Phoebe, Phoebi, Phevos, Polydoros (Greece)
Hilda (Hungary)
Fausto, Felice, Gregorio, Lorenzo, Marino, Rosa, Teodoro (Italy)
Bella, Berta, Klaudija, Klaudijs, Slaida (Latvia)
Bronislova, Bronislovas, Mirga, Sirtautas (Lithuania)
Alise, Alvhild, Vilde (Norway)
Antoni, Bartłomiej, Bazylissa, Bronisław, Bronisz, Erazma, Eufemia, Eufrozyna, Izabela, Jan, Joachim, Joachima, Manswet, Mojmir, Szymon, Wincenty, Zenon, Zenona (Poland)
Antim, Meletie, Neofit (Romania)
Belo (Slovakia)
Basilisa, Gregorio (Spain)
Alfhild, Alva (Sweden)
Page, Paige, Phebe, Phoebe, Phoebus (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 247 of 2024; 119 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of Week 36 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Muin (Vine) [Day 4 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Guy-You), Day 1 (Geng-Wu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 30 Av 5784
Islamic: 28 Safar 1446
J Cal: 7 Gold; Sevenday [6 of 30]
Julian: 21 August 2024
Moon: 1%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 23 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Riquet]
Runic Half Month: Rad (Motion) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 76 of 94)
Week: 1st Full Week of September
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 13 of 32)
Calendar Changes
桂月 [Guìyuè] (Chinese Lunisolar Calendar) [Month 8 of 12] (Osmanthus Month) [Earthly Branch: Rooster Month] (Bāyuè; Eighth Month)
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SAINT OF THE DAY (September 11)
Born to a pious family in 423 A.D., Theodosius began his studies at an early age and became a lector while still an adolescent.
The example of Abraham led him to leave home in order to properly follow God.
He met Saint Simeon Stylites in Antioch. Simeon recognized him as a holy man and leader. He invited Theodosius onto his pillar for prayer, blessing, and advice.
He then traveled to Jerusalem where legend says he worked with Saint Longinus, who would have been nearly 500 years old at the time.
After a time, he was given charge of a small church near Bethlehem, however, his time there did not last long.
Dreading the vanity that comes from the esteem of men and unable to live in solitude with the multitude of admirers, he retired to a cave in the desert of Judah where he led a hermit's life.
Word of his holiness began to attract disciples, and Theodosius built a monastery at Cathismus to house them.
So many came that there had to be sections built for Greeks, for Armenians, for Persions, etc., but they all happily worked and prayed together.
Next to the monastery, he built a hospital for the sick, a hospice for the aged, and a mental hospital.
He became a friend of and co-worker with Saint Sabbas. He was later appointed visitor to all cenobitical communities of Palestine, the patriarch of Jerusalem.
He opposed heresies, including Eutychianism and Monophysitism.
Emperor Anastatius, a supporter of Eutychianism, once sent Theodosius a large bribe, hoping to sway the influential monk to his thinking.
However, Theodosius distributed the money to the poor and continued to preach against heresy.
Because of his orthodox views, Anastatius removed him from his position in 513, but he soon resumed his duties under emperor Justinian.
He continued to work until his health gave out and spent the rest of his time praying for his community.
He died at the age of 105.
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Today we celebrate the memory of our Venerable Father Theodosius the Great, the Cenobiarch. Saint Theodosius the Great is considered the founding father of Cenobitic Monasticism (monks living a common life together) and is thus given the epithet of Cenobiarch. Born in Cappadocia to pious parents, Theodosius spent much time in church reading and chanting as the Lord had endowed him with an angelic voice. Praying that he might find the way to salvation, Theodosius visited the Holy Lands and met Saint Simeon the Stylite who prophesied his future in pastoral service. Longing for the solitary life of a monk, Theodosius settled into a deserted cave in Palestine, the same cave in which the Three Magi had spent the night after having come to worship the new born Christ. Having dwelt in this cave for thirty years in strict asceticism and unceasing prayer, many people began to flock to the Saint for spiritual guidance. He accepted them as his fellow monks and when the cave became too small to house them all, Theodosius, through divine inspiration, did the following. Carrying with him only a small censer with an unlit charcoal and incense, he ventured out into the desert while praying. At a certain spot in the desert, the charcoal ignited itself and the incense smoke began to rise. On this spot is where Saint Theodosius established the first cenobitic monastery where all the monks (numbering up to 700) lived a common life. Not only did the monastery house the monks, but it also served the poor and wanderers. One time, there was a severe famine in Palestine and Saint Theodosius opened the monastery to all. Knowing that the monastery could not provide for all the people, the monks started to complain, however through the prayers of Saint Theodosius, the bread house was full every time they went in. As well as his hospitality, Saint Theodosius fought valiantly against various heresies, anathematising those who did not heed the first four Ecumenical Councils (the fourth being the most recent). Saint Theodosius performed many miracles during his life and prophesied many things. At the age of 105, the blessed elder reposed in the Lord. May he intercede for us always +
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