Commemorated February 22
Many centuries ago, the village of Kola was located at the source of
the Mtkvari River. There Christians and pagans dwelt together as
neighbors. Christian and pagan children would play together, but when
the Christian children heard church bells ringing, they recognized the
call to prayer and dropped their games. Nine pagan children—Guram,
Adarnerse, Baqar, Vache, Bardzim, Dachi, Juansher, Ramaz, and
Parsman—would follow the Christian children to church.
But the
Christians always stopped them near the gates of the church and
reprimanded them, saying, “You are children of pagans. You cannot enter
God’s holy house.” They would return sorry and dejected.
One day
the nine pagan children tried to enter the church forcibly, but they
were cast out and scolded. “If you want to enter the church, you must
believe in our Lord Jesus Christ and be baptized in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,” they were told. “You must
receive Holy Communion and join the community of Christian believers.”
With
great joy the youths promised the Christians that they would receive
Holy Baptism. When the Christians of Kola related to their priest the
good news of the pagan boys’ desire, he recalled the words of the
Gospel: He that loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of
Me: and he that loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me.
And he that takes not his cross, and follows after Me, is not worthy of
Me. (Matt. 10:37-38).
He was not afraid of the anger that
would follow from the pagan community, but rather took the boys on a
cold winter night and baptized them in the icy river. A miracle occurred
while the Holy Sacrament was being celebrated: the water became warm
and angelic hosts appeared to the youths. Greatly encouraged in their
faith, the children decided to remain in the Christian community rather
than return to their parents.
When their parents learned that they
had been baptized in the Christian Faith, they dragged their children
away from the church, abusing and beating them into submission all the
way home. The heroic children endured the abuses and, though they went
hungry and thirsty for seven days, repeated again and again, “We are
Christians and will not eat or drink anything that was prepared for
idols!”
Neither gentle flattery, nor costly clothing, nor
promises of good things to come could tempt the God-fearing youths.
Rather they asserted, “We are Christians and want nothing from you but
to leave us alone and allow us to join the Christian community!”
The
enraged parents went and reported to the prince everything that had
happened. But the prince was of no help—he simply told them, “They are
your children, do with them as you wish.” The obstinate pagans asked the
prince permission to stone the children. So a large pit was dug where
the youths had been baptized, and the children were thrown inside.
“We
are Christians, and we will die for Him into Whom we have been
baptized!” proclaimed the holy martyrs, the Nine Children of Kola,
before offering up their souls to God.
Their godless parents took
up stones, and then others joined in, until the entire pit had been
filled. They beat the priest to death, robbed him, and divided the
spoils among themselves.
The martyric contest of the Nine
Righteous Children of Kola occurred in the 6th century, in the
historical region of Tao in southern Georgia.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2012(with 2011's link here also and further, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!):
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