Commemorated on April 4
The holy New Martyr Nicetas was a Slav from Albania, but we know
nothing of his family or his early life. He lived on Mt. Athos in the
Russian monastery of St Panteleimon, then lived in the Skete of St Anne.
Burning with a desire for martyrdom, he decided to travel to Serres. He
arrived on March 30, 1808 (Great and Holy Monday) and stopped at a
local monastery. In speaking to the igumen, he revealed that he was a
hieromonk from Mt. Athos. At midnight, the igumen was making his
customary rounds of the monastery when he saw someone standing in the
moonlight praying on the church porch.
As he came closer, he could
see that it was Father Nicetas, who revealed his intention to shed his
blood for Christ. After speaking with the saint for a while, the igumen
continued his rounds and left Fr .Nicetas to pray.
In the morning,
Fr Nicetas received Communion from the Presanctified Gifts, then went
to a mosque outside the city. There he debated religion with a Moslem
teacher and his disciples. St Nicetas approached one of them, noticing
that he was lame.
The saint asked the man why he did not seek
healing from his infirmity. The man said that it was impossible for him
to be cured, since he had been born this way.
The monk replied
that the man could be cured easily, if he would agree to obey him. The
afflicted man looked at him with amazement and asked, “How must I obey
you?”
“Believe in Jesus Christ as the one true God. If you are
baptized, I promise you that you will be healthy and no trace of your
lameness will remain.”
The man said nothing, but went to his
teacher to report what the monk had said to him. The teacher questioned
St Nicetas about where he had come from, and what he had said to his
disciple.
Fearlessly, the warrior of Christ told him he was from
Albania and had come to preach Christianity. Feeling pity for the lame
man, he had advised him to believe in Christ so that he might receive
his bodily health and the Kingdom of Heaven after death.
The
teacher sent word to the mayor that a monk had come to their city and
was speaking against their religion. St Nicetas was locked up in prison
for the night, and the next day he was interrogated by Moslem religious
leaders. Since they could not defeat him with reason, they tortured him
and hanged him in the evening of Great and Holy Saturday in 1808. He was
left hanging until Bright Tuesday, when Christians were given
permission to take his body and bury it.
Two separate services
have been composed in honor of St Nicetas, one in Slavonic and the other
in Greek. A comparison of the two services reveals a difference of
opinion about the saint’s national origin.
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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