Commemorated on April 12
Saint Athanasia was abbess of a monastery on the island of Aegina in
the ninth century. She was born into a pious Christian family, and her
parents were named Nicetas and Marina. Already at seven years of age the
girl studied the PSALTER, which she read constantly and with feeling.
Once, while working at the weaver’s loom, St Athanasia saw a shining
star coming down to her from above, which touched her bosom and
lightened all her being, and then disappeared. From that moment, the
maiden was illumined in soul and she firmly resolved to enter a
monastery.
When St Athanasia reached the age of sixteen, her
parents entreated her to marry. She consented, but after sixteen days
her husband was killed by barbarians who invaded Aegina.
St
Athanasia decided to take advantage of her unexpected freedom and
dedicate herself to God. Then the emperor Michael the Stammerer
(820-829) issued a decree ordering all young widows and virgins to take
husbands. Therefore, St Athanasia was forced to marry again. It is said
that her second husband was a Moslem, whom she converted by her holy way
of life.
She led a pious and virtuous life. She did housework,
helped the sick and those in need, and took in wanderers. On Sundays and
feastdays she invited family and acquaintances to her home and read the
Holy Scriptures to them. Under her influence, her husband entered a
monastery, and progressed in virtue and holiness. Soon, he departed to
the Lord.
The saint gave away her property, became a nun, and
founded a women’s monastery in a remote place. After four years, the
sisters asked St Athanasia to become the abbess of the small community.
In spite of her position, the saint surpassed all the others in meekness
and humility. She asked about the infractions of the sisters with love,
not anger.
Although St Athanasia had the title of abbess, she
regarded herself as the least of the sisters and always had in mind the
commandment of the Savior: “Whoever would be first among you, let him be
your servant” (Mt. 20:27). The saint never permitted the sisters to
wait on her, not even to pour water over her hands.
St Athanasia
wore a hair-shirt, and over it clothes of coarse sheep’s wool. She slept
very little, and prayed most of the night. By day she labored together
with the sisters. On most days she ate only bread and water, and that in
moderation, and only after the ninth hour of the day. She never ate
cheese or fish except on Pascha and on the twelve Great Feasts. During
Lent, she did not eat bread or drink water. She would only eat some
vegetables every other day.
On the island of Aegina lived a
certain monk named Matthew, who had been an igumen. Each night he read
the whole PSALTER, and also read prayers. The saint slept sitting up and
only for a short time. He could not refrain from tears when the Psalms
were chanted, while reading prayers, or offering the Bloodless
Sacrifice.
He wore only a coarse hair-shirt, and through his
temperance and struggles his body became completely withered. He had a
special love for St John the Theologian. Once, during the the Divine
Liturgy he saw the Apostle standing by the altar table.
The saint
healed a paralytic with his mantle; by making the Sign of the Cross he
corrected the face of a man distorted by the actions of the devil; he
cast out demons and worked many other miracles. St Matthew blessed St
Athanasia to go to a more isolated place with her sisters. She built a
monastery on a desolate hill of the island near an ancient church of the
Protomartyr Stephen.
St Athanasia was granted the gift of healing
by God. After she healed a man afflicted with a malady of the eyes, a
crowd of people began to flock to her in order to receive healing from
their infirmities of soul and body. From the abundant gifts brought to
the monastery, she built three churches at the monastery: one dedicated
to the Most Holy Theotokos, another to the holy Prophet John the
Forerunner, and the third to St Nicholas the Wonderworker.
Her
increasing celebrity distressed the saint, and she took the two sisters
closest to her in spirit (Maria and Eupraxia) and went secretly to
Constantinople. There, as a simple nun, she entered one of the women’s
monasteries, where she lived for seven years.
Again, her holy life
attracted attention. The sisters of the Aegina monastery learned where
their abbess had gone, and they went to her imploring her to return.
Submitting to the will of God, she returned to the monastery she
founded. Soon after this she had a vision of two radiant men, giving her
a document which said: “Here is your freedom, take it and rejoice.”
St
Athanasia spent the twelve days before her death in unceasing prayer.
On the eve of the Dormition of the Most HolyTheotokos she summoned the
sisters and said that she was able to read the PSALTER only as far as
the twelfth Psalm. The saint asked them to continue reading the PSALTER
for her in church. The sisters went to church and there fulfilled her
request, and then they came to bid the saint farewell. She blessed them
and asked them to celebrate the Feast of the Dormition of the Most Holy
Theotokos solemnly and joyfully, and also to provide a meal for the poor
and destitute. Then, after Divine Liturgy, they could bury her body.
With these words, St Athanasia fell asleep in the Lord on August 14,
860.
The saint predicted that she would receive glory in Heaven
forty days after her death. On the fortieth day, two devout sisters were
granted to see St Athanasia and two radiant men standing before the
royal doors of the iconostasis. They clothed her with a purple robe
embroidered with gold, pearls, and precious stones. They set a crown on
her head, handed her a gleaming staff, and led her through the royal
doors into the altar.
Before her death, St Athanasia ordered the
nuns to feed the poor for forty days. The sisters, however, did not
fulfill her request and set out the memorial meal for only ten days. The
saint appeared to some of the sisters and said, “Let everyone know that
alms given for a departed soul for forty days after death, and food
offered to the hungry, appease God. If the departed souls are sinful,
they receive forgiveness from God. If they are righteous, then the good
deeds bring God’s mercy on the souls of those who perform them.
Then
she thrust her staff into the ground and became invisible. The staff
left behind sprouted the next day and became a live tree. A year after
the saint’s death, they led a possessed woman to the grave. When they
dug up the ground, they then noticed a fragrance and removed the coffin.
After she touched it, the demoniac was immediately healed. Then they
opened the lid of the coffin and saw the saint’s incorrupt body, from
which myrrh flowed.
St Athanasia looked like she was asleep. Her
face shone brightly, her body was preserved incorrupt and soft, and even
her hands were supple. The priests decided to place her body in church.
When they transferred the body into a new coffin, the nuns removed the
hair-shirt from her holy relics and wanted to dress her in silken
clothes, but the hands of St Athanasia were so firmly clasped to her
bosom, that the nuns could not dress her in the silken garb. Even in
death the saint displayed her love for poverty. Then one of the sisters
knelt down and began to pray to the saint, saying, “O lady, hear us as
you heard us when you lived with us. Now consent to be dressed in these
clothes, our humble gift to you.” St Athanasia, as though alive, lifted
and extended her hands into the clothing.
The holy relics of St Athanasia were put into a crypt and became a source of healings.
The Life of St Athanasia is found in Vatican codex 1660, which dates from the year 916.
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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