May 12
Reading:
Saint Epiphanius was born about 310 in Besanduc, a village
of Palestine, of Jewish parents who were poor and tillers of the soil.
In his youth he came to faith in Christ and was baptized with his
sister, after which he distributed all he had to the poor and became a
monk, being a younger contemporary of Saint Hilarion the Great (see Oct.
21), whom he knew. He also visited the renowned monks of Egypt to learn
their ways. Because the fame of his virtue had spread, many in Egypt
desired to make him a bishop; when he learned of this, he fled,
returning to Palestine. But after a time he learned that the bishops
there also intended to consecrate him to a widowed bishopric, and he
fled to Cyprus. In Paphos he met Saint Hilarion, who told him to go to
Constantia, a city of Cyprus also called Salamis. Epiphanius answered
that he preferred to take ship for Gaza, which, despite Saint Hilarion's
admonitions, he did. But a contrary wind brought the ship to Constantia
where, by the providence of God, Epiphanius fell into the hands of
bishops who had come together to elect a successor to the newly-departed
Bishop of Constantia, and the venerable Epiphanius was at last
constrained to be consecrated, about the year 367. He was fluent in
Hebrew, Egyptian, Syriac, Greek, and Latin, and because of this he was
called "Five-tongued." He had the gift of working miracles, and was held
in such reverence by all, that although he was a known enemy of heresy,
he was well nigh the only eminent bishop that the Arians did not dare
to drive into exile when the Emperor Valens persecuted the Orthodox
about the year 371. Having tended his flock in a manner pleasing to God,
and guarded it undefiled from every heresy, he reposed about the year
403, having lived for ninety-three years. Among his sacred writings, the
one that is held in special esteem is the Panarion (from the Latin
Panarium, that is, "Bread-box,") containing the proofs of the truth of
the Faith, and an examination of eighty heresies.
Apolytikion in the Fourth Tone
O God of our Fathers, ever dealing with us according to Thy
gentleness: take not Thy mercy from us, but by their entreaties guide
our life in peace.
Kontakion in the Fourth Tone
Let us the faithful duly praise the most wondrous and sacred pair
of hierarchs, even Germanos together with the godly Epiphanios; for
these righteous Saints of God burned the tongues of the godless with the
sacred teachings which they most wisely expounded to all those who in
Orthodox belief do ever hymn the great myst'ry of piety.
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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