Commemorated on December 18
Saint Daniel the Hesychast, the great wonderworker and instructor of
monastics, was born in Moldavia at the beginning of the fifteenth
century. He was baptized with the name Dumitru. When he was sixteen, he
became a monk of the monastery of St Nicholas at Radauti and received
the name David. His spiritual Father was St Leontius of Radauti (July
1). After many years of ascetical struggles, he became a chosen vessel
of the Spirit and was ordained to the holy priesthood.
He lived
for some years at the monastery of St Laurence in the Civoul de Sus
district. There he fulfilled his obediences during the day, and at night
he kept vigil, prayed, and wove baskets. He received the Great Schema
and the new name Daniel. He obtained the igumen’s blessing to live in
the wilderness in solitude, where he devoted himself to spiritual
struggles. Around 1450, he lived near the Neamts Monastery by Secu creek
for fourteen years. In time, people discovered where he lived and came
to visit him. Longing for solitude, he moved to northern Moldavia and
chiseled out a cell for himself in the face of a cliff near Putna creek.
Next to it, he carved out a small chapel for prayer.
After his
spiritual child St Stephen the Great (July 2) built the Putna Monastery,
which was consecrated in 1470, St Daniel moved near the Voronets
Monastery. Here too, he carved a small cell out of the rock under Soim
(Falcon) Cliff and lived a God-pleasing life for the next twenty years.
He guided many disciples in the principles of the spiritual life, and he
also had the gift of healing the sick of their physical infirmities.
In
1488, when he was over eighty years old, St Daniel went to live at the
Voronets Monastery, where he was chosen to be the igumen.
St
Daniel was a great ascetic and wonderworker, wise and clairvoyant.
People from near and far visited him seeking his spiritual advice, or to
confess their sins. He died in 1496 and was buried at the Voronet
Monastery, where people continue to venerate his tomb.
St Daniel was glorified by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1992.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2012(with 2011's link here also and further, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!)
Looking for Christ at Christmas
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For Evangelicals, it can be very hard to find Christ at the church
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