Commemorated on February 12
During the reign of Emperor Theophilus (829-842) the Byzantine Empire
raged with the heresy of iconoclasm. In accordance with the emperor’s
command, thousands of soldiers pillaged the empire, searching every
corner, city, and village for hidden icons.
Near the city of
Nicaea there lived a certain pious widow who had concealed an icon of
the Most Holy Theotokos. Before long the soldiers discovered it, and one
of them thrust his spear into the image.
But by God’s grace his
terrible deed was overshadowed by a miracle: blood flowed forth from the
wound on the face of the Mother of God.
The frightened soldiers quickly fled.
The
widow spent the whole night in vigil, praying before the icon of the
Most Holy Theotokos. In the morning, according to God’s will, she took
the icon to the sea and cast it upon the water. The holy icon stood
upright on the waves and began to sail westward.
Time passed, and
one evening the monks of the Iveron Monastery on Mt. Athos beheld a
pillar of light, shining upon the sea like the sun (ca. 1004). The
miraculous image lasted several days, while the fathers of the Holy
Mountain gathered together, marveling. Finally they descended to the
edge of the sea, where they beheld the pillar of light standing above
the icon of the Theotokos. But when they approached it, the icon moved
farther out to sea.
At that time a Georgian monk named Gabriel was
laboring at the Iveron Monastery. The Theotokos appeared to the fathers
of the Holy Mountain and told them that Gabriel alone was worthy to
retrieve the holy icon from the sea. At the same time, she appeared to
Gabriel and told him, “Enter the sea, and walk out upon the waves with
faith, and all will witness my love and mercy for your monastery.”
The
monks of Mt. Athos found Gabriel at the Georgian monastery and led him
down to the sea, chanting hymns, and censing with holy incense. Gabriel
walked out upon the water as though upon dry land, took the icon in his
arms, and obediently carried it back to shore.
This miracle occurred on Bright Tuesday.
While
the monks were celebrating a paraklesis of thanksgiving, a cold, sweet
spring miraculously gushed forth from the ground where the icon stood.
Afterwards they took the icon to a church and set it down in the
sanctuary with great reverence.
But the next morning one of the
monks came to light a lamp and discovered that the icon was no longer
where they had left it; now it was hanging on a wall near the entrance
gate. The disbelieving monks took it down and returned it to the
sanctuary, but the next day the icon was again found at the monastery
gate. This miracle recurred several times, until the Most Holy Virgin
appeared to Gabriel, saying, “Announce to the brothers that from this
day they should not carry me away. For what I desire is not to be
protected by you; rather I will overshadow you, both in this life and in
the age to come. As long as you see my icon in the monastery, the grace
and mercy of my Son shall never be lacking!”
Filled with
exceeding joy, the monks erected a small church near the monastery gate
to glorify the Most Holy Theotokos and placed the wonder-working icon
inside. The holy icon came to be known as the “Iveron Mother of God”
and, in Greek, Portaitissa. By the grace of the miraculous Iveron Icon
of the Theotokos, many miracles have taken place and continue to take
place throughout the world.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2013(with 2012's link here also and further, 2011, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!)
Hawaiian Icon received in Ireland for last stop on Western European trip
-
The parish was joined by hundreds of faithful from other churches and
missions in Ireland and Northern Ireland, and even some from Great Britain.
9 hours ago
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