Commemorated on April 28
Saint Cyril, Bishop of Turov, was born of rich parents in the
thirties of the twelfth century in the city of Turov at the River
Pripyat.
From his early years St Cyril eagerly read the sacred
books and attained a profound understanding of them. He studied not only
in Russian, but also in Greek. When he reached maturity St Cyril
refused his inheritance and was tonsured in Turov’s St Boris and Gleb
monastery. He struggled much in fasting and prayer and taught the monks
to obey the igumen. A monk who is not obedient to the igumen does not
fulfill his vow, and therefore is not able to be saved.
Three
writings of St Cyril on monastic life have survived, one of which, “A
Narrative on the Black Clergy from the Old Law and from the New,” may be
ascribed to a period of his being in the monastery.
After a
certain while St Cyril lived on a pillar, where he increased his
asceticism, and meditated on the Holy Scripture. Many turned to him for
counsel in the spiritual life.
St Cyril’s holiness of life and
profound enlightenment became known to many, and so he was chosen as
Bishop of Turov. In 1169 St Cyril took part in a council censuring
Bishop Theodore, who occupied the Vladimir-Suzdal cathedra and who
sought to separate from the metropolitanate of Kiev. St Cyril denounced
the heresy of Theodore and wrote many letters to the holy prince Andrew
Bogoliubsky (July 4), in which he provided him instruction and guidance
in discovering the cause of church disorders in the Rostov region.
Because
of his love for solitude, St Cyril left his See (by the year 1182,
Bishop Laurence is mentioned as the Bishop of Turov) and he devoted
himself fully to spiritual writing. He composed a discourse on the
yearly cycle of the Lord’s Feasts, but not all of them have been
preserved. The works of St Cyril deserve a place beside the works of the
holy Fathers in book collections.
The most complete collection of works by St Cyril of Turov, published by Bishop Eugenius of Turov in 1880, includes:
Sermon on Palm Sunday, from Gospel accounts
Sermon on Holy Pascha on the Radiant Day of the Resurrection of Christ, from the prophetic accounts
Sermon
on the Sunday after Pascha, on the Renewal of the Resurrection, on the
Artos [loaf blessed on Pascha], and on Thomas Touching the Side of the
Lord
Sermon on Taking down the Body of Christ and on the
Myrrh-bearing Women, from the Gospel account, and in praise of Joseph on
the Third Sunday After Pascha
Sermon on the Paralytic from Genesis and from the Gospel account, on the Fourth Sunday After Pascha
Sermon on the Blind man and the enmity of the Jews from the Gospel account, on the Fourth Sunday After Pascha
Sermon
on the Ascension of the Lord, on Thursday of the Sixth Week After
Pascha, from prophetic decrees, and on Raising the Race of Adam from
Hades
Sermon on the Holy 318 Fathers, from the Holy Books, on
Christ the Son of God, and in praise of the Fathers of the Holy Council
of Nicea, on the Sunday Before Pentecost
Parable on the Blind and the Lame
Parable
on the Human Soul, and on the Body, and on Breaking God’s Commandments,
and on the Resurrection of the Human Body, and on the Future Judgment,
and on the Torment
Narrative on the Black Clergy, from the Old
Testament and from the New, bearing a common form, and the accomplishing
of this matter
To Igumen Basil: a Parable on the White Clergy, and on Monasticism, and on the Soul, and on Repentance
Letter of a certain Elder to the Blessed Archimandrite Basil on the Schema
Four Prayers on Sunday (after Matins, Hours, and two after Vespers)
Four Prayers on Monday
Four Prayers on Tuesday
Five Prayers on Wednesday (after Matins, Hours, and three after Vespers)
Three Prayers on Thursday (after Matins, Hours, Vespers)
Four Prayers on Friday (after Matins, Hours, and two after Vespers)
Six Prayers on Saturday (two after Matins, one after Hours, and three after Vespers)
Molieben Canon
Confession and Remembrance.
Later,
the “Sermon on the Enlightenment of our Lord Jesus Christ” was
discovered. The saint also composed a “Great Canon of Repentance to the
Lord in Alphabetic Chapters.” As a theologian St Cyril believed his task
was to discern the true and hidden meaning of various texts of Holy
Scripture.
St Cyril died on April 28, 1183. His contemporaries
regarded him as a Russian Chrysostom. The saint humbly wrote of himself:
“I am not a harvester, but I gather sheaves of grain; I am not an
artist in literary matters.” He was always conscious of the sublime
hierarchical service to which the Lord had called him: “If I were to
speak of my own opinions, you would do well not to come to church, but I
proclaim to you the Word of God. I read to you the accounts of Christ. I
present to you the words of God, finer than gold or other stones,
sweeter than mead or honeycomb, and you would be deprived of them by not
coming to church, ... but I praise and bless those of you who do come.”
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2013(with 2012's link here also and further, 2011, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!)
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