Commemorated on July 18
Saint Elizabeth was the older sister of Tsarina Alexandra, and was
married to the Grand Duke Sergius, the governor of Moscow. She converted
to Orthodoxy from Protestantism of her own free will, and organized
women from all levels of society to help the soldiers at the front and
in the hospitals.
Grand Duke Sergius was killed by an assassin’s
bomb on February 4, 1905, just as St Elizabeth was leaving for her
workshops. Remarkably, she visited her husband’s killer in prison and
urged him to repent.
After this, she began to withdraw from her
former social life. She devoted herself to the Convent of Sts Martha and
Mary, a community of nuns which focused on worshiping God and also
helping the poor. She moved out of the palace into a building she
purchased on Ordinka. Women from the nobility, and also from the common
people, were attracted to the convent.
St Elizabeth nursed sick
and wounded soldiers in the hospitals and on the battle front. On Pascha
of 1918, the Communists ordered her to leave Moscow, and join the royal
family near Ekaterinburg. She left with a novice, Sister Barbara, and
an escort of Latvian guards.
After arriving in Ekaterinburg, St
Elizabeth was denied access to the Tsar’s family. She was placed in a
convent, where she was warmly received by the sisters.
At the end
of May St Elizabeth was moved to nearby Alopaevsk with the Grand Dukes
Sergius, John, and Constantine, and the young Count Vladimir Paley. They
were all housed in a schoolhouse on the edge of town. St Elizabeth was
under guard, but was permitted to go to church and work in the garden.
On
the night of July 5, they were all taken to a place twelve miles from
Alopaevsk, and executed. The Grand Duke Sergius was shot, but the others
were thrown down a mineshaft, then grenades were tossed after them. St
Elizabeth lived for several hours, and could be heard singing hymns.
The bodies of St Elizabeth and St Barbara were taken to Jerusalem in 1920, and buried in the church of St Mary Magdalene.
TROPARION - TONE 4
Emulating the Lord’s self-abasement on the earth, / You gave up royal
mansions to serve the poor and disdained, / Overflowing with compassion
for the suffering. / And taking up a martyr’s cross, / In your meekness /
You perfected the Saviour’s image within yourself, / Therefore, with
Barbara, entreat Him to save us all, O wise Elizabeth.
KONTAKION - TONE 3
In the midst of worldliness, / thy mournful heart dwelt in Heaven; / in
barbaric godlessness, / Your valiant soul was not troubled; / You longed
to meet your Bridegroom as a confessor, / and He found you worthy of
your martyric purpose. / O Elizabeth, with Barbara, / Your brave
companion, / Pray to your Bridegroom for us.
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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