Commemorated on July 3
Saint George the God-bearer and Recluse labored in the Black
Mountains near Antioch during a time when the churches and monasteries
there flourished. Orthodox Christians from many parts of the world came
to settle there, and as a result, tensions often arose between monks of
different nationalities. In order to remain detached from the conflicts,
Fr. George found refuge in an impregnable cleft of a very high
mountain. For this reason he is also called St. George the Recluse.
Nevertheless,
the monks of the Black Mountains were well aware of the pious life led
by George the Recluse. Venerable George of the Holy Mountain journeyed
to the Black Mountains in search of a spiritual guide and, after praying
in each and every monastery, finally asked St. George the Recluse, “a
man innocent as a dove,” to fill this role.
George the Recluse
received the young ascetic and found a home for him in the monastery.
His disciple remained with him for three years, leading the strictest
ascetic life, until finally George the Recluse clothed him with the
schema and “perfected him in the monastic life.”
Then, after
sending him on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, he blessed George to resettle
at the Iveron Monastery on Mt. Athos and to continue the holy work of
St. Ekvtime of Mt. Athos.
George returned to the Holy Mountain
but, instead of translating books as his spiritual father had advised
him, he performed other obediences for seven years. When St. George the
Recluse heard this, he sent his disciple Theodore to Mt. Athos to rebuke
him and remind him that he was sent there to translate theological
texts from the Greek to the Georgian language. This time George of the
Holy Mountain humbly obeyed the will of his teacher.
When he was
not with George of the Holy Mountain, St. George the Recluse confined
himself to strict solitude and, like his spiritual son, dedicated much
of his time to literary pursuits. He was closely acquainted with the
writers of Iveron and other Georgian monasteries, and he encouraged his
spiritual son to continue his labor of translating Orthodox theological
literature.
St. George the Recluse copied Davit Mtbevari’s translations of the Life of Martha (the mother of Simeon of the Wonderful Mountain) and the Life of St. Barlaam
(of the Syro-Caucasus). When George heard that no copies of these Lives
existed on Mt. Athos, he transcribed the texts and sent them to the
Athonites.
St. George the God-bearer and Recluse reposed in 1068,
after the death of his venerable disciple St. George of the Holy
Mountain.
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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