Commemorated on November 25
Saints Clement, Bishop of Ochrid, Equal of the Apostles, Naum, Sava,
Gorazd and Angelar were Slavs, disciples of Sts Cyril and Methodius (May
11). At first they lived as ascetics in Moravia, where St Gorazd
succeded St Methodius as bishop. He was fluent in Slavonic, Greek and
Latin. Sts Clement, Naum, Angelar and Sava were priests.
The
Enlighteners of the Slavs were opposed by German missionaries, who had
the support of the Pope and the patronage of the Moravian prince
Svyatopolk. The struggle centered around the questions of the need for
divine services in Slavonic, the Filioque and Saturday fasting. Pope
Stephen VI prohibited the use of Slavonic in church.
The
proponents of the three-tongued heresy (who wanted to use only Hebrew,
Greek, or Latin for Church purposes), after setting aside the ancestral
language of the Slavic peoples, brought the disciples of St Methodius to
trial, including St Clement. They subjected them to fierce torture:
dragging them through thorns, and holding them in prison for a long
time, just as they had done with their spiritual Father, St Methodius.
In
886, some of the prisoners were sold to slave-traders, and ended up in
the Venice marketplace. The ambassador of the Byzantine Emperor Basil
the Macedonian went to Venice, ransomed the saints and brought them to
Constantinople. The older confessors were banished. It is not known
where St Gorazd went, nor where St Sava found shelter. Naum and Angelar
went to Bulgaria.
In 907 Moravia collapsed under the onslaught of
the Magyars, and Moravian refugees escaped along those same paths
followed earlier by the saints they had exiled.
The Bulgarians
received the Slavonic confessors with respect and requested them to
conduct divine services in the Slavonic language. The Bulgarian prince
Boris sought out such people as the disciples of St Methodius, who
labored for the enlightenment of his nation. The saints immediately
began to study Slavonic books collected by the Bulgarian nobles.
St
Angelar soon died, and St Clement received the appointment to teach at
Kutmichivitsa, a region in southwest Macedonia. In the Eastern Church a
worthy man was chosen to be a teacher, someone known for his pious life,
and possessed with a gift of words. St Clement was a teacher while he
was still in Moravia. In Bulgaria, St Clement worked as an instructor
until 893. He organized a school at the princely court, which attained
high esteem during the reign of Simeon. In southwest Macedonia he
created separate schools for adults and for children.
St Clement
instructed the children in reading and in writing. The total number of
his students was enormous. Those chosen and accepted for the clergy
amounted to 3500 men. In the year 893, St Clement became Bishop of
Dremvitsa, or Velitsa, and St Naum took his place.
St Clement was
the first Bulgarian hierarch to serve, preach and write in the Slavonic
language. To this end he systematically prepared clergy from among the
Slavic people. The holy bishop labored for the glory of God into his old
age. When his strength failed, and he was unable to fulfill his
responsibilities in the cathedral, he asked Tsar Simeon to let him
retire.
The Tsar urged the saint not to forsake the cathedral,
and St Clement agreed to continue his episcopal service. After this he
went to Ochrid, to a monastery he founded. There the saint continued
with his translation activities and translated important parts of the
PENTEKOSTARION.
Soon the saint became seriously ill and departed
to the Lord in the year 916. The saint’s body was placed in a coffin he
made with his own hands, and was buried in Ochrid’s St Panteleimon
monastery.
St Clement is considered the first Slavonic author. He
not only continued the translation work begun by Sts Cyril and
Methodius, but also left behind works of his own composition, the first
samples of Slavonic spiritual literature.
Many of the lessons and
sermons of St Clement were brought to Russia, where they were read and
lovingly copied by pious Russian Christians.
St Clement is also commemorated on July 27.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2013(with 2012's link here also and further, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!)
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