Saint Thomas Dephourkinos was born in Bithynia. From his
youth he was fond of monastic life and entered one of the area
monasteries. Later in life, when the Byzantine official Galoliktos had
founded a monastery at the River Sagarisa, St Thomas was already an
experienced monk, and the brethren chose him as head of the new
monastery.
From there St Thomas withdrew into the wilderness,
where for a long time he labored in solitude. The monk overcame many
snares of the devil in the wilderness. The Lord glorified him with the
gift of healing and prophecy.
Once, the emperor Leo the Wise
(886-911) came to the monastery to St Thomas for advice. Not finding the
monk at the monastery, the emperor sent his messenger with a letter for
him. And just as the messenger arrived at the the Elder’s hut, the
saint carried out to him a sealed answer, resolving the emperor’s
question. It is not known when St Thomas reposed.
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One of the key features of the Gospels is the many prophecies of Christ
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Introduction
I. The pastoral Magisterium
II. When truth functions as law
III. The fence and the circle of orthodoxy
IV. Criticizing Magisterial failures
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