Commemorated on April 18
The Holy Martyr John Kulikos was born in the Greek district of
Epirus, in the city of Ioannina. His parents were pious, but he was
orphaned at an early age, and he went to Constantinople. With the means
left him by his parents, he built a small stall in the city bazaar and
was occupied with trade.
He loved to work, he honorably filled
all his orders, and his business was successful. However, his soul did
not yearn for earthly blessings, but for the Kingdom of Heaven.
St
John lived during difficult times. Constantinople was under the
dominion of the Turks, and Christians were subjected to oppressions.
Many Christian tradesmen and merchants went over to the Moslem religion.
St John reproached them for their betrayal of Christ, and he also
sustained the unwavering in their faith. The apostates were filled with
hatred for St John, and they desired his ruin. The saint knew this, but
was not afraid. He was willing to suffer for Christ.
On Great and
Holy Friday he went to his spiritual Father and asked his blessing to
seek martyrdom. The priest counselled the youth to examine himself and
to prepare himself by fasting and prayer, so that at the time of torture
he would not deny Christ. St John prayed ardently to the Lord to
strengthen him. At night on Great and Holy Saturday he saw himself in a
dream, standing in a fiery furnace and singing praises to the Lord.
Interpreting this vision as an indication to go to martyrdom, St John
received the Holy Mysteries and asked the priest’s blessing.
When
St John arrived at the market, the vexed tradesmen began to reproach
him that he had promised to renounced Christ, but that he was not
fulfilling his word. In reply, the martyr declared that he was a
Christian and had never renounced, nor would he ever renounce Christ.
Then
the envious merchants had him arrested. The judge tried to persuade St
John to accept Islam, for he respected him as a skilled master
craftsman. But the martyr steadfastly confessed himself a Christian. For
several days, they wearied him with hunger and thirst, and beat him
without mercy. They sentenced the martyr to be burned alive.
St
John met his sentence with joy. When they led him to the blazing fire,
he went boldly into the midst of the flames. The torturers, seeing that
St John was prepared to die in the fire, pulled him out and beheaded him
with the sword (+ 1526). They then threw the martyr’s head and body
into the fire.
Christians gathered up the bones of the martyr
which remained from the fire, and reverently brought them to the
cathedral church.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!):
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