Commemorated on June 11
During the reign of the emperors Basil and Constantine
Porphyrogenitos, and the patriarchate of St Nicholas Chrysoberges
(984-995), a certain Elder and his disciple lived near Karyes, the
administrative center of the Holy Mountain.
One Saturday evening,
the Elder decided to go to Karyes to participate in the Vigil service
for Sunday. He left, instructing his disciple to remain behind and read
the service in their cell. As it grew dark, the disciple heard a knock
on the door. When he opened the door, he saw an unknown monk who called
himself Gabriel, and he invited him to come in. They stood before the
icon of the Mother of God and read the service together with reverence
and compunction. During the Ninth Ode of the Canon, the disciple began
to sing “My soul magnifies the Lord...” with the Irmos of St Cosmas the
Hymnographer (October 14), “More honorable than the Cherubim....”
The
stranger sang the next verse, “For He has regarded the low estate of
His handmaiden....” Then he chanted something the disciple had never
heard before, “It is truly meet to bless Thee, O Theotokos, ever-blessed
and most pure, and the Mother of our God...” Then he continued with,
“More honorable than the Cherubim....”
While the hymn was being
sung, the icon of the Theotokos shone with a heavenly light. The
disciple was moved by the new version of the familiar hymn, and asked
his guest to write the words down for him. When the stranger asked for
paper and ink, the disciple said that they did not have any.
The
stranger took a roof tile and wrote the words of the hymn on its surface
with his finger. The disciple knew then that this was no ordinary monk,
but the Archangel Gabriel. The angel said, “Sing in this manner, and
all the Orthodox as well.” Then he disappeared, and the icon of the
Mother of God continued to radiate light for some time afterward.
The tile was taken to Constantinople when St Nicholas Chrysoberges (December 16) was Patriarch.
SOURCE:
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