Commemorated on June 9
Saint David of Gareji was Syrian by birth. The future ascetic became a
disciple of St. John of Zedazeni and journeyed with him to Georgia. St.
David and his spiritual son Lucian settled on a mountain above Tbilisi,
the capital of Kartli.
At that time Kartli was
constantly under threat of the Persian fire-worshippers. St. David would
spend entire days in prayer, beseeching the Lord for forgiveness of the
sins of those who dwelt in the city. When he was finished praying for
the day, he would stand on the mountain and bless the whole city. Once a
week Sts. David and Lucian would go down into the city to preach. A
church dedicated to St. David was later built on the mountain where he
labored.
St. David’s authority and popularity alarmed the
fire-worshippers, and they accused him of adultery, in an attempt to
discredit him in the eyes of the people. As a “witness” they summoned a
certain expectant prostitute, who accused him of being the child’s
father. Hoping in God, the holy father touched his staff to the
prostitute’s womb and ordered the unborn child to declare the truth.
From out of the womb the infant uttered the name of his true father.
Outraged
at this slander, the bystanders savagely stoned the woman to death. St.
David pleaded with them to stop, but he was unable to placate the
furious crowd. Deeply disturbed by these events, St. David departed the
region with his disciple Lucian.
The holy fathers settled in a
small cave in the wilderness and began to spend all their time in
prayer. They ate nothing but herbs and the bark of trees. When the herbs
withered from the summer heat, the Lord sent them deer. Lucian milked
them and brought the milk to St. David, and when the elder made the sign
of the Cross over the milk it was miraculously transformed into cheese.
Shaken
by the holy father’s miracle, Lucian told him, “Even if my body rots
and wastes away from hunger and thirst, I will not permit myself to fret
over the things of this temporal life.”
The fathers kept a strict
fast on Wednesdays and Fridays—they ate nothing, and even the deer did
not come to them on those days.
A frightful serpent inhabited a
cave not far from where they lived and attacked all the animals around
it. But at St. David’s command the serpent deserted that place.
Once
local hunters were tracking the fathers’ deer, and they caught sight of
Lucian milking them as they stood there quietly, as though they were
sheep. The hunters paid great respect to St. David and, having returned
to their homes, reported what they had seen.
Soon the Gareji
wilderness filled with people who longed to draw nearer to Christ. A
monastery was founded there, and for centuries it stood fast as a center
and cornerstone of faith and learning in Georgia.
After some
time St. David set off on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. He entrusted Lucian
to fulfill his responsibilities at the monastery and took some of the
other brothers with him. When the pilgrims were approaching the place
called the “Ridge of Grace,” from which the holy city of Jerusalem
becomes visible, St. David fell to his knees and glorified God with
tears. Judging himself unworthy to follow in the footsteps of Jesus
Christ, he was satisfied to gaze upon the city from afar.
Then he
stood at the city gates and prayed fervently while his companions
entered the Holy City and venerated the holy places. Returning, St.
David took with him three stones from the “Ridge of Grace.” That night
an angel appeared to the patriarch of Jerusalem and informed him that a
certain pious man named David, who was visiting from afar, had taken
with him all the holiness of Jerusalem.
The angel proceeded to
tell him that the venerable one had marched through the city of Nablus,
clothed in tatters and bearing on his shoulders an old sack in which he
carried the three holy stones. The patriarch sent messengers after the
stranger with a request that he return two of the stones and take only
one for himself. St. David returned the two stones, but he declined the
patriarch’s invitation to visit him. He took the third stone back with
him to the monastery, and to this day it has been full of the grace of
miraculous healing.
After St. David brought the miraculous stone
from Jerusalem, the number of brothers at the monastery doubled. The
venerable father ministered to all of them and encouraged them. He also
visited the cells of the elder hermits to offer his solace. In
accordance with his will, a monastery in the name of St. John the
Baptist was founded in the place called “Mravalmta” (the Rolling
Mountains).
The Lord God informed St. David of his imminent
departure to the Kingdom of Heaven. Then he gathered the fathers of the
wilderness and instructed them for the last time not to fall into
confusion, but to be firm and ceaselessly entreat the Lord for the
salvation of their souls.
He received Holy Communion, lifted up his hands to the Lord, and gave up his spirit.
St.
David’s holy relics have worked many miracles: approaching them, those
blind from birth have received their sight. To this day, believers have
been healed of every spiritual and bodily affliction at his grave.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2014(with 2013's link here also and further:, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!):
My Substack
-
I have a home on Substack where I publish thought pieces, poetry and other
creative work. Clifton’s Newsletter
14 hours ago
No comments:
Post a Comment