Commemorated on November 28
The Monk Martyr and Confessor Stephen the New was born in 715 at
Constantinople into a pious Christian family. His parents, having two
daughters, prayed the Lord for a son. The mother of the new-born Stephen
took him to the Blachernae church of the Most Holy Theotokos and
dedicated him to God.
Monkmartyr and Confessor Stephen the New of Mt St Auxentius
During the reign of the emperor Leo the
Isaurian (716-741) there was a persecution against the holy icons and
against those venerating them. With the support of the emperor, the
adherents of the Iconoclast heresy seized control of the supreme
positions of authority in the Empire and in the Church. Persecuted by
the powers of this world, Orthodoxy was preserved in monasteries far
from the capital, in solitary cells, and in the brave and faithful
hearts of its followers.
The Orthodox parents of Saint Stephen,
grieved by the prevailing impiety, fled from Constantinople to Bithynia,
and they gave over their sixteen-year-old son in obedience to the monk
John, who labored in asceticism in a solitary place on the Mount of
Saint Auxentius. Saint Stephen dwelt with the venerable monk John for
more than fifteen years, devoting himself totally to this spirit-bearing
Elder, and learning monastic activity from him. Here Stephen received
the news that his father was dead, and his mother and sisters had been
tonsured as nuns.
After a certain time his teacher John also died.
With deep sorrow Saint Stephen buried his venerable body, and continued
with monastic effort in his cave by himself. Soon monks began to come
to the ascetic, desiring to learn from him the virtuous and salvific
life, and a monastery was established, with Saint Stephen as the igumen.
At forty-two years of age Stephen left the monastery he founded, and he
went to another mountain, on whose summit he dwelt in deep seclusion in
a solitary cell. But here also a community of monks soon gathered,
seeking the spiritual guidance of Saint Stephen.
Leo the Isaurian
was succeeded by Constantine Copronymos (741-775), a fiercer persecutor
of the Orthodox, and an even more zealous iconoclast. The emperor
convened an Iconoclast Council, attended by 358 bishops from the Eastern
provinces. However, except for Constantine, the Archbishop of
Constantinople, illegitimately raised to the patriarchal throne by the
power of Copronymos, not one of the other patriarchs participated in the
wicked doings of this Council, thus making it less likely to style
itself as “ecumenical.” This council of heretics, at the instigation of
the emperor and the archbishop, described icons as idols, and pronounced
an anathema on all who venerated icons in the Orthodox manner, and it
described icon veneration as heresy.
Meanwhile, the monastery of
Mount Auxentius and its igumen became known in the capital. They told
the emperor about the ascetic life of the monks, about their Orthodox
piety, about the igumen Stephen’s gift of wonderworking, and of how
Saint Stephen’s fame had spread far beyond the region of the monastery,
and that the name of its head was accorded universal respect and love.
The saint’s open encouragement of icon veneration and the implied rebuff
to the persecutors of Orthodoxy within the monastery of Mount Auxentius
especially angered the emperor. Archbishop Constantine realized that in
the person of Saint Stephen he had a strong and implacable opponent of
his iconoclastic intentions, and he plotted how he might draw him over
to his side or else destroy him.
They tried to lure Saint Stephen
into the Iconoclast camp, at first with flattery and bribery, then by
threats, but in vain. Then they slandered the saint, accusing him of
falling into sin with the nun Anna. But his guilt was not proven, since
the nun courageously denied any guilt and died under torture and
beatings. Finally, the emperor gave orders to lock up the saint in
prison, and to destroy his monastery. Iconoclast bishops were sent to
Saint Stephen in prison, trying to persuade him of the dogmatic
correctness of the Iconoclast position. But the saint easily refuted all
the arguments of the heretics and he remained true to Orthodoxy.
Then
the emperor ordered that the saint be exiled on one of the islands in
the Sea of Marmora. Saint Stephen settled into a cave, and there also
his disciples soon gathered. After a certain while the saint left the
brethren and took upon himself the exploit of living atop a pillar. News
of the stylite Stephen, and the miracles worked by his prayers, spread
throughout all the Empire and strengthened the faith and spirit of
Orthodoxy in the people.
The emperor gave orders to transfer Saint
Stephen to prison on the island of Pharos, and then to bring him to
trial. At the trial, the saint refuted the arguments of the heretics
sitting in judgment upon him. He explained the dogmatic essence of icon
veneration, and he denounced the Iconoclasts because in blaspheming
icons, they blasphemed Christ and the Mother of God. As proof, the saint
pointed to a golden coin inscribed with the image of the emperor. He
asked the judges what would happen to a man who threw the coin to the
ground , and then trampled the emperor’s image under his feet. They
replied that such a man would certainly be punished for dishonoring the
image of the emperor. The saint said that an even greater punishment
awaited anyone who would dishonor the image of the King of Heaven and
His Saints, and with that he spat on the coin, threw it to the ground,
and began to trample it underfoot.
The emperor gave orders to take
the saint to prison, where already there were languishing 342 Elders,
condemned for the veneration of icons. In this prison Saint Stephen
spent eleven months, consoling the imprisoned. The prison became like a
monastery, where the usual prayers and hymns were chanted according to
the Typikon. The people came to the prison in crowds and asked Saint
Stephen to pray for them.
When the emperor learned that the saint
had organized a monastery in prison, where they prayed and venerated
holy icons, he sent two of his own servants, twin-brothers, to beat the
saint to death. When these brothers went to the prison and beheld the
face of the monk shining with a divine light, they fell down on their
knees before him, asking his forgiveness and prayers, then they told the
emperor that his command had been carried out. But the emperor learned
the truth and he resorted to yet another lie. Informing his soldiers
that the saint was plotting to remove him from the throne, he sent them
to the prison. The holy confessor himself came out to the furious
soldiers, who seized him and dragged him through the streets of the
city. They then threw the lacerated body of the martyr into a pit, where
they were wont to bury criminals.
On the following morning a
fiery cloud appeared over Mount Auxentius, and then a heavy darkness
descended upon the capital, accompanied by hail, which killed many
people.
TROPARION - TONE 4
Trained in asceticism on the mountain, / with the weapon of the Cross
you destroyed the spiritual assaults of the hostile powers, all-blessed
one; / Again you bravely prepared for combat / and slew Copronymus with
the sword of faith; / for both struggles you have been crowned by God,
monk-martyr Stephen of eternal memory.
KONTAKION - TONE 8
Lovers of the feasts, from the heart with hymns let us praise in faith /
godlike Stephen the lover of the Trinity, / for he honored the fair
icon of the Master and of His Mother. / Now let us rejoice together and
cry out to him with love: / “Rejoice, ever glorious Father.”
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2016(with 2015's link here also and further: 2014 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!):
Patriarch Kirill offers condolences after Azerbaijan Airlines crash in
Kazakhstan
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On the morning of December 25, 2024, an Azerbaijan Airlines plane flying
from Baku to Grozny, Chechnya crashed near Aktau in western Kazakhstan.
22 hours ago
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