Commemorated on November 14
Saint Gregory Palamas, Archbishop of Thessalonica, was born in the
year 1296 in Constantinople. Saint Gregory’s father became a prominent
dignitary at the court of Andronicus II Paleologos (1282-1328), but he
soon died, and Andronicus himself took part in the raising and education
of the fatherless boy. Endowed with fine abilities and great diligence,
Gregory mastered all the subjects which then comprised the full course
of medieval higher education. The emperor hoped that the youth would
devote himself to government work. But Gregory, barely twenty years old,
withdrew to Mount Athos in the year 1316 (other sources say 1318) and
became a novice in the Vatopedi monastery under the guidance of the
monastic Elder Saint Nicodemus of Vatopedi (July 11). There he was
tonsured and began on the path of asceticism. A year later, the holy
Evangelist John the Theologian appeared to him in a vision and promised
him his spiritual protection. Gregory’s mother and sisters also became
monastics.
After the demise of the Elder Nicodemus, Saint Gregory
spent eight years of spiritual struggle under the guidance of the Elder
Nicephorus, and after the latter’s death, Gregory transferred to the
Lavra of Saint Athanasius (July 5). Here he served in the trapeza, and
then became a church singer. But after three years, he resettled in the
small skete of Glossia, striving for a greater degree of spiritual
perfection. The head of this monastery began to teach the young man the
method of unceasing prayer and mental activity, which had been
cultivated by monastics, beginning with the great desert ascetics of the
fourth century: Evagrius Pontikos and Saint Macarius of Egypt (January
19).
Later on, in the eleventh century Saint Simeon the New
Theologian (March 12) provided detailed instruction in mental activity
for those praying in an outward manner, and the ascetics of Athos put it
into practice. The experienced use of mental prayer (or prayer of the
heart), requiring solitude and quiet, is called “Hesychasm” (from the
Greek “hesychia” meaning calm, silence), and those practicing it were
called “hesychasts.”
During his stay at Glossia the future
hierarch Gregory became fully imbued with the spirit of hesychasm and
adopted it as an essential part of his life. In the year 1326, because
of the threat of Turkish invasions, he and the brethren retreated to
Thessalonica, where he was then ordained to the holy priesthood.
Saint
Gregory combined his priestly duties with the life of a hermit. Five
days of the week he spent in silence and prayer, and only on Saturday
and Sunday did he come out to his people. He celebrated divine services
and preached sermons. For those present in church, his teaching often
evoked both tenderness and tears. Sometimes he visited theological
gatherings of the city’s educated youth, headed by the future patriarch,
Isidore. After he returned from a visit to Constantinople, he found a
place suitable for solitary life near Thessalonica the region of Bereia.
Soon he gathered here a small community of solitary monks and guided it
for five years.
In 1331 the saint withdrew to Mt Athos and
lived in solitude at the skete of Saint Sava, near the Lavra of Saint
Athanasius. In 1333 he was appointed Igumen of the Esphigmenou monastery
in the northern part of the Holy Mountain. In 1336 the saint returned
to the skete of Saint Sava, where he devoted himself to theological
works, continuing with this until the end of his life.
In
the 1330s events took place in the life of the Eastern Church which put
Saint Gregory among the most significant universal apologists of
Orthodoxy, and brought him great renown as a teacher of hesychasm.
About
the year 1330 the learned monk Barlaam had arrived in Constantinople
from Calabria, in Italy. He was the author of treatises on logic and
astronomy, a skilled and sharp-witted orator, and he received a
university chair in the capital city and began to expound on the works
of Saint Dionysius the Areopagite (October 3), whose “apophatic”
(“negative”, in contrast to “kataphatic” or “positive”) theology was
acclaimed in equal measure in both the Eastern and the Western Churches.
Soon Barlaam journeyed to Mt Athos, where he became acquainted with the
spiritual life of the hesychasts’. Saying that it was impossible to
know the essence of God, he declared mental prayer a heretical error.
Journeying from Mount Athos to Thessalonica, and from there to
Constantinople, and later again to Thessalonica, Barlaam entered into
disputes with the monks and attempted to demonstrate the created,
material nature of the light of Tabor (i.e. at the Transfiguration). He
ridiculed the teachings of the monks about the methods of prayer and
about the uncreated light seen by the hesychasts.
Saint Gregory,
at the request of the Athonite monks, replied with verbal admonitions at
first. But seeing the futility of such efforts, he put his theological
arguments in writing. Thus appeared the “Triads in Defense of the Holy
Hesychasts” (1338). Towards the year 1340 the Athonite ascetics, with
the assistance of the saint, compiled a general response to the attacks
of Barlaam, the so-called “Hagiorite Tome.” At the Constantinople
Council of 1341 in the church of Hagia Sophia Saint Gregory Palamas
debated with Barlaam, focusing upon the nature of the light of Mount
Tabor. On May 27, 1341 the Council accepted the position of Saint
Gregory Palamas, that God, unapproachable in His Essence, reveals
Himself through His energies, which are directed towards the world and
are able to be perceived, like the light of Tabor, but which are neither
material nor created. The teachings of Barlaam were condemned as
heresy, and he himself was anathemized and fled to Calabria.
But
the dispute between the Palamites and the Barlaamites was far from over.
To these latter belonged Barlaam’s disciple, the Bulgarian monk
Akyndinos, and also Patriarch John XIV Kalekos (1341-1347); the emperor
Andronicus III Paleologos (1328-1341) was also inclined toward their
opinion. Akyndinos, whose name means “one who inflicts no harm,”
actually caused great harm by his heretical teaching. Akyndinos wrote a
series of tracts in which he declared Saint Gregory and the Athonite
monks guilty of causing church disorders. The saint, in turn, wrote a
detailed refutation of Akyndinos’ errors. The patriarch supported
Akyndinos and called Saint Gregory the cause of all disorders and
disturbances in the Church (1344) and had him locked up in prison for
four years. In 1347, when John the XIV was replaced on the patriarchal
throne by Isidore (1347-1349), Saint Gregory Palamas was set free and
was made Archbishop of Thessalonica.
In 1351 the Council of
Blachernae solemnly upheld the Orthodoxy of his teachings. But the
people of Thessalonica did not immediately accept Saint Gregory, and he
was compelled to live in various places. On one of his travels to
Constantinople the Byzantine ship fell into the hands of the Turks. Even
in captivity, Saint Gregory preached to Christian prisoners and even to
his Moslem captors. The Hagarenes were astonished by the wisdom of his
words. Some of the Moslems were unable to endure this, so they beat him
and would have killed him if they had not expected to obtain a large
ransom for him. A year later, Saint Gregory was ransomed and returned to
Thessalonica.
Saint Gregory performed many miracles in the three
years before his death, healing those afflicted with illness. On the eve
of his repose, Saint John Chrysostom appeared to him in a vision. With
the words “To the heights! To the heights!” Saint Gregory Palamas fell
asleep in the Lord on November 14, 1359. In 1368 he was canonized at a
Constantinople Council under Patriarch Philotheus (1354-1355,
1364-1376), who compiled the Life and Services to the saint.
TROPARION - TONE 8
O light of Orthodoxy, teacher of the Church, its confirmation, / O ideal
of monks and invincible champion of theologians, / O wonder-working
Gregory, glory of Thessalonica and preacher of grace, / always intercede
before the Lord that our souls may be saved.
KONTAKION - TONE 8
Holy and divine instrument of wisdom, / joyful trumpet of theology, /
together we sing your praises, O God-inspired Gregory. / Since you now
stand before the Original Mind, guide our minds to Him, O Father, / so
that we may sing to you: “Rejoice, preacher of grace.”
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
-
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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