Commemorated on March 23
The Monk Martyr Nikon was born at Neapolis (Naples). His father was a
pagan, and his mother a Christian. He was not baptized, but his mother
secretly instructed him in the tenets of Christianity. Nikon was still a
pagan when he reached adulthood. He served as a soldier, and showed
unusual courage and strength.
Once, Nikon and his military
company were surrounded by enemies. In deadly peril, he remembered the
Christian precepts of his mother and, signing himself with the Sign of
the Cross, he prayed to God, vowing to be baptized if he were saved.
Filled with unusual strength, he killed many of the enemy, and put the
rest to flight.
He managed to return home, giving thanks to God
for preserving his life. With the blessing of his mother, he set off in
search of a priest. This was no easy thing to do in a time of
persecution. Saint Nikon took a ship to the island of Chios. He went up
on a high mountain and spent eight days in fasting and prayer,
entreating the Lord to help him.
An angel of God appeared to
Saint Nikon in a dream, showing him the way. Saint Nikon went to Mount
Ganos, where many monks were hidden, headed by Theodosius the Bishop of
Cyzicus. Saint Nikon received from the bishop both the mystery of
Baptism and the angelic schema (i.e., monastic tonsure). Living in the
cave church, Saint Nikon became an example for all the brethren.
When
Saint Nikon had lived on the mountain for three years, an angel
revealed to the bishop that Saint Nikon should be consecrated bishop,
and should move to the province of Sicily with all the monks. Bishop
Theodosius obeyed the angel, and then died after he had entrusted the
190 monks to Saint Nikon. After he buried Bishop Theodosius, Saint Nikon
sailed to Sicily with the brethren, and so was saved from approaching
barbarians.
By God’s grace, Saint Nikon came to his native city
Neapolis. He found his mother still alive, and he remained with her for
the final day of her life. His mother collapsed on his chest with tears
of joy and kissed him. Making a prostration to the ground, she said, “I
give thanks to You, O Lord, for You have permitted me to see my son as a
monk, and as a bishop. Now, my Lord, hear Your servant, and receive my
soul.” When she had finished this prayer, the righteous woman died.
Those present glorified God and buried her with psalmody.
Rumors
of Saint Nikon’s arrival spread through the city, and ten soldiers, his
former companions, came to see him. After conversing with the saint they
believed and were baptized, and went with him to Sicily. Having arrived
on the island, Saint Nikon settled with the monks in a desolate area,
called Gigia, near the river Asinum.
Many years passed, and there
was another persecution against Christians. Quintilian, the governor of
Sicily, was informed that Bishop Nikon was living nearby with many
monks. All 199 monks were seized and beheaded, but they left Saint Nikon
alive in order to torture him.
They burned him with fire, yet he
remained unharmed. They tied him to the tails of wild horses to be
dragged over the ground, but the horses would not budge from the spot.
They cut out the saint’s tongue, threw him off a high cliff, and finally
beheaded him. The body of the hieromartyr Nikon was left in a field to
be eaten by wild beasts and birds.
A certain shepherd, possessed
by an evil spirit, went to that place, and finding the body of the
saint, he immediately fell to the ground on his face. The unclean
spirit, vanquished by the power of the saint, had thrown him to the
ground and gone out from him with a loud shriek: “Woe is me, woe is me,
where can I flee from Nikon?”
The healed shepherd related this to
the people. The bishop of the city of Messina also learned of this,
then he and his clergy buried the bodies of Saint Nikon and his
disciples.
TROPARION - TONE 4
By your ascetic way of life / you conquered the crafty one, Holy Father
Nikon. / By virtue of your holy life you became a rule and model to your
disciples, / and with them you struggled for the Faith in the West. /
You have all attained glory in heaven.
KONTAKION - TONE 8
Of like discipline with the Ascetics, and rivaling the holy Athletes in
zeal, / you were offered to the Lord through martyrdom, steadfast and
righteous Martyrs. / As your sure guide you had the glorious Nikon; /
fighting together with him you sang: Alleluia.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2017(with 2016's link here also and further: 2015,2014 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, and even 2008!):
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