Commemorated on April 5
Saint Mark was born in Athens. He related his life to Abba Serapion who, by the will of God, visited him before his death.
He
had studied philosophy in his youth. After the death of his parents,
Saint Mark withdrew into Egypt and settled into a cave of Mount Trache
(in Ethiopia). He spent ninety-five years in seclusion and during this
time not only did he not see a human face, but not even a beast or bird.
The first thirty years were the most difficult for Saint Mark.
Barefoot and bedraggled, he suffered from the cold in winter, and from
the heat in summer. The desert plants served him for food, and sometimes
he had to eat the dust and drink bitter sea water. Unclean spirits
chased after Saint Mark, promising to drown him in the sea, or to drag
him down from the mountain, shouting, “Depart from our land! From the
beginning of the world no one has come here. Why have you dared to
come?”
After thirty years of tribulation, divine grace came upon
the ascetic. Angels brought him food, and long hair grew on his body,
protecting him from the cold and heat. He told Abba Serapion, “I saw the
likeness of the divine Paradise, and in it the prophets of God Elias
and Enoch. The Lord sent me everything that I sought.”
During his
conversation with Abba Serapion, Saint Mark inquired how things stood
in the world. He asked about the Church of Christ, and whether
persecutions against Christians still continued. Hearing that idol
worship had ceased long ago, the saint rejoiced and asked, “Are there
now in the world saints working miracles, as the Lord spoke of in His
Gospel, ‘If ye have faith even as a grain of mustard seed, ye will say
to this mountain, move from that place, and it will move, and nothing
shall be impossible for you’ (Mt.17:20)?”
As the saint spoke
these words, the mountain moved from its place 5,000 cubits
(approximately 2.5 kilometers) and went toward the sea. When Saint Mark
saw that the mountain had moved, he said, “I did not order you to move
from your place, but was conversing with a brother. Go back to your
place!” After this, the mountain actually returned to its place. Abba
Serapion fell down in fright. Saint Mark took him by the hand and asked,
“Have you never seen such miracles in your lifetime?”
“No,
Father,” Abba Serapion replied. Then Saint Mark wept bitterly and said,
“Alas, today there are Christians in name only, but not in deeds.”
After
this, Saint Mark invited Abba Serapion to a meal and an angel brought
them food. Abba Serapion said that never had he eaten such tasty food
nor drunk such sweet water. “Brother Serapion,” answered Saint Mark,
“did you see what beneficence God sends His servants? In all my days
here God sent me only one loaf of bread and one fish. Now for your sake
He has doubled the meal and sent us two loaves and two fishes. The Lord
God has nourished me with such meals ever since my first sufferings from
evil.”
Before his death, Saint Mark prayed for the salvation of
Christians, for the earth and everything in the world living upon it in
the love of Christ. He gave final instructions to Abba Serapion to bury
him in the cave and to cover the entrance. Abba Serapion was a witness
of how the soul of the one hundred- thirty-year-old Elder Mark, was
taken to Heaven by angels.
After the burial of the saint, two
angels in the form of hermits guided Abba Serapion into the inner desert
to the great Elder John. Abba Serapion told the monks of this monastery
about the life and death of Saint Mark.
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!):
God’s Warriors and Inner Silence. The Theme of Monasticism in the work of
Pavel Ryzhenko
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