Commemorated on September 11
Saint Euphrosynus the Cook was from one of the Palestinian
monasteries, and his obedience was to work in the kitchen as a cook.
Toiling away for the brethren, St Euphrosynus did not absent himself
from thought about God, but rather dwelt in prayer and fasting. He
remembered always that obedience is the first duty of a monk, and
therefore he was obedient to the elder brethren.
The patience of
the saint was amazing: they often reproached him, but he made no
complaint and endured every unpleasantness. St Euphrosynus pleased the
Lord by his inner virtue which he concealed from people, and the Lord
Himself revealed to the monastic brethren the spiritual heights of their
unassuming fellow-monk.
One of the priests of the monastery
prayed and asked the Lord to show him the blessings prepared for the
righteous in the age to come. The priest saw in a dream what Paradise is
like, and he contemplated its inexplicable beauty with fear and with
joy.
He also saw there a monk of his monastery, the cook
Euphrosynus. Amazed at this encounter, the presbyter asked Euphrosynus,
how he came to be there. The saint answered that he was in Paradise
through the great mercy of God. The priest again asked whether
Euphrosynus would be able to give him something from the surrounding
beauty. St Euphrosynus suggested to the priest to take whatever he
wished, and so the priest pointed to three luscious apples growing in
the garden of Paradise. The monk picked the three apples, wrapped them
in a cloth, and gave them to his companion.
When he awoke in the
early morning, the priest thought the vision a dream, but suddenly he
noticed next to him the cloth with the fruit of Paradise wrapped in it,
and emitting a wondrous fragrance. The priest, found St Euphrosynus in
church and asked him under oath where he was the night before. The saint
answered that he was where the priest also was. Then the monk said that
the Lord, in fulfilling the prayer of the priest, had shown him
Paradise and had bestown the fruit of Paradise through him, “ the lowly
and unworthy servant of God, Euphrosynus.”
The priest related
everything to the monastery brethren, pointing out the spiritual
loftiness of Euphrosynus in pleasing God, and he pointed to the fragrant
paradaisical fruit. Deeply affected by what they heard, the monks went
to the kitchen, in order to pay respect to St Euphrosynus, but they did
not find him there. Fleeing human glory, the monk had left the
monastery. The place where he concealed himself remained unknown, but
the monks always remembered that their monastic brother St Euphrosynus
had come upon Paradise, and that they in being saved, through the mercy
of God would meet him there. They reverently kept and distributed pieces
of the apples from Paradise for blessing and for healing.
TROPARION - TONE 4
You lived in great humility, / In labors of asceticism and in purity of
soul, / O righteous Euphrosynos, / By a mystical vision you demonstrated
the Heavenly joy which you had found. / Therefore make us worthy to be
partakers of your intercessions.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2013(with 2012's link here also and further, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!)
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