Commemorated on September 1
Saint Simeon the Stylite was born in the Cappadocian village of Sisan
of Christian parents, Sisotian and Martha. At thirteen years of age he
began to tend his father’s flock of sheep. He devoted himself
attentively and with love to this, his first obedience.
Once,
after he heard the Beatitudes in church, he was struck by their
profundity. Not trusting to his own immature judgment, he turned
therefore with his questions to an experienced Elder. The Elder readily
explained to the boy the meaning of what he had heard. The seed fell on
good soil, and it strengthened his resolve to serve God.
When
Simeon was eighteen, he received monastic tonsure and devoted himself to
feats of the strictest abstinence and unceasing prayer. His zeal,
beyond the strength of the other monastic brethren, so alarmed the
igumen that he told Simeon that to either moderate his ascetic deeds or
leave the monastery.
St Simeon then withdrew from the monastery
and lived in an empty well in the nearby mountains, where he was able to
carry out his austere struggles unhindered. After some time, angels
appeared in a dream to the igumen, who commanded him to bring back
Simeon to the monastery.
The monk, however, did not long remain at
the monastery. After a short while he settled into a stony cave,
situated not far from the village of Galanissa, and he dwelt there for
three years, all the while perfecting himself in monastic feats. Once,
he decided to spent the entire forty days of Great Lent without food or
drink. With the help of God, the monk endured this strict fast. From
that time he abstained from food completely during the entire period of
the Great Lent, even from bread and water. For twenty days he prayed
while standing, and for twenty days while sitting, so as not to permit
the corporeal powers to relax.
A whole crowd of people began to
throng to the place of his efforts, wanting to receive healing from
sickness and to hear a word of Christian edification. Shunning worldly
glory and striving again to find his lost solitude, the monk chose a
previously unknown mode of asceticism. He went up a pillar six to eight
feet high, and settled upon it in a little cell, devoting himself to
intense prayer and fasting.
Reports of St Simeon reached the
highest church hierarchy and the imperial court. Patriarch Domninos II
(441-448) of Antioch visited the monk, celebrated Divine Liturgy on the
pillar and communed the ascetic with the Holy Mysteries.
Elders
living in the desert heard about St Simeon, who had chosen a new and
strange form of ascetic striving. Wanting to test the new ascetic and
determine whether his extreme ascetic feats were pleasing to God, they
sent messengers to him, who in the name of these desert fathers were to
bid St Simeon to come down from the pillar.
In the case of
disobedience they were to forcibly drag him to the ground. But if he was
willing to submit, they were to leave him on his pillar. St Simeon
displayed complete obedience and deep Christian humility. The monks told
him to stay where he was, asking God to be his helper.
St Simeon
endured many temptations, and he invariably gained the victory over
them. He relied not on his own weak powers, but on the Lord Himself, Who
always came to help him. The monk gradually increased the height of the
pillar on which he stood. His final pillar was 80 feet in height.
Around him a double wall was raised, which hindered the unruly crowd of
people from coming too close and disturbing his prayerful concentration.
Women,
in general, were not permitted beyond the wall. The saint did not make
an exception even for his own mother, who after long and unsuccessful
searches finally succeeded in finding her lost son. He would not see
her, saying, “If we are worthy, we shall see one another in the life to
come.” St Martha submitted to this, remaining at the foot of the pillar
in silence and prayer, where she finally died. St Simeon asked that her
coffin be brought to him. He reverently bid farewell to his dead mother,
and a joyful smile appeared on her face.
St Simeon spent 80 years
in arduous monastic feats, 47 years of which he stood upon the pillar.
God granted him to accomplish in such unusual conditions an indeed
apostolic service. Many pagans accepted Baptism, struck by the moral
staunchness and bodily strength which the Lord bestowed upon His
servant.
The first one to learn of the death of the saint was his
close disciple Anthony. Concerned that his teacher had not appeared to
the people for three days, he went up on the pillar and found the dead
body stooped over at prayer. Patriarch Martyrius of Antioch performed
the funeral before a huge throng of clergy and people. They buried him
near his pillar. At the place of his ascetic deeds, Anthony established a
monastery, upon which rested the special blessing of St Simeon.
We pray to St Simeon for the return to the Church of those who have forsaken Her, or have been separated from Her.
TROPARION - TONE 1
You were a pillar of patient endurance, / Having imitated the
forefathers, O Venerable One: / Job in suffering, and Joseph in
temptations. / You lived like the bodiless ones while yet in the flesh, O
Simeon, our Father. / Beseech Christ God that our souls may be saved.
KONTAKION - TONE 2
Seeking the things of the Highest, / And having made your pillar a fiery
chariot, you were joined to the heights. / Therefore, you have become a
companion to the angels, O Venerable One, / And with them you are
praying incessantly to Christ God for us all.
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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