Saint Peter of Galatia left home at the age of seven, then
spent the rest of his life in ascetical labors as a monk. At first, he
remained in Galatia, then went to Palestine. Later, he went to Antioch.
There he enclosed himself in a tomb, devoting himself to deeds of prayer
and strict abstinence. He partook of bread and water only every other
day. Because of his holy life, God granted him the gift of
wonderworking, healing infirmities and expelling devils.
St Peter
died around the year 429 at the age of ninety-nine. His Life was
written by Theodoret of Cyrrhus, whose mother had been healed by the
saint.
This St Peter should not be confused with the other St Peter of Galatia, who is commemorated on October 9.
Decoratiune de toamna cu frunze 1
-
Din frunze galbene am făcut un fel de coroniță pentru ușă. A fost o joacă
frumoasă în care galbenul a strălucit în prim plan, alături de castane și
nuci ...
Ascetic Strength
-
“Everyone who competes in the games exercises self-control in all things.
Now they do it in order to receive a corruptible crown, but we seek an
incorrupti...
Romans Chapter 1 & 2
-
We are currently doing a study of the Book of Romans via Google Meets,
which I intend to post to our parish channel on YouTube. Unfortunately, I
didn't ...
Does God Really Care About Me?
-
Have you ever gotten the message that God doesn’t care about you? Logic
tells you this to be true; however, your heart seems unable to accept this
conclusi...
The Catacomb Church (1991)
-
The text below is excerpted from the 2011 book "In the Catacombs" by S.V.
Shumilo:
"Remaining in a position without rights, the Catacomb Church – as in t...
The Four Horsemen of Palamism
-
There are many interesting things taking place in academia right now
regarding Orthodox history and theology, beyond the usual faddish
expressions of “theo...
Moving
-
I started this blog back in late 2005. For a few years, I posted fast and
furiously--138 in 2007. Then gradually it dropped off to the point where I
o...
Ascension and Judgment in the Triumphal Entry
-
One of the key features of the Gospels is the many prophecies of Christ
regarding His own passion, death, resurrection, …
Continue reading →
My Branch of the Healy Family Tree
-
Last night I worked through the Healy family genealogy I came across
yesterday. I was able to work out the direct line of descent from William
to me. A cal...
The circular firing squad on Pope Francis
-
Introduction
I. The pastoral Magisterium
II. When truth functions as law
III. The fence and the circle of orthodoxy
IV. Criticizing Magisterial failures
V. ...
Christmas: the Eternal embraces the Finite
-
The following is a Christmas-season meditation by Susan Anne, who will be
joining me on this blog as a co-author. Beginnings and endings, finite
measures o...
Learning geography and ballistics
-
The IRBM Russia launched yesterday from way far from the border with
Ukraine in Astrakhan took 15 minutes to get to Dnipro. The WSG (Western
Shadow Governm...
Service Interruption notice
-
You may have noticed rigorousintuition.ca is currently down. We're moving
servers. Drew informs me it shouldn't take too long. Perhaps tonight or
tomorrow....
The truth drew hatred…
-
“Seest Thou what suffer those who censure, O Word of God, the faults of
the unclean. Not being able to bear censure, lo, Herod cut off my head, O
Savior....
The Dynamism of Holy Tradition
-
I. How & Why Traditions Are Created “Be imitators of me, just as I also am
of Christ. Now I praise you because you remember me in everything and hold
firml...
Apostleship - A Family Affair?
-
Sometimes I amuse myself by imagining Jesus and the Apostles in situations
they might see if they grew up in the America that I know and love. When I
was a...
Moving Day
-
I’m beginning to copy some of the articles on ecumenism over to a new blog
called “Eirenikon“, devoted solely to the topic of Orthodox/Catholic
rapprocheme...
No comments:
Post a Comment