Commemorated on June 26
The wonder-working Lydda Icon is mentioned in the service for the
Kazan Icon (July 8 & October 22) in the third Ode of the Canon.
According
to Tradition, the Apostles Peter and John were preaching in Lydda
(later called Diospolis) near Jerusalem. There they built a church
dedicated to the Most Holy Theotokos, then went to Jerusalem and asked
her to come and sanctify the church by her presence. She sent them back
to Lydda and said, “Go in peace, and I shall be there with you.”
Arriving
at Lydda, they found an icon of the Virgin imprinted in color on the
wall of the church (some sources say the image was on a pillar). Then
the Mother of God appeared and rejoiced at the number of people who had
gathered there. She blessed the icon and gave it the power to work
miracles. This icon was not made by the hand of man, but by a divine
power.
Julian the Apostate (reigned 361-363) heard about the icon
and tried to eradicate it. Masons with sharp tools chipped away at the
image, but the paint and lines just seemed to penetrate deeper into the
stone. Those whom the emperor had sent were unable to destroy the icon.
As word of this miracle spread, millions of people came to venerate the
icon.
In the eighth century, Saint Germanus, the future Patriarch
of Constantinople (May 12) passed through Lydda. He had a copy of the
icon made, and sent it to Rome during the iconoclastic controversy. It
was placed in the church of Saint Peter, and was the source of many
healings. In 842, the reproduction was returned to Constantinople and
was known as the Roman Icon (June 26).
The oldest sources of
information for the Lydda Icon are a document attributed to Saint Andrew
of Crete in 726, a letter written by three eastern Patriarchs to the
iconoclast emperor Theophilus in 839, and a work of George the Monk in
886.
The icon still existed as late as the ninth century.
The Lydda Icon of the Mother of God is also commemorated on March 12.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2016(with 2015's link here also and further: 2014 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, and even 2008!):
Historic Russian monastery celebrates 600 years of foundation, 30 years
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On December 19, 2024, on the feast day of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker,
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