Commemorated on August 3
Saint Razhden the Protomartyr was descended from a noble Persian
family. When Holy King Vakhtang Gorgasali married the daughter of the
Persian king Hormuzd III Balunducht, the queen took Razhden with her to
Georgia.
In Kartli Razhden converted to the Christian Faith, and
King Vakhtang presented him with an estate and appointed him as a
military adviser and commander.
At that time Georgia was under
heavy political pressure from Persia. Enraged at King Vakhtang’s clearly
Christian convictions, the Persian king Peroz (Son of Yazgard
III.)(457-484) attacked Georgia with an enormous army. His
accomplishments in this battle earned Razhden his distinction as a brave
and virtuous warrior.
Before long the furious King Peroz ordered
that “a certain Persian aristocrat who had converted to Christianity and
survived the battle” be taken captive. The Persians surrounded Razhden,
bound his hands and feet, and delivered him to their king. Peroz
received him with feigned tenderness, saying, “Greetings, my virtuous
Razhden! Peace be to you! Where have you been all this time, and for
what reason have you turned from the faith of your fathers to confess a
creed in which your fathers did not instruct you?”
Razhden
fearlessly asserted that Christianity is the only true faith and that
Christ is the only true Savior of mankind. King Peroz tried to conceal
his anger and cunningly lure Razhden to his side, but his attempt was in
vain. Convinced that his efforts were futile, Peroz finally ordered
that the saint be beaten without mercy. The expert executioners trampled
Saint Razhden, battered him, knocked out his teeth, dragged him across
jagged cliffs, then chained him in heavy irons and cast him into prison.
When
the news of Razhden’s suffering and captivity spread to Mtskheta, the
Georgian nobility came to Peroz and requested that he free the holy man.
Peroz consented to their request, but made Razhden vow to return.
Razhden
arrived in Mtskheta, bid farewell to his family and the beloved king
Vakhtang Gorgasali and, despite his loved ones’ admonitions to the
contrary, returned to Peroz. The Persian king tried again to return
Razhden to the religion of the fire-worshippers. But seeing that he
would not be broken, Peroz instead ordered his exile to a military camp
at Tsromi in central Georgia. Then he secretly ordered the chief of the
Persian camp to turn him away from Christianity and to execute him if he
refused. “Your flattery and bribes are insulting to me. With joy I am
prepared to endure every suffering for the sake of Christ!”
Razhden replied to his appeals.
“If he hopes in the Crucified One, then he also is fit to suffer crucifixion!”
Such
was the Persians’ verdict. They erected a cross, crucified Christ’s
humble servant, and prepared to shoot at the pious man with bow and
arrow.
“Into Thy hands, O Lord, I commit my spirit!” were the last words of Saint Razhden.
That
night a group of Christians stole the Persians’ cross, took the holy
martyr’s body down from it, and buried his holy relics in secret. A few
years later Vakhtang Gorgasali translated Saint Razhden’s relics from
Tsromi to Nikozi (in central Georgia) and interred them in a cathedral
that he had built there not long before. Holy King Vakhtang later
erected churches in honor of Georgia’s first martyr in Ujarma and
Samgori in eastern Georgia.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2016(with 2015's link here also and further: 2014 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!):
Schismatics seize another cathedral in Ukraine
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According to the Kremenchuk Diocese, among those who came to seize the
church, there was not a single parishioner or person with any connection to
the chur...
8 hours ago
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