Commemorated on October 10
In the year
1274 at the Council of Lyons (in France), the Byzantine emperor Michael
VIII Paleologos decided to buttress his waning power by forming a union
with Catholic Rome. This step evoked universal discontent. In 1278, the
emperor issued a decree to introduce the Union at Constantinople by
forceful measures, if necessary.
Mt. Athos stood in firm
opposition to the Union. The Athonite monks sent a letter to Michael
pointing out that the primacy of the Pope, his commemoration in the
churches, celebrating the Eucharist with unleavened bread, the insertion
of the “filioque” [“and from the Son”] into the Creed, could not be
accepted by Orthodox, and they asked the emperor to change his mind. “We
clearly see,” the letter said, “that you are becoming a heretic, but we
implore you to forsake all this and abide in the teachings that were
handed down to you.... Reject the unholy and novel teachings of a false
knowledge, speculations, and additions to the Faith.”
The
Crusaders pushed out of Palestine and finding refuge in the Byzantine
Empire, declared to the emperor their readiness to affirm the power of
the Pope by fire and sword, if necessary. In addition, Michael had hired
mercenaries, both Turks and Tatars, to enforce his decree.
The
emperor despised the monks of Mt. Athos for their opposition. Since he
did not want to provoke the Greeks, he decided to vent his spite upon
the Athonite Slavs. By Michael’s order, the servants of the Pope
descended upon the Bulgarian Zographou monastery. When the demand to
accept the Union was presented before the Zographou monks, they refused
to listen. They adhered to the doctrines of the Fathers, and fearlessly
censured those who accepted the Latin teachings. The majority of the
Zographou monks left the monastery, but the most steadfast, twenty-six
in number, remained within the monastery tower. These were:Igumen
Thomas, and the monks Barsanuphius, Cyril, Michael, Simon, Hilarion,
James, Job, Cyprian, Sava, Jacob, Martinian, Cosmas, Sergius, Menas,
Joasaph, Joannicius, Paul, Anthony, Euthymius, Dometian, Parthenius, and
four laymen.
The holy martyrs for their Orthodox Faith, were burned in the monastery tower on October 10, 1284. (also September 22).
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!):
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On December 19, 2024, on the feast day of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker,
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