Commemorated on October 1
During the
reign of King Aderki of Kartli, the Jewish diaspora in Mtskheta learned
that a wondrous Child had been born in Jerusalem. Then, thirty years
later, a man came from Jerusalem to deliver this message: “The youth has
grown up. He calls Himself the Son of God and preaches to us the
New Covenant. We have sent envoys to every Jewish diaspora to urge the
scholars of the religion to come to Jerusalem and judge what measures
should be taken in regard to this matter.”
In response to the
envoy’s request and at the recommendation of the Jewish Sanhedrin, Elioz
of Mtskheta and Longinoz of Karsani were chosen to journey to
Jerusalem. Elioz of Mtskheta was born to a pious family, and as his
mother prepared him for the journey, she tearfully begged him not to
take any part in the spilling of the blood of the Messiah.
When
the Roman soldiers were nailing our Savior to the Cross on Golgotha,
Elioz’s mother miraculously heard each strike of the hammer. She cried
out in fear, “Farewell majesty of the Jews! For inasmuch as you have
killed your Savior and Redeemer, henceforth you have become
your own enemies!” With this she breathed her last.
After
the soldiers had cast lots for the Robe of our Lord, it was acquired by
Elioz and Longinoz, and with great honor they carried it back with them
to Mtskheta. Upon their arrival, Elioz met his sister Sidonia, who took
from him the Sacred Robe. With much grief she listened to the story of
our Savior’s Crucifixion, clutched the Robe to her breast, and
immediately gave up her spirit.
Many miracles were worked by the
Robe, and news of this flashed like lightning throughout Mtskheta. King
Aderki had a great desire to possess the Robe but, frightened by the
miracles, he did not attempt to free it from Sidonia’s embrace. Elioz
was obliged to bury his sister and the Precious Robe together. A cypress
tree grew up on Sidonia’s grave. When the disciples of Christ cast lots
after Pentecost, the lot for evangelizing Georgia fell to the Most Holy
Theotokos. But Christ revealed to His Mother that it was not His will
for her to preach there. “You have been entrusted to protect the
Georgian nation,” He said, “but the role of evangelizing that land
belongs to My disciple Andrew the First-called. Send him with an image
of your face “Not-Made-By-Hands” to protect the Georgian people to the end of the ages!”
According
to the will of God and the blessing of the Theotokos, Saint Andrew the
First-called set off for Georgia to preach the Christian Faith. He
entered Georgia from the southwest, in the region of Atchara, and
subsequently preached in every region of the nation. He established a
hierarchy for the Georgian Church and then returned to Jerusalem for
Pascha. When he visited Georgia for the second time, the Apostle Andrew
was accompanied by the Apostles Matthias and Simon the Canaanite.
Years
passed and, under threat from Persian fire-worshippers and other pagan
communities, the memory of Christ faded from the minds of the Georgian
people.
Then, at the beginning of the 4th century, according to
God’s will and the blessing of the Most Holy Theotokos, the holy virgin
Nino arrived in Kartli to preach the Christian Faith. She settled in the
outskirts of Mtskheta, in the bramble bushes of the king’s garden.
Saint Nino inquired as to the whereabouts of our Lord’s Robe, but no one
could remember where it had been preserved. In her quest for the
Precious Robe, she became acquainted with Elioz’s descendants, the
Jewish priest Abiatar and his daughter, Sidonia. Saint Nino converted
them to Christianity.
Saint Nino was blessed by God with the gift
of healing. She healed the afflicted through the name of our crucified
Savior and through the grace of the cross formed from grapevines by the
Theotokos and bound with strands of Saint Nino’s hair.
At that
time King Mirian ruled Kartli. Following in the footsteps of his
ancestors, he worshiped the idol Armazi, but in the depth of his heart
he was drawn to the Faith that the holy virgin was preaching. Mirian’s
wife, Queen Nana, was the daughter of a famous military leader of
Pontus. Thus, the king had received some prior knowledge of the Faith of
the Greeks.
Once Queen Nana fell deeply ill, and only through the
prayers of Saint Nino was she spared from death. After this miraculous
healing, King Mirian became intrigued by the Faith that Saint Nino was
preaching, and he began asking the newly enlightened Abiatar about the
Holy Scriptures.
Once, while he was hunting on Mt. Tkhoti near
Mtskheta, King Mirian was suddenly gripped by an evil spirit, and he
burned with a desire to destroy the Christian people of his land
and—above all others—the virgin Nino. But suddenly the sun was eclipsed,
and the king was surrounded by darkness. The frightened Mirian prayed
to the pagan gods to save him from this terror, but his prayers went
unanswered. Then, in utter despair, he began to pray to the Crucified
God-man and a miracle occurred: the darkness scattered and the sun shone
as before. Raising his hands to the east, Mirian cried out, “Truly Thou
art the God preached by Nino, God of gods and King of kings!”
Having
returned to the capital, King Mirian went immediately to the bramble
bushes where Saint Nino dwelt. He greeted her with great honor and spent
several hours seeking her counsel. Upon her recommendation, he sent
messengers to Emperor Constantine in Byzantium, requesting that he send
priests to baptize the people of Kartli and architects to build
churches.
This happened on June 24 of the year 324, which was a
Saturday. King Mirian began to construct a church so that the priests
arriving from Constantinople would have a place to serve. Seven columns
to support the church were formed from the wood of a cypress tree that
had grown in the king’s garden. Six of the columns were erected without a
problem, but the seventh could not be moved from the place where it had
been carved. Saint Nino and her disciples prayed through the night, and
at dawn they watched as a youth, encompassed by a brilliant light,
descended from the heavens and raised the column. The miraculous column
began to shine and stopped in mid-air at a height of twelve cubits.
Sweet-smelling
myrrh began to flow from under the Holy Pillar’s foundations, and the
entire population of Mtskheta flocked to that place to receive its
blessing. Approaching the Life-giving Pillar, the sick were healed, the
blind received sight, and the paralyzed began to walk.
By that
time a certain Bishop John and his suite had arrived from
Constantinople. Saint Constantine the Great sent a cross, an icon of the
Savior, a fragment from the Life-giving Cross of our Lord (from the
place where His feet lay), and a nail from His Crucifixion as gifts to
the newly enlightened King Mirian and his people.
At the
confluence of the Mtkvari and Aragvi Rivers in Mtskheta, the king and
queen, the royal court, and all the people of Kartli were baptized into
the Christian Faith. After the glorious baptism, Bishop John and his
retinue from Constantinople set off toward southern Georgia, for the
village of Erusheti. There they built churches and presented the
Christian community with the nail from our Lord’s Crucifixion. Soon
after, they began to construct Manglisi Church and placed the fragment
from the Life-giving Cross inside.
King Mirian wanted to keep some
of the newly obtained sacred objects in the capital city, but St.Nino
informed him that one of the holiest objects, the Robe of our Savior,
was already located in Mtskheta. The king summoned the priest Abiatar
and inquired about the Robe, then rejoiced greatly after Abiatar
confirmed Saint Nino’s words that the Robe of the Lord was held in the
embrace of Sidonia, who was buried under the stump of the cypress tree
which now served as the pedestal for the Life-giving Pillar.
At
that time a lush, sweet-smelling, wonder-working tree grew up on a
mountain over Mtskheta and, at Bishop John’s suggestion, Prince Revi,
the son of King Mirian, ordered that the tree be chopped down and a
cross formed from its wood. The tree was chopped down and replanted,
without its roots, next to a church that was under construction. For
thirty-seven days the tree retained its original appearance—even its
leaves did not fade or wither. Then, after thirty-seven days had passed,
three crosses were formed from its wood.
For many days after this
miracle the people of Mtskheta saw a vision: during the night a fiery
cross shone above the church, surrounded by stars. When morning came,
two of the stars had moved away from the cross in opposite
directions—one to the west and the other to the east. The fiery cross
headed to the north, stopped for some time over the hill on the other
side of the River Aragvi, then disappeared.
Saint Nino advised
King Mirian to erect one of the three crosses in the west, on Tkhoti
Mountain, and another in the east, in the village of Ujarma. But it was
unclear where the third cross should be erected, so King Mirian
prayerfully beseeched the Lord to reveal to him the place.
The
Lord heard his prayers and sent an angel to show him the place: a rocky
hill to the north of the capital, at the confluence of the Aragvi and
Mtkvari Rivers. Today this hill is called Jvari (Cross) and upon it
towers the magnificent church of Jvari Monastery. At the moment the
cross was erected on this hill, all the idols in Mtskheta fell and
shattered to pieces.
Prior to his death King Mirian blessed his
heir, Prince Bakar, and urged him to dedicate his life to the Holy
Trinity and fight ceaselessly against idolaters. Then he peacefully
reposed in the Lord.
According to his will, Holy
Equal-to-the-Apostles King Mirian was buried in the upper church at
Samtavro, where today a convent in honor of Saint Nino is located. The
king was too modest to be buried in the lower church, the Svetitskhoveli
Cathedral, in which the Life-giving Pillar had been preserved.
Queen Nana reposed two years later and was buried next to her husband.
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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