Commemorated on October 4
Saint Evdemoz led the Georgian Orthodox Church in the mid-17th
century during the reign of King Rostom-Khan (1632-1658), a Georgian who
had converted to Islam.
Having murdered King Luarsab II of Kartli
and chased out King Teimuraz I of Kakheti, the Persian shah Abbas I had
declared Rostom-Khan ruler of a unified Kartli-Kakheti kingdom.
Rostom
tried to be accommodating in his policies and protect the beliefs and
traditions of both the Persian shah and the Georgian people: he set a
standard salary for the Georgian clergy and even built churches, but
society deteriorated rapidly nevertheless. Human vices became
commonplace, and sins like those of Sodom and Gomorrah were multiplied.
The nation was so overtaken by sin that even the clergy ceased to
conduct themselves in a manner befitting their God-given role.
But
the chief shepherd of the Georgian nation would not yield to the moral
decline of his flock, and he confronted this crisis with conviction and
fearlessness. Several times he led his most valiant military leaders in
revolt against Persia. Following the example of Catholicos Evdemoz,
several Georgian princes rebelled against the pro-Persian policies of
Rostom-Khan and cast out the Islamic influence from their territories.
Catholicos
Evdemoz resisted the Islamic custom of raising the king’s heirs in the
shah’s court from a young age. He was never too intimidated by the king
to expose his wrongdoing and tell him at every convenient opportunity:
“You are the natural father of the Muslims, but the stepfather of the
Christians!”
Evdemoz was the spiritual father of Rostom-Khan’s
wife, the faithful Queen Mariam, the daughter of Manuchar Dadiani,
Prince of Samegrelo.
As a result of the holy labors of Catholicos
Evdemoz and Queen Mariam, the Christian soul of the Georgian people was
not entirely extinguished. The Georgians built churches, wrote spiritual
literature, and gradually regained their national consciousness.
Catholicos Evdemoz preached throughout the country and developed and
implemented a plan to bring King Teimuraz, who had been driven out by
Shah Abbas, back to the throne.
Naturally Rostom-Khan felt
threatened by the strong influence Catholicos Evdemoz had on the people.
In 1642 he arrested the chief shepherd of the Georgian people and tried
to win him over, but neither his feigned tenderness nor his threats
could break the firm will of the man who loved Christ and his motherland
above all else. After his arrest, Saint Evdemoz criticized the king
even more harshly and called on the people to rise up against him.
Finally Rostom-Khan ordered that Catholicos Evdemoz be strangled to
death in his prison cell, and as a further insult, his body was cast off
Nariqala Fortress (in Tbilisi) in the direction of the Turkish baths.
That
night, a group of Christians stole the body of the holy hieromartyr
Catholicos-Patriarch Evdemoz and buried it in the northwest corner of
Anchiskhati Church in Tbilisi.
SOURCE:
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