Saint Gregory, Bishop of Homer (Omirits), the son of Agapius
and Theodota, was filled with the grace of God and possessed gifts of
healing and wonderworking even in his youth. The Providence of God led
him to hierarchical service. While still a deacon at Mediolanum (Milan)
he heard the foretelling of his destiny from a hermit, and then he
received confirmation of these words from another spirit-bearing Elder
who lived an ascetic life in the mountains.
When Gregory went to
this holy schemamonk for guidance, a miracle occurred. As he approached
the mountain, he saw a fiery column in the air. He soon realized that
the fiery column was actually the man of God coming toward him. That
night he saw the Elder standing in the air above the ground. The Elder
revealed to Saint Gregory that he must go to Rome to pray in the church
of Saints Boniface and Aglaida. Then he would go to Alexandria and to
become a bishop. Then he would arrive in the city of Negran in the land
of Homer (in southern Arabia) to proclaim the Gospel.
Saint
Gregory felt himself unworthy of this, and wished to remain with the
ascetic as his disciple. So that Gregory should have no doubts of the
veracity of his words, the Elder revealed that he knew a secret about
him. In a vision, Gregory had seen the First-Ranked Apostles Peter and
Paul, and they had placed a bishop’s omophorion upon him.
Saint
Gregory stayed a short time in Carthage (North Africa) serving as a
deacon, then arrived in Rome. He went to the church of Saints Boniface
and Aglaida, then to the tomb of Saint Peter. There he was granted a
vision of the holy Apostle, who told him to walk the path of virtue and
to live according to God’s will. That night he saw the Apostle Paul in a
dream bringing to him a cup filled with oil, foretelling that he should
receive the grace of the priesthood and the episcopacy.
During
this time the armies of the Ethiopian emperor Elesbaan (October 24)
vanquished the Himyarite king Dunaan, who was of Jewish background. The
city of Negran was liberated, and Christianity restored in the land of
Homer. But all the clergy had been cruelly exterminated by Dunaan, and
therefore Elesbaan sent emissaries to the Patriarch of Alexandria asking
him to send a bishop to Negran, and clergy for the churches. While he
was praying, the holy Apostle Mark appeared to the patriarch, bidding
him to find a deacon named Gregory, who was to be ordained to the
priesthood, consecrated as a bishop, and then to be sent to Elesbaan.
The patriarch did this. During the service a miracle took place. Saint
Gregory’s face shone with the grace of the Holy Spirit, and from his
vestments came a sweet fragrance like myrrh or incense, filling the
whole church with the scent.
Arriving in Homer, Saint Gregory
began to set the Church in order, preaching to both pagans and Jews.
After three years Elesbaan returned to Ethiopia, leaving the noble
Abramius behind as King of Homer. Saint Gregory crowned and anointed
Abramius as king. Soon he issued a decree that all his subjects be
baptized. Then certain prominent Jews turned to the emperor saying that
it was better for people to believe willingly rather than under
compulsion. They requested that he should permit a debate on faith to be
held between them and the Christians, vowing that if the Christians
proved victorious in this debate, the Jews would then accept Baptism.
The
Jews were given forty days to prepare for the debate, which lasted for
several days. Saint Gregory refuted all the arguments of the head of the
Hebrew elder, Rabbi Ervan, using only texts from the Old Testament. In a
vision Ervan beheld the holy Prophet Moses, who worshipped the Lord
Jesus Christ. The prophet told Ervan that Ervan was in opposition to the
truth and would be defeated.
By the grace of God Christian truth
prevailed in the debate, but Ervan would not acknowledge his defeat. He
made a last desperate attempt. He said, “If you want me to believe in
your Christ, and to acknowledge that yours is the true God, then show
Him to me, bishop!” The saint replied: “Your request is impertinent. It
is not with man that you contend now, but with God. However, the Lord
can do what you have asked in order to convince you.
Everyone
waited to see what would happen. Saint Gregory, having steadfast faith
in God and trusting in Him, began to pray aloud. He recalled the mystery
of the Incarnation of God the Word, the miracles of His earthly life,
the Three-day Resurrection and the Ascension into Heaven, and he invoked
the power of the Life-Creating Cross. “Show Thyself to these people, O
Lord,” he prayed, “and glorify Thy holy Name!”
When he finished
the prayer, the earth quaked, and in the east the heavens were opened,
and in a radiant cloud of light the Lord Jesus Christ came down on
earth, and the Voice of the Lord was heard: “Through the prayers of
Bishop Gregory, He Whom your fathers put to death will heal you.”
Like
Saul, who was struck blind by the Heavenly light on the road to
Damascus, the Jews were struck blind. Then they believed in Christ and
they implored the holy bishop to heal them. Upon receiving holy Baptism,
all of them were healed. Rabbi Ervan received the Christian name Leo
(meaning “lion”).
After this most extraordinary miracle, Saint
Gregory guided the flock of Homer for another thirty years. He reposed
in the year 552 and was buried in a crypt in the cathedral of Afar.
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