October 28 / October 15
1. The Venerable Martyr Lucian, Presbyter of Antioch
Lucian was born of noble parents in the Syrian city of Samosata. In his youth, he acquired a very broad education, both secular and spiritual. He was a man distinguished in learning, as well as in the austerity of his ascetic life. Having distributed his goods to the poor, Lucian supported himself by compiling instructive works, and thus fed himself by the work of his hands. He performed a great service to the Church in that he corrected many Hebrew texts in Holy Scripture (that heretics, in accordance with their own false teaching, had distorted). Because of his learning and spirituality, he was ordained a presbyter in Antioch. During Maximian’s persecution, when St. Anthimus of Nicomedia and St. Peter of Alexandria were tortured, St. Lucian was on the list of those the emperor wanted to kill. Lucian fled the city and hid, but an envious heretical priest, Pancratius, reported him. The persecution was horrible and not even young children were spared. Two boys who did not want to eat food sacrificed to idols were thrown into a boiling bath, where in torments they gave up their holy souls to God. A disciple of Lucian named Pelagia (October 8) preserved her virginal purity from dissolute attackers by praying to God on her roof-top: she gave up her soul to Him, and her body fell from the roof. Lucian was brought to Nicomedia before the emperor. Along the way, his counsels converted forty soldiers to the Christian Faith, and all died a martyr’s death. Following interrogation and flogging, St. Lucian was cast into prison where he suffered starvation. St. John Chrysostom writes of St. Lucian: “He scorned hunger: let us also scorn luxury and destroy the power of the stomach that we may, when the time that requires such courage comes for us, be prepared in advance by the help of a lesser ascesis, to show ourselves glorious at the time of battle.” He received Holy Communion in prison on the Feast of Theophany, and on the following day rendered his soul to God. St. Lucian suffered on January 7, 311.
2. The Venerable Euthymius the New, of Thessalonica, Confessor (889) Euthymius was born in Ancyra in 824 of righteous parents, Epiphanius and He served in the army, married and had one daughter, Anastasia. He lived a strict and long ascetic life in monasteries on Mount Olympus and Mount Athos. For a time he also lived as a stylite near Thessalonica. He founded a monastery for men and a convent for women, near Thessalonica. He entered into rest on an island near the Holy Mountain toward the end of the ninth century. His holy and miracle-working relics repose in Thessalonica.
- Martyrs Sarbelus (Thathuil) and his sister Bebaia, of Edessa (98-138).
- Barses the Confessor, bishop of Edessa (378).
- Aurelia of Strasbourg (Alsace, Gaul) (ca. 383).
- Sabinus, bishop of Catania (760).
- Thecla, abbess, of Ochsenfurt (Germany) (ca. 790).
- Hieromartyr Lucian, hieromonk of the Kiev Caves (1243).
- John, bishop of Suzdal (1373).
- Dionysius, archbishop of Suzdal (1385).
- New Hieromartyr Valerian Novitsky, priest, of Telyadovich (1930).
- New Hiero-confessor Athanasius (Sakharov), bishop of Kovrov (1962).
- Synaxis of New Hieromartyrs of Belorussia: Archimandrite Seraphim, Priests Vladimir (5), Basil, Sergius, Michael (2), Porphyrius, Dimitry (2), John (3), Leonid, Alexander, Matthew, Peter, Valerian, Nicholas, and Deacon Nicholas.
- Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos “She Who Ripens the ”
HYMN OF PRAISE
The Venerable Martyr Lucian
Lucian the most wise ascetic and scribe
Boldly walked on the path of Christ.
Against heretics and idolatrous darkness
Lucian the victor waged a bitter struggle.
Planted firmly on the foundation of the Most-holy Trinity—
The Father without beginning,
with the Spirit and the Son—
Lucian glorified God in word and deed,
And he confirmed this by his innocent blood.
Savage Rome collapsed, the heresies died;
Works immoral and shameful perished;
The Church raised martyrs up to heaven;
And the Church, great and glorious, outlived all.
This is the Kingdom of saints,
the Kingdom without end
That Daniel foretold and Christ founded—
O desired Kingdom, of earthly origin,
With golden domes atop the heavenly roofs!
And holy Lucian,
a builder of that Kingdom,
Labored much, and gave all for it.
He now gloriously reigns beside his Jesus,
Borne by God to the angelic flock.
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