Commemorated on November 30
The
Holy Apostle Andrew the First-Called was the first of the Apostles to
follow Christ, and he later brought his own brother, the holy Apostle
Peter, to Christ (John 1:35-42). The future apostle was from
Bethsaida, and from his youth he turned with all his soul to God. He
did not enter into marriage, and he worked with his brother as a
fisherman. When the holy Prophet, Forerunner and Baptist John began
to preach, St Andrew became his closest disciple. St John the Baptist
himself sent to Christ his own two disciples, the future Apostles
Andrew and John the Theologian, declaring Christ to be the Lamb of
God.
After
the Descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles, St Andrew went to
the Eastern lands preaching the Word of God. He went through Asia
Minor, Thrace, Macedonia, he reached the River Danube, went along the
coast of the Black Sea, through Crimea, the Black Sea region and
along the River Dniepr he climbed to the place where the city of Kiev
now stands.
He
stopped overnight on the hills of Kiev. Rising in the morning, he
said to those disciples that were with him: “See these hills? Upon
these hills shall shine forth the beneficence of God, and there will
be a great city here, and God shall raise up many churches.” The
apostle went up around the hills, blessed them and set up a cross.
Having prayed, he went up even further along the Dniepr and reached a
settlement of the Slavs, where Novgorod was built. From here the
apostle went through the land of the Varangians towards Rome for
preaching, and again he returned to Thrace, where in the small
village of Byzantium, the future Constantinople, he founded the
Church of Christ. The name of the holy Apostle Andrew links the
mother, the Church of Constantinople, with her daughter, the Russian
Church.
On
his journeys the First-Called Apostle endured many sufferings and
torments from pagans: they cast him out of their cities and they beat
him. In Sinope they pelted him with stones, but remaining unharmed,
the persistant disciple of Christ continued to preach to people about
the Savior. Through the prayers of the Apostle, the Lord worked
miracles. By the labors of the holy Apostle Andrew, Christian
Churches were established, for which he provided bishops and clergy.
The final city to which the Apostle came was the city of Patra, where
he was destined to suffer martyrdom.
The
Lord worked many miracles through His disciple in Patra. The infirm
were made whole, and the blind received their sight. Through the
prayers of the Apostle, the illustrious citizen Sosios recovered from
serious illness; he healed Maximilla, wife of the governor of Patra,
and his brother Stratokles. The miracles accomplished by the Apostle
and his fiery speech enlightened almost all the citizens of the city
of Patra with the true Faith.
Few
pagans remained at Patra, but among them was the prefect of the city,
Aegeatos. The Apostle Andrew repeatedly turned to him with the words
of the Gospel. But even the miracles of the Apostle did not convince
Aegeatos. The holy Apostle with love and humility appealed to his
soul, striving to reveal to him the Christian mystery of life
eternal, through the wonderworking power of the Holy Cross of the
Lord. The angry Aegeatos gave orders to crucify the apostle. The
pagan thought he might undo St Andrew’s preaching if he were to put
him to death on the cross.
St
Andrew the First-Called accepted the decision of the prefect with joy
and with prayer to the Lord, and went willingly to the place of
execution. In order to prolong the suffering of the saint, Aegeatos
gave orders not to nail the saint’s hands and feet, but to tie them
to the cross. For two days the apostle taught the citizens who
gathered about. The people, in listening to him, with all their souls
pitied him and tried to take St Andrew down from the cross. Fearing a
riot of the people, Aegeatos gave orders to stop the execution. But
the holy apostle began to pray that the Lord would grant him death on
the cross. Just as the soldiers tried to take hold of the Apostle
Andrew, they lost control of their hands. The crucified apostle,
having given glory to God, said: “Lord Jesus Christ, receive my
spirit.” Then a blazing ray of divine light illumined the cross and
the martyr crucified upon it. When the light faded, the holy Apostle
Andrew had already given up his holy soul to the Lord. Maximilla, the
wife of the prefect, had the body of the saint taken down from the
cross, and buried him with honor.
A
few centuries later, under the emperor Constantine the Great, the
relics of the holy Apostle Andrew were solemnly transferred to
Constantinople and placed in the church of the Holy Apostles beside
the relics of the holy Evangelist Luke and St Paul’s disciple St
Timothy.
Quelle: http://oca.org
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