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Timon the Deacon. 33–100 (circa) 30 December / 28 July [ 502 ] / 4 January [ 42 ] Apostle of the Seventy, one of the seven Deacons, Bishop of Bosra, Hieromartyr [ 714 ] Timothy of Ephesus. 93. 22 January / 4 January [ 42 ] Apostle of the Seventy, Bishop of Ephesus, Hieromartyr [ 715 ] Timothy of Prusa.
Archimandrite Polycarp. Spiritual Father: Elder Ephraim of Arizona. [4] Holy Trinity Monastery Greek Orthodox Monastery, Smith Creek, Michigan. Hieromonk Joseph. Spiritual Father: Elder Ephraim of Arizona. Panagia Pammakaristou Greek Orthodox Monastery, Lawsonville, North Carolina. Hieromonk Nektarios.
List. Alexander Hotovitzky, hieromartyr, Missionary of America. Alexis of Wilkes-Barre, Missionary, leader of 20,000 ex- Uniates into Orthodoxy. Bogoljub Gakovich, hieromartyr. Bazyli Martysz, hieromartyr, Polish protopresbyter who served parishes in Alaska, Canada, and Pennsylvania. Herman of Alaska, first missionary to Alaska.
The Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Church (Serbian: Црква светог Саве, romanized: Crkva svetog Save) was originally established February 14, 1914, in Gary, Indiana, US, and is now located in Merrillville, Indiana, after the consecration of the new church building in 1991. [1] It is the church-school congregation in which Saint ...
June 9/May 27. John the Russian (‹See Tfd› Russian: Иоанн Русский; 1690 – May 27 (N.S. June 9), 1730) is one of the most renowned saints in the Eastern Orthodox Church. Being a prisoner of war and a slave to a Turkish Ağa, he became famous and respected even by his Muslim master for his humility, steadiness in faith and ...
All saints bear this title (e.g. St. Seraphim of Sarov) Theologian: Has classical meaning, but only three saints are given the appellation Theologian, due to their writings introducing new theological doctrines: St. John the Theologian, [49] St. Gregory the Theologian, [50] and St. Symeon the New Theologian.
John the Dwarf was born in the town of Thebes in Egypt to poor Christian parents. At the age of eighteen, he and an elder brother, moved to the desert of Scetes [3] where he became a disciple of Pambo and a good friend of Pishoy. He lived a life of austerity and taught several other monks his way of life, among them was Arsenius the Great.
Most of John's relics were looted from Constantinople by crusaders in 1204 and taken to Rome, but some of his bones were returned to the Orthodox Church on 27 November 2004 by Pope John Paul II. [ 83 ] [ 84 ] [ 85 ] Since 2004 the relics have been enshrined in the Church of St. George, Istanbul .