Þe
(The) South has many armed men to guard her, and these have there place, it would seem. But for heavenly protectors she
cares little. This is foolishness. See what great help is being so carelessly
ignored:
After
Corfu's deliverance from a siege by the Turks - owing to the protection of St.
Spyridon the Wonderworker - on August 11, 1716, Andrea Pisani, the governor and
captain-general of Corfu, wished to do
something in order to thank the saint for his great benefaction concerning the
aforementioned deliverance. He consulted a papist theologian, Francisco
Frangipani, as to what he should do, what would be best and well-pleasing to
the saint.
The
theologian said that it would be a very good and holy deed to build a precious
marble altar inside the Church
of St. Spyridon, so that
they could perform a Latin mass inside. And "Your excellency can hear the
mass in your own language when you are present there," he said. The
theologian's counsel pleased the governor, and he ordered that the materials be
prepared at once. However, before the materials were made ready, it seemed
appropriate to him to call the priests of that church (where the relics of the
divine Spyridon were housed) and find out in what way they could be of
assistance. As soon as they heard the unexpected news, they told him bluntly
that this was a dangerous innovation, and they wished in no way to help him
with his plan. The governor replied angrily that even if they were not willing
to help, as the supreme authority he would do as he wished and would command that
the materials be gathered outside the saint's church without fail. So there was
gathered together asbestos, plaster, marble, and a slab from select marble,
superbly crafted for an altar.
That night in a dream, the governor saw a man in a
monastic habit saying to him, "Why are you bothering me, and why are you
upsetting my children (i.e., the priests)? Know that what you are intending to
do is not in your interest." At daybreak he called the theologian into his
room (that is, the one who gave him the idea) and related to him the dream in
detail. The theologian said, "As Christians, we are obliged in no way to
believe dreams, nor are we to accept them at all as real. You should certainly
consider this, my lord, to be an obvious temptation of the devil, with which
the adversary troubles the good, in order to amuse himself and impede such a
most-pious deed." The governor calmed down, fully convinced by the
theologian's words. That night, the governor again saw the same monk in a dream
threatening him harshly saying, "Know, most certainly, that if you bother
my holy house, you will regret it, as it is of no profit." The ruler was
terrified by this steadfast decree. He did not again wait for daybreak, but
straightaway called for the theologian. He told him every detail about the
vision, described his faint-heartedness and said that he was overcome by such
fear, that he not dare go through with the task. Then the theologian speaking
up and poising himself nobly, said, "My lord, know, that if you grow timid
from doing this holy deed that you have decided upon, you will appear to people
as not being of proper judgement, since you believe in dreams conjured up by
the devil." The governor was filled with courage by these words and as day
came on, which was the 11th of November 1718, he went to the church of the
saint so as to venerate. He was accompanied by those of his court (along with
the city's engineer) in order to measure the area according to length, width,
and height for the construction of the altar.
. . .
At around midnight on November 12th, the day on
which the craftsmen expected to start their work, there was lightening and
thunder - thunderbolts, one after the other. It was then that the guard of the
governor's residence saw a monk approaching him holding a lit torch in his
hand. The guard, according to procedure, asked him once, and then twice,
"Who are you? Where are you going?" And seeing as he did not receive
an answer, he lifted his musket in order to kill the visitor. But then the monk
answered, "I am Spyridon." As soon as he said this he grabbed the
guard by the arm and threw him with great force out into Spianada Square in the city of Corfu, close to the
Church of the Crucifixion.
There the guard found himself standing upright on both feet holding his gun as
he had been before. Immediately following this, the saint lit the store house
of the castle on fire. The extreme heat caused the buildings that were inside
the governor's palace and everything around it to collapse. The governor was
killed inside, his neck having been crushed between two beams in such a way
that it was as though they had been placed there for that purpose. The
theologian was found outside the walls of the citadel in a ditch, into which
all the squalor of the city sewer drained and flowed, holding his private parts
in his hand. He received a just foretaste of his reward for his excellent
advice, and the grandeur of his polity (as a papist). Many others were also
killed, both men and women, some belonging to the court and others not, about
nine-hundred souls. Around that time two other fearsome signs also took place.
First:
That same night, a large silver oil lamp that the governor had hung before the
saint's relics as an offering fell to the ground and its base broke into
pieces, in spite of having been hung with a very strong chain. None of the
numerous other oil lamps fell or suffered anything similar. And what happened
to the oil lamp (or rather, the base) is apparent still today, because it was
again hung up in the same manner it was found as evidence of the incident.
Second:
At the exact same moment (as was confirmed later by those who looked into the
matter) a flaming arrow - a thunderbolt of lightening to be precise - struck
the picture of the governor in Venice
and burnt it up, without anything else in the house suffering any harm. His
brothers and relatives immediately interpreted this as a bad omen concerning
the governor.
The
rest of the Latin laymen and clergy, or rather the "Prevedore" as
they were called, the Latin bishop, other officials and private citizens, as
many as lived in the city of Corfu (for it was the home of the bishop's palace
and many others), these are who I call the rest, gave the command that the
aforementioned building materials be taken from the Saint's church. They made
use of the materials elsewhere, save the marble slab which had been cut for the
altar. This was reverently taken to their so-called "duomo," that is
the cathedral of their own metropolis, into the great altar. It can still be
seen there today resting low on its side.
The
soldier, who had been the guard at the castle on that day, was roused and
crying out in a loud voice, declaring, "Saint Spyridon did these great and
fearful things." And he would tell the whole story in great detail.
Therefore, the Latins, not wanting to bear the shame, sent him away to Italy three
days later.
This
is the story of the frightful and monumental event that took place in the city
of Corfu, owing
to the most-divine Spyridon - quick to listen and patron of the city and of the
whole Church. We must now consider carefully and in detail those circumstances,
which prove the event undeniable, so that the enemies of the truth cannot
blather, saying that the arson at the store house was a coincidence, from which
the governor and those around him died.
Source: Ouranou
Crisis (Judgement from Heaven),
Archimandrite Nektarios Ziompolas. Athens, 2007;
from ‘Miracle of St. Spyridon in Corfu: Recounted by St. Athanasios of Paros (+1813)’, http://www.pravoslavie.ru/english/89163.htm,
posted 25 Dec. 2015, accessed 26 Dec. 2015
The
saints of our forebears of Orthodox Europe and Africa
await our cries for help, as kinsmen long sundered yet full of love. How many times have St Geneviève of Paris, St
Menas of Egypt, St Cuthbert
of Lindisfarne, and others delivered those who
called upon them from famine, plague, invasion, and so on? Let us seek their help, together with St
Spyridon, St Michael the Archangel, and all the holy saints and angels, and the
Most Holy Mother of God most of all, who hath invincible might, that we may
live quiet lives in all godliness.
No comments:
Post a Comment