Celebrating
some of the saints from the South’s Christian inheritance of various lands:
Universal
Church Feasts:
1st
– The Church New Year
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/01/501-church-new-year
4th
– Holy Prophet Moses the God-Seer.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/04/102490-holy-prophet-and-god-seer-moses
6th
- Commemoration of the Miracle of the Archangel Michael at Colossae (Chonae)
(4th c.). In Colossae in Phrygia there were a church and a holy spring
dedicated to the Archangel Michael. Malicious pagans diverted the course of two
rivers so that they would inundate the church. But the Archangel appeared,
bringing with him an earthquake that shook the whole area and opened a fissure
into which the waters plunged, sparing the church. The place was thereafter
called "Chonae" Greek for "funnels" instead of Colossae.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
A
longer account is here: https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/06/102517-commemoration-of-the-miracle-of-the-archangel-michael-at-colossa
8th
– The Nativity of the Mother of God and Ever-Virgin Mary.
9th
– Holy Ancestors of God, Joachim and Anna, Father and Mother of the Mother of
God.
9th
– Holy Fathers of the Third Ecumenical Council at Ephesus (+431). The
Third Ecumenical Council was convened in the year 431 in the city of Ephesus
(Asia Minor) during the reign of the emperor Theodosius the Younger (408-450).
The Council was convened to investigate without further delay, the false
teachings of Patriarch Nestorius of Constantinople (428-431). Contrary to the
dogmas of the Ecumenical Church, Nestorius dared to assert that the Son of God
Jesus Christ is not one Person (Hypostasis), as Holy Church teaches, but is
rather two distinct persons, one Divine, and the other human. Regarding the
Most Holy Theotokos, he impiously asserted that She should not be called the
Mother of God, but rather only the mother of the man Christ. The heresy of
Nestorius is opposed to one of the basic dogmas of the Christian Faith: our
Lord Jesus Christ’s divine and human natures. . . . The rest is at https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/09/102555-commemoration-of-the-holy-fathers-of-the-third-ecumenical-counci
13th
- Commemoration of the Founding of the Church of the Resurrection (Holy
Sepulchre) at Jerusalem (+335).
14th
– The Universal Exaltation of the Precious and Life-Giving Cross (326).
A
hymn for the Feast:
As
You were voluntarily raised upon the cross for our sake, / grant mercy to those
who are called by Your Name, O Christ God; / make all Orthodox Christians glad
by Your power, / granting them victories over their adversaries, / by bestowing
on them the Invincible trophy, Your weapon of Peace.
15th
– The Uncovering of the Relics of St Stephen the First Martyr and Archdeacon,
an event attended by many miracles.
23rd
– The Conception of the Glorious Forerunner and Baptist John.
24th
– St Thekla, First Woman Martyr and Equal to the Apostles (+1st
hundredyear). The Holy Protomartyr and Equal of the Apostles Thekla was born in
the city of Iconium. She was the daughter of rich and illustrious parents, and
she was distinguished by extraordinary beauty. At eighteen years of age they
betrothed her to an eminent youth. But after she heard the preaching of the
holy Apostle Paul about the Savior, Saint Thekla with all her heart came to
love the Lord Jesus Christ, and she steadfastly resolved not to enter into
marriage, but rather to devote all her life to preaching the Gospel. Saint
Thekla’s mother was opposed to her daughter’s plans and insisted that she marry
her betrothed. Saint Thekla’s fiancé also complained to the prefect of the city
about the Apostle Paul, accusing him of turning his bride against him. The
prefect locked up Saint Paul in prison. During the night Saint Thekla secretly
ran away from her house, and she bribed the prison guards, giving them all her
gold ornaments, and so made her way into the prison to the prisoner. For three
days she sat at the feet of the Apostle Paul, listening to his fatherly
precepts. Thekla’s disappearance was discovered, and servants were sent out
everywhere looking for her. . . . The rest of her illustrious life may be read
here:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/24/102715-protomartyr-and-equal-of-the-apostles-thekla
26th
– The Falling Asleep of the Holy Apostle John the Theologian.
Africa:
6th
– St David of Egypt. St David led the life of an evil robber and murderer early
in life but later repented and became a holy wonderworker as a monk at a
monastery.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/06/102528-saint-david-of-hermopolis-egypt
6th
– Sts Donatian, Praesidius, Mansuetus, Germanus, Fusculus and Laetus. 5th
century. Orthodox driven out of Africa into exile by Hunneric the Arian King of
the Vandals. At that time the number of exiles reached nearly five thousand in
a single year.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
10th
– Sts Nemesian, Felix, Lucius, another Felix, Litteus, Polyanus, Victor, Jader,
Dativus and Companions. + 257. Nine bishops of Numidia in North Africa who with
numerous other clergy and laypeople were condemned to slavery in the marble
quarries of Sigum where they ended their lives. A letter of St Cyprian
addressed to them still exists.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Some
of the contents of this noteworthy letter by St Cyprian to these heroic martyrs
are here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/103.html
11th
– Holy Mother Theodora of Alexandria (+490). A wonderful story of how even the
deepest falls into sin can be overcome by sincere repentance. An excellent life
to read and dwell upon:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/11/102570-venerable-theodora-of-alexandria
11th
– St Paphnutius the Confessor (+4th hundredyear). "A bishop of
the Egyptian Thebaid, he suffered greatly for the Orthodox faith: heretics put
out one of his eyes and broke his left leg. He took part in the First
Ecumenical Council, refuting the Arian heresy with great power. The Emperor
Constantine valued him greatly and often kissed him on the missing eye, lost
for the truth of Orthodoxy. At the council, he stood in opposition to the
western representatives, who proposed that secular priests be completely
forbidden to marry. He was chaste throughout the whole of his life." (Prologue)
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
16th
– St Dorotheos the Solitary of Egypt (+4th hundredyear). He was one
of the great company of Egyptian desert fathers of the fourth century. He lived
alone in a cell in the Thebaid for sixty years, devoting himself to prayer,
asceticism and renowned love of labor. He spent his days building cells for new
monks, his nights making plaited mats, all the while immersed in prayer and
psalmody.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
More
details: https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/16/102632-venerable-dorotheus-the-hermit-of-egypt
23rd
– St Iraida (Rhais) of Alexandria (+308). The Holy Martyr Iraida lived at
Alexandria. Once, she went to a well to draw water and saw a ship at the shore.
On board were a large number of men, women, clergy and monks, all fettered in
chains for their confession of the Christian Faith. Casting aside her water
pitcher, the saint voluntarily joined the prisoners for Christ, and fetters
were placed on her, too. When the ship arrived in the Egyptian city of
Antipolis, Saint Iraida was the first to undergo fierce torments and was
beheaded with the sword. After her, the other martyrs sealed their confession
of faith in Christ with their blood.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/23/102706-virgin-martyr-irais-rhais-of-alexandria
25th
– St Paphnutius and the 546 companions martyred with him in Egypt.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/25/102729-martyr-paphnutius-and-546-companions-in-egypt
Africa/Switzerland:
22nd
– Martyrs of the Theban Legion + c 287. The army of Maximinian Herculeus
included a legion (6,600 men) of Christians recruited in Upper Egypt. When the
Emperor marched his army across the Alps to suppress a revolt in Gaul, he
camped near Agaunum in Switzerland and prepared for battle with public
sacrifices. The Christian legion refused to take part and were as a result
consequence decimated twice. When they still persevered in their refusal they
were massacred. Among those who suffered were Maurice, Exuperius, Candidus,
Vitalis, two Victors, Alexander (in Bergamo) and Gereon (in Cologne). A
basilica was built in Agaunum, now St-Maurice-en-Valais to enshrine the relics
of the martyrs.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/221.html
Alaska:
24th
– All Saints of Alaska. On the anniversary of the arrival of the Russian
missionaries in Alaska (1794), we remember the New Martyrs Saint Peter the
Aleut, Protomartyr of America, and Saint Juvenal.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/24/102712-synaxis-of-all-saints-of-alaska
Hymns
to the Saints:
Today
Alaska rejoices and America celebrates, / for the new world has been sanctified
by martyrdom / Kodiak echoes with songs of thanksgiving, / Iliamna and Kenai
observe the festival of faith. / The Apostle and martyr Juvenaly is glorified,
/ and Peter the Aleut is exalted by his voluntary sacrifice, / in their
devotion and love for the Lord / they willingly endured persecution and death
for the Truth, / now in the Kingdom of Heaven they intercede for our souls!
Today
Valaam joins Alaska / in celebrating this joyous feast, / as her spiritual son
Juvenaly / embraces the new martyr Peter with love. / Together they suffered
for the Lord in America / and united the old world with the new by their
voluntary sacrifice. / Now forever they stand before the King of glory and
intercede for our souls.
https://www.oca.org/saints/troparia/2020/09/24/102712-synaxis-of-all-saints-of-alaska
The
Lives of Sts Peter and St Juvenaly:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/24/102713-martyr-peter-the-aleut
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/24/102714-martyr-juvenal-of-alaska
Armenia:
30th
– St Gregory, Equal of the Apostles and Enlightener of Armenia. The
sufferings he endured for the Armenian people are quite extraordinary. Read
about that and more here:
Asia
Minor:
2nd
– St Mamas. A courageous 15-year-old
martyr for the Orthodox Faith. He is honored together with his mother and
father, Rufina and Theodotus, who also died for the Faith.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/02/102459-martyr-mamas-of-caesarea-in-cappadocia
3rd
– St Basilissa the Martyr (+309). She lived near Nicomedia during the great
persecution by the Emperor Diocletian. Though she was only nine years old,
she was arrested and brought before Alexander, the Governor of Bithynia. When
she fearlessly proclaimed her faith in Christ, the Governor had her stripped
and beaten, but she only gave thanks to God. Enraged at the steadfastness of a
mere child, the Governor ordered her chained and plunged head-first into
boiling pitch, then cast into a blazing furnace, then thrown to the lions.
Through all these torments she was miraculously preserved. Astonished at the
wonders that he beheld, Alexander fell at Basilissa's feet and confessed that
he too believed that Christ is the Savior. He was baptized by the Bishop of
Nicomedia and died not long afterward. Basilissa went into the wilderness
outside the city to give thanks to God for her endurance under torture and to
ask Him to receive her soul in peace. While praying in this way, she entered
into her rest.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/03/102482-martyr-basilissa-of-nicomedia
7th
– St Eupsychius. The Holy Martyr Eupsychius was born in Caesaria, Cappadocia.
In one of the Synaxaria he is called the son of a senator Dionysius. During a
time of a persecution against Christians under Hadrian, he was arrested and
tortured. After the torture they threw him into prison, where he was healed of
his wounds by an angel. When they set the martyr free, he distributed all his
property to the poor. He gave away a certain portion even to his enemies, who
had reported him and given him over to torture. Under a new governor, Saint
Eupsychius was again arrested. They hung him up and cut his body with iron
hooks, and then they cut off his head with a sword. The martyr died under the
emperor Hadrian (117-138).
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/07/102538-martyr-eupsychius-of-caesarea-in-cappadocia
7th
– St Sozon. Saint Sozon lived in the late III century. He was from Lykaonia in
Cilicia, and originally his name was Tarasios. When he became a Christian, he was
baptized and received the name Sozon. A shepherd by profession, he tried to
imitate the meekness of the sheep, at which he marveled. “I am ashamed,” he
said, “that I am inferior to sheep.” He studied the Holy Scriptures
attentively, and he also guided Christ‘s rational sheep to good pastures. One
day, while watering his flock at a spring, Sozon fell asleep under an oak tree,
where he had a vision which foretold his impending martyrdom for Christ. He was
also informed that the spring would become a source of blessing and of healing
for many, since it would be sanctified by God‘s grace. When he awakened, he
entrusted his flock to another shepherd and journeyed to Pompeiopolis in
Cilicia. Seeing what impiety there was in that city, his heart was profoundly grieved.
Entering one of the temples of the idolaters, he beheld a golden statue
representing a pagan “god.” Then, with great courage, he broke off the statue‘s
right hand with his shepherd‘s crook and smashed it into tiny pieces, which he
distributed to the poor. This caused a great uproar in the city. . . . The rest
is at https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/07/102532-martyr-sozon-of-cilicia .
15th
– St Porphyrius the Actor. The Holy Martyr Porphyrius suffered during the reign
of Julian the Apostate (361-363). Porphyrius was an actor and on the emperor’s
birthday he was performing a role at the theater, where he was supposed to mock
the mystery of holy Baptism. During the play Porphyrius was immersed in water
and said: “The servant of God, Porphyrius, is baptized in the Name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” Through divine grace, he
emerged from the water and confessed himself a Christian. Julian ordered him to
be tortured, and after the torments, to be beheaded. This took place in the
city of Ephesus in the year 361.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/15/102620-martyr-porphyrius-the-actor
16th
– Great Martyr Euphemia the All-Praised (+304). She was born in
Chalcedon to noble Christian parents. When Priscus, the locul Proconsul,
celebrated a public sacrifice to Ares, forty-nine Christians including Euphemia
hid themselves to avoid idolatry. Their absence was noticed, and they were
found and brought before Priscus. After torturing all of them for eleven days,
on the twelfth day he singled out Euphemia because of her beauty and began to
flatter her, hoping in this way to draw her away from the Faith. When his
efforts proved useless, he ordered her to be more savagely tortured than any of
her fellow believers. She was miraculously preserved intact through many
tortures, finally giving her soul into God's hands when she was thrown to wild
beasts. Her devout parents retrieved and buried her body. Her relics are
preserved in the Patriarchate of Constantinople. The miracle wrought by her
holy relics at the Council of Chalcedon is commemorated on July 11.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
Read
further at https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/16/102626-great-martyr-euphmia-the-all-praised
19th
– Martyr Zosimas the Hermit of Cilicia (+4th hundredyear). Dometian,
a prince and a fierce persecutor of Christians, was hunting in the mountains
when he came upon an old man surrounded by wild beasts, who were as gentle and
tame as lambs in his presence. When asked who he was, the old man answered that
he was Zosimas, a Christian who had left the persecutors in the city to live
among the beasts instead. Dometian, hearing that Zosimas was a Christian,
ordered him seized and bound, and subjected him to many tortures. When the holy
man was wounded and beaten all over, the prince tied a rock around his neck and
hanged him from a tree, mocking him with the words 'Command a wild beast to
come, then we will all believe!' Zosimas prayed, and at once a large lion
appeared, came up to Zosimas, and took the weight of the rock on its head to
ease the martyr's sufferings. The terrified prince freed Zosimas, who died of
his wounds not long afterward.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
See
also https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/19/102670-martyr-zosimas-the-hermit-of-cilicia
Asia
Minor/France:
24th
– Sts Andochius, Thyrsus and Felix. + 2nd cent. Andochius, a priest, and
Thyrsus, a deacon in Smyrna, were sent to what is now France by St Polycarp.
They settled in Autun where they converted their host, a rich merchant, by name
Felix. All three were martyred and were venerated throughout Gaul.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Asia
Minor/Palestine:
28th
– St Chariton the Confessor (+350). Saint Chariton the Confessor was born at
Iconium in the province of Lycaonia, and suffered there during a persecution
against Christians in the reign of Emperor Aurelian (270-275). The example of
the holy Protomartyr Thekla (September 24), who was also a native of his city,
encouraged him to confess Christ, since he had a great devotion to her. Saint
Chariton bravely denounced the pagan gods and staunchly confessed faith in the
one True God, Christ the Savior. The holy Confessor underwent fierce tortures
but, by God's Providence, he survived. The persecution ended after Aurelian's
death in 275. Saint Chariton was among the many Christians who were released
from prison, and he resolved to dedicate his entire life to the service of the
Lord. Although he escaped death, he grieved because he had not received the crown
of martyrdom. . . . The rest is at
Asia
Minor/Syria:
1st
– St Simeon Stylites the Elder (+459). A special desert father of Syria
who practiced his ascetic feats on a tall pillar.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/01/102448-saint-simeon-stylites-the-elder
Belgium:
20th
– St Vincent (Madelgarus). +677. Madelgarus was the husband of St Waldetrudis.
They had four children, all saints: Landericus, Dentin, Madalberta and
Aldegtrudis. About the year 653 she became a nun and Madelgarus became a monk
with the name of Vincent in Haumont in Belgium which he had founded. Later he
founded another monastery in Soignies, also in Belgium.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Belgium/Holland:
17th
– St Lambert of Maestricht. + 709. Born in Maastricht in Holland, he
became bishop there in 668, but in 674 he was driven out by the tyrant Ebroin.
He then lived as a monk for seven years at the monastery of Stavelot in
Belgium. He returned later and did much to help St Willibrord. He was murdered
in the then village of Liège and is venerated as a martyr.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Much
more about this great Saint of the West is here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/171.html
Carthage/Old
Rome:
27th
– St Calistratus and the 49 soldiers martyred with him (+288 or 304). Saint
Callistratus was a native of Carthage. An ancestor of Saint Callistratus,
Neochorus, had served under the emperor Tiberius in Palestine, under the
command of Pontius Pilate, the procurator of Judea, and was a witness to the
suffering on the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, His voluntary death and
glorious Resurrection. The saint’s father was a Christian, and he raised his
son in faith and piety. Also like his father, Saint Callistratus became a
soldier and excelled among his pagan military comrades by his good conduct and
gentle disposition. At night when everyone slept, he usually stayed up at
prayer. Once, a soldier sleeping nearby heard Saint Callistratus invoking the
Name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and he reported this to the military commander,
who in turn summoned Callistratus, interrogated him and wanted to make him
offer sacrifice to idols. . . . The rest is at
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/27/102736-martyr-callistratus-and-49-companions
Constantinople/New
Rome:
10th
– Right Believing Empress Pulcheria (+453). An exceedingly good ruler of the
Orthodox Roman Empire for many years.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/10/102566-right-believing-pulcheria-byzantine-empress
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/102.html
14th
– St Placilla the Empress (+385 or 386). She was the wife of the Emperor
Theodosius the Great, and the mother of two Emperors, Arcadius and Honorius.
Despite her lofty station, she devoted herself to visiting the poor and to
caring personally for the sick. She often worked in the kitchens of various
hospices in Constantinople, taking on tasks unexpected of anyone of patrician
rank, let alone the Empress herself. To fulfil these missions, she often
traveled unescorted through the poorest parts of the City. When others tried to
caution or dissuade her, she answered that this was her way of giving thanks
for all that God had given her. "Throughout her life, Saint Placilla
served God in chastity, meekness, charity and prayer, and departed in peace to
eternal life in 386 (or 385), having brought to those who encountered her a
pledge of the Resurrection and of endless joy." (Synaxarion).
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
Corinth/Palestine:
29th
– St Cyriacus the Hermit (+555 or 557). A remarkable ascetic, wonderworker, and
defender of the Orthodox Faith against heresies. Read his wonderful life here:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/29/102813-venerable-cyriacus-the-hermit-of-palestine
Czechia:
16th
– St Ludmilla. + 921. Princess of Czechia, entrusted with the education of the
young prince St Wenceslas, she was the victim of jealousy and was strangled by
hired assassins.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
is at https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/16/102633-martyr-ludmilla-the-grandmother-of-saint-wenceslaus-prince-of-th .
28th
– St Wenceslas (Viacheslav). 907-929. Prince of Czechia, he was brought up in
the Orthodox Faith by his grandmother, the future martyr Ludmilla. During a
pagan reaction in 922, which he tried to stop through patience and mildness, he
too was martyred as a result of a political conspiracy. He is the patron-saint
of Czechia.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Longer
accounts of the holy prince:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/28/102754-martyr-wenceslaus-prince-of-the-czechs
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/281.html
England:
8th
– St Ethelburgh (Ethelburga). + c 647. Daughter of King Ethelbert of Kent in
England, she married King Edwin of Northumbria. She went there accompanied by
St Paulinus. After Edwin's death she returned to Kent and founded the convent
of Lyminge, where she became a nun and abbess.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
8th
– Sts Ina (Ine) and Ethelburgh. + 727. Ina was King of Wessex in England from
688 till 726, and is remembered as the restorer of Glastonbury. In about 726 he
abdicated and went to Rome with his wife Ethelburgh, where he ended his days as
a monk.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
13th
– St Wilfrida. + c 988. Mother of St Edith of Wilton in England. After Edith's
birth, Wilfrida went to Wilton where she became a nun. As a nun, and later as
abbess, she led a repentant and edifying life.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
about St Wilfrida is told here: http://orthochristian.com/97360.html
16th
– St Edith. + 984. Daughter of King Edgar and St Wilfrida. She became a nun at
Wilton in England at the age of fifteen. She reposed at the age of twenty-two,
famous for her generosity to the poor and her familiarity with wild animals.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
A
longer account is here: http://orthochristian.com/97360.html
19th
– St Theodore of Canterbury. c 602-690. A Greek who was educated in
Tarsus in Cilicia, he spent some time at Athens and became a monk in Rome. He
was aged sixty-six when Pope Vitalian appointed him to Canterbury at the
suggestion of the African St Adrian in 666. They travelled to England together,
Adrian becoming Abbot of Sts Peter and Paul in Canterbury. Theodore is rightly
called the second founder of Canterbury. He visited all parts of the country,
consolidated or re-established dioceses, promoted learning and held the first
national Council in Hertford in 672. St Theodore is one of the greatest figures
in English history.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/19/102671-saint-theodore-of-tarsus-archbishop-of-canterbury
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/192.html
A
service for St Theodore: http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/servtheo.htm
25th
– St Ceolfrid (Geoffrey), Abbot of Wearmouth-Jarrow. 642-716. A
Northumbrian who became a monk at Gilling in Yorkshire in England. From here he
went to Ripon and later to Wearmouth. Eventually he became Abbot of
Wearmouth-Jarrow for twenty-six years. He is remembered for inspiring St Bede
and also producing the Codex Amiatinus, the oldest surviving copy of the
Vulgate in one complete volume. He reposed at Langres in France on his way to
Rome.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://celticsaints.org/2020/0925a.html
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/251.html
https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/bede-jarrow.asp
28th
– St Tetta. + c 772. Abbess of Wimborne in Dorset in England. She helped St
Boniface by sending him nuns from her 500-strong convent, among whom were Sts
Lioba and Thecla.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
30th
– St Honorius of Canterbury. + 653. Born in Rome, he succeeded St Justus as
fifth Archbishop of Canterbury in England (627). He was consecrated bishop at
Lincoln by St Paulinus and himself consecrated St Felix for East Anglia and St
Ithamar, the first English bishop, for Rochester.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/303.html
England/France:
6th
– St Felix and Augebert. 7th cent. Two slaves from England sold in France and
ransomed by St Gregory the Great, who asked that they be taken to a monastery
to be prepared as missionaries in England. Felix was ordained priest and
Augebert deacon, but they were killed by pagans in Champagne before they could
undertake their mission.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
England/Germany:
28th
– St Lioba. + c 781. A relative of St Boniface, St Lioba became a nun at
Wimborne. In 748, at the request of St Boniface, she left England for Germany
together with a group of nuns and became Abbess of Bischoffsheim. She was
greatly loved by her nuns. St Lioba's convents were one of the most
important factors in the conversion of Germany.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
about St Lioba: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/282.html
France:
1st
– St Giles. 8th cent. Probably born in Provence in the south of France, he
became abbot of a monastery on the Rhône, where the town of Saint-Gilles now
stands. He is venerated as the patron-saint of cripples and beggars.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
is at https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/011.html .
1st
– St Lupus of Sens. + 623. A monk at Lérins who became Bishop of Sens in France
in 609. He was slandered and exiled but was recalled by his people and fully
vindicated.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
A
fuller account is here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/013.html .
2nd
– St Agricola (Agricolus). c 630-700. Son of St Magnus, Bishop of Avignon. At
the age of sixteen he became a monk at Lérins where he stayed for sixteen
years. His father called him to Avignon and in 660 he became bishop
there and is considered to be the patron-saint of the town.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
2nd
– St Justus of Lyons. + 390. A deacon in Vienne who became Bishop of Lyons in
France in 350. In 381 he attended the Council of Aquileia and then went to
Egypt and lived as a hermit.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/022.html
7th
– St Cloud. Saint Cloud was born in 520. When his father was killed in battle
in 524 he and his brothers were brought up by their grandmother Saint Clotilde
(June 3). His brothers were murdered by their uncles Childebert and Clotaire to
prevent them from succeeding to the Frankish throne. Saint Cloud escaped and
lived as a hermit, renouncing any claim to the throne. Later, Saint Cloud was
ordained to the holy priesthood, and lived a life of virtue and good works. He
died around 560.
A
longer account is here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/071.html
And
a short video recounting his life is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksufdDd1prY
10th
– St Salvius. + 584. A lawyer who became a monk and abbot, then a hermit and
finally Bishop of Albi in France (574-584). He died while tending the sick
during an epidemic.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/105.html
11th
– St Patiens. + c 491. Archbishop of Lyons in France, he was highly praised by
his contemporary St Sidonius Apollinaris. He devoted all his income to the
poor.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/113.html
15th
– St Aicard. + c 687. Born in Poitiers in France, the son of an officer at the
court of Clotaire II, early in life he became a monk at Ansion in Poitou. Here
he spent thirty-nine years, later becoming Abbot of St Benedict's at Quinçay
near Poitiers. Finally he succeeded St Philibert as Abbot of Jumièges, where
there were nearly one thousand monks.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
about St Aicard is found here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/154.html
18th
– St Ferreolus. + 3rd cent. An army officer, he was martyred in Vienne in France
under Diocletian.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/183.html
18th
– St Richardis. + c 895. Married at the age of twenty-two to the Frankish
Emperor Charles the Fat, after nineteen years of married life she was accused
of unfaithfulness. Her innocence was established, but she became a nun at the
convent of Andlau which she had founded.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
19th
– St Seine. + c 580. A monk at Réomay and founder of a monastery in Segreste
near Langres in France, which was later called Saint-Seine after him.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/196.html
21st
– St Maura. +850. A holy virgin in Troyes in France, she reposed at the
age of twenty-three after a life of prayer and good works.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
details about this wonderful saint are here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/212.html
22nd
– St Lo. + c 568. Bishop of Coutances in France for forty years (528-568). His
estate became the village of Saint-Lô.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/213.html
22nd
– St Salaberga. + c 665. As a child she was healed of blindness by St Eustace
of Lisieux in France. She married very young but her husband died after only
two months. Her second husband was St Blandinus and she had five children, two
of whom are venerated as saints. In later years husband and wife took up the
monastic life, Salaberga in Poulangey. Later she founded the convent of St John
the Baptist in Laon where she reposed
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
24th
– St Geremarus (Germer). + c 658. Born in Beauvais in the north of France, with
the consent of his saintly wife he became a monk at the monastery of Pentale,
where he later became abbot. He later lived as a hermit in a cave nearby. In
655 he founded the monastery of Flay, between Beauvais and Rouen, which became
known as Saint-Germer.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/242.html
25th
– St Aunaire (Anacharius), +604. HE was descended from a distinguished
family of the Orleanois, and lived in his youth at the court of Gontran, king
of Burgundy. But, having renounced the world, he submitted himself to the
direction of Syagrius, bishop of Autun, then celebrated for learning and
virtue. He was placed in the see of Auxerre about the year 570. He assisted at
the fourth council of Paris in 573, as well as at two other councils which were
held some years after at Macon. Zealous to restore discipline in his diocess,
he assembled a synod, where forty-five statutes were framed, the first of which
condemned superstitious observances on New Year’s day. He was indefatigable in
his vigilance and care over the purity of manners, and constantly instructed
his people in all the duties that regard the Christian dispensation. . . . The
rest is at
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/254.html
28th
– St Exuperius (Soupire). +411. Bishop of Toulouse in France, he was noted for
his generosity in sending large contributions to the poor in Palestine and
Egypt.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/284.html
28th
– St Faustus. c 408-490. Born in Brittany, Faustus became a monk at Lérins in
France and later abbot (433). In about 459 he became Bishop of Riez. He fought
both Arianism and Pelagianism and was very influential, maintaining the
Orthodox teaching of St Cassian.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
France/Germany:
4th
– St Ida of Herzfeld. + c 813. Happily married, she was widowed when she was
still very young. She founded the convent of Herzfeld in Westphalia in Germany
and devoted herself to good works.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/043.html
8th
– St Corbinian. 670-730. He lived for fourteen years as a hermit and then went
to Rome. He was consecrated bishop and went to preach Christ in Germany. He
lived in Freising in Bavaria.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/085.html
22nd
– St Emmeran. + c 690. Born in Poitiers in France, he moved to Bavaria in
Germany where he became abbot of a monastery in Regensburg and then bishop
there. He was later attacked by assassins and died from his wounds. His relics
were enshrined in the monastery dedicated to him in Regensburg where he was
venerated as a martyr.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
His
tireless work as a preacher of the Gospel bore much fruit:
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/222.html
France/Luxembourg/Belgium/Holland:
3rd
– St Remaclus, An Enlightener of the West. + c 663. A noble born in
Aquitaine in France, he became a monk and the first Abbot of Solignac near
Limoges and then of Cougnon in Luxembourg. About the year 648 he founded the
monasteries of Stavelot and Malmédy in Belgium and in 652 he became Bishop of
Maastricht in Holland.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/032.html
France/Switzerland:
13th
– St Amatus. + 690. Abbot of Agaunum, he became the tenth Bishop of Sion in
Valais in Switzerland. As a result of a false accusation, he was exiled to the
monastery of Péronne and then to Breuil near Arras in the north of France,
where he lived as one of the monks.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Many
other details are related here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/132.html
France/Switzerland/Italy:
6th
– St Chainoaldus (Chagnoald, Cagnou). + 633. Brother of St Faro and St Fara. A
disciple of St Columbanus, with whom he went to Bobbio in Italy and helped
found the monastery. He later became Bishop of Laon in France.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://celticsaints.org/2020/0906d.html
Gaza:
8th
– Sts Eusebius, Nestablus, Zeno, and Nestor, Martyrs. IN the reign of
Julian the Apostate, Eusebius, Nestablus, and Zeno, three zealous Christian
brothers at Gaza, were seized by the pagans in their houses, where they had
concealed themselves: they were carried to prison, and inhumanly scourged.
Afterwards the idolaters, who were assembled in the amphitheatre at the public
shows, began loudly to demand the punishment of the sacrilegious criminals, as
they called the confessors. By these cries the assembly soon became a tumult;
and the people worked themselves into such a ferment that they ran in a fury to
the prison, which they forced, and hauling out the three brothers, began to
drag them, sometimes on their bellies, sometimes on their backs, bruising them
against the pavement, and striking them with clubs, stones, or any thing that
came in their way. The very women, quitting their work, ran the points of their
spindles into them, and the cooks took the kettles from off the fire, poured
the scalding water upon them, and pierced them with their spits. . . . The rest
is at https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/084.html .
Germany:
15th
– Greatmartyr Nicetas the Goth (+372). He was a Goth of noble birth among his
people, a disciple of Bishop Theophilus of the Goths, who took part in the
First Ecumenical Council. When he confronted Athanaric, the pagan ruler of the
Goths, for his persecution of Christians and for his unbelief, Nicetas was
cruelly tortured and finally burned to death. Though he died in the flames, his
body was brought forth unharmed. His relics were taken by his friend Marianus
to Mopsuestia in Cilicia, where a church dedicated to the Saint was built.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
For
a longer account: https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/15/102615-greatmartyr-niketas-the-goth
Germany/France:
22nd
– St Florentius. + 5th cent. Born in Bavaria in Germany, he was a disciple of
St Martin of Tours, by whom he was ordained priest and sent to preach in Poitou
in France. He eventually went to live as a hermit at Mt Glonne in Anjou, where
he gained numerous disciples. He built a monastery for them later known as
Saint-Florent-le-Vieux. He reposed there in extreme old age.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Germany/Sweden/Denmark:
17th
– St Uni. + 936. A monk at New Corvey in Germany, in 917 he became Bishop of
Bremen-Hamburg. He helped enlighten Sweden and Denmark and reposed in Birka in
Sweden.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Greece:
21st
– Apostle Quadratus of the Seventy (+130). He was one of the Seventy appointed
by Christ Himself. After Christ's Ascension, Quadratus preached the Gospel in
Athens, then served as a bishop in Athens, then in Magnesia. He was stoned by
the pagans, then imprisoned and starved to death in prison. It is said that he
wrote a defense of the Christian faith which caused the Emperor Hadrian to
decree that Christians were not to be persecuted without special cause. He was
buried in Magnesia.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
See
also: https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/21/102683-apostle-quadratus-of-the-seventy
Ireland:
9th
– St Ciaran of Clonmacnoise (+549). Born to the family of a cartwright
in Ireland, he entered monastic life when he was very young at the Monastery of
Clonard, where he became a disciple of St Finnian (December 12). He became
one of the 'Twelve Apostles of Ireland', all of them disciples of St
Finnian. Ciaran founded the great monastery of Clonmacnoise (pronounced clon-mac-neesh) on the Shannon River, which became one of
Ireland's great monasteries. Once, during a great famine, He distributed all of
the monastery's food to the people, entrusting his monks' survival, and his
own, to providence. Saint Ciaran reposed in peace, aged only thirty-three, in
459.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
Longer
accounts are here:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/09/102553-saint-ciaran-of-clonmacnoise
https://orthochristian.com/73745.html
12th
– St Ailbhe of Emly (+6th hundredyear). THIS saint, who is honoured
as chief patron of Munster, one of the four provinces of Ireland, was converted
by certain Britons, and had travelled to Rome before the arrival of St. Patrick
among the Irish. After his return home, he became the disciple and
fellow-labourer of that great apostle of his country, and being ordained by him
first archbishop of Munster, fixed his see at Emly, 1 which has been
long since removed to Cashel. With such a commanding authority did this
apostolic man deliver the dictates of eternal wisdom to a rude and barbarous
people, such was the force with which, both by words and example, he set forth
the sanctity of the divine law, and so evident were the miracles with which he
confirmed the heavenly truths which he preached, that the sacred doctrine
easily made its way to the hearts of his hearers; and he not only brought over
an incredible multitude to the faith of Christ, but infused into many the perfect
spirit of the gospel, possessing a wonderful art of making men not only
Christians but saints. King Engus having bestowed on him the isle of Arran, he
founded in it a great monastery, which was so famous for the sanctity of its
inhabitants, that from them the island was long called Arran of Saints. . . .
The rest is at
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/123.html
23rd
– St Adomnan (+704). St. Adomnan (also Adamnan, Eunan) was born in Ireland in
about 625, approximately on the site of the present-day small town of Raphoe in
County Donegal in Ulster. His father’s name was Ronan and his mother was called
Ronat. The venerable man studied at one of the monasteries founded by St.
Columba of Iona (who was probably a distant relative) in Ireland before he
moved to Scotland. The young Adomnan soon became famous for his learning,
brilliant knowledge of the Holy Scriptures and
theology, fine teaching abilities and holiness of personal life. It is believed
that for a short time Adomnan studied and taught at the Irish Monastery of
Durrow. Historians suggest that for some time the saint headed the Skreen
Monastery in the Irish county of Sligo; the area where this monastery stood
once was known as “the Seals’ Hill”. Later the man of God moved to Scotland, to
the great monastery of Iona, where he led the monastic life under Abbot Segene.
In the year 679, aged about fifty-five, Adomnan himself became the tenth abbot
of this prominent monastery and, thus, one of the successors of great Columba. Adomnan
was one of the wisest and most active abbots in the whole history of Iona.
From time to time he made journeys to the north of England and Ireland to
spread the Good News of Christ. He also undertook a successful mission to the
Scottish area now known as Perth and Kinross, especially to the long glen (a
narrow valley in Scotland) called Glen Lyon. . . . The rest is at
https://orthochristian.com/86489.html
25th
– St Finbarr, first bishop of Cork (+610). St. Finbarr (also spelled Findbarr,
Barra, Barr, Barry) was descended from a clan in the south-western
Irish kingdom (now province) of Connacht,
which is also spelled Connaught, in the mid-sixth century. In all probability
his birthplace was at Lisnacaheragh in what is now county Cork in the south of
Ireland. His father was a metalworker and his mother was a royal slave. The
name “Finbarr” means “a white head” because he was born fair-haired. This name
was given him when he was tonsured, but his original baptismal name was Lochan.
Young Finbarr may have studied at a monastery in Kilkenny and also at Macroom –
a town in the present-day county Cork. St. Finbarr with several companions made
at least two pilgrimages to Rome and also visited Wales where he communicated
with St. David of Mynyw, the patron-saint of that country. St.
Finbarr preached energetically in the south of Ireland and, according to some
traditions, also in Scotland, though there is no written evidence to confirm
that. The saint of God spent a part of his life as an anchorite in full
seclusion on an island in lake Gougane Barra in county Cork. With time the holy
ascetic was joined by numerous disciples, mainly from southern Ireland, and St.
Finbarr founded a monastery and a school near his hermitage at Gougane Barra,
both of which became very famous and attracted a large number of monks and
students from the southern part of the emerald island. The saint also erected
at least several churches in the neighboring area and one chapel at Kilbarry –
a site associated with his family. . . . The rest is at
https://orthochristian.com/97682.html
See
also https://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2019/09/saint-finbarr-bishop-of-cork.html
26th
– St Colman Elo. + c 610. A nephew of St Columba, he founded monasteries in
Lynally (Land-Elo, Lin-Alli) and in Muckamore in Ireland. He is credited as the
author of the Alphabet of Devotion.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/263.html
https://celticsaints.org/2020/0926a.html
https://celt.ucc.ie//published/T201036.html
Ireland/England/Scotland:
6th
– St Bega (Begh, Bee). 7th cent. A holy virgin from Ireland who founded a
convent at what is now St Bee's Head in Cumberland. The village of Kilbees in
Scotland was also named after her.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
More
details are here: http://orthochristian.com/82258.html
Ireland/France/Germany:
8th
– St Disibod (Disibode, Disen). + c 700. Born in Ireland, he went to Germany
with several companions and founded a monastery on a hill in the valley of the
Nahe near Bingen. This became known as Disibodenberg or Disenberg.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/086.html
Ireland/Austria/Germany:
24th
– Sts Chuniald and Gislar. + 7th cent. Born in Ireland, they enlightened the
south of Germany and Austria with St Rupert of Salzburg.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Ireland/Germany/France:
17th
– St Rouin. + c 690. A monk and priest from Ireland who preached in Germany and
entered the monastery of Tholey near Trier. He moved to the forest of Argonn in
France where he founded the monastery of Wasloi, later known as Beaulieu.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/174.html
Ireland/Scotland:
15th
– St Merinus (+620). Saint Mirin, a contemporary of
Saint Columba, was a disciple of Saint Comgall at Bangor (County Down). He had
a powerful influence in the area of Strathclyde, south of Glasgow, Scotland.
There he founded and was abbot of Paisley abbey, where he died and was buried.
His shrine became a pilgrimage centre. Mirin is venerated in both Ireland and
Scotland, where there is a chapel dedicated to him among the ruins of Inch
Murryn, the largest island in Loch Lomond.
https://celticsaints.org/2020/0915b.html
Ireland/Switzerland:
27th
– St Marcellus (+869). Born in Ireland, he became a monk at St Gall in
Switzerland.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
The Irish with some merit claim him as the instigator of the
cultural eminence of Saint Gall. . . . In the 19th century, H. Zimmer wrote:
"In my opinion, there were very few men who in the middle of the 9th
century exerted such a beneficent influence upon the German mind in the
cultivation of the higher arts and sciences as Moengal and his followers."
The abbey necrology calls Marcellus "the most learned and excellent
man".
More
at https://celticsaints.org/2020/0927c.html
Italy
and across the West:
29th
– The Feast of St Michael the Archangel/Dedication of the Church of St
Michael the Archangel on Mt Gargano, Italy.
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/291.html
More
on the Holy Angels:
Old
Rome:
11th
– Sts Protus and Hyacinth. + c 257. By tradition brothers, they were both
servants and were martyred in Rome. The relics of St Hyacinth were uncovered in
1845.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/111.html
15th
– St Nicomedes. HE was a holy priest at Rome, who was apprehended in the
persecution of Domitian for his assiduity in assisting the martyrs in their
conflicts, and for interring their bodies. Refusing constantly to sacrifice to
idols, he was beaten to death with clubs about the year 90.
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/152.html
16th
– Sts Abundius, Abundantius, Marcian and John. + c 303. The first two were
martyred in Rome on the Flaminian Way under the Emperor Diocletian who ordered
them to be beheaded together with Marcian, a senator, and John, his son, whom
Abundius had raised from the dead.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
16th
– St Cornelius (+253). Pope of Rome, he was much tried by the heresy of
Novatianism and his persecutors exiled him to Civita Vecchia where his
sufferings probably hastened his death. St Cyprian refers to him as a martyr.
His tomb in Lucina in the cemetery of Callistus still exists.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
For
more about St Cornelius and the persecutions against the Orthodox Church at
this time: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/161.html
17th
- Martyrs Sophia and her three daughters Faith, Hope and Love, at Rome
(+137). Sophia was a widow in Rome in the time of the Emperor Hadrian, and
raised her three daughters in the Faith. When the four of them were brought
before the persecutors, Faith was twelve years old, Hope was ten, and Love was
nine. Ordered to make sacrifice to the goddess Artemis, all of them humbly
refused. All three daughters were tortured, then executed, before their
mother's eyes. Sophia buried their bodies and mourned at their grave for three
days and nights, then fell asleep in peace. For her steadfastness and
solidarity with her daughters' sufferings she is counted as a martyr along with
them. Sophia means "wisdom" in Greek; the three
daughters' names in Greek are Pistis, Elpis, and Agape; in Russian, Vera, Nadezhda, and Lyubov. They are represented on many icons.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/17/102638-martyr-sophia-and-her-three-daughters-at-rome
20th
– Great Martyr Eustathios Placidas and his wife and children, also martyred
with him (+118). We open with a portion of their life, but the whole thing
deserves to be read by all Christians. Before his Baptism, the Holy Great
Martyr Eustáthios was named Plakidas (Πλακίδας). He was a Roman General in the
reigns of Emperors Titus (79-81) and Trajan (98-117). Even before he came to
know Christ, Plakidas devoted himself to charitable endeavors, helping the poor
and destitute. Therefore, the Lord did not allow this virtuous pagan to
continue in the darkness of idolatry. One day, while hunting in a forest, he
saw a remarkable stag which stopped now and then to stare at him. Plakidas pursued
it on horseback, but could not catch up. The stag jumped over a chasm and stood
on the other side facing him. Suddenly, Plakidas saw a radiant Cross between
its antlers. The General was astonished to hear a voice coming from the Cross
saying, “Why do you pursue me, Plakidas?” “Who are You, Master?” asked
Plakidas. The voice replied, “I am Jesus Christ, Whom you do not know, but by
your good deeds, you honor me. I have appeared here on this creature for your
sake, to draw you into the net of my love for mankind. It is not fitting that
one as righteous as you should worship idols and remain ignorant of the truth.
It was to save mankind that I came into the world.” Plakidas cried out, “Lord,
I believe that You are the God of Heaven and earth, the Creator of all things.
Master, teach me what I should do.” Again the Lord replied, “Go to the bishop
of your country and receive Baptism from him, and he will instruct you.” . . .
The rest is at
20th
– St Agapitus I, Bishop of Rome. + 536. Born in Rome, he was elected Pope of
Rome in May 535 and reposed in Constantinople on April 22 536. As Pope he
showed great strength of character in opposing Monophysitism. His relics were
brought back to Rome on Sept 20, when he was commemorated a second time.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://orthodoxwiki.org/Agapetus_I_of_Rome
23rd
– St Linus, Bishop of Rome (+ c. 78), first pope,
Martyr. A disciple of the Apostle Paul, he was consecrated by him. One of the
Seventy Apostles, he is mentioned in 2 Timothy 4,21. He was pope for about
twelve years and may have been martyred. Feast: 23 September (In the East 4
January and 5 November).
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/ortpopes.htm
Old
Rome/Palestine.
28th
– St Eustochium. c 370-419. Born in Rome, she was the third daughter of St
Paula. She joined her mother in Bethlehem and succeeded her mother as abbess of
a convent in Bethlehem in 404.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
For
more about her life: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/283.html
30th
– St Jerome. c 341-420. Eusebius Hieronymus Sophronius was born at
Stridon in Dalmatia. He studied in Rome, travelled in Italy and Gaul, lived as
a hermit in Palestine and then returned to Rome where he was ordained. He
finally went back to Palestine and settled in Bethlehem. He spent the rest of
his life translating and commenting on the Bible.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/06/15/101732-saint-jerome-hieronymus-of-stridon
Palestine:
1st
– Righteous Joshua, son of Nun.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/01/102456-righteous-joshua-son-of-nun-navi
5th
– Holy Prophet Zachariah and Righteous Elizabeth, father and mother of Saint
John the Baptist.
22nd
– Holy Prophet Jonah.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/22/102696-prophet-jonah
28th
– Holy Prophet Baruch, scribe of the Prophet Jeremiah. As John Brady of
abbamoses.com says, ‘The prophetical book that bears his name is not included
in the Protestant canon of scripture; if your Bible does not contain it, look
for another Bible.’
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/28/102745-prophet-baruch
Palestine/Africa:
11th
– St Euphrosynus the Cook (+9th hundredyear). An humble
kitchen-worker in a monastery who because of his humility and other great
virtues was granted to walk in Paradise while in the flesh. When his brother
monks discovered how holy he was, he fled his monastery for the wilderness to
escape the praises of men.
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/11/102581-saint-euphrosynus-the-cook-of-alexandria
Palestine/Asia
Minor:
4th
– St Hermione, Daughter of St Phillip the Deacon. She was one of the four
daughters of the Apostle Philip the Deacon (October 11). As we read in the Acts
of the Apostles (21:8), all four were virgins and prophets. Her fame as a
prophetess and a worker of miraculous healings attracted the attention of the
Emperor Hadrian, under whose tribunal she was cruelly tortured. It is written
that throughout her torments the only sounds that came from her lips were
verses of the Psalms. At last she was sentenced to death; when the executioners
raised the sword to behead her they were struck with paralysis, but St Hermione
healed them by her prayer. At this, the executioners believed in Christ and
laid down the sword. Saint Hermione was buried at Ephesus.
http://www.abbamoses.com/months/september.html
A
longer account is here: https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/04/102492-martyr-hermione-daughter-of-saint-philip-the-deacon
13th
– St Cornelius the Centurion, Martyr-Bishop. Most know him through the Book of
Acts (ch. 10), but his missionary work after his baptism is also well worth
reading about:
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/13/102594-hieromartyr-cornelius-the-centurion
Russia:
25th
– St Sergius of Radonezh (+1392), the greatest Saint of Russia.
30th
– St Michael, first bishop of Kiev (+992).
https://www.oca.org/saints/lives/2020/09/30/102820-saint-michael-first-metropolitan-of-kiev
Hymns
to the Saint:
The
prophecy of the first-called apostle has been fulfilled today: / Grace has
illumined the hills of Kiev and the faith is increased. / Those who were not a
people / are now the people of God, a holy nation, / a flock of Christ of which
you, O Michael, are first shepherd, / and you serve it by bringing baptism. / O
Hierarch, standing before God pray that all may be saved!
You
appeared as a second Moses, / bringing the vine from Egyptian idolatry into the
land of promise. / You said of it: Faith shall be established in this land, /
and fruit to nourish the world shall flourish on the summits of Kiev, / more
than on the heights of Lebanon. / Having this harvest we bless you, O Hierarch
Michael!
https://www.oca.org/saints/troparia/2020/09/30/102820-saint-michael-first-metropolitan-of-kiev
Spain:
17th
– St Columba. + 853. Born in Cordoba and a nun at Tábanos, she was driven from
there by the Moorish persecution of 852. She took refuge in Cordoba in Spain,
where, being called on to deny Christ, she openly rejected Mohammed and was
beheaded.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/172.html
23rd
– Sts Polyxene and Xanthippe, early preachers of the Gospel in Spain. The
Monastic Women Xanthippe and Polyxene were sisters by birth and they lived in
Spain in the time of the holy Apostles. They were among the first to hear the
divine teaching of Christ the Savior from the holy Apostle Paul, when he
preached in their land. Saint Xanthippe and her husband Probus accepted
Christianity, but Saint Polyxene was still a pagan when a certain man became
entranced with her extraordinary beauty and forcibly carried her off to Greece
on a ship. . . . The rest is at
Switzerland/France:
5th
– St Bertin. + c 709. Born near Constance, he became a monk at Luxeuil in
France. He helped St Omer, Bishop of Thérouanne and became Abbot of Sithin
(afterwards called St Bertin). The monastery prospered under him and he founded
many new monasteries.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/052.html
9th
– St Omer. c 595-670. Born near Constance in Switzerland, he became a
monk at Luxeuil and after some twenty years Bishop of Thérouanne in the north
of France. In order to enlighten the region, St Omer covered the area with
monasteries. The saint himself helped found the monastery of Sithin, around
which grew up the town now known as Saint Omer.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Much
more about this great Saint is told here: https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/092.html
Thrace:
29th
– St Theodota (+318), a harlot who repented of her sins and suffered martyrdom
after cruel tortures, steadfastly refusing to deny Christ.
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/292.html
Venice/Hungary:
24th
– St Gerard Sagredo. + 1046. Apostle of Hungary, where he is venerated
as St Collert. Born in Venice, he was a monk and Abbot of San Giorgio Maggiore.
On a pilgrimage to Palestine he was stopped while travelling through Hungary by
King Stephen and persuaded to stay. He became the first Bishop of Csanad.
Gerard worked zealously, but during the pagan reaction after St Stephen he was
martyred in Buda and his body was thrown into the Danube.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
Much
more:
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/241.html
Wales:
11th
– St Deiniol of Bangor (+584). St. Deiniol (the Welsh from of Daniel) lived in
the sixth century. He was a descendant of one Celtic ruler in Northern Britain.
As a young man Deiniol probably studied at the monastery of the saintly Abbot Cadoc
in Llancarfan, Wales. He also may have lived as hermit in Pembrokeshire for
some while. But our saint of God, above all, is famous for establishing two
monasteries in Wales with the name “Bangor”: the first was called “Bangor Fawr”
(now the city of Bangor in Gwynedd), while the second was called “Bangor
Iscoed”1
(now the village of Bangor-on-Dee on the River Dee in Wrexham). St. Deiniol may
have served as abbot of both monasteries – Bangor Fawr and Bangor on the River
Dee - which gained wide renown all over Britain. According to the Venerable
Bede, Bangor Fawr Monastery over a short period of time became one of the
greatest monastic centers among Britons and no fewer than 2000 monks lived in
it. Tradition says that Deiniol was not only abbot, but also the first bishop
of the newly-established Diocese of Bangor, which exists to this day. . . . The
rest is at
https://orthochristian.com/82345.html
17th
– Sts Socrates and Stephen. THEIR names are illustrious in the British
Martyrologies. They suffered during the persecution of Dioclesian. Many
churches in Wales were formerly dedicated to their memory; and they are thought
to have glorified God by their death in that part of Britain.
https://www.bartleby.com/210/9/175.html
27th
– St Barrog (+7th hundredyear). 7th cent. A disciple of St Cadoc of
Wales, he left his name to Barry Island off the coast of Glamorgan, where he
lived as a hermit. His chapel became a famous
pilgrimage site.
http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/stdsep.htm
https://celticsaints.org/2020/0927a.html
--
Holy
Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema
to the Union!
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