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St. John Chrysostom:
Patron Saint of the Holy Metropolis of New Jersey
Apolytikion:
The grace of your words illuminated the
universe like a shining beacon. It amassed treasures of munificence in the
world. It demonstrated the
Kontakion:
You received divine grace from Heaven, and by your own lips taught all to worship the One God in Trinity. All-blessed, venerable John Chrysostom, deservedly, we praise you for you are a teacher clearly revealing things divine.
About St. John Chrysostom
This greatest and most beloved of all Christian orators was born in Antioch the
Great in the year 344 or 347; his pious parents were called Secundus and Anthusa.
After his mother was widowed at the age of twenty, she devoted herself to
bringing up John and his elder sister in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.
John received his literary training under Anthragathius the philosopher, and
Libanius the sophist, who was the greatest Greek scholar and rhetorician of his
day. Libanius was a pagan, and when asked before his death whom he wished to
have for his successor, he said, "John, had not the Christians stolen him from
us." With such a training, and with such gifts as he had by nature, John had
before him a brilliant career as a rhetorician. But through the good example of
his godly mother Anthusa and of the holy Bishop Meletius of Antioch (see Feb.
12), by whom he was ordained reader about the year 370, he chose instead to
dedicate himself to God. From the years 374 to 381 he lived the monastic life in
the hermitages that were near Antioch. His extreme asceticism undermined his
health, compelling him to return to Antioch, where Saint Meletius ordained him
deacon about the year 381. Saint Meletius was called to Constantinople later
that year to preside over the Second Ecumenical Council, during which he fell
asleep in the Lord. In 386 Bishop Flavian ordained John presbyter of the Church
of Antioch. Upon his elevation to the priesthood his career as a public preacher
began, and his exceptional oratorical gifts were made manifest through his many
sermons and commentaries. They are distinguished by their eloquence and the
remarkable ease with which rich imagery and scriptural allusions are multiplied;
by their depth of insight into the meaning of Scripture and the workings of
God's providence; and, not least of all, by their earnestness and moral force,
which issue from the heart of a blameless and guileless man who lived first what
he preached to others. Because of his fame, he was chosen to succeed Saint
Nectarius as Patriarch of Constantinople. He was taken away by stealth, to avoid
the opposition of the people, and consecrated Patriarch of Constantinople on
February 28, 398, by Theophilus, Patriarch of Alexandria, who was to prove his
mortal enemy.
At that time the Emperor of the East was Arcadius, who had had Saint Arsenius
the Great as his tutor (see May 8); Arcadius was a man of weak character, and
much under the influence of his wife Eudoxia. The zealous and upright
Chrysostom's unsparing censures of the lax morals in the imperial city stung the
vain Eudoxia; through Theophilus' plottings and her collaboration, Saint John
was banished to Pontus in 403. The people were in an uproar, and the following
night an earthquake shook the city; this so frightened the Empress Eudoxia that
she begged Arcadius to call Chrysostom back. While his return was triumphant,
his reconciliation with the Empress did not last long. When she had a silver
statue of herself erected in the forum before the Church of the Holy Wisdom
(Saint Sophia) in September of 403, and had it dedicated with much unseemly
revelry, Saint John thundered against her, and she could not forgive him. In
June of 404 he was exiled to Cucusus, on the borders of Cilicia and Armenia.
From here he exchanged letters with Pope Innocent of Rome, who sent bishops and
priests to Constantinople requesting that a council be held. Saint John's
enemies, dreading his return, prevailed upon the Emperor to see an insult in
this, and had John taken to a more remote place of banishment called Pityus near
the Caucasus. The journey was filled with bitter sufferings for the aged bishop,
both because of the harshness of the elements and the cruelty of one of his 310
guards. He did not reach Pityus, but gave up his soul to the Lord near Comana in
Pontus, at the chapel of the Martyr Basiliscus (see May 22), who had appeared to
him shortly before, foretelling the day of his death, which came to pass on
September 14, 407. His last words were "Glory be to God for all things." His
holy relics were brought from Comana to Constantinople thirty-one years later by
the Emperor Theodosius the Younger and Saint Pulcheria his sister, the children
of Arcadius and Eudoxia, with fervent supplications that the sin of their
parents against him be forgiven; this return of his holy relics is celebrated on
January 27.
Saint John was surnamed Chrysostom ("Golden-mouth") because of his eloquence. He
made exhaustive commentaries on the divine Scriptures and was the author of more
works than any other Church Father, leaving us complete commentaries on the Book
of Genesis, the Gospels of Saints Matthew and John, the Acts, and all the
Epistles of Saint Paul. His extant works are 1,447 sermons and 240 epistles.
Twenty-two teachers of the Church have written homilies of praise in his honour.
Besides his feasts today and on January 27, he is celebrated as one of the Three
Hierarchs on January 30, together with Saint Basil the Great and Saint Gregory
the Theologian. It should be noted that, because September 14 is the Exaltation of the Cross, the Saint's memory has been transferred to this day.
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