The Sixth Day of Pascha:
Teaching 10
Commemoration of the Theotokos of the Life-Giving Spring
(With Which Prayers, When and How Should One Approach the Theotokos?)
By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko
I. Today is the celebration in honor of the icon of the Life-Giving Spring. Let us set forth the history of the present feast of the Life-Giving Spring and draw from it lessons of edification that we can learn.
In the middle of the fifth century, in the environs of Constantinople, the capital of the Greek kingdom, there was a beautiful place, shaded by a grove of various trees and watered by a pure and bright spring; but with time it died out and the spring itself closed up. The Greek Emperor Leo the Macedonian, when he was still a simple private man, was walking one day in this place and met a man who was blind from birth. Being compassionate by nature, Leo gave his hand to the blind man and led him; but the blind man, being scorched by the strong heat of the sun, asked for a drink. In vain Leo, having seated the blind man in the shade, looked for water; there was none anywhere. But when he returned tired from his useless search to the blind man, he suddenly heard a wonderful voice from heaven: “Do not be sad, Leo! The water is near you.” Struck by this voice, Leo was confused and saw nothing around him. Then again the gentle voice was heard: “Leo, king! Enter this thick, shady grove, take the water you find there and give it to the thirsty man, and put the mud from the spring on his eyes. Who I am, the long-time inhabitant of this place, you will learn later, and with My help you will not hesitate to build a temple in My name on this place, in which those who come here and call upon My name with faith will receive the fulfillment of their petitions and complete healing from illnesses." The frightened Leo immediately hurried to the indicated place, and first, taking mud from the spring, applied it to the eyes of the blind man, then, taking water from the spring, gave it to the half-dead blind man, who was immediately refreshed. But as soon as he sprinkled water on his own eyes, he suddenly regained his sight and, no longer requiring a guide, went alone into the city, preaching the miracles of the Mother of God.