January 14, 2026

Saint Nina as a Model for our Lives

St. Nina (Feast Day - January 14)

By Protopresbyter Fr. George Papavarnavas

Saint Nina was born in the 3rd century A.D. in Cappadocia to pious parents: Zebulon, who was a relative of the Holy Great Martyr George the Trophy-Bearer, and Susanna. Her father was a renowned general of the Roman army during the reign of Emperor Maximian. However, out of great love for Christ, he abandoned the army and, with the consent of his wife, became a monk in the desert of the Jordan. Her mother was the sister of Juvenal, Bishop of Jerusalem, and after her husband’s departure to the desert of the Jordan, she was appointed — by the bishop’s blessing — as a deaconess at the Holy Church of the Resurrection of Christ, having first entrusted their daughter Nina to the most devout Eldress Nikephora, who raised her “in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.” That is, she taught her prayer, participation in the worship of the Church, and the study of the God-inspired Scriptures. For this reason Nina’s heart was filled with love for God and for human beings, and she desired to preach the gospel, like the Apostles.

When she reached adulthood, following an exhortation of the Most Holy Theotokos, she journeyed to what is now Georgia. There, through her inspired preaching, her radiant example, and the miracles that God worked through her, she succeeded in drawing people away from lifeless idols and leading them to the true faith — first the rulers of Georgia, King Mirian and Queen Nana, and then the people, that is, the simple folk as well as those of the so-called higher social classes. To this day the people of Georgia honor Saint Nina and regard her as the patroness of their country, after Saint George. She reposed in peace, and her holy relic remained incorrupt.

Homily for the Commemoration of the Holy Equal-to-the-Apostles Nina (Fr. Daniel Sysoev)


Homily for the Commemoration of the Holy Equal-to-the-Apostles Nina 

By Fr. Daniel Sysoev

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit!

I congratulate you all on the feast day of Saint Nina, Equal-to-the-Apostles, Enlightener of Georgia! Saint Nina converted the people of Georgia from the darkness of unbelief to the Light of Christ, and we see that in Christ there is neither female nor male, and every person can ascend to the unimaginable heights of divine vision and see the Light of God, as Saint Nina did. Her life is described in detail in the Iveron Paterikon, but I will remind you of its highlights for the benefit of our souls.

Saint Nina was a relative of the Holy Great Martyr George, which is why Georgia is labeled "Georgia" on all English-language maps, in honor of the Holy Great Martyr George the Victorious. Saint Nina's mother was the sister of the ruling Patriarch of Jerusalem. From childhood, she decided to dedicate her life to serving God and become a nun. At that time, monasticism did not yet exist, but there were people who lived near churches, did not marry, and dedicated their entire lives to serving God. One day, in a dream, Nina saw the Mother of God, who gave her a cross woven from grapevines and commanded her to go to her inheritance, which had been assigned to her by lot during her lifetime, but which the Archangel Gabriel refused to allow her to enter, saying that God would be pleased to enlighten this land in the coming years.

Holy Fathers Massacred at Sinai in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

These Saints, longing for the ascetic life, abandoned everything of the world and dwelt in the desert. With them was also the blessed Nilus, who had formerly been prefect of Constantinople, the one who, with power of speech and by the grace of the Holy Spirit, composed excellent writings that guide one in ascetic life in Christ, and who described the way of life, as well as the captivity and the murder of these venerable fathers. For they were slain by the barbarians called the ‘Blemmyes,’ who ranged from Arabia to Egypt and along the desert of the Red Sea.

Many years earlier, during the reign of Diocletian and in the time of Peter, Archbishop of Alexandria, other monks were also slain who likewise lived in stillness on Mount Sinai. The Saracens who dwelt on Mount Sinai went out, when the leader of their tribe died, and killed many of the ascetics. The remaining ascetics fled to the fortress. During the night a flame of fire appeared to the Saracens, burning the entire Mountain, and the flame rose up to heaven. The Saracens saw this and were afraid; they threw down their weapons and fled.

Those who were slain first were thirty-eight, bearing various wounds on their bodies. Of these, two were found alive, Savvas and Isaiah. Of those who were killed, some had their heads completely severed, others had their skin hanging from one side, and others were cut in two. These were buried by the two monks, who also recounted to us what had happened to them.


The Holy Abbas whom we celebrate today are doubly crowned by God: both for their ascetic labors as monks and for their athletic contests as martyrs. 

“From ascetic labors you passed into athletic contests; and adorned with double crowns, you fervently beseech the Savior that we may be saved.” 

Our hymnography indeed always emphasizes, in such cases of venerable martyrs, that the relationship between ascetic conduct and martyrdom is one of cause and effect. The martyrdom of blood often constitutes the consistent culmination of the martyrdom of conscience, which a monk above all experiences through his ascetic struggle. This is also what Saint Joseph, the Hymnographer of the Canon of the Holy Abbas, points out: 

“Venerable Fathers, meditating day and night on the law of the Lord, you were deemed worthy to become one with the Lord, the Tree of Life; and your fruit blossomed into crowns of contest.”

The correlation made by the Holy Hymnographer between the ascetic tears of the Holy Abbas and the outpouring of their martyric blood continues. He sees the holy ascetics as an extension of the Israelites, who, under the guidance of Moses, were able to escape the tyranny of Pharaoh in Egypt and drown his armies in the Red Sea. For them, the sea in this instance was their tears, in which they drowned the noetic Pharaoh, the devil; and then, through the shedding of their blood in martyrdom, they finally destroyed him and consigned him to oblivion: 

“In the sea of tears you first drowned the noetic Pharaoh, O wise ones; and afterwards, in the channels of your blood, you destroyed him and sent him to utter disappearance.”

And it is a fact that Saint Joseph emphasizes a reality of broader significance: it is not possible for the devil, the enemy of the salvation of the human race, to be defeated by the believer unless that person — whether monk or living in the world — walks in repentance, that is, with awareness of his sins and with tears that wash them away. When the Lord Himself, among other things, blessed those who mourn for their sins and for the sins of the world, there is no possibility of anyone diminishing this truth: “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted,” He said in His Sermon on the Mount.

The blessing of those who mourn is in reality, according to Saint Joseph, a blessing of those who by the grace of God have seen the depth of reality: that absolute priority belongs to the eternal and abiding things, and not to the trivial things of the earthly, unstable, and fluid matters of this world. Only the one, in other words, who has oriented his existence toward the eternal God can transcend whatever constitutes the deceptive allure of the present world and weep for his sins. The Apostle Paul expressed this clearly: “We do not look at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen are temporary, but the things which are not seen are eternal.” The Holy Hymnographer moves along the same lines, referring to today’s Saints: 

“Looking toward the eternity of the abiding things, O wise ones, you rejected the base and lowly character of the unstable and fluid earthly things; therefore you are blessed, O venerable martyrs.”

This godly mourning, due to the transfer of their existence to the eternal realities, made the Venerable Martyr Abbas live as monks with a contrite mind. And this contrition revealed their humility and consequently their true worship of God: “A broken and contrite heart God will not despise.” Saint Joseph the Hymnographer employs this contrition in order to describe in a single stroke the entire life of the Saints: 

“Having worshiped God with a contrite mind, you shattered the pride of the enemy, O blessed ones, and were yourselves broken in body and slain by his sword.” 

Thus the Holy Abbas were revealed quite literally as Paradise, giving a practical answer to all those who irrationally seek earthly paradises. And what do they proclaim? Paradise is the relationship with Christ. He is the true Paradise, and whoever is united with Him likewise becomes Paradise. 

“You were shown to be a Paradise of delight, having in your midst the Tree of Life, the Lord, who accepted your blood as a sacrifice.”

Source: Translated by John Sanidopoulos.
 

Homily for the Baptism of Christ, or Theophany (Fr. Daniel Sysoev)


Homily for the Baptism of Christ, or Theophany 

By Fr. Daniel Sysoev

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit!

I congratulate you all on the feast of the Theophany — the Baptism of the Lord! Today we celebrate the day when the Lord God revealed His inner nature, when the Lord appeared as the Triune Godhead! God the Father proclaimed His Son from Heaven, the Son was baptized by John in the Jordan, and the Holy Spirit rested upon Christ in the form of a dove. Thus, for the first time, we experienced the mystery of the life-giving and indivisible Trinity. We know that God is one, that God is Existent, Almighty, Omniscient, Righteous, Omnipresent, upholding all things with His power, but we would never have known what His inner life is like had He not revealed it to us. As Nikolai of Serbia said: "Previously, people knew that God is one, but they were very far from Him, so they saw only some distant flame of life force, but now, through the Incarnation of Jesus Christ, we are placed very close to the blazing hearth of God." And now we see that God is three Lights united as one.

Prologue in Sermons: January 14

 

Against Idle Talk

January 14

(A Discourse on Sinners Buried in the Church)


By Archpriest Victor Guryev

Many Christians don't restrain their tongues and, without thought or caution, blurt out whatever comes into their heads. When they are told that this is wrong and that they will have to answer to God for their thoughtless words, they pay no attention and reply, "So what if we talk too much? We won't get into trouble for that; for words are like water."

Is that so?

January 13, 2026

Saint Jeremiah I, Ecumenical Patriarch and Founder of the Sacred Monastery of Saint Nicholas "Stavronikita" on Mount Athos


By Panagiotis V. Koulpas,
Faculty of Theology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

Saint Jeremiah was born in the year 1485[1] in Zitsa of Ioannina. He was a man of great piety and virtue, though of limited formal education. At a young age he came under the guidance of the then Metropolitan of Ioannina, Theoleptos. The latter, appreciating the gifts of the young man from Ioannina, took him under his protection, tonsured him a monk, and ordained him deacon and presbyter. Later, the young Archimandrite Jeremiah went to Constantinople as a co-worker of his spiritual father, Metropolitan Theoleptos of Ioannina. The latter was elected Ecumenical Patriarch in the year 1518. In 1520 Saint Jeremiah was appointed Metropolitan of Sofia in Bulgaria.

Subsequently, in the year 1522,[2] he was elected for the first time Ecumenical Patriarch, as “Jeremiah I,” succeeding his deceased spiritual father and predecessor, Theoleptos. Nevertheless, he was compelled to be re-enthroned on the throne of the Apostle Andrew the First-Called in 1525, due to the uncanonical actions of Metropolitan Joannikios of Sozopolis. He remained in this position until 1537. As shepherd of Byzantium, Saint Jeremiah distinguished himself for his wisdom and humility, while at the same time showing particular zeal for the orderly functioning of the Ecumenical Patriarchate. He sent patriarchal letters regulating various matters of an administrative nature. He founded new dioceses (Argos and Nafplio, and Rhodes), restored the privileges of the Sacred Monastery of Eikosifoinissa on Mount Pangaion in Drama,[3] settled the issue of the election of the Archbishop of Sinai, and finally saved many churches of Constantinople from demolition by the Turks.

Holy Martyrs Hermylos and Stratonikos in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

The Holy Martyrs Hermylos and Stratonikos lived in the time of the emperor Licinius. Saint Hermylos held the ecclesiastical rank of Deacon. When he was brought before the emperor and confessed the name of Christ, he was first struck on the jaws with bronze instruments, then torn apart creating many wounds, while he also urged his friend Stratonikos to confess the faith. When Stratonikos turned and saw Saint Hermylos being struck on the jaws and having his belly and heart laid open by rods and swords, he wept. Since it immediately became evident that he shared in Saint Hermylos’ suffering by his own free choice, he confessed that he too was a Christian. Whereupon he was also beaten and cast together with Saint Hermylos into the river Istros, where both received a blessed end.

Saint Joseph the Hymnographer dwells on the manner of the Saints’ martyrdom — their drowning in the river Istros, the Danube. He considers this very drowning to have been their strongest weapon, by which, through the grace of God, they themselves drowned the devil and thus entered triumphantly into the Kingdom of Heaven.

Prologue in Sermons: January 13


On the Words of the Savior: "The Kingdom of God Suffers Violence"

January 13

(A Discourse on Labor and the Kingdom of Heaven)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

The Lord says, "The Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force" (Matthew 11:12). How should these words be understood? Yes, in our opinion, they can be understood very simply. Work, labor for the salvation of your soul, pray, be self-controlled, fulfill the duties of your calling, enrich yourself with Christian virtues, and you will be saved.

In the teaching on labor and the Kingdom of Heaven, we read: "Do not be lazy, brethren, about your salvation, and do not be intemperate like beasts, thinking only of food and drink. For Christ did not choose us for this life alone, but called us to the Kingdom of Heaven and showed us the way by which we can enter it. It is said that we must enter the Kingdom of Heaven through many tribulations, and those who use force take it by force; and this effort of those who take it by force propitiates God, and He grants us eternal life. The Lord knows our hearts and sees when we sincerely labor for Him and for our salvation, when we hasten to church to glorify our Creator with hymns, when we spend time in prayer and vigil. And the Lord elevates such people to angelic dignity. And such people, who use force to attain the Kingdom of Heaven, are known to God as His friends."

The Geopolitical Strategy of Russia and the Accusations Against the Ecumenical Patriarch


SVR: "Patriarch Bartholomew Is Creating a New Schism"

By Romfea.gr

January 12, 2026

Severe accusations against the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and the British intelligence services were launched by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), according to an official statement broadcast by the TASS news agency.

According to the SVR Press Office, the United Kingdom’s special services are allegedly providing strong support for the actions of the Phanar, with the aim of curbing the international influence of the Russian Orthodox Church.

For its part, the Russian side claims that the British services are “fueling Russophobic sentiments” in various European countries, using the ecclesiastical issue as a tool of pressure.

The statement places particular emphasis on developments in Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia.