| Of
all of the great saints and orators espousing Christianity throughout
our faith's humble beginning John of Antioch has proven to be one
of the greatest, and as such was given the title of "Chrysostom"
(in Russian, "Zlatoust"), or "golden-mouthed"
St. John Chrysostom was born in 347 in Antioch, Syria and was prepared
for a career in law. He was considered a brilliant student and his
mentor has high hopes for his pupil to become a statesman and lawyer.
But John decided, after he had been baptised at the age of 23, to
abandon the law in favour of service to the Church. He entered a
monastery which served to educate him in preparation for his ordination
as a priest in 386 AD. From the pulpit there emerged John, a preacher
whose oratorical excellence gained him a reputation throughout the
Christian world, a recognition which spurred him to even greater
expression that found favour with everyone but the Empress Eudoxia,
whom he saw fit to examine in some of his sermons.
When St. John was forty-nine years old, his immense popularity
earned him election to the Patriarchate of Constantinople, a prestigious
post from which he launched a crusade against excessiveness and
extreme wealth which the Empress construed as a personal affront
to her and her royal court. This also gave rise to sinister forces
who were envious of his tremendous influence. His enemies found
an instrument for his indictment when they discovered that he had
harboured some pious monks who had been excommunicated by his archrival
Theophilos, Bishop of Alexandria, who falsely accused John of treason
and surreptitiously plotted his exile.
When it was discovered that St. John had been wrongly exiled by
those who were working for the state a great protest arose in support
of St. John and he was restored to his post. Upon his return St.
John delivered a sermon in which he condemned the adoration of the
Empress Eudoxia during the unveiling of a public statue of her.
His sermon was grossly exaggerated by his enemies, and by the time
it reached the ears of the Empress it resulted in his permanent
exile from his beloved city of Constantinople. This banishment,
however, did not deter the golden-mouthed St. John, who continued
to communicate with the Church and until he died in Pontus, on the
Black Sea coast, in 407.
The treasure of treatises and letters which St. John left behind,
included the moving sermon that is heard at Easter Sunday services.
The loss of his sermons which were not set down on paper is incalculable.
Nevertheless, the immense store of his excellent literature reveals
his insight, straightforwardness, and rhetorical splendour, and
commands a position of the greatest respect and influence in Christian
thought, rivaling that of other Fathers of the Church. His liturgy,
which we respectfully chant on most Sundays, is a living testimony
of his greatness.
The slight, five-foot St. John stood tall in his defiance of state
authority, bowing only to God and never yielding the high principles
of Christianity to expediency or personal welfare. In the words
of his pupil, Cassia of Marseilles, "It would be a great thing
to attain his stature, but it would be difficult. Nevertheless,
a following of him is lovely and magnificent."
Chrysostom
as a Monk (AD 374-381)
After the death of his mother, St. John fled from the seductions
of city life to the monastic solitude of the mountains south of
Antioch, and there spent six happy years in theological study and
sacred meditation and prayer. Monasticism was to him (as to many
other great teachers of the Church) a profitable school of spiritual
experience and self-government. He embraced this mode of life as
"the true philosophy" from the purest motives, and brought
into it intellect and cultivation enough to make the seclusion available
for moral and spiritual growth.
He gives us a lively description of the bright side of this monastic
life. The monks lived in separate cells or huts, but according to
a common rule and under the authority of an abbot. They wore coarse
garments of camel's hair or goat's hair over their linen tunics.
They rose before sunrise, and began the day by singing a hymn of
praise and common prayer under the leadership of the abbot. Then
they went to their allotted task, some to read, others to write,
others to manual labour for the support of the poor. Four hours
in each day were devoted to prayer and singing. Their only food
was bread and water, except in case of sickness. They slept on straw
couches, free from care and anxiety. They held all things in common,
and the words of "mine and thine," which cause innumerable
strifes in the world, were unknown among the brethren. If one died,
he caused no lamentation, but thanksgiving, and was carried to the
grave amidst hymns of praise; for he was not dead, but "perfected,"
and permitted to behold the face of Christ. For them to live was
Christ, and to die was gain.
St. John was an admirer of active and useful monasticism, and warns
against the dangers of idle contemplation. He shows that the words
of our Lord, "One thing is needful"; "Take no anxious
thought for the morrow"; "Labour not for the meat that
perisheth," do not inculcate total abstinence from work, but
only undue anxiety about worldly things, and must be harmonised
with the apostolic exhortation to labour and to do good. He defends
monastic seclusion on account of the prevailing immorality in the
cities, which made it almost impossible to cultivate there a higher
Christian life.
Chrysostom as Patriarch of Constantinople
(AD 398-404)
After the death of Nectarius towards the end of the year 397, St.
John was chosen, entirely without his own agency and even against
his strongest opposition against him becoming archbishop of Constantinople.
He was hurried away from Antioch by a military escort, to avoid
a commotion in the congregation and to make resistance useless.
He was consecrated Feb. 26, 398, by his Theophilus, patriarch of
Alexandria, who reluctantly yielded to the command of the Emperor
Arcadius.
Constantinople, built by Constantine the Great in 330, on the site
of Byzantium, assumed as the Eastern capital of the Roman empire
the first position among the Episcopal sees of the East, and became
the centre of court theology, court intrigues, and theological controversies.
St. John soon gained by his eloquent sermons the admiration of
the people, of the weak Emperor Arcadius, and, at first, even of
his wife Eudoxia, with whom he afterwards waged a deadly war. He
extended his pastoral care to the Goths who were becoming numerous
in Constantinople, had a part of the Bible translated for them,
often preached to them himself through an interpreter, and sent
missionaries to the Gothic and Scythian tribes on the Danube. He
continued to direct by correspondence those missionary operations
even during his exile. For a short time he enjoyed the height of
power and popularity.
But he also made enemies by his denunciations of the vices and
follies of the clergy and aristocracy. He emptied the Episcopal
palace of its costly plate and furniture and sold it for the benefit
of the poor and the hospitals. He introduced his strict ascetic
habits and reduced the luxurious household of his predecessors to
the strictest simplicity. He devoted his large income to benevolence.
He refused invitations to banquets, gave no dinner parties, and
ate the simplest fare in his solitary chamber. He denounced unsparingly
luxurious habits in eating and dressing, and enjoined upon the rich
the duty of almsgiving to an extent that tended to increase rather
than diminish the number of beggars who swarmed in the streets and
around the churches and public baths. He disciplined the vicious
clergy and opposed the perilous and immoral habit of unmarried priests
of living under the same roof with "spiritual sisters."
This habit dated from an earlier age, and was a reaction against
celibacy. Cyprian had raised his protest against it, and the Council
of Nicea forbade unmarried priests to live with any females except
close relations.
Chrysostom's unpopularity was increased by his irritability and
obstinacy. The Empress Eudoxia was jealous of his influence over
Arcadius and angry at his uncompromising severity against sin and
vice. She became the chief instrument of his downfall.The occasion
was furnished by an unauthorised use of his Episcopal power beyond
the lines of his diocese, which was confined to the city. At the
request of the clergy of Ephesus and the neighbouring bishops, he
visited that city in January, 401, held a synod and deposed six
bishops convicted of shameful simony. During his absence of several
months he left the Episcopate of Constantinople in the hands of
Severian, bishop of Gabala, an unworthy flatterer, who basely betrayed
his trust and formed a group headed by the empress and her licentious
court ladies, for the ruin of St. John.
On his return to Constantinople he used unguarded language in the
pulpit, and spoke on Elijah's relation to Jezebel in such a manner
that Eudoxia understood it as a personal insult. The clergy then
become too anxious to get rid of a bishop who was too severe for
their lax morals.
The Repose of Saint John and the Transfer
of His Relics (adapted from the OCA website)
The saint died in the city of Comene on September 14th in the year
407 on his way to a place of exile, having been condemned by the
intrigues of the empress Eudoxia because of his daring denunciation
of the vices ruling over Constantinople. The last words on his lips
were, "Glory be to God for all things!" The transfer of
his venerable relics was made in the year 438: after 30 years following
the death of the saint during the reign of Eudoxia's son emperor
Theodosius II (408-450).
Saint John Chrysostom had the warm love and deep respect of the
people, and grief over his untimely death lived on in the hearts
of Christians. Saint John's student, Saint Proclus, Patriarch of
Constantinople (434-447), making Divine-services in the Church of
Saint Sophia, preached a sermon which in glorifying Saint John he
said: "O John! Thy life was filled with difficulties, but thy
death was glorious, thy grave is blessed and reward abundant through
the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ. O graced one, having
conquered the bounds of time and place! Love hath conquered space,
unforgetting memory hath annihilated the limits, and place doth
not hinder the miracles of the saint." Those who were present
in church, deeply touched by the words of Saint Proclus, did not
allow him even to finish his sermon. With one accord they began
to entreat the Patriarch to intercede with the emperor, so that
the relics of Saint John might be transferred to Constantinople.
The emperor, overwhelmed by Saint Proclus, gave his consent and
made the order to transfer the relics of Saint John. But the people
dispatched by him were by no means able to life up the holy relics
-- not until that moment when the emperor realising his oversight
that he had not sent the message to Saint John, humbly beseeching
of him forgiveness for himself and for his mother Eudoxia. The message
was read at the grave of Saint John and after this they easily lifted
up the relics, carried them onto a ship and arrived at Constantinople.
The reliquary coffin with the relics was placed in the Church of
the holy Martyr Irene. The Patriarch opened the coffin: the body
of Saint John had remained without decay. The emperor, having approached
the coffin with tears, asked forgiveness. All day and night people
did not leave the coffin. In the morning the reliquary coffin with
its relics was brought to the Church of the Holy Apostles. The people
cried out: "Receive back thy throne, father!" Then Patriarch
Proclus and the clergy standing at the relics saw Saint John open
his mouth and pronounce: "Peace be to all."
In the Fourth Century the feastday in honour of the transfer of
the relics of Sainted John Chrysostom was written into church singing.
-An
adaptation from the GOA's Conerstone Youth Website and the OCA Website |