This common feast of these three teachers was instituted a little
before the year 1100, during the reign of the Emperor Alexis I Comnenus,
because of a dispute and strife that arose among the notable and virtuous men
of that time. Some of them preferred Basil, while others preferred Gregory, and
yet others preferred John Chrysostom, quarreling among themselves over which of
the three was the greatest. Furthermore, each party, in order to distinguish
itself from the others, assumed the name of its preferred Saint; hence, they
called themselves Basilians, Gregorians, or Johannites. Desiring to bring an
end to the contention, the three Saints appeared together to the saintly John
Mavropous, a monk who had been ordained Bishop of Euchaita, a city of Asia
Minor, they revealed to him that the glory they have at the throne of God is
equal, and told him to compose a common service for the three of them, which he
did with great skill and beauty. Saint John of Euchaita (celebrated Oct. 5) is
also the composer of the Canon to the Guardian Angel, the Protector of a Man's
Life. In his old age, he retired from his episcopal see and again took up the
monastic life in a monastery in Constantinople. He reposed during the reign of
the aforementioned Emperor Alexis Comnenus (1081-1118).
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