Saint Nicephorus was born in Constantinople about the year 758, of pious parents; his father Theodore endured exile and tribulation for the holy icons during the reign of Constantine Copronymus (741-775). Nicephorus served in the imperial palace as a secretary. Later, he took up the monastic life, and struggled in asceticism not far from the imperial city; he also founded monasteries on the eastern shore of the Bosphorus, among them one dedicated to the Great Martyr Theodore.
After the
repose of the holy Patriarch Tarasius, he was ordained Patriarch, on April 12,
806, and in this high office led the Orthodox resistance to the Iconoclasts'
war on piety, which was stirred up by Leo the Armenian. Because Nicephorus
championed the veneration of the icons, Leo drove Nicephorus from his throne on
March 13, 815, exiling him from one place to another, and lastly to the
Monastery of Saint Theodore which Nicephorus himself had founded. It was here
that, after glorifying God for nine years as Patriarch, and then for thirteen
years as an exile, tormented and afflicted, he gave up his blameless soul in
828 at about the age of seventy. See also March 8.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου