The Holy Apostle Andrew the First-Called
was the first of the Apostles to follow Christ, and he later brought his own
brother, the holy Apostle Peter, to Christ (John 1:35-42). The future apostle
was from Bethsaida, and from his youth he turned with all his soul to God. He
did not enter into marriage, and he worked with his brother as a fisherman.
When the holy Prophet, Forerunner and Baptist John began to preach, Saint
Andrew became his closest disciple. Saint John the Baptist himself sent to
Christ his own two disciples, the future Apostles Andrew and John the
Theologian, declaring Christ to be the Lamb of God.
After the
Descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles, Saint Andrew went to the Eastern
lands preaching the Word of God. He went through Asia Minor, Thrace, Macedonia,
he reached the River Danube, went along the coast of the Black Sea, through
Crimea, the Black Sea region and along the River Dniepr he climbed to the place
where the city of Kiev now stands.
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The Lord
worked many miracles through His disciple in Patra. The infirm were made whole,
and the blind received their sight. Through the prayers of the Apostle, the
illustrious citizen Sosios recovered from serious illness; he healed Maximilla,
wife of the governor of Patra, and his brother Stratokles. The miracles
accomplished by the Apostle and his fiery speech enlightened almost all the
citizens of the city of Patra with the true Faith.
Few pagans
remained at Patra, but among them was the prefect of the city, Aegeatos. The
Apostle Andrew repeatedly turned to him with the words of the Gospel. But even
the miracles of the Apostle did not convince Aegeatos. The holy Apostle with
love and humility appealed to his soul, striving to reveal to him the Christian
mystery of life eternal, through the wonderworking power of the Holy Cross of
the Lord. The angry Aegeatos gave orders to crucify the apostle. The pagan
thought he might undo Saint Andrew’s preaching if he were to put him to death
on the cross.
A few
centuries later, under the emperor Constantine the Great, the relics of the
holy Apostle Andrew were solemnly transferred to Constantinople and placed in
the church of the Holy Apostles beside the relics of the holy Evangelist Luke
and Saint Paul’s disciple Saint Timothy.
Maps of Apostle Andrew's Travels
Sources:
1)https://oca.org/saints/lives/2012/11/30/103450-apostle-andrew-the-holy-and-all-praised-first-called
2)http://www.pravoslavie.ru/43507.html
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