Saint
Varus is especially honored by Russian Orthodox Christians as the patron of
those who have died outside the Orthodox Christian Faith, and of young children
who are ill or have died either by illness or during birth or even in the womb.
During the reign of the impious Maximian, the Emperor
of the Romans, there lived in Egypt a brave soldier named Varus, who secretly
served the King of Heaven. Out of fear he hid his faith in the true God for a
time, but later, he revealed it before both heaven and earth and became a
spectacle before angels and men.
At that time Maximian raised up a persecution against
the Christians and issued a decree in every province of his empire commanding
that those Christians who would not sacrifice to the gods be put to death. When
this ordinance was published in the land of Egypt, the blood of Christians was
shed mercilessly; all who worshipped the Creator and not things created were
subjected to various torments. Varus, a secret Christian, visited by night the
faithful who were held in prison for their confession of Christ, bribing the
guards with gold to permit him to enter the cells in which they were held. He
bound up the wounds of the holy martyrs and washed their blood, gave them to
eat, kissed their stripes, and prayed them to beseech Christ to have mercy on
him.
It happened that there were seven teachers of the Christians, desert-dwellers, that were brought before the Prince of Egypt. When the Prince questioned them, he found them to be firm in the faith. Having subjected them to flogging, he had them cast bound into prison. When Varus learned of this, he hastened by night to the dungeon where the saints were being held. After he had given much gold to the guards, he was permitted to visit the saints. Varus loosed their hands and removed their feet from the stocks that held them and then placed food before them. He besought them to eat, for they had remained hungry for eight days since they had been left in prison with no food. He fell at their feet and kissed them, and he praised them for their sufferings, saying, "Blessed are you, O good and faithful servants of the Lord! You shall enter into the joy of your Lord, for you have resisted unto blood (Heb. 12:4). Blessed are you, O good strugglers; the right hand of the Most High has woven crowns for you in Heaven. You have run with patience the race that is set before you (Heb. 12:1), and I know for certain that tomorrow your sufferings shall come to an end. Blessed are you, O passion-bearers of Christ; the Kingdom of Heaven is open unto you, for you suffer with Christ, Who suffered for our sake, as the Apostle says, 'If it be that we suffer with him, we shall also be glorified with him' (Rom. 8:17). I beseech you, O holy servants of God, pray for me to Christ that He have mercy upon me, for it is my desire to suffer for Him, but I have not the strength to do so. I fear the cruel torments I see you have undergone."
The saints replied, "Beloved, no one who is
fearful can attain perfection, nor can he who does not sow reap. Likewise, a
man who is unwilling to suffer receives no crown. Remember the words written in
the Gospel: 'Whosoever shall deny Me before men, him will I deny before My
Father which is in Heaven' (Matt. 10:33). If you fear passing torments, you
shall not escape those which are eternal. If you fear to confess Christ on
earth, you shall not be satisfied with the vision of His countenance in Heaven.
Therefore, come, O brother, and tread with us the path of martyrdom, which
leads to the Master Who looks down upon our struggles. Suffer together with us,
for you will not soon find again a company like ours."
When he heard these things, Varus' heart was set afire
with love for God, and he wished to endure torment for Jesus Christ. He passed
the entire night at prayer with the holy martyrs and hearkened unto their
teaching gladly.
When the morning was come, the Prince's servants came
to the prison to bring the holy martyrs before the tribunal. As they entered
the dungeon, they saw Varus seated with the prisoners, hearing their words with
compunction of heart. They were astonished, and they asked, "What is your
business here, Varus? Have you lost your mind, giving heed to the myths of
which these wicked men tell? Have you no fear that someone will speak of this
to the Prince or one of the nobles? You shall lose both your military rank and
your life!"
Varus replied, "He who tells the Prince of me is
my benefactor. Know that if you choose to make accusation against me, I am
ready to die for Christ with the other Christians here."
The servants were thus put to silence. They took six
of the martyrs from the prison, but the seventh they left, for he had weakened
so from his wounds that he died and departed unto the Lord, leaving his place
to be filled by Varus, who was to complete his suffering. The saints were led
bound before the Prince, who sat proudly upon his tribunal and sought to compel
them to sacrifice to the idols. When they would not consent, they were stripped
and beaten mercilessly upon the wounds they had already received. Thus were
wounds added to their wounds and stripes to their stripes, but they endured
their suffering as though it were nothing and said only, "We are
Christians."
Then the Prince asked, "Were there not seven of
these men? Now there are but six. Where is the seventh?"
At that very moment Saint Varus entered and said,
"I am the seventh. He of whom you spoke has already finished his course
and gone to Christ, leaving me to complete his sufferings. I am prepared to
render to you whatever he owed you. I wish to take his place among these noble
martyrs who suffer for Christ, for I am a Christian."
When the Prince heard this, he asked his attendants,
"Who is this man?"
They replied, "It is the soldier Varus, the
commander of the band of Tyanis."
The Prince was perplexed and said to Varus, "What
demon has led you to surrender yourself to perdition? Why do you choose to
forsake your military rank and the honors that await you and bring evil upon
yourself?"
The blessed Varus answered, "I prefer the Bread
which is come down from heaven and the chalice of the divine and most precious
Blood of my Lord to your honors and esteem. I count nothing more dear than my
Christ: not your regard, my rank, great honors, nor yet life itself. To suffer
for Christ I count as the greatest honor and to lose all things for His sake as
gain."
The Prince then cast his angry glance upon the six
holy martyrs and said, "This is your work, you impious deceivers! It is
you who have beguiled this soldier of the Emperor, depriving him of his senses
by your sorcery! I swear to you by my great gods that I shall put you to death
even before I do the same to him and thus revenge the dishonor you have shown
our gods. You are unworthy to remain among the living, for you blaspheme the
gods and lead others into wicked error."
The saints replied, "We have not beguiled Varus
but have rather delivered him from deception. We have not caused him to lose
his mind but have restored him to his senses. God has vouchsafed him strength
and boldness for the struggle, that together with us he might prevail over your
feeble might and that of your gods. In but a short time you shall behold his
soldierly courage, for we have enrolled him in the host of the angels. Is it
your boast that you shall destroy us? Know that it is our desire to lay down
our lives for the Lord of all."
The Prince said, "I will immediately have you cut
in pieces if you do not fall down and worship the gods of Egypt!"
The saints answered, "The gods that have not made
the heavens and the earth, even they shall perish" (Jer. 10:11).
Wishing to move the Prince to yet greater anger, the
blessed Varus said, "The fool shall speak foolish things, says the Prophet
Isaiah. Lo, our bodies lie stretched out before you. Do with them as you
would."
Greatly angered, the Prince commanded that Varus be suspended from a tree, that he might put him to torture. To the six saints he said, "We shall see who will prevail over whom: you over us as you suffer torment or we over you as we inflict our tortures. Of a truth I say to you that if you by your patience prevail over me, I will renounce my gods and believe in your Christ."
The saints replied, "Try your strength against
one of us, and if you can overcome him, you may hope to prevail over the
others."
As they began to torment Varus, he said to the holy
martyrs, "O holy passion-bearers! Bless me, who am your servant, that I
may share your lot. Entreat the Master Christ for me that He grant me patience,
for He knows that our flesh is infirm. 'The spirit indeed is willing,' it is
written, 'but the flesh is weak' (Matt. 26:41)."
The saints lifted up their eyes unto Heaven and prayed
fervently for Varus as the servants began to beat his whole body with rods and
staves. As the saint was being beaten, the Prince said, "Now tell us,
Varus, what profit your Christ brings you."
Varus bravely replied, "More than you receive
from your gods."
The saints cried out to Varus, "Take courage,
Varus, and may your heart be strengthened, for Christ invisibly stands before
you and strengthens you!"
Answered Varus, "Truly, I perceive the help of my
Christ, for these torments seem as nothing to me."
Then they scraped his sides with iron claws, after
which he was hung upside-down from the tree. They tore the skin from his back,
cut his flesh with razors, and thrashed him with switches until he burst open
and his bowels fell to the ground. When the holy martyrs saw his inward parts
fall out, they wept. The persecutor beheld the martyrs weeping, and he cried
out with a great voice, "Lo, you are defeated! You have been brought low,
and you weep from fear of torment! What more is necessary for you to
acknowledge that Christ cannot deliver you out of our hands and for you to
forsake Him and worship our gods?"
The saints answered, "You are a beast and not a
man! We are not defeated but shall yet prevail by the power of Jesus, Who
strengthens us. We do not weep because we fear torment but out of natural love
for our brother, whom you wish to slay in a beastly manner. In spirit we
rejoice for him, for a crown has already been prepared for the noble sufferer."
The Prince then commanded that they be led back to
prison. As Varus saw the saints being returned to the dungeon, he cried out to
them from the tree from which he was suspended and was being tortured, saying,
"My teachers! Pray for me one last time unto Christ, for I am about to
depart from my body. I thank you for you have made me to inherit life
eternal."
Saint Varus endured torture for five hours and then in
suffering surrendered his honorable and holy soul into the hands of the Lord.
Thinking that he was yet alive, the torturers continued to beat and torment his
corpse. When they saw that he was already dead, they were amazed, and in
accordance with the persecutor's command, they cast him out of the city in the
place where the carcasses of beasts were left to be devoured by dogs.
There was a widow living in that city named Cleopatra,
who was born in Palestine. Her husband, an officer, had died in Egypt, and she
had a son named John, who was still a little boy. When Saint Varus was
tortured, she looked on from afar upon his sufferings, sighing and beating her
breast, for she was a Christian. When the martyr's corpse was cast out of the
city, she arose by night, took certain of her servants, and went to remove the
long-suffering body of Saint Varus. She brought it to her home, where she dug a
grave for it in her room.
The next morning, the Prince had the other martyrs
brought forth from the prison, and after he had tortured them for a long time,
they were beheaded. They were also cast out of the city without burial, but
their corpses were taken by night and committed to the earth by secret
Christians.
Every day Cleopatra censed and lit candles before the
grave of Saint Varus, whom she regarded as her great intercessor and mediator
before God. When, after some years, the persecution died down, she began to
consider how she might return to the land of her birth, and she wondered how it
would be possible for her to take with her the relics of Saint Varus. She
decided to send a gift to the Prince, which was taken to him by a messenger,
who said to him on her behalf, "My husband was an officer and died here in
the Emperor's service. He has still not received final burial, for it is not
seemly that an officer and man of rank be buried in a foreign land. I, who am a
widow and a stranger in this country, wish to return to my homeland to live
with my kindred. Therefore, my lord, permit me to take the remains of my
beloved husband to the land of my birth, that I may give them a fitting burial
together with my forebears, for I wish to remain with my spouse even after I
die."
The woman sent this message that the Christians might
not think that it was the relics of the holy martyr she was removing from the
city, for she was afraid that they would prevent her from taking that sacred
treasure. The Prince accepted her gift and granted her request, but she took
the remains of Saint Varus rather than those of her husband. Like a vine she
brought them out of Egypt (cf. Ps. 79:8) into Palestine to her village of
Edras, which was near Tabor, and she buried them there with her fathers. Every
day she went to his grave, censed it, and lit candles there. When the other
Christians who lived there saw this, they began to go with her to where the
saint lay. They brought with them their sick, who received healing at Saint
Varus' grave through his prayers. Soon all the Christians in the parts that lay
roundabout learned of Saint Varus, and they began to come with faith to his
tomb.
When Cleopatra saw how the Christians gathered to pray
at the grave of the saint, she determined to build a church dedicated to him.
Soon its erection was begun. By that time her son had reached manhood, and
Cleopatra desired that he receive a position in the imperial army. Through the
intercession of certain mediators she requested that her son be commissioned an
officer, and her entreaty was granted. Her son received from the Emperor his
appointment to the army and the emblems of his rank while the church was being
constructed, but Cleopatra said, "My son shall not begin to serve the
Emperor in the army until the house of God is completed. It is my intention
that he be here to help transfer the Saint's relics to the church. After this
is done, he may depart to serve the Emperor."
When the church was completed, Cleopatra summoned
bishops, priests, and monks, removed the precious relics of the holy martyr
from their grave, and had them placed on a very costly bier. She laid her son's
military belt and uniform upon the relics, that they might be sanctified by the
Saint's remains. She prayed to Saint Varus fervently that he be her son's
protector, and all the bishops and priests present bestowed their blessing upon
the young man. A multitude of Christian people without number had gathered
there as well, and accompanied by them, Cleopatra and her son carried the bier
and the relics to the church. The church was consecrated, and the remains of
the Saint were placed beneath the altar. Then the Divine Liturgy was served.
Cleopatra fell down before the relics of Saint Varus and prayed thus: "I
beseech thee, O passion-bearer of Christ: Ask God for that which is profitable
for me and for mine only son. I do not dare ask for anything more than what the
Lord Himself wisheth, for He knoweth what is needful for us. May His good and
perfect will be done in us!"
After the service was completed, a great banquet was
set before those present at which Cleopatra and her son served the guests.
Cleopatra instructed her son to eat nothing until the
evening, when the meal was finished and only then to partake of that which
remained. As the youth was serving, he suddenly took ill, and he went to lie
down upon his bed. When all the guests had arisen from the meal, Cleopatra
called for her son, that he might share with her what food remained. But John
was unable even to reply, for he was burning with a great fever. When Cleopatra
saw how ill her son was, she said, "As the Lord lives, I will not put food
into my mouth until I learn what is to become of my child!"
She sat down beside him and sought to cool the fire of
his fever; but her own womb burned still more than did his body, and her heart
ached for her only son. At midnight the youth died, leaving his mother to weep
inconsolably. As she lamented bitterly, she hastened to the Church of Saint
Varus, and she fell down before his sepulcher and cried out, "O servant of
God! Is this how thou hast rewarded me for the great labors I endured on thy
behalf? Is this the succor which thou providest me, who forsook my husband on
thine account and have placed my hope in thee? Thou hast permitted mine only
son to die; thou hast deprived me of mine only consolation and hast taken from
me the light of mine eyes! Who shall now feed me in mine old age? Who shall
close mine eyes when I die? Who shall commit my body to the grave? It had been
better for me to die than to behold my beloved son perish in his youth like a
flower before its time. Either give me back my son as once Elisha returned the
son of the Shunamite woman (cf. IV Kings 4) or take me hence without delay, for
I can endure this bitter sorrow no longer."
Cleopatra remained weeping by the grave of the Saint
and then fell asleep for a short while from weariness and grief. As she slept,
she beheld Saint Varus in a dream. He held her son by the hand, and they both
shone like the sun. Their vesture was whiter than snow, and they were girded
with golden belts; upon their heads were crowns of unspeakable beauty. Seeing
this, the blessed Cleopatra fell down before them, but Saint Varus lifted her
up and said, "O woman, why do you cry unto me? Do you imagine that I have
forgotten the good works you did on my behalf in Egypt and along the way to
this place? Do you suppose that I felt nothing when you removed my body from
amid the carcasses of beasts, placing it in a coffin? Have I not always
hearkened to your prayers? I make entreaty for you at all times unto God. I
have prayed first of all for your relatives, with whom you buried me, that
their sins be remitted them, and now I have enrolled your son in the army of
the King of Heaven. Did you not beseech me here at my grave that I ask God to
grant you and your son whatever is in accordance with His will and is to your
benefit? Therefore, I have prayed unto the good God, and in His ineffable
kindness He has deigned to number your son among the host of Heaven. Lo, you
see that your son now stands near the Lord's throne. If you wish, take him and
send him to serve a mortal and earthly king since you do not desire that he
should serve the heavenly and eternal King."
The youth, who sat beside Varus and embraced him,
exclaimed, "No, my lord! Pay no heed to my mother, neither permit me to be
returned to the world, which is full of falsehood and every iniquity, and from
which you delivered me when you came to me. Do not deprive me, O father, of a
portion with the saints and a dwelling place among them."
Then the youth turned to his mother and said,
"Why do you lament for me thus, mother? I have been enrolled in the host
of Christ the King and have been permitted to stand before Him with the angels.
Why do you now ask that I be removed from the kingdom and brought to
abasement?"
When the blessed Cleopatra saw that her son's
appearance was like that of an angel, she said, "Take me with you that we
may be together."
Saint Varus said, "In this place you are with us.
Go in peace, and after a time, when the Lord commands, we shall come and take
you."
After saying this, the Saint became invisible. When
Cleopatra awoke, her heart was filled with ineffable happiness and joy, and she
related her dream to the priests. They buried her son beside the sepulcher of
Saint Varus, and Cleopatra wept no more but rather rejoiced in the Lord. Later
she distributed her possessions among the needy and renounced the world. She
lived beside the Church of Saint Varus, serving God in prayer and fasting by
day and night. Every Sunday as she prayed Saint Varus appeared to her in great
glory with her son. After she had lived in this God-pleasing manner for seven
years, the blessed Cleopatra reposed. Her body was placed in the Church of
Saint Varus near her son John, and her holy soul took up its abode in the
heavens, together with Saint Varus and John. There it now stands in the
presence of God, to Whom be glory unto the ages of ages. Amen.
Saint Varus and Praying for Those Who Died Unbaptized
Saint Varus is especially honored by Russian Orthodox
Christians as the patron of those who have died outside the Orthodox Christian
Faith, and of young children who are ill or have died either by illness or
during birth or even in the womb.
In 2008, the Archangel Cathedral in the Kremlin after
restoration, opened the chapel dedicated to Saint Varus. This chapel was built
in the 17th century because at that time, the Time of Troubles, many children
died without being baptized. Patriarch Hermogenes at the time blessed the
commemoration of Saint Varus to ease the fate of the children who were dying
without baptism. It is from this time that the Canon to Saint Varus originates.
Since it is not permissible to pray for the unbaptized
who have departed this world during the Divine Liturgy or Funeral Services,
many Orthodox have resorted to praying to Saint Varus on behalf of their loved
ones who died without baptism (this does not apply to those Christians who have
committed suicide, rather see the Prayer of Elder Leonid of Optina). For
example, in the Church of Saint Nicholas Kuznetsy, every Saturday prayers are
made to Saint Varus on behalf of those who died without baptism.
Thou didst follow in the steps of the martyrs, and
contend for the glory of Christ. Thou wast tied to a beam and restored by the
Tree of Life, and thine intercessions gladden our souls.
Kontakion in the Fourth Tone
Prayer to the Holy Martyr St. Varus for Those Who Have
Died Outside the Faith:
O Holy, wondrous Martyr Varus, who, burning with zeal
for the Heavenly King, didst confess Him before thy torturers and didst greatly
suffer for Him!
Now the Church doth venerate thee, as one glorified
with the glory of heaven by Christ the Lord, Who granted thee the abundant
grace to approach Him boldly. And now, standing before Him together with the
Angels, rejoicing on high, beholding the Most Holy Trinity clearly, and enjoying
the Uncreated Light, remember the suffering of our relatives who have died
outside the Faith, and accept our pleas, and as thou didst intercede for the
unbelieving ancestors of Cleopatra and didst free them from eternal suffering,
remember those who have died unbaptized and have been buried in an ungodly
manner, and pray earnestly that they may be delivered from eternal darkness,
that we may all, with one mouth and one heart, praise the Most Merciful Creator
unto the ages of ages. Amen.
By St. Dimitri of Rostov
Source: http://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2015/10/saint-varus-martyr-and-blessed-cleopatra.html
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