Monthly Archives
- December 2011
- January 2008
- January 2007
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
- July 2005
- May 2005
- April 2005
- March 2005
- February 2005
- January 2005
- Complete Archives
- Category Archives
Most recent entries
- This Blog Is Closed!
- Reinvention
- It Ain’t Just Singing
- Taking Old Friends For A Spin
- Guess I’ll See You At The 9th Hour
- My First Computer
- A Little Perspective
- Here Comes the Judge.. There Goes the Blog
- Remembering Athos One Year Later
- Hello From the Flight Deck
- Its December So It Must Be…
- Oh…Fruitcake..Gee Thanks!
- November 23, 1992
- George Harrison
- What’s For Dinner?
Syndicate
Statistics
- This page has been viewed 146146 times
- Referrers
The second Sunday of Great Lent is known as the Sunday of the Paralytic. On this day the Gospel reading is from St Mark (2:1-12) telling of Jesus’ healing of the paralyzed man. This particular Sunday our parish held a “Reader Service” since our priest was out of town. Monk Paul read the Gospel and followed it with a homily by St John Chrysostom on this particular passage. Several times in the homily he refers to the words of St Paul. This made me think of something I heard and saw on Mt Athos concerning St John. While at Vatopedi Monastery we were able to venerate a relic of St John, his skull with his left ear intact and incorrupt. The relic was in a ornate silver box that had a door on the side that opened revealing the ear. Having already seen the incorrupt hand of St John elsewhere this was an added “mind-blower”!
Fr Mathew, the monk that showed us around Vatopedi, told us the story behind the “incorrupt ear”.
The story goes:
St. Proculus (the spirtual son of the saint and eventually Patriarch of Constantinople) was going to visit St John and entered the room where the saint was working and saw a man standing close at his side appearing to be talking in his ear. Not wanting to interrupt, St Proculus left and returned sometime later and mentioned to St John that he had come by earlier and found him busy with a visitor. St John exclaimed that he had no visitors that day and that he had been occupied in writing the entire time.

Incorrupt Hand of St John Fr Mathew told us that legend has it that St Paul would whisper in the saint’s ear as he was composing his many homilies. What in effect St Proculus had seen in this tale is St Paul himself whispering in the ear of St John! The incorrupt ear is due to it being the ear St John would listen to the God inspired wisdom of the great saint with.
God Is Glorious In His Saints!
More about St John Chrysostom
Read about the Orthodox view of saints
St John’s Marvelous Paschal Homily read every Pascha (Easter)
Next entry: This Is What It Is
Previous entry: WebTales