Troparion in Tone 4
Today the faithful celebrate the feast with joy
illumined by your coming, O Mother of God.
Beholding your pure image we fervently cry to you:
"Encompass us beneath the precious veil of your protection;
deliver us from every form of evil by entreating Christ,
your Son and our God that He may save our souls."
Kontakion in Tone 3
Today the Virgin stands in the midst of the Church
and with choirs of saints she invisibly prays to God for us.
Angels and bishops worship,
apostles and prophets rejoice together,
since for our sake she prays to the pre-eternal God.
The Protection of the Most Holy Theotokos:
"Today the Virgin stands in the midst
of the Church, and with choirs of Saints she invisibly prays to God
for us. Angels and Bishops venerate Her, Apostles and prophets
rejoice together, Since for our sake she prays to the Eternal God!"
This miraculous appearance of the Mother of God
occurred in the mid-tenth century in Constantinople, in the Blachernae
church where her robe, veil, and part of her belt were preserved after
being transferred from Palestine in the fifth century.
On Sunday, October 1, during the All Night
Vigil, when the church was overflowing with those at prayer, the
Fool-for-Christ St Andrew (October 2), at the fourth hour, lifted up his
eyes towards the heavens and beheld our most Holy Lady Theotokos coming
through the air, resplendent with heavenly light and surrounded by an
assembly of the Saints. St John the Baptist and the holy Apostle John
the Theologian accompanied the Queen of Heaven. On bended knees the Most
Holy Virgin tearfully prayed for Christians for a long time. Then,
coming near the Bishop's Throne, she continued her prayer.
After completing her prayer she took her veil
and spread it over the people praying in church, protecting them from
enemies both visible and invisible. The Most Holy Lady Theotokos was
resplendent with heavenly glory, and the protecting veil in her hands
gleamed "more than the rays of the sun." St Andrew gazed trembling at
the miraculous vision and he asked his disciple, the blessed Epiphanius
standing beside him, "Do you see, brother, the Holy Theotokos, praying
for all the world?" Epiphanius answered, "I do see, holy Father, and I
am in awe."
The Ever-Blessed Mother of God implored the
Lord Jesus Christ to accept the prayers of all the people calling on His
Most Holy Name, and to respond speedily to her intercession, "O Heavenly
King, accept all those who pray to You and call on my name for help. Do
not let them not go away from my icon unheard."
Saints Andrew and Epiphanius were worthy to see
the Mother of God at prayer, and "for a long time observed the
Protecting Veil spread over the people and shining with flashes of
glory. As long as the Most Holy Theotokos was there, the Protecting Veil
was also visible, but with her departure it also became invisible. After
taking it with her, she left behind the grace of her visitation."
At the Blachernae church, the memory of the
miraculous appearance of the Mother of God was remembered. In the
fourteenth century, the Russian pilgrim and clerk Alexander, saw in the
church an icon of the Most Holy Theotokos praying for the world,
depicting St Andrew in contemplation of her.
The Primary Chronicle of St Nestor reflects
that the protective intercession of the Mother of God was needed because
an attack of a large pagan Russian fleet under the leadership of Askole
and Dir. The feast celebrates the divine destruction of the fleet which
threatened Constantinople itself, sometime in the years 864-867 or
according to the Russian historian Vasiliev, on June 18, 860.
Ironically, this Feast is considered important by the Slavic Churches
but not by the Greeks.
The Primary Chronicle of St Nestor also notes
the miraculous deliverance followed an all-night Vigil and the dipping
of the garment of the Mother of God into the waters of the sea at the
Blachernae church, but does not mention Sts Andrew and Epiphanius and
their vision of the Mother of God at prayer. These latter elements, and
the beginnings of the celebrating of the Feast of the Protection, seem
to postdate St Nestor and the Chronicle. A further historical
complication might be noted under (October 2) dating St Andrew's death
to the year 936.
The year of death might not be quite reliable,
or the assertion that he survived to a ripe old age after the vision of
his youth, or that his vision involved some later pagan Russian raid
which met with the same fate. The suggestion that St Andrew was a Slav
(or a Scythian according to other sources, such as S. V. Bulgakov) is
interesting, but not necessarily accurate. The extent of Slavic
expansion and repopulation into Greece is the topic of scholarly
disputes.
In the PROLOGUE, a Russian book of the twelfth
century, a description of the establishment of the special Feast marking
this event states, "For when we heard, we realized how wondrous and
merciful was the vision... and it transpired that Your holy Protection
should not remain without festal celebration, O Ever-Blessed One!"
Therefore, in the festal celebration of the
Protection of the Mother of God, the Russian Church sings, "With the
choirs of the Angels, O Sovereign Lady, with the venerable and glorious
prophets, with the First-Ranked Apostles and with the Hieromartyrs and
Hierarchs, pray for us sinners, glorifying the Feast of your Protection
in the Russian Land." Moreover, it would seem that St Andrew,
contemplating the miraculous vision was a Slav, was taken captive, and
became the slave of the local inhabitant of Constantinople named
Theognostus.
Churches in honor of the Protection of the
Mother of God began to appear in Russia in the twelfth century. Widely
known for its architectural merit is the temple of the Protection at
Nerl, which was built in the year 1165 by holy Prince Andrew Bogoliubsky.
The efforts of this holy prince also established in the Russian Church
the Feast of the Protection of the Mother of God, about the year 1164.
At Novgorod in the twelfth century there was a
monastery of the Protection of the Most Holy Theotokos (the so-called
Zverin monastery) In Moscow also under Tsar Ivan the Terrible the
cathedral of the Protection of the Mother of God was built at the church
of the Holy Trinity (known as the church of St Basil the Blessed).
On the Feast of the Protection of the Most Holy
Theotokos we implore the defense and assistance of the Queen of Heaven,
"Remember us in your prayers, O Lady Virgin Mother of God, that we not
perish by the increase of our sins. Protect us from every evil and from
grievous woes, for in you do we hope, and venerating the Feast of your
Protection, we magnify you."