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Once, as the Holy Virgin prayed on the Mount of Olives (near Jerusalem), the Angel
Gabriel appeared to Her, as he had the first time in Nazareth, holding in his hand
a branch with a white flower from Paradise, and announced to Her that in three days
Her earthly life would come to an end and that the Lord would take Her to Him. The
Lord arranged it so that toward that time the Apostles congregated in Jerusalem
from the many parts of the world where they were preaching.
At the hour of Her end, a bright light illuminated the room in which the Virgin
Mary was lying. The Lord Jesus Christ Himself, surrounded by Angels, appeared and
received Her most pure soul.
The Apostles buried Her holy body, according to Her wish, at the foot of the Mount
of Olives in the Garden of Gethsemane, in the cave where reposed the bodies of her
parents and of the righteous Joseph.
During the burial, many miracles came to pass. By touching the bier of the Mother
of God, the blind regained their sight, demons were exorcised, and many diseases
were cured. Three days after the burial of the Theotokos, there arrived belatedly
the Apostle Thomas, who had missed the burial. He was very distraught at not having
paid his last respects to the Mother of Jesus and wished to see Her body for the
last time. When the cave in which the Virgin Mary was buried was opened, Her body
was not found, but only Her burial clothes. The Apostles returned to their home
in amazement. In the evening during their prayers, they heard Angels singing. Glancing
upward, the Apostles saw the Most Holy Virgin surrounded by Angels, in radiant heavenly
glory. She said to the Apostles: "Rejoice! I am with you for all the days and nights."
She has been fulfilling this promise to help and defend Christians to the present
day, having become our heavenly Mother. For Her great love and all-powerful help,
Christians always have honored Her and turned to Her for help, appealing to Her
as the "Fervent intercessor for the Christian race, the Joy of all those who grieve,
Who did not abandon us after Her Dormition." From these earliest times, following
the example of the prophet Isaiah and the righteous Elizabeth, all Christians began
to address Her as the Mother of God or Theotokos, and this title was confirmed during
the Third Ecumenical Council (431 AD) in Ephesus.
The Most Holy Virgin Mary serves as great example to all those who are striving
for perfection. She was the first who decided to dedicate Her whole life to God
and who showed that voluntary virginity is higher than wedded life. From the first
centuries, in emulating Her and Her Son and other prophets and apostles, many Christians
began to pass their life in virginity, prayer, fasting, meditation and contemplation.
Thus, the monastic life arose, and there appeared many monasteries which became
sources of inspiration for a pious life and spiritual wisdom.
Unfortunately, the present ungodly world does not appreciate and even sometimes
ridicules the advancement of virginity, disregarding the words of the Lord: "For
there are eunuchs who were born thus from their mother's womb, and there are eunuchs
who were made eunuchs by men, and there are eunuchs who have made themselves eunuchs
(virgins) for the kingdom of heaven’s sake." To this the Lord added this very unambiguous
directive: "He, who is able to accept it, let him accept it" (Matthew 19:12).
In reviewing the earthly life of the Theotokos, it is essential to emphasize that,
just as at the moment of Her greatest glory, when She was chosen to become the Mother
of the Savior, as well as at the hour of Her greatest grief, by the prophecy of
the righteous Simon, as She stood at the foot of the Cross when "a weapon pierced
Her soul," She displayed complete self-control and faith in God. In all events,
big or small, She invariably manifested the strength and beauty of Her virtues:
humility, perseverance, patience, courage, hope in the Lord and unbounded love for
Him! That is why we Christians hold Her in such high esteem and want to emulate
Her.
On the Feast of Dormition (August 15th) "The
repose of the Theotokos is best explained through the Dormition icon …The Mother
of God has fallen asleep and lies on her deathbed. Christ’s apostles have gathered
around her, and above her stands Christ Himself holding His Mother in His arms,
where she is alive and eternally united with Him. Here we see both death and what
was already come to pass in this particular death: not rupture, but union; not sorrow,
but joy; and most profoundly, not death, but life. ‘In giving birth, you remained
a Virgin and after falling asleep you have not forsaken the world, O Theotokos …
Neither the tomb nor death could hold the Mother of God, who is ever watchful in
prayer, in whose intercession lies unfailing hope. For as Mother of Life she was
transported to Life…’"
Troparion (in Tone 1) In thy birth giving, O
Theotokos, thou hast retained thy virginity, and in falling asleep thou hast not
forsaken the world. Thou hast passed to life, being the Mother of Life. Through
thine intercession, deliver our souls from death.
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