
St.
Irene Chrysovalantou
flourished after the death of the greedy Emperor Theophilos the first. After
Theophilos's death his spouse, the most reverend and God-loving Theodora, took
the throne. The Empress Theodora supported the Orthodox faith and re-established
the veneration of the holy icons, as was the tradition of the Orthodox Church.
The Empress Theodora was reigning in place of her son, Michael, who was not yet
of age to assume rule of the empire.
When Michael was twelve years old Theodora sought to find him a suitable wife.
She sent her scouts on a mission to find a beautiful girl who was noble as well
as virtuous and worthy of becoming an empress.
In the land of Cappodocia there lived such a beautiful girl and of great virtue.
She was the daughter of noble parents and her name was Irene. The scouts new of
Irene's virtue and beauty and quickly took her to the empress in hope that she
would one day become empress herself. Irene had one sister who was taken as wife
by the Empress's brother Vardis.
As the scouts escorted the fair Irene to Byzantium, they neared Olympus. Irene
had heard of a man that lived an extremely ascetical life on Mt. Olympus named
Ioannikios the Great and knowing that he was a holy man she very much desired to
see him. She begged the scouts to lead her to the saint so that she may receive
his blessing. The spies finally agreed but St. Ioannikios, only appeared to
those worthy in heart. Upon their approach St. Ioannikos recognized the
spiritual progress of the young girl and exclaimed, "Welcome servant of God,
Irene. Go to the capitol and rejoice for the Convent of Chrysovalantou needs you
to shepherd her virgins."
Upon hearing this Irene was quite amazed that the holy man even knew her
destiny, let alone her name. She therefore fell to his feet and praised him.
Before she set on her way, St. Ioannikios gave her spiritual advice to
strengthen her.
When Irene finally arrived at the capitol her relatives, who lived in the city,
came to greet her. They all had their own ranks among others in the kingdom.
They came forward with some of their noble friends and greeted her with much
honor, as was truly due her. The King of kings, who called all things from
nothingness into being, provided that the earthly king had chosen another girl
to be his bride several days before Irene even arrived. Irene was not in the
least upset by this, but rather, she gave thanks to God that He enlightened the
king to choose another wife.
Many other noblemen and leaders, the richest men of Constantinople, sought to
make Irene their wife because of her beauty and nobility. However, she desired
no other bridegroom than the heavenly Bridegroom. She all-wisely rejected all
the temporal and earthly things and sought a place to pass her life peacefully
and pleasing to God.
So remembering the words of St. Ioannikios the Great, she sent people to visit
the Convent of Chrysovalantou so that she might know what it was like. They
found that the Convent of Chrysovalantou was in a quite beautiful and quiet
place with a surprisingly good community of nuns. Upon hearing of the Convent's
good fame St Irene rejoiced and gave to the poor not only all the expensive
clothes that her parents had given her, but also all the priceless things the
queen had bestowed upon her. She then freed all of her servants and slaves, cut
her long golden hair and entered the Convent of Chrysovalantou with all
eagerness. Irene effectively abandoned every worldly vanity and every worldly
way of thinking. She, the tender, noble, and most beautiful, dressed herself in
a habit of animal hair and rejoiced as she took up the light yoke of Christ, the
Anointed One and Most Sweet. She subjected herself to all the sisters with
amazing humility and served all the needs of the convent with great care and
tirelessness without ever contradicting. She never considered that she was from
a noble family and far too good for such work and performed the most humiliating
services without complaint. Her very image shown brightly and in her soul she
had compunction and happiness.
The abbess of the convent was a woman of great virtue for this abbess was a
struggler at the spiritual trials and always advised towards good works. Irene
had the grace of God which had mystically descended upon her. This same grace
taught her what was of benefit for her soul for without this grace, as the Lord
himself says, man can do no good. "Without me you can do nothing but the one who
lives in Me and I in him, this one brings forth much fruit." Thus this
ever-memorable one, as good and fertile earth brought forth fruit to Christ and
was pleasing in the eyes of God and in the eyes of the entire sisterhood of the
convent and all were amazed by her. Such was the trust that Irene had gained
that she was made the treasurer and purchaser of the monastery and was given the
care of the silver pieces of the convent. She was obedient to all, displayed
great humility, and never scandalized or hurt any of the sisters. She was well
loved and respected by all of the nuns. Irene was not only very capable of all
her physical duties, but more so of all of her spiritual duties. She was never
missing from the church services and in her cell she would read the lives of
venerable monastics in order to imitate their lives and to teach the sisters and
incite them to similar endeavors.
One day as she was reading the life of St. Arsenios the Great and learned that
he remained awake until the morning hours praying. She too desired to perform
this act and so she sought permission from the abbess to also practice this
spiritual struggle. The abbess at first hesitated to give Irene her blessing to
perform this ascetic act, fearing that she might become ill from
over-exhaustion, but seeing her eagerness and knowing her humility and her
stability she blessed Irene to carry out this ascetical practice. Irene began
this super-human struggle even though she had not lived in the monastery for one
year. The grace of God, however, gave her strength and she would stand from
evening until morning with her hands lifted up as Moses and praying to God. Many
other times she would do the same from morning until sunrise and other times she
would stand in prayer all day and night. The abbess was all the more impressed
by Irene's progress.
When three years had passed from the day St. Irene began this great ascetical
struggle, the hater of all good, the devil himself, saw her great struggles and
sought to trap her in transgression. He was, however, unsuccessful. St. Irene
had not succumbed to the passions and had so much given up care for her flesh
for the sake of her soul that she rejected and totally despised all physical
things (food, glory, money, clothes, etc.). She possessed only one habit. She
would wear her habit for the first time on Pascha and continue with it for one
full year without taking it off or ever washing it. When Pascha would come she
would put on the new one and give the old one to the poor. Her diet consisted of
bread and water, once a day, and perhaps some herbs. She was not prone to
vainglory and had totally forgotten her noble upbringing.
The demon who was unsuccessful at inciting St. Irene to commit a sin at all,
sowed forth discord in Irene's mind by reminding her of the pleasure of her
former life and stirring her with carnal desires. The man-hating one in vain
tortured her, for she recognized his attack all too well and she confessed his
attempts to her abbess so that she would be delivered from the temptation of
this demon and she continued her struggles as before.
One night, as she was praying as usual, a demon took the form of a very ugly
black man and stood from a distance while insulting her, trying, the weak one
that he is, to instill a terror in the servant of God. The demon said to her,
"You fortune-teller and ill-fated woman, against me do you battle without
realizing what I am and how great my strength is?" These and other insults did
the all-conniving one say to her, but our saint of God made the sign of the
cross and the demon disappeared immediately.
One day after another, St. Irene was plagued with dark imaginations. Even though
they deeply disturbed her she, the courageous one, waged battle against the
passions of the flesh and was triumphant. She would often fall to the ground and
pray with tears to the Lord. She often called upon the all-powerful Theotokos
for help and to the Archangels Michael and Gabriel to whom the monastery's
church was dedicated. She also called out to for assistance to all the heavenly
saints so that they might rescue her from the snares and unclean suggestions of
the demons. St. Irene prayed using these words, "All-holy Trinity, All-powerful,
through the intercession of the Theotokos, and the supplications of the
Archangels Michael and Gabriel, and all the heavenly powers, and all the saints,
help your servant and deliver me from the assault of this demon." In this way
our holy mother prayed many days and nights until divine illumination descended
on her from above and overshadowed her soul and drove out all the evil
imaginings, leaving the saint unbothered, so that she began even greater
ascetical struggles and more eagerly labored for God.
Whoever beheld this saint of God, Irene, saw in her great and holy desire and
her many God-given graces. She had become a chosen vessel, as the Great St. Paul
says and a container of the Holy Spirit, having abiding in her soul the living
Christ. She was no longer living according to the flesh, but for Christ in
spirit while Christ lived in her, as the Holy Apostle writes. In this way St.
Irene became totally enlightened and led many souls towards the Light of Truth.
It came to pass that people of all classes would run to her in numbers.
Diligently, she taught and advised with prudence and sweetness.
Suddenly, however, the abbess of the monastery became very ill. All the nuns
mourned in their cells for they knew that she had reached the end of her earthly
life. Since the abbess was so virtuous they were grieved by her impending
departure. The nuns mourned but the humble Irene mourned ever so much. The dying
abbess said to them with all meekness, "Don't be sad about me, for you have a
good abbess more capable and more wise than I and to her be ye all obedient with
your whole soul. I am speaking about Irene, the daughter of light, the lamb of
God, the vessel of the All-holy Spirit and do not choose for yourselves any
leader other than Irene." The blessed abbess, having reached her last hour said
to her Master, "Glory to your mercy, O Lord!" as she gave up her soul to the
angelic hands that were awaiting her.
The venerable Irene was not present when the abbess departed from the earthly
world. Likewise, none of the nuns told Irene what the abbess had said, for
knowing Irene's great humility and how she turned away from vainglory, they
feared that she might leave the convent if she heard such words. Therefore, they
buried the deceased abbess as it was fitting and they proceeded to the church
that God might enlighten them.
At that time the Confessor of the faith Methodios was Patriarch of
Constantinople. During the iconoclastic controversy this holy patriarch had
endured many tortures and bore on his body the marks of the price he paid for
Holy Orthodoxy. Truly he possessed the Holy Spirit and he was able to know the
future. When the other sisters were ready to depart for a visit to the patriarch
Irene did not want to go with them and she found an assortment of reasons and
obstacles not to go. The nuns, however, managed to force Irene along. When they
had arrived and had received the patriarch's blessing, he asked them which of
all the nuns they had considered for the new abbess. They replied that they had
chosen no one but rather had their trust first in God and in his holiness the
patriarch, as he possessed the Holy Spirit. Therefore, he was asked to make the
decision for the Holy Spirit would guide him. The God-bearer then responded that
he knew that all the nuns wanted the honorable and pure Irene and that their
opinion was good and pleasing to God. The patriarch gave thanks to God that He
had revealed to him the virtuous acts of his handmaid Irene.
The sisters were amazed and venerated him by saying, "Truly God dwells in your
righteous soul and He enlightens you and makes the hidden things known unto
you." Immediately the saintly patriarch arose from his throne and singing the
required hymns, incensing, and blessing the Lord, he ordained Irene a diaconess
of the Great Church, knowing by the Holy Spirit that she was clean. He later
read over her the prayers of the installation of an abbess. He then instructed
her on how to proceed in guiding the sisters in the way of salvation and in
peace. He blessed Irene as well as the sisterhood and sent them on their way
back to their convent. Irene cried long and hard. She felt unworthy of such a
position. The sisters tried to comfort her by saying to her, "Don't feel sad
that you have been assigned our protection for we will always remain obedient to
you and we will help you in all godly endeavors as much as we are able.
When they arrived at the convent they gave thanks to God and escorted Irene to
the cell of the abbess. Irene cried on. She closed the door of her new cell and
fell on her face, "Master, Lord Jesus Christ, the Good Shepherd, our Guide and
Teacher, help Your handmaid and this Your small sheepfold and deliver us from
the grasp of the noetic wolf, for you know our weakness and that we are not able
to do anything good without your help and grace."
She had prayed to the Lord in this manner for a long time and addressed herself
by saying, "And you, lowly Irene, perhaps you realize what a burden Christ has
placed on your shoulders? You take the responsibility for souls for which God
took flesh and became man and shed His all-holy and all-precious blood. If you
allow one soul to be lost you will answer to God for this on the judgment day.
You will receive hell as your reward for having taken on yourself the care of so
many souls, if you are careless and one of these souls is condemned. The Lord
Himself says that the soul is worth more than the whole world. Therefore, hold
vigil, fast, pray and be careful that from today on that your own fault does not
become cause for one of the sisters to lose her soul, so that the words of
Christ that say, 'a blind man leading a blind man causes the two to fall into a
pit,' may not be fulfilled in you."
Irene struggled ever harder and spent many days praying and fasting. She would
also spend the night kneeling and making many prostrations. She never gave rest
to her body, so that the Lord, seeing her many struggles, might be merciful to
her and give her wisdom to guide her flock God-pleasingly.
According to her desire, the Lord gave her much wisdom and she was praiseworthy
in guiding the sisters. She taught and taught with wisdom surpassing the great
teachers and rhetoricians. Below is a small selection of some of her precepts
and admonitions:
"I know well, sisters in Christ and honorable offerings to God, that it is
neither proper nor blessed, that I the unworthy and uneducated should teach you,
but because the mercies of God are unfathomable and incomprehensible, His grace
established that I should be your superior. I, your worthless servant, beg you
to obey me and to listen to the words of my lowliness. When we don't keep the
rules and orders of this schema which we wear, and we don't do that which we
promised before God and angels, we are of no benefit, just as faith without
works is dead, as we have heard. Christ has promised us for the small amount of
fatigue that we endure here in this transient life, to give us the kingdom of
the heavens and unending life, delight, and eternal pleasure. It was for Christ
that, having believed in Him as we should, we left the charms of this world as
being false and passing, in order to inherit those true and eternal things. If
therefore, we don't keep the commandments of the Lord, wretched and miserable
that we are, then we will lose these transient things along with the eternal
things like the unwise virgins, we will be truly unworthy and foolish. Since the
soul cannot be divided into two parts, one that seeks delights and one that
seeks temperance, one that is haughty and one that is humble, we must totally
hate all of our failings and toil to dispel from our soul every worldly desire,
so that our internal state resembles our external state and we may work on
attaining all the other virtues.
Remember that the virtues of the soul are preferable to the virtues of the body.
Fasting and vigils and the other hardships of the body do not benefit us so much
when the virtues of the spirit are lacking. The virtues of the spirit are
humility, love, understanding, almsgiving to the poor, and all the other good
and God-pleasing acts. After all of these things let us also work on the virtues
of the flesh and let us fast as much as possible."
These and others such as these was St. Irene advising her flock, with motherly
affection. Her spiritual children would eagerly accept everything she would tell
them and they brought forth much spiritual fruit. Our venerable Mother Irene,
seeing that her counsel brought forth much reward to the souls of the sisters
rejoiced and thanked the Lord, whom she loved with all of her soul and strength.
Having in God unshakable faith and immeasurable love for the sisters, St. Irene
dared to ask of God a great and super-natural gift, the gift of spiritual
clairvoyance. She desired to be able to know the secret transgressions of all
the sisters, not out of human curiosity, but in order to correct them so that
not even one be condemned to hell.
The Lord, seeing that her goal was a good one, immediately heard her request and
sent to her from the heavens a light-bearing angel who appeared to her dressed
in a stunning white garment.
Irene was not frightened nor disturbed at the sight of the angel, but rather
rejoiced. The angel greeted her by saying, "Hail most faithful and productive
handmaid of God! The Lord has sent me to serve you according to your request for
those who are destined to be saved by you. The Lord commanded me to always stand
by your side and to wisely reveal to you daily the secrets of each one." Having
said this, the angel, for the time being, disappeared. Our venerable mother fell
to the ground in joy thanking the Lord and from then on this angel was always
beside her. This angel would appear to her, conversing with her as a friend each
time it was needed for her to know something secret. This gift was given to her
not only for all the nuns who were under her spiritual care, but also for the
many that came to her seeking to hear her golden words. Whenever Irene would see
someone who had committed a wrong-doing she would teach him about the eternal
hell to which all those who die unrepentant are condemned. St. Irene would speak
in this way whether she was addressing a nun or a laywoman. She never corrected
a person in front of others so as not to humiliate him but rather she employed
the appropriate manner to bring each person to repentance.
Irene would pray from the evening until the time of the service of Orthros.
After the service she would sleep until the sun rose. She would then go into the
church and call the sisters one by one to confession and if one of them did not
tell of all sins committed, St Irene would advise as the angel would instruct.
All the nuns came to respect her as a saint. Word spread quickly about the
holiness of the abbess of Chrysovalantou. Inhabitants of the city came to see
this honorable and venerable person by the hundreds. The nobility, political
leaders, women, virgins, young, and old. Irene taught with such wisdom and
compunction and the name of the holy abbess of Chrysovalantou became ever so
popular.
Irene continued to pray hard and long. One night as she was praying with her
hands lifted up towards heaven, the demons came into her cell and began to
scream in a terrifying voice. They spoke in an unfit manner and tried to
distract our holy mother from prayer. They, however, were unable to faze the
Saint. Nevertheless, the demons continued to taunt Irene and mimicked her by
saying,
"Wooden Irene, wooden feet hold you up. For how long will you torture our race,
how long will you burn us with your prayers and how long will you hurt and make
us sad?" Our venerable mother remained unfazed. This audacious demon then lit a
candle from the votive lamp and continued to light the mantle and veil of the
saint herself on fire. The flames reached down to the ground and burned not only
the saint's clothing, but deep into the skin on her shoulders, chest, and back.
Her entire body would have surely burned had it not been for one of the sisters
who rushed it to put the fire out after smelling it from her own cell down the
hall. Unbelievably, the saint continued to stand unfazed by the whole event.
Irene stood tall, hands still in the air and praying to our Lord above. "My
child", Irene said to the frightened nun, "why did you do such a bad thing and
interrupt the good that was taking place? We shouldn't think about the human
things, but rather about the divine. An angel was standing in front of me
weaving a wreath of various marvelous and fragrant flowers and as he stretched
out his hand to place this wreath on my head, you came in. You thought that you
were committing a praiseworthy act but instead committed a most unpraiseworthy
act. The angel saw you and left. You brought to me sorrow and I lost a great
opportunity."
The sister began to cry as she began to gather up the fragments of our venerable
mother's habit. They were partly burned and stuck to her flesh. A glorious
fragrance then came forth from her. This fragrance was sweeter smelling and more
powerful than all the costly perfumes that could be purchased. This aroma filled
the monastery for many days and the nuns glorified thy God for this was a true
miracle. St. Irene did not own a second garment and so her cell-attendant
brought her a new one. In just days wounds that would have killed most people
were miraculously healed by the Physician of our souls and bodies and she was
granted the grace of prophecy.
At the time a certain eunuch of her sister (the wife of Caesar Vardis) came to
visit the saint. Irene called him aside secretly and said to him, "Kyrillos,
(this was the eunuch's name) tell my sister to prepare her things because in a
few days her husband will die as an outcome of a plot of King Michael. After a
little while this King will also lose both his kingdom and his life by another
machination against him due to his foolish misdeeds. Be cautious not to say
anything to anyone. None of our relatives should dare to rise up against the new
king who will rise to the throne, neither should they deter him in any way, even
if he will assume the throne after a murder, for God has loved him because he
fears Him and God has been gracious to him."
Learning of all this, the sister of Irene told her husband of the prophecies,
being overcome by her love for him. Her husband from his pride and
foolhardiness, rather than running to the Lord with tears and begging mercy,
remained indifferent. He was interested only in learning who would be the next
king and many times he sent messages to our holy mother Irene trying to learn
the future king's name. A few days later he was killed in the military camp.
King Michael was then killed in the same way and Basil the Macedonian became
king.
A noble and beautiful woman from Cappadocia, the home-city of St. Irene, was
engaged to a certain man. Later on, however, she thought better of it and
decided against marriage. She decided instead to become a nun at the famed
monastery of Chrysovalantou. The demon grew jealous, however, and filled her
ex-fiancé with tremendous sexual passion. However, the man knew well that he
would not be able to enter the monastery. Instead, he hired a powerful magician,
a most able servant of the devil to whom he gave him a large amount of money for
the deliverance of the woman he wanted as his wife. The magician wrought his
evil art in Cappadocia and the woman in the monastery went completely out of her
mind. She began to run around the convent screaming and crying out the name of
her ex-fiancé and swearing that if they did not open the doors of the convent
she would suffocate. Our venerable mother heard the uprise and cried, "Woe to me
the wretched one, if by the carelessness of the shepherds the wolves snatch the
sheep away. However, in vain do you labor, O sly devil, because Christ will not
allow you to swallow my lamb." She then called the sisterhood together and
instructed them to guard themselves against the snares of the demons and she
ordered them all to fast for the entire week while praying to God and each one
of them to make a thousand prostrations a day with tears for this sister of
theirs who was undergoing temptation.
Our venerable mother prayed in her cell daily for this sister and on the third
day, she saw St Basil the Great in front of her and he said to her, "Why do you
deride us, Irene? We have left our homeland and all the vile and impious acts
take place there now. When the sun rises take your sick disciple and bring her
to Vlachernae and there the mother of our Master Christ who is powerful will
make her well." Having said this, St. Basil disappeared. St. Irene took the sick
sister along with two other nuns and arriving at the Church of Vlachernae, they
prayed the entire day with tears in their eyes. At about midnight, St. Irene
fell asleep and in her sleep she saw many people dressed in brilliant golden
clothes and preparing the roads with the most fragrant flowers and incense. Our
venerable mother then asked why so much preparation was taking place. They
answered that the Mother of God was coming and warned her to prepare herself
that she might be accounted worthy to venerate God's mother. Then the Mother of
the Life arrived followed by a vast crowd. So much did the face of the Virgin
radiate that it was not possible for a mere mortal to gaze upon her. Our Lady
having looked at all the ill, assembled in the church, looked at the disciple of
St. Irene. Our venerable mother Irene fell at the spotless feet of the Mother of
God, full of fear and trembling. The Mother of God then called on St. Basil the
Great and asked him what Irene needed. St. Basil explained to the Theotokos
exactly what St. Irene's need was. Hearing this the Theotokos said, "Call here,
Anastasia!" When St. Anastasia had arrived, the Mother of God said to her, "Go
with Basil to Caesarea, and study carefully the situation in order to cure this
girl, for to you my Son and God has granted this grace."
Venerating the Theotokos, St. Anastasia and St. Basil left in all haste in order
to perform the ordained task. Our venerable mother Irene then heard a voice
saying. "Go to your convent and she will be made well." On awakening, Irene
explained to the sisters what she had seen and they went on their way rejoicing
greatly. When they arrived at the convent it was Friday at the time of vespers
and all the nuns were gathered at the church. St. Irene explained her vision and
then ordered them all to raise their hands and eyes towards heaven and with all
their hearts and burning tears to cry out, "Lord have mercy!" After a long time,
when the entire floor of the church had become wet from the tears of the
sisters, St. Basil and the Great-martyr Anastasia appeared floating in the air
and the sisters heard them say, "Irene open your arms and receive this, and
don't grieve us needlessly again." (St. Irene had been praying before the icon
of St. Basil and begged him to free Caesarea from magicians). Stretching out her
hands, St. Irene received from the midst of the air a package weighing about
three liters and containing a host of charms including strings, hair, and lead,
bound together with the names of demons written upon them. It also contained two
small idols made of lead, one in the shape of the ex-fiance and the other in the
shape of the sick nun, stuck together as if they were committing a sin. The nuns
were amazed and remained praying the entire night. They thanked the Theotokos.
In the morning, St. Irene sent the sick nun, along with two other nuns to
Vlachernae. Taking with them the charms, oil and prosphora, they attended the
Divine Liturgy. After the liturgy, the priest anointed the sick nun with oil
from the vigil lamp and later put the magical charms on live coals. As the
charms burned, the nun became well and regained her senses. When the spell of
the charms was totally broken, a crying sound came forth from the coals that
resembled the squealing of pigs at their slaughter. The nuns returned to the
monastery glorifying God that He does such strange and magnificent things and on
entering the monastery they told all what had happened.
The humble Irene, seeing that she was revered for her holy acts, all the more
condemned herself and tears were always to be found in her eyes. She would
especially cry during the Holy Liturgy when the priest would sacrifice God on
the holy altar. She would ponder how the invisible and immortal God accepted to
become man and to be crucified for our love and to prepare for us those divine
mysteries that we might receive them as food and drink. Being overcome with
compunction, she was not able to hold back her grief and she would bow down her
head so that no one would see her crying, feeling that she was a thief and
evil-doer and committed great misdeeds.
Let us relate to you another of her miracles during her lifetime: A young man by
the name of Nicholas used to take care of the vineyard of the convent of our
venerable mother. Nicholas fell in love with one of the nuns of the convent and
could find no peace day or night for desire of this nun. The devil led Nicholas
to this passion in order to punish St. Irene. So much did the evil one darken
the mind of this young man that one night as he made his way towards the convent
he fantasized that he found the gate of the cloister open, went into the cell of
this nun, fell down with her on her mattress and did that which he desired. He
then actually fell down on the ground and began to grind his body up against the
earth. Not only did he cut and bruise his body but he also gave the demon a
chance to disturb him.
In the morning, the doorkeeper opened the gate of the monastery and noticed him
outside possessed, foaming at the mouth and writhing. She went and told our
venerable mother what she had seen and asked her if she knew the reason that
Nicholas was now possessed. Falling down in Prayer, St. Irene said, "Blessed are
you O Lord, that you did not allow us to become neither the prey nor the victims
of the demons." She then sent the young man to the Church of St. Anastasia to be
healed. A few days later Irene saw a vision of St. Anastasia and heard the
Great-martyr say to her, "To free yourself from this possessed man you sent him
to me? Only you, my sister, can make him well." So, St. Irene ordered that the
young man be brought to her. So that no one might learn of her miraculous power
St. Irene did not cure the man immediately but rather they tied him to a column
of the church. The saint, along with the other sisters, prayed daily for him.
When the priest was serving the Divine Liturgy and had put down the holy gifts
on the holy table after the great entrance the possessed man broke the chain
that was binding him and ran into the altar. He grabbed the priest and began to
bite his shoulder as if he was actually trying to eat his flesh. Immediately our
saint of God rushed to the possessed man and ordered him to remain still. Seeing
the saint, Nicholas wanted to run away, but he was not able to move at all being
held tighter by the command of the saint than by any chain. When the liturgy had
finished, our venerable mother remained alone in the church with the possessed
young man. She prayed to the Lord and then addressed the demon. She ordered the
demon to tell her the reason and the manner with which he had entered this man.
The demon, forced by divine power, answered all of our saint's questions
honestly. She then commanded the demon to come out of the man. Shaking the man
and throwing him down to the ground the demon came forth. St. Irene raised the
man up and advised him as to how to always be careful in avoiding overeating and
intoxication. Never to be absent from church on any feast day and to pray
without ceasing so that the demon might never again get a chance to bother him.
When people would ask him, "Who cured you?" he would respond, "The Lord through
the prayers of His angels." Nicholas went forth praising and giving thanks to
God.
Our saint remained as before, occupied with her ascetical struggles and often
spent the entire day and night in prayer for one, two, and even three weeks at a
time. So long and in such ecstatic prayer would she have her hands upraised that
she later would be incapable of lowering them. At such times she would call one
of the sisters to help her lower her hands and from far away one could hear her
shoulders cracking. She would not eat bread from the beginning of Great Lent
until Pascha. She would eat only fruit and vegetables only once a week with a
little water. On major feasts she would hold vigil and not sleep an all. She
would spend those nights praying and chanting and many times she would stand out
in the convent's yard praying with much compunction. When she would look at the
stars and the vastness and the beauty of the universe, she would glorify the
Creator who wisely made all things.
One night a sister of the nunnery noticed St. Irene praying in the outer yard of
the convent. Our venerable mother's feet were not touching the ground but rather
she was standing in the air about two yards above the ground! Near her there
were two extremely tall cypress trees. So long as our glorious saint was praying
the two cypress trees bowed down to the ground and waiting for our venerable
mother to finish her prayer. When finished with her prayer St Irene touched the
treetops and blessed them in the sign of the cross as they returned to their
original position! The nun saw this amazing site and became frightened. She
watched this strange event for three hours. She went so far as to check the cell
of her abbess in order to make sure that she was not dreaming. It was not a
dream.
So was the nun terrified that she did not mention the event to the others.
Several days later the nuns noticed two handkerchiefs tied to the tops of the
two cypress trees. Our venerable mother had tied those two handkerchiefs there
for the glory of God because many times the trees venerate her. Awed by this
strange sight, one sister began to ask another, by whom, and how, and when might
these handkerchiefs been hung on the tops of such tall and slender trees. Then
the sister who had seen the above stated miracle explained to the other nuns how
the cypress trees bowed when their abbess prayed. On hearing this, the other
nuns were filled with joy and began to cry and even scolded the sister because
she did not wake them so that they also might see the miracle.
When St. Irene learned that this nun had made known this great sign she became
scandalized. She called the nun before her and asked her, "If you saw me, as a
human being that I am, fall into sin would you tell everyone what sin I had
committed?" Then our venerable mother warned this nun along with all the others,
that if they ever reported another miracle as long as she lived that they would
receive a very strict penance. The sisters saw countless other miraculous signs
during our holy mother's life, but for fear of being chastised, they did not
make them known to anyone.
It was the custom then of their convent to celebrate the feast of St. Basil the
Great on the first day of January, because St. Irene had a great devotion to him
as they were both from the same city. One particular year, after the priest
finished serving the Divine Liturgy on this feast day, he came out of the altar
and announced that there was a mouse in the altar that was defiling the sacred
vessels and that the nuns should try to kill it. Our venerable mother went to
her cell and prayed even for this seemingly very small request. When the priest
was ready to leave the convent the abbess sent the ecclesiarch to the church and
said to her, "Go to the door of the altar and there you will find a dead mouse.
Throw it outside." The priest found the mouse dead just as St. Irene had said
and proclaimed, "Magnified is God in His Saints!"
On that same day, Wednesday, during the watchguard of the night, our holy mother
heard a mystical voice say to her, "Receive the sailor who will bring you fruit
today and eat this fruit rejoicing in your soul." During the Orthros, St. Irene
called two nuns to her and said to them, "Go to the convent's gate and you will
find a sailor waiting outside. Bring him into the convent." On meeting, the
sailor our venerable mother exchanged greetings and asked him from where he was
and how it was that he happened to come to the convent. He replied in this
manner: "My lady, I am a sailor from the island of Patmos. I had embarked on a
voyage with my crew to come here to Constantinople for a certain service I had
to perform. When we were passing by the far end of my island we saw on the land
a most pious and handsome looking old man. This old man yelled out to us to wait
for him. However we were close to the land and there were many rocks there. We
had a good wind behind us and we continued to speed along farther and farther
away. The old man yelled again louder and at that moment the ship came to a
complete stop and this old man began to come towards us while walking on the
waves. At that point, he took out of his shirt three apples and gave them to me
saying, "When you arrive in the capitol, give these apples to the patriarch and
tell him that God sent them to him from paradise by way of His servant John."
Taking out three other apples he said to me, "Give these three to the abbess of
Chrysovalantou whose name is Irene. Tell her to eat these in fulfillment of the
desire of her soul because now I have brought these from paradise." The old man
then gave thanks to God and blessed us and immediately the ship began to move
and the old man disappeared. I gave the three apples to the patriarch and now 1
am bringing you the other three." Our venerable mother hearing this began to cry
from joy and gave thanks to the beloved Disciple and Apostle of Christ. Then the
sailor took the apples out of a silk and gold embroidered handkerchief in which
he had kept them as divine possessions and he gave them to St. Irene with much
reverence. These three worldly and incorruptible apples were so large and so
beautiful in their shape and so fragrant that in their physical nature alone
they were an amazing sight. The only explanation for the beauty of these apples
is that they were from paradise.
The sailor received a blessing and forgiveness from the abbess before he went on
his way. Our venerable mother fasted for one week to give thanks to the Lord for
this gift He had sent her. After giving thanks in this way she began to eat a
small piece of one of the apples every day without eating food or even water for
forty days. Whenever St. Irene would eat a piece of this apple a fragrance would
exude from her mouth so strong that all the nuns of the convent could smell it.
The entire convent smelled as if it had been washed with a most costly perfume
and it truly smelled like paradise.
When the day of Great and Holy Thursday arrived, St. Irene blessed all the nuns
to receive the Holy Mysteries and having received communion our venerable mother
cut the second apple and gave a piece to each nun to eat. They all ate of it
without knowing what it was being only aware of its great fragrance and
sweetness. Not only did they taste the sweetness of the apple with their mouths,
but on eating it they also felt a sense of joy and jubilance in their souls. The
third apple she kept as a very valuable possession and every time she smelled
it, she felt joy and comfort in her soul.
On Great and Holy Friday, when our Master suffered His passion, our holy mother
was in ecstasy and as the sisters were singing the service of the Holy Passions
with much, compunction, she beheld a vision. She saw an innumerable amount of
beautiful and brilliant youth come into the church holding in their hands
guitars and singing hymns to the glory of God in great harmony, sweetly and
gloriously. They were also carrying vessels filled with myrth and they emptied
these on the holy table. Then the angel who was waiting at the holy table cried
out, "For how long my Lord?" A voice was heard answering the angel and saying,
"Until the second Solomon shall come to join the heavenly things with the
earthly and that they might become one, so long will the Lord magnify the
remembrance of His handmaid." At this point the youth in white cried out the
"Glory to God in the Highest" and ascended to the heavens.
Our venerable mother, however, also had to pay her own debt as mortal man. An
angel appeared to her and told her, "Be aware that in the coming year, on the
twenty-eighth of the present month, when you will celebrate the martyr
Panteleimon, you will come to stand at the throne of the Godhead." It was then
July twenty-sixth and at the Convent of Chrysovalantou that they were
celebrating the consecration of the Church of the Archangel for on this day was
its building and restoration completed.
The next year, when they were again celebrating this feast and the feast of St.
Panteleimon, our holy mother received the holy mysteries having first fasted for
one week according to the order of our Church. During that time she was praying
and had not even drunk water at all during the week. She had only eaten of the
holy apple that the beloved apostle of our Master Christ sent to her from
Paradise. Before this time she had nor wanted to eat of this third and last
apple because she wanted to have some comfort in this exile here on earth. Every
time she or one of the sisters would fall into despondency or sadness or have a
certain complaint, as humans are prone to, she would take the apple into her
hands and from its unimaginable fragrance she would be immediately be filled
with joy and would ponder what happiness awaits those who are to inherit the
eternal heavenly kingdom. Again this time, upon eating the apple, the entire
convent was filled with the heavenly aroma. After partaking of the apple, our
venerable mother fell into agony, weeping, fearing death, and looking to heaven.
The nuns, not being aware of what was happening, asked what had upset her that
she was now crying. She replied to them, "Today, my children, I am leaving this
world and you will no longer see me. When the hour will have come and I will
leave this life for the eternal one, I want you to elect Maria abbess, because
the Lord has chosen her as she will govern you God-pleasingly.
Be alert to walk the narrow and difficult road in order to find the spacious
place of paradise. Hate the world and the worldly things because all of these
temporal things are vain. According to the divine order, hate your own souls in
order to save them. In a few words, don't do anything that your flesh wants, but
rather the desire of God, because only He can help you at the hour of judgment."
These and other spiritually beneficial words did St. Irene say to her sisters
during her last hour. Then she lifted up her hands and eyes towards heaven and
prayed in this way to the Lord, "Master, Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of the
Living God, the Good Shepherd, who saved us with Your all-holy and precious
blood, into Your hands do I give over Your small flock. Protect it in the
shelter of Your wings and guard it against the snares of the devil, for You are
our Sanctification and our Salvation and to You do we send up thanks and glory
to all ages." Having prayed this prayer, she sat down and began to smile, seeing
before her the holy angels, who were greeting her. Then her face began to shine
as the sun and she closed her eyes as one falling asleep and she gave up her
sacred soul to the Lord, having lived one-hundred and three years. Even though
she had reached such a great age, her physical beauty had not faded as she
looked like a young, beautiful girl, by grace of her virginity and by the fact
that she had never known anything worldly. God had granted that the all-pure one
remain in this state to give witness to the beauty of her soul and that grace
had been bestowed on her by her heavenly Bridegroom.
The nuns of the convent began to weep and wail and they mourned their mother
worthily. The entire city, men and women of every age wept. Such a crowd of men
and women came to venerate her holy relics that the convent was not able to hold
them all. Neither was it possible for them to bury her, because of the pilgrims
who were arriving. When the night arrived they managed with difficulty to bury
our venerable mother according to the order of our holy Church. According to the
custom, the bishops brought incense and myrrh and most-precious perfumes, but
the fragrance that came forth from our holy mother’s relics far surpassed all of
the earthly aroma.
Having sung the burial service, they placed the body of our venerable mother in
a temporary burial place until they had prepared a tomb for her in the Church of
St. Theodore, which was next to the Church of the Archangel and there was the
body of our holy mother given final rest and from her tomb, more miraculous than
the tomb of a martyr, came forth a most heavenly fragrance. The noble relative
of St. Irene, who had been delivered from dearth by the intercession of the
saint with the emperor, began to celebrate every year the memory of our holy
mother in the most brilliant manner. All those who called on the name of our
most venerable mother Irene, received that which was to their benefit.