ST. BARTHOLOMEW, APOSTLE

The
Holy Apostle
Bartholomew was born at Cana of Galilee
and was one of the Twelve
Apostles of Christ. After the Descent of the Holy Spirit on the Day of
Pentecost, it fell by lot to the holy Apostles Bartholomew and Philip (November
14) to preach the Gospel in Syria and Asia Minor. In their preaching they
wandered through various cities, and then met up again. Accompanying the holy
Apostle Philip was his sister, the holy virgin St Mariamnne.
Traversing the cities of Syria and Myzia, they underwent much hardship and
tribulations, they were
stoned and they were locked up in prison. In one of the
villages they met up with the Apostle John the Theologian, and together they set
off to Phrygia. In the city of Hieropolis by the power of their prayers they
destroyed an enormous viper, which the pagans worshipped as a god. The holy
Apostles Bartholomew and Philip with his sister confirmed their preaching with
many miracles.
At Hieropolis there lived a man by the name of Stachys, who had been blind for
40 years. When he received healing, he then believed in Christ and was baptized.
News of this spread throughout the city, and a multitude of the people thronged
to the house where the apostles were staying.
The sick and those beset by demons
were released from their infirmities, and many were baptized.
The city prefect
gave orders to arrest the preachers and throw them in prison, and to burn down
the house of Stachys. At the trial pagan priests came forth with the complaint
that the strangers were turning people away from the worship of the ancestral
gods.
Thinking that perhaps some sort of magic power was hidden away in the clothes of
the apostles, t
he prefect gave orders to strip them. But St Mariamne became like
a fiery torch before their eyes, and none dared touch her. They sentenced the
saints to death. The Apostle Philip was crucified upside down. Suddenly there
was an earthquake, and a fissure in the earth swallowed up the prefect of the
city, together with the pagan priests and many of the people. Others took fright
and rushed to take down the apostles from the crosses. Since the Apostle
Bartholomew had not been suspended very high, they soon managed to take him
down. The Apostle Philip, however, had died. After making Stachys Bishop of
Hieropolis, the Apostle Bartholomew and St Mariamne left the city and moved on.
Preaching the Word of God, Mariamne arrived in Lykaonia, where she peacefully
died (February 17). The Apostle
Bartholomew went to India, where he translated
the Gospel of Matthew into their language, and he converted many pagans to
Christ. He also visited Greater Armenia (the country between the River Kura and
the upper stretches of the Tigrus and Euphrates Rivers), where he worked many
miracles and healed the daughter of King Polymios from the demons afflicting
her. In gratitude, the king sent gifts to the apostle, who refused to accept
them, saying that he sought only the salvation of the souls of mankind.
Then Polymios together with his wife, daughter, and many of those close to them
accepted Baptism. And people from more than ten cities of Greater Armenia
followed their example. But through the intrigues of the pagan priests,
the
Apostle Bartholomew was seized by the king's brother Astiagus in the city of
Alban (now the city of Baku), and crucified upside down.
But even from the cross
he did not cease to proclaim the good news about Christ the Savior. Finally, on
orders from Astiagus, they flayed the skin from the Apostle Bartholomew and cut
off his head.
Believers placed his relics in a leaden coffin and buried him.
In about the year 508 the holy relics of the Apostle Bartholomew were
transferred to Mesopotamia,
to the city of Dara. When the Persians seized the
city in 574, Christians took the relics of the Apostle Bartholomew with them
when they fled to the shores of the Black Sea. But since the enemy overtook them
there, they were compelled to leave the coffin behind, and the pagans threw it
into the sea. By the power of God the coffin miraculously arrived on the island
of Lipari. In the ninth century, after the taking of the island by the Arabs,
the holy relics were transferred to the Neapolitan city of Beneventum in Italy,
and in the tenth century part of the relics were transferred to Rome.
The holy Apostle Bartholomew is mentioned in the Life of St Joseph the
Hymnographer (April 4). Having received from a certain man part of the relics of
the Apostle Bartholomew, St Joseph conveyed them to his own monastery near
Constantinople, and he built a church in the name of the Apostle Bartholomew,
placing in it a portion of the relics. St Joseph ardently desired to compose
hymns of praise in honor of the saint, and he fervently besought God to grant
him the ability to do so.
On the Feast day in memory of the Apostle Bartholomew, St Joseph saw him at the
altar. He beckoned to Joseph and took the holy Gospel from the altar table and
pressed it to his bosom with the words,
"May the Lord bless you, and may your
song delight the whole world."
And from that time St Joseph began to write hymns
and canons to adorn not only the Feast day of the Apostle Bartholomew, but also
the Feast days of many other saints, composing about 300 canons in all.
Sts John
Chrysostom, Cyril of Alexandria, Epiphanius of Cyprus and certain other teachers
of the Church regard the Apostle Bartholomew as being the same person as
Nathanael
(John 1:45-51, 21:2).