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Tropar of St. Peter & St. Paul
O First Enthroned of the Apostles, teachers of the Universe. Entreat the
Master of all to grant peace to the world and great mercy to our souls!
About St. Peter & St. Paul
St Peter
The divinely-blessed Peter was from Bethsaida of Galilee. He was the
son of Jonas and the brother of Andrew the First-called. He was a
fisherman by trade, unlearned and poor, and was called Simon; later
he was renamed Peter by the Lord Jesus Christ Himself, Who looked
at him and said, "Thou art Simon the son of Jonas; thou shalt be
called Cephas (which is by interpretation, Peter)" (John 1:42). On
being raised by the Lord to the dignity of an Apostle and becoming
inseparable from Him as His zealous disciple, he followed Him from
the beginning of His preaching of salvation up until the very Passion,
when, in the court of Caiaphas the high priest, he denied Him thrice
because of his fear of the Jews and of the danger at hand. But again,
after many bitter tears, he received complete forgiveness of his
transgression. After the Resurrection of Christ and the descent of the
Holy Spirit, he preached in Judea, Antioch, and certain parts of Asia,
and finally came to Rome, where he was crucified upside down by
Nero, and thus he ascended to the eternal habitations about the year
66 or 68, leaving two Catholic (General) Epistles to the Church of
Christ.
St Paul
Paul, the chosen vessel of Christ, the glory of the Church, the Apostle
of the Nations and teacher of the whole world, was a Jew by race, of
the tribe of Benjamin, having Tarsus as his homeland. He was a
Roman citizen, fluent in the Greek language, an expert in knowledge
of the Law, a Pharisee, born of a Pharisee, and a disciple of Gamaliel,
a Pharisee and notable teacher of the Law in Jerusalem. For this
cause, from the beginning, Paul was a most fervent zealot for the traditions of the Jews and a great
persecutor of the Church of Christ; at that time, his name was Saul (Acts 22:3-4). In his great passion
of rage and fury against the disciples of the Lord, he went to Damascus bearing letters of introduction
from the high priest. His intention was to bring the disciples of Christ back to Jerusalem in bonds. As
he was approaching Damascus, about midday there suddenly shone upon him a light from Heaven.
Falling on the earth, he heard a voice saying to him, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?" And he
asked, "Who art Thou, Lord?" And the Lord said, "I am Jesus Whom thou persecutest; it is hard for
thee to kick against the pricks." And that heavenly voice and brilliance made him tremble, and he
was blinded for a time. He was led by the hand into the city, and on account of a divine revelation to
the Apostle Ananias (see Oct. 1), he was baptized by him, and both his bodily and spiritual eyes were
opened to the knowledge of the Sun of Righteousness. And straightway- O wondrous transformation!
- beyond all expectation, he spoke with boldness in the synagogues, proclaiming that "Christ is the
Son of God" (Acts 9:1-21). As for his zeal in preaching the Gospel after these things had come to pass,
as for his unabating labors and afflictions of diverse kinds, the wounds, the prisons, the bonds, the
sbeatings, the stonings, the shipwrecks, the journeys, the perils on land, on sea, in cities, in
wildernesses, the continual vigils, the daily fasting, the hunger, the thirst, the nakedness, and all
those other things that he endured for the Name of Christ, and which he underwent before nations
and kings and the Israelites, and above all, his care for all the churches, his fiery longing for the
salvation of all, whereby he became all things to all men, that he might save them all if possible, and
because of which, with his heart aflame, he continuously traveled throughout all parts, visiting them
all, and like a bird of heaven flying from Asia and Europe, the West and East, neither staying nor
abiding in any one place - all these things are related incident by incident in the Book of the Acts,
and as he himself tells them in his Epistles. His Epistles, being fourteen in number, are explained in
250 homilies by the divine Chrysostom and make manifest the loftiness of his thoughts, the
abundance of the revelations made to him, the wisdom given to him from God, wherewith he brings
together in a wondrous manner the Old with the New Testaments, and expounds the mysteries
thereof which had been concealed under types; he confirms the doctrines of the Faith, expounds the
ethical teaching of the Gospel, and demonstrates with exactness the duties incumbent upon every
rank, age, and order of In all these things his teaching proved to be a spiritual trumpet, and his
speech was seen to be more radiant than the sun, and by these means he clearly sounded forth the
word of truth and illumined the ends of the world. Having completed the work of his ministry, he
likewise ended his life in martyrdom when he was beheaded in Rome during the reign of Nero, at the
same time, some say, when Peter was crucified.