The Friends of Mount Athos Book Reviews

© 2006

The Synaxarion: The Lives of the Saints of the Orthodox Church: Volume 5: May, June. By Hieromonk Makarios of Simonos Petra; translated from the French by Mother Maria (Rule) and Mother Joanna (Burton). Ormylia, 2005. 690 pages. ISBN 960-518-247-5. Price h/b £36.00. Available from UK distributor Orthodox Christian Books Ltd or from the Holy Convent of the Annunciation, 63071 Ormylia, Greece.

This able and readable translation of Hieromonk MakariosÕs masterly contemporary Synaxarion volume 5 is the second in the series of six to be translated by Mother Maria (Rule) and Mother Joanna (Burton), who were also responsible for volume 4. The first three volumes were wonderfully translated by a very dear friend, Christopher Hookway, before his death in 2000. A review of volume 4 by Professor Andrew Louth of the University of Durham is to be found in the Friends of Mount Athos Annual Report for 2003, pp. 67–9.

            The Synaxarion is a collection of the lives of the saints, and in this volume we find the saints commemorated in May and June listed according to the date the Orthodox Church remembers them. As Professor Louth explains in his 2003 review of volume 4, Fr Makarios has used the standard Synaxarion of the Greek Church, itself based on the tenth-century Synaxarion of Constantinople, as revised by St Nikodimos of the Holy Mountain among others. For the first millennium, saints of the whole Church are included, though saints of the Byzantine empire receive the greatest attention. Fr Makarios also includes western saints of the first millennium including a number of Celtic and Anglo-Saxon saints, such as St Columba (9 June), with a contemporary icon by Aidan Hart, well known to readers of this Report. Fr MakariosÕs sources for the second millennium are largely Greek, but he supplements these from Slav and Romanian traditions. There is outstanding a sixth and final volume of the series that will cover July and August.

            The translation reads well and the present reviewer, who, unlike Dr Louth, is neither a scholar nor a linguist, was impressed by the high standards of this volume as well as its four predecessors, though there are a number of unfortunate typographical errors, as in previous volumes. The colour illustrations of icons from the Protaton in Karyes, from Patmos, from Staro Nagorichino, from the Hermitage in St Petersburg, and from the monastery of Simonos Petra are all of high quality, and there are hundreds of black and white illustrations of icons of the saints beside their entries, which adorn the text and enhance the volume. The print is clear and very legible, and the Convent of Ormylia is to be congratulated on the very high standard they are maintaining in all these volumes.

            Friends of Mount Athos will find many Athonite saints here: the Holy New Martyrs Euthymius, Ignatius, and Acacius of the skete of the Forerunner, St Nicephorus the Hesychast, St John and St Euthymius, founders of the monastery of Iviron, St Gabriel the Iberian who received the icon of the Porta•tissa at Iviron, the venerable Euphrosynius also of Iviron. There is St Peter the Athonite, St Niphon the Athonite, St Callistus, monk of the Great Lavra, a disciple of St Gregory the Sinaite at the skete of Magoula, later monk of Iviron and Patriarch of Constantinople, St Dionysius founder of Dionysiou Monastery, St David monk of St AnneÕs skete and new martyr, and St George the Hagiorite, Abbot of Iviron. English readers will find here St Augustine of Canterbury, St Dunstan, and St Alban, and from the Celtic Church St Kevin of Ireland, St Comgall of Bangor in Ireland, as well as St Columba of Iona already mentioned.

            Two lives that particularly caught the attention of the reviewer were those of St John Maximovich, Archbishop of Shanghai, Brussels, and San Francisco, who died on 19 June 1966, and St Nicolas Cabasilas, friend of St Gregory Palamas and author of A Commentary on the Holy Liturgy and The Life in Christ, two masterpieces of Orthodox Christian literature.

            The society of the Friends of Mount Athos is to be congratulated, together with the Fellowship of St Alban and St Sergius, for supporting the publication of this volume, as are Hieromonk Makarios of Simonos Petra and the nuns of Ormylia, for all their efforts in the production of this beautifully produced Synaxarion.

HIEROMONK SILOUAN

Shropshire