ὁ Ἅγιος νέος Ἱερομάρτυς Ἰωσὴφ ὁ ἐκ Δεσφίνης
(† July 22, 1944, Old
Style)
Following a decision, in
September of 2014, by the Synod of Bishops of the Church of the Genuine
Orthodox Christians of Greece to enter his name into the catalogue of Saints,
the offcial Proclamation of the sanctity of the Holy New Hieromartyr Joseph of
Desphina, as well as the first liturgical commemoration in his honor, took
place on Monday, August 3, and Tuesday, August 4, 2015 (according to the Civil
or New Calendar), at the Church of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul in Daphne
(Athens), Greece. Presiding at the Vespers Service, on Monday, and the Matins
and Divine Liturgy, on Tuesday, was His Beatitude, Archbishop Kallinikos of
Athens, President of the Holy Synod, with four Hierarchs, with four Presbyters,
and with two Deacons concelebrating. A large number of clergy, monastics, and
faithful were also present for the historic event.
St. Joseph the New Martyr was
born Ioannes (John) Antoniou, in 1900, in the small town of Desphina (Desfina)
in Central Greece, where he was reared by pious parents in a traditional
Orthodox manner. At a young age, he was tonsured a monk and in 1925 was
ordained to the Priesthood. In 1935, having rejected the calendar reform in the
State Church of Greece, he joined the Old Calendar struggle. In the same year,
he was deposed by the New Calendarist State Church for “Old Calendarism,” and a
year later he organized a huge public celebration of the Blessing of the Waters,
at the central port of Karystos on the island of Euboea, gathering the Old
Calendarist communities in his region that had rejected the calendar
innovation. At this celebration, he strongly condemned the calendar innovation
and the departure of the State Church of Greece from Holy Tradition.
Eventually, in 1938, in
retaliation for his faithful protest, he was arrested and jailed, stripped of
his clerical dress, and forcibly shaved by the police authorities at the behest
of the State Church. This sort of barbaric and technically illegal action was
taken against the Old Calendarist clergy throughout Greece, much to the shame
of the ecclesiastical administration of the “official” Church and the secular
agencies at its disposal as a branch of the civil structure.
Father Joseph was highly regarded
among the Greek clergy and faithful as a man of strict fasting, high moral
accomplishment, and self-sacrifice. He was a tireless celebrant of the Divine
services and was constantly available to the faithful and to all who needed his
spiritual counsel and guidance. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, when a large
part of Greece either belonged to Old Calendarist communities or sympathized
with their commitment to Church tradition, there was deep public respect for
the traditionalist heroes, and thus St. Joseph was held in high esteem for his
spiritual virtues and prophetic gifts. Indeed, during the occupation of Greece
by Nazi Germany, when he was serving in the mountain villages near Corinth, he shared
what food and basics of life he had with his fellow citizens, many of whom were
close to starvation in the last two years of the occupation.
In 1944, with the defeat of the
Axis Powers and the growth of the communist insurgency, St. Joseph, who had remained
silent about the Communists and their ideology, as long as they were helping to
defend the Greek nation against the Nazi invaders, began to speak openly
against the communist insurgents. Their violent actions against their fellow
Greeks, including clergy, teachers, and innocent civilians who opposed their
ideology, he openly condemned. He also condemned and abhorred their militant
atheism. Indeed, he boldly called the communists to repentance for their crimes
and for their faithlessness. As a result, the communists, in their anger,
sentenced him to death. They subsequently arrested him, tortured him, and
slaughtered him, as they did many Priests during the Greek Civil War. After his
murder, they hastily buried his remains in Panariti, a small village in the
region of Corinth. It was said that a light was seen from afar for a number of
nights over the area where he was martyred.
The precise location of the holy
Martyr Joseph’s Relics was discovered in a very curious way, after the
liberation, when his donkey, in the company of those seeking his burial place,
stopped at a certain point and began scratching with his front hooves in the
earth. Indeed, when the place where the animal indicated was excavated, the
remains of the Martyr were found. They were identified by his monastic belt.
The Relics also gave off a fragrant scent. Those fragrant Relics, along with the
Saint’s Icon, painted at the Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in
Phyle, Greece, were available for veneration by those present at the
Proclamation of the Martyr’s sanctity by the Holy Synod of our Church.
May the Holy Hieromartyr Joseph
pray for us!
Source: https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2024/11/13/E20241113aAgiosIosifDesfina.pdf
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