On May 29, 1453, the
troops of the Moslem leader, Mohammed II , took the great city of
Constantinople. For more than 1000 years Orthodox Christians had assumed
that the Byzantine Christian Empire would stand until the Second Coming
of Christ. They had always called their city the "God-protected City,"
and indeed, until now it had been protected by Heaven. But when their
Emperor, Constantine XI , fell in battle, the holy city of Byzantium
became the capital of a new empire, the Ottoman Empire, ruled by a pagan
people, enemies of Christ and Christianity, the Moslems. It was a dark,
dark time for Orthodox Christians in that part of the world.
In their violent hatred of Christianity, the
Moslem Turks embarked on a course of persecution designed to effectively
muzzle the flock of Christ. Their strategy was no less cruel than that
of atheist communists in the Soviet Union today; the parallels are
striking. Most of the churches of Constantinople (whose name was changed
to Istanbul, just as years later Petersburg was changed to Leningrad)
were converted to mosques. Their movable icons were destroyed and whole
walls of inspiring and radiantly beautiful mosaics were covered with
paint or plaster. Crosses were torn off domes and broken off the roofs
of churches. The Moslems guaranteed Christians a definite place in
Turkish society; but it was a place of guaranteed inferiority. Orthodox
Christians were required to pay an annual head tax, like cattle. To the
Turks they were unbelievers, and they had absolutely no rights of
citizenship. They even had to wear distinctive dress. They could not
marry Moslems, nor could they engage in missionary work of any kind; in
fact, it was a crime, usually punishable by death, to convert a Moslem
to the Christian Faith.
As if these measures were not enough, the
Moslems actively undertook to control the Church itself. The Sultan
ironically considered himself the "protector" of Orthodoxy, supposedly
guaranteeing the existence of the Church, but actually keeping it in the
vise of a terrible stranglehold. Under this system each Patriarch had to
pay a stiff fee to the Sultan before he could be enthroned. Unable to
raise the funds himself, the Patriarch was forced to exact a fee from
each new bishop before installing him in his diocese, and this burden
was eventually placed on the flocks. Taking advantage of this
financially lucrative situation, the Turks forced re-elections of the
Patriarch with undue rapidity. The majority of the Sultans themselves
were sick, demon-ridden men, whose irrational rule and unbridled power
only heightened the already demoralizing effect of Turkish rule on the
Church. It is not without reason that an Englishman living in Istanbul
in the 17th century wrote these words: "Every good Christian ought with
sadness to consider and with compassion to behold this once glorious
Church tearing and rending out her bowels and giving them as food to
vultures and ravens. .
The aim of Orthodoxy in the Ottoman Empire
became, simply, one of survival. Little could they know, in 1453, that
the heavy sword of Islam would weigh upon them not for a generation or
two, but for five hundred years, five long centuries of darkness
and difficulty. But even under such ruinous circumstances, God did not
allow the light of Christianity to be extinguished. It was kept alive
through the courageous confession of the New Martyrs of the Turkish
Yoke.
When speaking of New Martyrs today, one
generally thinks of the recently glorified New Martyrs of Russia. But
until just last year, the "New Martyrs" listed in the Orthodox calendar
of saints referred to those men and women who suffered for the faith
under the Turkish Yoke. Their lives are not very well known, and yet
they are a rich catalogue of the diversity and generosity of the Holy
Spirit acting in the lives of Orthodox believers in time of oppression
and persecution. The following examples illustrate the image often used
in their Lives which describes them "laboring like diligent bees,
gathering the honey of virtue" as they moved through life towards
martyrdom.
Guard the deposit; keep safe what has been
entrusted to you. (I Tim. 6:20)
St. Cyprian the New, for instance, was a pious
monk from Mount Athos. After fortifying himself with Holy Communion, he
went forth and found a Pasha (the ruler of a province). Straight way he
witnessed to him that Mohammed was a false prophet and the enemy of God.
The Pasha only laughed, thinking he was crazy; he ordered his guards to
beat him and cast him out, which they did. St. Cyprian then went to
Constantinople, to the Grand Vizier whose position was like that of a
prime minister. There he attempted to witness to the Grand Vizier by
sending him a written message about the Gospel of salvation. The Vizier
thought the saint must be drunk, or mad. But when at last he realized
that the saint was quite sober and quite sane, he ordered that he be
beheaded and, as his Life says, as he was being led to the place of
execution, "his face shone with joy; it was as though he hurried not to
execution, but to a wedding banquet.”
St. Timothy of Esphigmenou is an example of a
Christian who betrayed Christ and then returned to suffer martyrdom for
his Lord. He was married, but his beautiful wife was abducted by a
Moslem who added her to his harem after forcibly converting her to
Islam. In order to get his wife back through the process of Islamic law,
St. Timothy himself converted to Islam. His wife was indeed re turned
and they both secretly repented of having converted to Islam and
returned to Christianity. Finally his wife withdrew to a convent and he
to Mount Athos, where he became a monk and prepared for theday when he
could descend back into the Turkish world, there to 'witness for Christ
and accept martyrdom, which in fact he eventually did.
Sometimes the family of a martyr begged
him to embrace Islam rather than die. In the life of St. Zlata, a pious
virgin-martyr of the 13th century, for example, the parents and sisters
of the saint implored her to convert to Islam, saying, "O sweetest
daughter, have pity on yourself and on us your parents and your
sisters.... Deny Christ just for the sake of appearances." But she
turned and said to them? "You who incite me to deny Christ, the true
God, are no longer my parents and sisters.... But in your place I have
my Lord Jesus Christ as a father, my Lady the Theotokos as a mother, and
the saints as my brothers and sisters." She suffered a particularly
horrible form of torture and martyrdom, including thrusting a red-hot
skewer through one ear and out the other, so that smoke came forth from
her nose and mouth. The writer of her life tells us that her sufferings
were so terrible "that even the most stout-hearted of men would be hum
bled." This martyr, he says, "now dances and rejoices together with the
prudent and prize-winning virgins in the heavenly bridal chambers, and
stands at the right hand of her Bridegroom, Christ."
Another striking example of faithfulness to
Christ and His Church is found in the Life of Martyred Monk James and
his disciples. This Saint led a very pure life and was often vouchsafed
to see angels during the Divine Liturgy. One day, while a guest in the
home of a wealthy Turk, St. James declined the meat given at a banquet
because it was the Apostles' Fast. This identified him immediately as a
Christian. For such a holy one as this, the Moslems devised a
particularly painful method of torture and death, which included
wrapping bands of cloth around his head and twisting them gradually,
crushing the skull
There were many rewards given to those
Christians who would convert to the Moslem religion. Sometimes these
enticements worked and Orthodox believers gave up the struggle for the
true Faith. St. John the Bulgarian was a young boy when he fell into the
company of some Moslem youths and was led by peer pressure to renounce
Christ and follow Mohammed. It was not long before he came to his senses
and, overwhelmed with grief at having renounced Christ, he fled to Mt.
Athos and gave himself up to a life of repentance. His conscience,
however, would give him no rest until finally he set out for
Constantinople in order to preach the Gospel. Dressing as a
Turk-something forbidden to Christians-so as not to be detected, he
entered a great mosque. There, in front of everyone, he made the sign of
the cross and began to pray, witnessing to all that he had been a
Christian and had fallen away, but that he had now been delivered from
the error of Mohammed. Concluding with the ringing declaration, "Without
Jesus Christ there is no salvation!" St. John was dragged out into the
courtyard of the mosque and beheaded.
While many other Christians lived in daily fear
and trembling, these noble warriors of Christ marched forth directly
into the enemy's camp in order to boldly plant the cross of Christ like
a battle banner. Penetrated by the very essence of Christianity, Christ
Him- self; they were able not only to endure the most frightful
tortures-but also to be victorious. The victory of martyrs, however, is
understood only from an otherworldly perspective, for they had deep in
their hearts the words of Scripture:
What will it profit a man if he win the
whole world and lose his sou1? What can a man give in exchange for his
sou1?
To paraphrase the closing paragraph from the
life of yet another confessor of the Turkish Yoke:
Where are those Moslems who once saddened and
despised the New Martyrs? Where are the m i g h t y of the earth? Where
is the Ottoman lord? Where the fearsome guards and Tartars who bound
them and beat them and martyred them? Where are their pampered bodies?
O! They are dispelled as a morning mist. The tombstone of forgetful ness
has covered them. And in Jerusalem on high, in the dwelling where are
found the blessed souls of the saints who lived in privation in this
world so that they might pass through the narrow and afflicted w a y
that leadeth unto life, there rejoices also with them the spirits of
these much-suffering martyrs whom we remember today. They reposed in the
Lord and received the reward of the labors and toils and pains which
they endured for Christ, Whom they loved more than all the fleeting
things of this world. And now, wearing crowns in heaven, they rejoice
with the choirs of the saints and behold in glory the Prize-bestower,
our Lord Jesus Christ Him self. To Him be glory and dominion and worship
unto the unending ages. Amen
by Fr. Alexey Young