Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.
Saint John Chrysostom.
Bishop.
Confessor.
Doctor Of The Church.
Feast Day 27 January.
Double.
White Vestments.
Portrait of Saint John Chrysostom of Antioch (Hagios Ioannis Chrysostomos). An Early-Byzantine mosaic from the Cathedral of Hagia Sophia, Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey). The mosaic is approximately 1,000 years old.
This File: 5 February 2011.
User: Ch.Andrew
(Wikimedia Commons)
The Lives of the Saints:
Saint John Chrysostom.
Available on YouTube
Saint John Chrysostom, born at Antioch towards 347 A.D., was a great genius and his powerful eloquence earned for him the surname of Chrysostom, or "Golden Mouthed". [Editor: Note that Saint Bernard of Clairvaux also earned the sobriquet of "Mellifluous", or "Honey-Tongued".] The people of Constantinople, eager to hear him, crowded his Cathedral.
He ardently loved Saint Paul, of whom he would say: "The heart of Paul is The Heart of Christ." He also passionately loved Christ, and, like the great Apostle, he suffered everything rather than allow His Divine Rights to be impaired.
With Saint Athanasius, Saint Gregory of Nazianzen, and Saint Basil, they form The Four Great Doctors Of The Eastern Church (Introit).
Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom from Valaam Monastery, From Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia: Valaam Monastery, or Valamo Monastery, is a Stauropegic Orthodox Monastery in Russian Karelia, located on Valaam, the island in Lake Ladoga, the largest lake in Europe.
Available on YouTube at
His courage in branding vice, "in correcting in Season and out of Season" (Epistle), in order always to be The Salt of Wisdom, which preserves Souls from corruption (Gospel), caused him to be exiled and ill-treated in all manner of ways (Alleluia).
English: Saint John Chrysostom confronting Aelia Eudoxia,
in a 19th-Century painting by Jean-Paul Laurens.
French: Saint Jean Chrysostome et l’Impératrice Eudoxie.
Date: 1893.
Artist: Jean-Paul Laurens (1838–1921).
(Wikimedia Commons)
Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom.
Composed by: Tchaikovsky.
Available on YouTube at
Let us love to hear The Divine Word, and let us keep it in our hearts, so that our lives reflect The Life of God.
Mass: In Médio.
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