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he
feast of the Dormition is the last great feast in the Church
calendar year. It is preceded by a two week fast. The glorious
lot of the Ever Blessed Virgin in the role of God's salvation
of the world made all her life wonderful and exemplary.
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After the Crucifixion of Christ, the Mother of
God was taken to live in the house of her adopted son, the Apostle
John. Tradition notes that even after the descent of the Holy
Spirit on the apostles, the Mother of God remained in Jerusalem,
visiting those places where the Saviour of the world preached,
suffered and died. She did not want to leave the country that
was dear and holy to her. When Caesar Herod Agrippa began to persecute
the Church, both the pagans and the Jews, indignant at the respect
the Mother of God was receiving from the Christians, wanted to
kill her. It was during this time that she traveled with Apostle
John to Ephesus. Church tradition has this as the time of her
visit to Cyprus to Bishop Lazarus, who had been raised from the
dead after four days, and to the Mount Athos. When the persecution
ended, the Mother of God returned to Apostle John's house at Zion
in Jerusalem.
Once when she went to the Mount of Olives to pray, Archangel Gabriel
appeared and spoke of her approaching death. Upon returning home,
she told Apostle John all that the Archangel spoke of and started
preparing herself for her final day on earth. Friends and relatives
gathered, and eleven of the apostles were miraculously transported
from various parts of the world to her deathbed. They were all
amazed seeing each other there. When the Apostle John explained
that the Mother of God would soon be departing this world they
understood why God had brought them together, and they became
sad. But she comforted them saying: "Do not cry and darken
my happiness with your sadness. I am going to my Son and your
God, and you will bury my body and return each to your work."
As the time of her death neared the room shone with a divine light,
the roof disappeared, and a wondrous sight appeared before all.
The Lord Jesus Christ descended from heaven surrounded by many
angels. All looked upon this wondrous sight with awe and reverence,
and when they approached her bed, the holy body of the Mother
of God was radiant and a smell of incense pervaded the room.
The apostles carried the body of the Mother of God through the
city to Gethsemane to be buried at her request in the tomb of
her family and Joseph. They buried her body, closed the tomb with
a stone and remained there at the site in prayer for three days.
On the third day Apostle Thomas arrived and was very saddened
he had been unable to take his leave of her when she had been
alive. To make him feel better, the other apostles rolled away
the stone to let him pay his respects to the body. But on entering
the tomb, they found that the body was not there - only the winding
sheet remained. They returned home to partake of a communal meal
at which they always left a place for the Resurrected Lord. After
the meal, they raised the bread left for Christ aloft and exclaimed
"Lord, Jesus Christ, help us." And they heard a choir
of angels, and when they looked up they saw the holy Ever-Virgin
surrounded by angels. She hailed them, saying: "Rejoice,
for I am always with you." Then the apostles were filled
with joy, and instead of using the usual words, they exclaimed
"Most holy Theotokos, help us." And now they understood
and believed that upon the third day after her Dormition, the
Mother of God had been resurrected.
Thus, the Dormition of the Mother of God is not a sad event, but
a joyous one. Her death is but a short sleep, after which follows
her resurrection and ascension to heaven.
From the very beginning, the Church saw in the Mother of God one
who would pray for all of mankind. She is the haven of the mothers
of the world. She teaches how to live in total faithfulness to
the will of God. She, who kept in her heart the divine words,
is an example of faithfulness, love and service.