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> At 03:43 PM 8/3/2000 +0100, you wrote:
> >   Dear listmembers:   Any of you happens to know of saints
> >  (besides Jerome, of course) with a lion as an
> >  iconographical atribute?   I thank you
> >  in advance   Carlos
________

With compliments from New Zealand..... Fr Ambrose

Icongraphic images can often be located at
< http://cedar.evansville.edu/~ecoleweb/images.html >

Saint Ignatius of Antioch is depicted with two lions gnawing upon him
Icon with lion at < http://www.cybercom.net/~htm/images/a-282.jpg >

Our Holy Father Gerasim of the Jordan
Icon with lion at < http://www.cybercom.net/~htm/images/a-344.jpg >


This well-known saint first learned asceticism in the Egyptian Thebaid,
but then went to the Jordan and there founded a community of about
seventy monks which remains to this day. He formulated a particular rule
for his monastery: the monks spent five days a week in their cells
weaving baskets and mats; they were allowed no heat in their cells; five
days they ate only a little dry bread and a few dates; the monks had to
leave their cells open, even when they went out, so that anyone could,
if he wanted something, take it from another's cell. On Saturdays and
Sundays they gathered in the monastery church, ate together boiled
vegetables, and took a little wine in God's praise. Then each monk
brought and placed before the feet of the abbot the work he had done in
the preceeding five days. Each monk had only one garment. St Gerasim was
an example to all. In the Great Fast he ate nothing but what he received
in Holy Communion. He once saw a lion which was roaring with pain,
having a thorn in its paw. Gerasim came near to it, crossed himself and
pulled the thorn out. The lion was so tame that it followed the elder to
the monastery and remained there until the latter's death. When the
elder died, the lion also succumbed to illness after him and died. St
Gerasim was present at the 4th Council in Chalcedon in 451, in the time
of Marcian and Pulcheria, and though he at first inclined a little
towards the Monophysite heresy of Eutyches and Dioscorus, he was at that
Council a great champion of Orthodoxy, having been turned from heresy by
St Euthymius. Of Gerasim's disciples, the best-known is St Cyriac the
Solitary. St Gerasim entered into rest and into the eternal joy of his
Lord in 475.







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