The Monastic Macrina, Sister of Sainted-Hierarchs Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa
Commemorated on July 19
      The Monastic
Macrina, Sister of Sainted-Hierarchs Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa,
was born in Cappadocia at the beginning of the IV Century. Her mother, Emilia,
saw in a dream an Angel, naming her yet unborn one Thekla, in honour of the
holy First-Martyress Thekla. Saint Emilia (Emily, Comm. 1 January) fulfilled
the will of God and named her daughter Thekla. Another daughter that was born
they named Macrina, in honour of a grandmother, who suffered during the time of
persecution against Christians under the emperor Maximian Galerius.
      Besides Macrina, in
her family were nine other children. Saint Emila herself guided the upbringing
and education of her elder daughter. She taught her reading and writing in the
Scriptural books and Psalms of David, selecting those examples from the Sacred
books, which instructed of a pious and God-pleasing life. Saint Emilia trained
her daughter to attend church services and make private prayers. Macrina was
likewise taught the proper knowledge of domestic governance and various
handicrafts. She was never left idle and did not participate in childish games
or amusements.

        When Macrina grew up,
  her parents betrothed her to a certain pious youth, but the bridegroom soon
  died. Many young men sought marriage with her, but Macrina refused them all,
  having chosen the life of a virgin and not wanting to be unfaithful to the
  memory of her dead fiancee. The Monastic Macrina lived in the home of her
  parents, helping them fulfill the household tasks as an overseer together with
  the servants, and she carefully followed after the upbringing of her younger
  brothers and sisters. After the death of her father she became the chief
  support for the family. 
        When all the children
  grew up and left the parental home, Saint Macrina convinced her mother, Saint
  Emilia, to leave the world, to set their slaves free, and to settle in a
  women's monastery. Several of their servants followed their example. Having
  taken monastic vows, they lived together as one family, they prayed together,
  they worked together, they possessed everything in common, and in this manner
  of life nothing distinguished one from another.
        After the death of
  her mother, Saint Macrina guided the sisters of the monastery. She enjoyed the
  deep respect of all who knew her. Strictness towards herself and temperance in
  everything were characteristic of the saint over the course of all her life.
  She slept on boards and had no possessions. Saint Macrina was granted a gift of
  wonderworking. There was an instance (told by the sisters of the monastery to
  Saint Gregory of Nyssa after the death of Saint Macrina), when she healed a
  girl of an eye-affliction. Through the prayers of the saint, at her monastery
  in times of famine there was no shortage of wheat, necessary for the use of the
  sisters.
        Saint Macrina died in
  the year 380, after a final sigh of exalting prayers of thanks to the Lord for
  having received of Him blessings over all the course of her life. She was
  buried in the same grave with her parents.
© 1996-2001 by translator Fr. S. Janos.