Jump to content

Elias of Enna

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Rathfelder (talk | contribs) at 20:59, 13 January 2021 (removed Category:People from the Province of Enna; added Category:Religious leaders from the Province of Enna using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Saint Elias of Enna
SS. Elias and Filarete
BornEnna
DiedThessaloniki
Venerated inCatholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, Oriental Orthodoxy

Saint Elias of Enna, born John Rachites (Template:Lang-grc-gre; 822/823 in Enna – August 17, 903 in Thessaloniki), is venerated as a saint by the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church. Elias is also known as Saint Elias the Younger, or Junior, to distinguish him from the biblical prophet Elijah. He lived a very adventurous life during the ninth century and was the protagonist of repeated ups and downs. He is commemorated on Aug. 17.

Biography

Because of the Muslim conquest of Sicily, John forced to abandon the town, which was conquered by the Saracens in 859, despite its strength as a military stronghold. The Arabs still managed to imprison Elias, who was taken to Ifriqiya to be sold as a slave. After managing to regain his freedom, Elias decided to preach the Gospel, putting more times to risk his own life, and arrived in Palestine, he received the monastic habit from the Patriarch of Jerusalem. After three years in a monastery of Sinai, Brother Elias undertaken an adventurous travel series, going first to Alexandria in Egypt, and Persia, Antioch and again to Africa. After 878 Syracuse also fell into Arab hands. Elias returned to the island, where he met his elderly mother in Palermo. At Taormina he met Daniel, his new disciple. Going north, Elias lived in Calabria, where in the year 884, in the "Valley of Salt" and precisely on Mount Aulinas (now Mount Saint Elias near Palmi), he founded a monastery later named after him. subsequent Arab invasions forced Elias to repair to Patras in Greece, and then at Santa Caterina in Aspromonte.

Elias then went on a pilgrimage to Rome. The adventures, the wonders and the work of evangelization that Elias had undertaken on three continents extended his fame to Constantinople, where the Byzantine Emperor Leo VI the Wise invited him to visit. Elias, however, now seventy, though he had begun the journey to Constantinople, fell ill and died at Thessaloniki. The most faithful friend and companion, the monk Daniel, buried him in the monastery of Monte Aulinas, at Palmi, founded by the saint.

Places of worship dedicated to the saint

In Italy the following churches are dedicated to him:

  • Church of Saint Elias of Palmi
  • Orthodox Monastery of Saints Elias and Filaret of Seminara
  • Church of Saint Elias of Reggio Calabria

Bibliography

  • Giuseppe Rossi Taibbi, The Life of St. Elias the Younger, Sicilian Institute for Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 1962
  • A. Basile, The New Monastery of St. Elias and St. Philaret at Seminara in ASCL XIV, 1945, n. 2;
  • N. Ferrante, The Monastery of St. Elianovo and Philaretos Seminara in Historica XXXII (1979);
  • Anonymous (Monaco), Life and Works Of Our Holy Father Elijah Young (Siculus) (ed. editorial and translation into modern Greek Monaco Hagiorite Cosma, Stefano Italian translation of the Island), Joseph Pontari Editore, Rome

References

  • [1], Elia di Enna, santo, santi e beati.it (in Italian)