The servant of God, father Cosmas of Gregoriou Monastery
Below is a homily given by Bishop Avgoustinos
of Florina a few months after Fr. Cosmas, Apostle to Zaire, reposed. This
excerpt is from the book Apostle to Zaire: The Life and Legacy of Blessed
Father Cosmas of Gregoriou.
Some, when they hear in the Gospel,
“at that time” they say, “This is written for those of old.” Christ, however,
is “the same yesterday, today and unto the ages”. Our Church does not reserve
the showing forth of missionaries for the days of old, but continues its
mission today, in this harsh, materialistic, new idol-worshipping and Masonic
age. In this age of the antichrist we have examples of missionaries both within
the borders of our country [Greece] and abroad.
One such excellent example is Fr.
Cosmas, priestmonk and missionary, for whom we serve the holy memorial today.
He lived close to me. He was a child of a poor but honourable family from
Thessaloniki. He loved God from his youth. He was a regular at the catechetical
schools. He heard the sermons of the pre-eminent preachers of the city. He
studied much, attending the school for foreman, and could have been an
important architect who built houses that would have brought him millions of
dollars. Our age is an age of architects, lawyers and engineers – an age of
“how-much-you-mak’n”. However, he didn’t become such a one as these. Nor did he
wish to continue his studies and become a university professor, just because he
had an extremely clever mind, a mathematical mind. Rather, he preferred the
work of fishermen. He became a “fisherman.” He was with us in the early days of
great productivity when, together with Father Hierotheos and a few co-workers,
we had “hustle it up” as our watchword, and he worked extremely hard.
He couldn’t care less about
“how-much-you-mak’n”. When he came to Florina and went to dealers in order to
buy supplies, their first question was always, “How much do you make?” They
would say, “Being so close to the Bishop you probably make a lot. You work on a
twenty-four hour basis. You don’t have a break, neither on Saturday nor
Sunday…” He would reply, “I don’t make anything except for room and board.”
They didn’t believe him. They said he was lying. The truth is that boy abhorred
the world of “how much you make,” and soon left.
The beloved Cosmas was a trailblazer of a
beautiful journey for our race. We want to believe that others will follow his
example: the feast of a martyr, the imitation of a martyr. Both here in the
holy altar and elsewhere there are certain young people who shouldn’t become
“how-much-you-makers” but idealists. Once upon a time, Greece had such
idealists. Who brought Orthodoxy to Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania, and Russia? It
was Greek Christians. Nowadays, households don’t produce idealists. A child’s
mother wants him to become a doctor, a lawyer, a teacher, a professor, an
engineer, a businessman – anything but a priest. She doesn’t even want to hear
of it. So it is that today I especially honour the elect disciple, monk and
missionary Cosmas. He is a prototype. He is a combination of internal and
external mission work.
The servant of God, Cosmas of
Gregoriou Monastery, apostle martyred* in Africa to the glory of God and
Orthodoxy – may his memory be eternal! And may there be many followers of his
heroic example.
*lessonsfromamonastery’s note: While Fr.
Cosmas was in fact killed in a car accident, I believe the Bishop is applying
St. John Chrysostom’s definition of a martyr here. That is, one who lives
ascetically, willingly “dying” to his sins and passions.
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