Our Venerable Father Nicephor the Confessor
Nicephorus was a nobleman of
Constantinople. His father Theodore, a high- ranking official of the
imperial court, was wealthy and pious. Nicephorus served at the court
for several years in the same profession as his father. Seeing all
the vanity of the world, he withdrew to the shores of the Bosphorus
and founded a monastery. The monastery was quickly filled with monks
and he governed it but was not willing to receive the monastic
tonsure under the pretext that he was not worthy, even though, in all
things he served as a model to all. Before that, he participated in
the Seventh Ecumenical Council [Nicea, 783 A.D.] as a layman at the
wishes of the emperor and the patriarch and the Council benefited
greatly by his superior knowledge of Sacred Scripture. When Patriarch
Tarasius died, Nicephorus was elected patriarch against his will.
Immediately following his election in the year 806 A.D., he received
the monastic tonsure and in succession all other ecclesiastical
ranks. He was enthroned as patriarch in the Church of the Divine
Wisdom of God [Hagia Sophia]. This took place during the reign of
Emperor Nicephorus who immediately, after that, went to war against
the Bulgarians and was slain. His son, Stauracius, reigned only two
months and died. After him, the good Emperor Michael, surnamed
Rangabe, ruled but he reigned for only two years until he was
overthrown by Leo the Armenian and banished into exile. When Leo was
crowned, the patriarch sent him a book of the Orthodox Confession of
Faith to sign (according to the custom of all Byzantine emperors
which was considered an oath that they will uphold and defend the
True Faith). The emperor did not sign it but rather postponed it
until after the coronation. When the patriarch crowned him, Leo
refused to sign the book and quickly proved himself to be a heretic;
an iconoclast. The patriarch attempted to advise him and to restore
him to the True Faith, but in vain. The emperor forcibly banished
Nicephorus into exile to the island of Proconnesus where he remained
for thirteen years enduring every kind of misery and privation and
entered eternity in the year 827 A.D. As patriarch he governed the
Church of Christ for nine years.
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