St. John the Russian, depicted with St. Seraphim of Sarov and St. John of Kronstadt (source)
In one of the two children's hospitals
of Athens, a mother lied at the head of her child day and night. She
brought the child from Patras, because the child's chronic
affliction, paralysis of the lower extremities, had worsened in the
last few days...
One evening, while the sun was setting,
and the last few sunbeams lit up the hospital room, the mother
remembered how she would go to a chapel of the Panagia high above
Patras, and prayed, lighting the vigil lamps, sometimes with her
husband, other times with her children. Her nous was fixed on that
chapel. She prayed noetically: “My Panagia, my sweetest Mother who
feels our pain, help my child. My Panagia, send me a Saint, look at
my poor child, how in his life, he is struggling to stand on his
feet. Help, my poor little boy.”
“Mother,” the child said, “who
are you talking to?”
“My Georgie, remember when you read
in your church book how our Lord lived in Palestine, and healed
demoniacs, opened the eyes of the blind, lifted up Paralytics and
made them to walk, and raised the dead? Tell him, my Georgie, and He
will hear you, my good boy, tell Christouli to make you well.”
The helpless child, with his innocent
gaze, looked at his mother, and at the sun which was setting. He
looked on high towards the heavens.
That midnight, George saw a dream of a
beautiful horseman, on a glorious horse. He stopped before him and
said:
“Get up, Georgie, jump up on my
horse!”
“But I am a paralytic, my feet don't
move and hold me up.” he replied.
“Give me your hand, Georgie, get up
on my horse. I am St. John from Russia, and our Lord sent me to bring
you His grace and His healing power!"
The child, half awake, then awoke his
mother, who picked him up so that he wouldn't fall out of bed.
“Mother, hold me, St. John from
Russia told me to get up.”
In the morning when the night resident
told the professor that the paralyzed child from Patras began walking
that night, went with a hammer in hand, checked the child's reflexes,
and plucked his feet with a sharp instrument, and he saw that his
body was functioning normally.
“Go,” said the professor, “God
had something to do with you."
(8/17/77 – from the book “Life and
new miracles of the Venerable John the Russian”, by Priest Ioannis
Vernezou, 1999, source)
St. John the Russian (source)
Through the prayers of our Holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ our God, have mercy on us and save us! Amen!
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