Who is Saint Timothy?
Memory celebrated 22 January
St
Timothy was born in Lystra in Lyconia of a pagan Greek
father and a Jewish mother named Eunice. His grandmother was
a Christian and it was perhaps through her influence and
teaching that he came to follow Christ. When the Apostle
Paul visited Lystra, the young Timothy was already a full
member of the Christian Church and after the two discussed
the many difficulties Christianity was facing, the younger
man expressed a desire to serve as a missionary, despite its
hazards. It was after the departure of Barnabas and Mark
that Paul summoned Timothy to accompany him as a colleague
in the cause of Christ.
About a quarter of a century after Christ, Timothy and
Paul traveled to Europe, accompanied by Silas, in a
missionary task of staggering proportion. In most areas
theirs was at best a thankless job, but with the zeal born
of a profound love of the Savior, they succeeded in securing
a foothold in spiritually darkened corners. They brought
this about with administrative skill in the face of odds
which might have discouraged less hardy souls. In a fury of
religious oratory, they summoned thousands to the fold and
established Churches of God where for centuries people had
worshipped mere objects or beasts out of fear and
superstition.
When St Paul was summoned to Athens, he commissioned
Timothy to carry the word of Christ to Corinth,
Thessalonica, and Philippi. To these areas Timothy displayed
his talents to the fullest in establishing a nucleus of
Christian Churches which became the cornerstone from which
Christianity has grown to its present day proportions.
Timothy made his way to Ephesus were he was established as
bishop of the city. A frenzied mob of resentful pagans whom
he denounced stoned him to death. St Timothy died a martyr
for Christ on January 22 AD 72.
To the man Timothy fell the solemn honor of being the
recipient of two letters from the great apostle St Paul
entitled First Timothy and Second Timothy.
from Orthodox Saints, v. 1
by Fr George Poulos, Holy Cross Orthodox Press |