Like several other countries situated between Eastern and Western Europe, the Orthodox past of Hungary is much overlaid and forgotten. Although, like Croatia and Poland, Hungary was enlightened only late in the history of European Orthodoxy, many saints sprang from its territory.
This is due to the fact that in more ancient times, before the coming of the Hungarians, this territory was known as Pannonia and was anciently associated with the Apostle Andrew. As such, it also produced one of the greatest of all Western saints, St Martin of Tours. Perhaps it was by the prayers of these ancient saints and on the foundations of their piety, that the Hungarian people, workers of the eleventh hour, managed to know holiness. However, of all of the saints of the Hungarian race, one of the closest to Orthodox hearts is the eleventh-century St Moses the Hungarian, honoured in the Orthodox world on 26 July. Who was he?
Together with his brother George, Moses was a favourite young servant of the holy passion-bearer, the right-believing Prince Boris in Kiev. When in 1015 Boris was slain together with his brother Gleb, it was Moses’ brother, George, who died with them, attempting to protect his masters. Surviving this attack and returning to Kiev, in 1018 Moses was taken prisoner by the Polish Prince Boleslav I, who thought it a pity to kill the handsome young man.
Moses was taken to Poland. Here he was bought and kept as a slave in shackles for five years. Then he was seen and bought by a powerful Polish woman, who had been widowed after only a year of marriage. In reality, the widow wished to seduce Moses, subjecting him to herself. Moses rejected her offers, for since the events of 1015 he had become drawn to the monastic life. He wished to keep his virginity, thus saving his soul. Moses resisted the Polish woman’s blandishments by fasting and prayer. At this, she imprisoned him and tried to starve him to death. However, another slave secretly brought him food. Then the widow tried to seduce him again, showing him all the riches that could be his. Again he resisted, rejecting her seductions.
It is recorded that at this time, through the Providence of God, a priest came to this region from the Holy Mountain and made Moses a monk. The priest escaped, having first instructed Moses on how to avoid further temptations. Moses was then beaten, almost to death. Finally, the widow wrote to Boleslav himself, asking him for advice. Boleslav summoned the widow to his court, together with Moses, and spoke to the latter, urging him to accept the widow’s offers. Moses answered that the world was as nothing to him compared to the salvation of his soul. He also predicted that both Boleslav and the widow would soon die. Ignoring this, the widow tried to seduce Moses again. Failing miserably, she then had him severely beaten and castrated. As for Boleslav, he began a persecution of monks, casting them all out of his kingdom.
It was soon after this act of impiety that in 1025, Moses’ prophecy came true. Boleslav, crowned King only in 1024, died suddenly in his sleep and the whole country rose in revolt. Many nobles, including the widow, were slaughtered. The events of that time were later recorded by Boleslav’s daughter. Many years later, having fled the chaos and ensuing Catholicisation of Poland, she had married Iziaslav, who had become Prince of Kiev in 1054. Here she gave protection to the monks of Kiev, reminding her husband of the sad results of her own father’s hatred of monks.
Upon the revolt in Poland, Moses was freed. Making his way to Kiev and St Antony of the Caves, there he became a monk and worked to save his soul. He lived in one of the caves, in fasting and prayer, and was especially powerful in chasing away the demons of fleshly temptation. Thus he spent the remaining sixteen years of his life, reposing in 1043. His relics were always of great effect in protecting and healing those who suffered from the passions of the flesh.
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