Icon of the Mother of God of St. Theodore

Commemorated on August 16 (also on March 14) On August 16 is commemorated the miraculous finding of the of the Most Holy of St Theodore. According to Tradition, the Theodore Icon of the Mother of God was written by the Evangelist Luke, and resembles the famous Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God. This icon received its name from St. Alexander Nevsky's father, Great Prince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich, who in holy Baptism was named Theodore in honor of St. Theodore Stratelates. According to Tradition, his elder brother, St. George, had found the icon in an old wooden chapel near the city of Gorodets. Later, the Gorodets Monastery of St. Theodore was built on this spot. When the citizens of Gorodets fled the city at the approach of the Khan they did not have time to take the Icon with them. In 1239, the residents of Kostroma saw the Icon being carried through their city by a radiant figure who resembled St Theodore Stratelates. The next day the Icon was found in a tree by Prince Basil of Kostroma, St. Alexander Nevsky's younger brother, while he was hunting in the forest. The Icon was placed in the church of St. Theodore Stratelates, and many miracles took place before it. Prince Yaroslav-Theodore became the Great Prince of Vladimir after his brother, St. George, died in battle against the Mongols at the Sita River. He gave the icon which he inherited from his brother to his own son, St. Alexander Nevsky. The wonderworking Theodore Icon of the Mother of God was constantly with St. Alexander Nevsky, and he often prayed before it. After St Alexander Nevsky died on November 14, 1263 at the monastery founded by his father, the icon was taken by his younger brother, Basil. Numerous copies of the Kostroma Theodore Icon were made, and one of the first was commissioned and brought to Moscow by Tsar 's mother, the Martha. From the second half of the seventeenth century, various copies of the Theodore Icon were enlarged with scenes depicting events from the history of the wonderworking icon. The Theodore Icon is two-sided. On the reverse side is the image of the holy Great Paraskeva, depicted in the splendid attire of a princess. It is believed that the image of St. Paraskeva on the reverse of the icon is connected with the wife of St. Alexander Nevsky. The first Romanov tsar, Michael, was acclaimed as sovereign before the Theodore Icon in 1613. The Icon of the Most Holy Theotokos of St. Theodore is also commemorated on March 14. By permission of the Orthodox Church in America (www.oca.org)