One Must Be Prudent in Petitions to God
March 27
(The Tale of our Venerable Father Daniel of Scetis concerning Eulogios the Stonecutter.)
By Archpriest Victor Guryev
March 27
(The Tale of our Venerable Father Daniel of Scetis concerning Eulogios the Stonecutter.)
By Archpriest Victor Guryev
There are, brethren, fortunately even at the present time quite a number of God-loving souls who, though themselves poor, do not cease to build their salvation through works of mercy and share their last possessions with the needy. Does not the thought ever come to these merciful ones: if we were rich, what would we not do for the poor? If the Lord were to bless us with abundance, how many widows and orphans we would provide for! Is it not also often heard among us: ah, if such-and-such a one were rich, how much good he would do, how many others he would enrich! — To our sorrow, we are mistaken in such judgments.
A certain elder, having come to a village to sell his handiwork, met a simple man who, surrounded by beggars and the destitute, was returning home from his work. The elder, together with the others, entered his house, and the man washed everyone’s feet, fed them all, gave them drink, and gave them rest. Having learned that this lover of the poor was a stonecutter named Eulogios, who every day distributed his entire wage among the poor, the elder thought: "What if this man were rich, how much good he would do!" And he began to pray to God that He would grant Eulogios wealth.








