Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Bulgarian Orthodox Church marks the day of Saint Stephen

Photo: library

The memory of St. Stefan )Saint Stephen), the first Christian martyr, is venerated by the Bulgarian Orthodox Church on December 27.

The troparion performed in honour of St. Stefan reads:

“Because of all you have endured for Christ our God,

you have been given a royal crown,

O First and Holy Martyr Stephen!

You have put your persecutors to shame

and have seen your Saviour enthroned

at the right hand of the Father.

Do not cease to intercede for the salvation of our souls.”

As recorded in the life of the saint, Stephen was diligent in the church service, a model of mercy and patience. He was among the first seven deacons ordained by the first apostles. Like Christ and his disciples, he could work miracles by laying his hands on the sick and they were healed. He was one of the most zealous followers of the doctrine and with his words and deeds he converted more and more people to Christianity. The Jewish leaders decided to prevent this. They slandered Stephen, set the crowd against him, and summoned him to the Sanhedrin. In defense of the faith, he quarrelled with the leaders, accusing them of killing the Savior. Enraged by his words, they took him out of the city, where he was stoned to death. All the while, the archdeacon prayed to Christ to receive his spirit. This happened in the 37th year of the new calendar. Among the fiercest in the crowd was a young man named Saul, who later converted to Christianity and became a zealous preacher, the Apostle Paul. According to the legend, the Mother of God and John the Theologian prayed for Stephen, watching his martyrdom from afar. Dying, the saint turned to the Lord to forgive his enemies.

In Greek, the name Stephen means "wreath". It is believed that the name of the saint is a translation of the Aramaic Kelil (kelila - wreath, crown). According to legend, when the relics of the saint were discovered, a plaque with the name Kelil was found in the tomb, which leads many researchers to believe that this is the birth name of the saint.

St. Stephen is the patron saint of many Bulgarian temples, including one of the shrines of the Bulgarian struggle for church independence - the Iron Church "St. Stephen" in Istanbul.

There are no special rituals in the folk tradition performed on St. Stephen's Day, at least in the works of the first Bulgarian ethnographers, which to this day serve as a starting point in the study of the traditional Bulgarian system of rituals. Nevertheless, St. Stephen's Day is greeted with a festive meal, mandatory in the homes of those named after the saint. And today they are: Stefan, Stefana, Stefka, Venko, Stoyan, Stoyko, Stoichko, Stoimen and all their derivative names. A bright and blessed holiday to all!

Compiled by Albena Bezovska



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Photo: National Museum of Natural History of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Paleontologists find more than 30 animal fossils from the time of the dinosaurs near Trun

What was the animal world like in the region of what is today the town of Trun more than 80 million years ago – that is the question paleontologists from the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences’ National Museum of Natural History have been trying to answer...

published on 10/6/24 6:35 AM
Tsar Boris III

Exhibition in Sofia on the occasion of the 130th anniversary of the birth of Tsar Boris III

The National History Museum celebrates the 130th anniversary of the birth of Tsar Boris III with the exhibition "Tsar Boris III. Personality and Statesman" . It will be opened today in the central lobby of the museum. The exhibition will present, in..

published on 10/3/24 6:05 AM

Why a new Pan-Orthodox Council must be convened in Sofia

26 years ago, on 30 September, at the initiative of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church (BOC), a Pan-Orthodox Council was convened in Sofia to resolve the schism within the Bulgarian clergy . Then, despite the efforts of Patriarch Bartholomew of Istanbul to..

published on 9/30/24 7:05 AM