A graceful silver ring bearing the monogram of Saint Catherine of Alexandria betokens the most ancient of societies, its earliest membership predating Christianity itself. Presented to pilgrims at Mount Sinai by the monks of St. Catherine's Greek Orthodox Monastery, the ring signifies pilgrimage to the Holy Mountain – a custom whose preservation in the memory of local populations led the earliest ascetics to settle at the Burning Bush. Saint Helena visited in the fourth century, and others followed, enthusiastically noting the hospitality that rewarded arduous journey through the desert by camel caravan.
“Behold! A great number of monks and hermits beyond counting came out to meet us,” recounted a sixth century pilgrim in one of the earliest surviving Sinai travelogues, “carrying crosses and singing psalms. They lay down upon the ground and made obeisance to us, and we did likewise, weeping.”[1] Then, as now, it would seem, few experiences surpassed that of comprehending the holy ground where God walked.
Pilgrims return home with Saint Catherine’s ring to every corner of the globe, consoled in faith, inspired by her brilliance, and most of all, emboldened by her fearless love for Christ.
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Upon admittance to the monastery fortress, sensory perception is disconcerted by a fragrance suggestive of heavenly mysteries – much at odds with the solidity of arched granite passageways. St. Catherine’s is situated on a slope, and the scent increases with the descent down a flight of well-worn steps to the door of its sixth century church.
Byzantine icons displayed in the narthex welcome pilgrims without fanfare to the world of the legendary Sinai saints – for John Climacus and Gregory of Sinai gazed upon the same sacred images, as did a host of others. They represent the world's foremost collection of Byzantine masterworks, saved by the monks from the destructive centuries of iconoclasm. Preserved by the desert climate, saints’ expressions remain as untouched by the centuries as the rocky wilderness without. Unaccountably, the discs of their golden halos revolve in the light as if to display the reality of immortality; a special effect never reproduced outside Sinai, modern iconographers still search for its secret.
More perceptibly now, the engaging fragrance beckons from the nave, drawing one into Justinian’s original basilica through massive wooden doors carved from cedars of Lebanon. Twelve columns support the roof of the nave, each containing holy relics of saints. Stately ranks of silver oil candles interspersed with antique chandeliers advance toward the altar, leading the visitor ever closer to “the source of our resurrection” in wonderment at the blaze of such intricate yet unstudied beauty.
Gifts of European emperors, empresses and kings, they write a compelling history, for the veneration of Saint Catherine took Europe by storm after monks brought miracle-working relics of the saint to Rouen in the eleventh century – the same relics whose incomparable fragrance reaches from their reliquary in the altar to stone passageways about the monastery courtyards.
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The Holy Great Martyr and All-Wise Bride of Christ Aikaterina was born to aristocratic parents in the city of Alexandria shortly before the year 300. Her father was the pagan governor of the city, and her mother a secret Christian. Given the name Dorothea, she was educated in Greek philosophy and literature, rhetoric, music, mathematics, astronomy, and medicine.
Renowned for incomparable beauty, knowledge, and virtue, the young maiden avoided numerous offers of marriage by avowing that no suitor could match her ideals of perfection, drawn as she was to the love of purity in quest of the highest beauty in life.
Dorothea was therefore intrigued, when an ascetic monk from the desert told her of a wondrous youth who surpassed her in everything, "whose beauty eclipsed the radiance of the sun, whose wisdom governed all creation, whose wealth was richly bestowed upon all the world." Ardently wishing to see such a youth, she was granted a vision of the Mother of God holding the infant Jesus on her lap. But the Child turned His face away from the young noblewoman, saying that she was ugly, ignorant, and unworthy.
Returning to the holy elder, Dorothea learned the mysteries of the Faith and was baptized with the name Catherine, or in Greek, Aikaterina. Once again, in a vision she saw the Heavenly Queen with her Divine Child, who this time praised the newly-baptized Catherine’s beauty of soul, saying, "Now she has become brilliant and glorious, noble and wise!"
Taking her hand, the Holy Theotokos said, "Give her a ring, my Child, to make her worthy of Your kingdom," at which the Christ held out a beautiful ring to Catherine, saying, "Behold, today I take you as my pure bride forever – diligently preserve this trust, taking no earthly bridegroom." Catherine awoke from the vision to find the ring on her finger, and her hopes to discover the highest union possible in this life answered.
Consequently, in a unique departure from tradition, the Bride of Christ reigns next to her Bridegroom on the towering iconostasis of her Monastery. Byzantine tradition reserves the place next to Christ for Saint John the Baptist, but in Saint Catherine’s Monastery the friend of the Bridegroom gives way to His bride; the Holy Forerunner moves to the other side of the icon screen, and Saint Catherine takes his place next to Christ.
Filled with the power of the Holy Spirit, Catherine was overcome with divine love. Recalling Prophet Moses who bitterly censured the Hebrew people for resorting to idol sacrifice while he sojourned on Sinai, Catherine boldly denounced idol worship to the emperor Maxentius (306-312) on a day of pagan rituals taking place at his command in Alexandria. Amidst the fires and smoke and cries of the animals being sacrificed, she rebuked the emperor for forcing his subjects to deny Christ by offering sacrifice to man-made statues. She then confessed the truth of Christianity.
The emperor responded by summoning fifty pagan scholars, philosophers, and orators, the foremost of the empire, to debate with Catherine. Promised the help of divine wisdom by Archangel Michael who appeared to her in prison, Catherine brilliantly vanquished their arguments. She pointed out that the same pagan philosophers who extolled the gods also condemned them as demons with human passions. She cited the prophecies made by ancient oracles about the Incarnation, Crucifixion, and Resurrection of Christ, "who would rescue man from his incurable passions." Finally, she placed these prophecies within the chronological perspective of God's entire work of salvation, from the creation of the world to the coming of His kingdom in glory.
Enlightened, the scholars confessed Christ, for which they were condemned to be burnt alive on November 17th. Saint Catherine steadfastly withstood all the infuriated emperor’s flatteries, threats, and cruel tortures, including a spiked wheel, which by divine intervention failed to harm her.
Maxentius' wife, the empress Faustina, and her escort Porphyrios together with 200 of his soldiers also confessed Christ, having met with the Saint in prison. They too received the glorious crown of martyrdom for their faith.
Finally, the Saint was beheaded on November 25th. Angels bore her body to the highest peak in the Sinai range where its presence was miraculously revealed to the monks following construction of their fortress monastery. Monks brought the holy relics of the Great Martyr to the sanctuary of the Monastery where they have exuded unearthly fragrance ever since. As a result of the Saint’s many miracles, the Monastery of the God-trodden Mountain of Sinai gradually became known as St. Catherine's.
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In a chamber hung with ancient tapestries adjacent to the basilica’s main altar, Greek pilgrims wait with anticipation as the moment to venerate the Saint's incorrupt relics finally draws near. Momentarily distracted by an unobstructed view of the famous mosaic Transfiguration of Christ in the high apse over the altar, their attention is recalled by the shimmer of soft bells as a monastery priestmonk begins censing an antique marble sarcophagus, softly chanting the apolytikion of the Saint.
Folding back a brocade cover, he slides open the chest’s heavy lid. With great care he lifts out two golden reliquaries, one holding the bejeweled hand of Saint Catherine, sometimes warm to the touch, and the other, her fragrant holy skull. Reverently placing them on a small table, he reaches inside the reliquiary once more, where the rest of the Saint’s body remains whole and incorrupt, and lifts out a pouch filled with silver rings.
Pilgrms approach one by one to kiss the Saint’s precious relics, each with the secret prayer closest to his heart, and then bow to receive the ring blessed by her grace, to be worn forever in mystical union with the Heavenly Bridegroom – and all those illumined by the Holy Light of Sinai to exchange the worship of this world’s false gods for union with the Most High – inspired by the radiant example of our Princess among the Saints, the Holy Great-Martyr and All-Wise Bride of Christ, Catherine of Alexandria.
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[1]Daniel F Caner, History and Hagiography from the Late Antique Sinai, Translated Texts for Historians, vol. 53 (Liverpool University Press, 2010), p. 257.
[2]Kurt Weitzmann and Fred Anderegg, “Mount Sinai’s Holy Treasures,” National Geographic (January 1964), 109-27. e='mso-bidi-font-style:normal'>History and Hagiography from the Late Antique Sinai, Translated Texts for Historians, vol. 53 (Liverpool University Press, 2010), p. 257.