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Stylianos of Paphlagonia

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{| class="wikitable" style="margin:0px 0px 10px 10px;float:right;width:300px;"
! colspan="2" style="background-color:gold;font-size:120%;"|'''''Saint Stylianos'''''
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|align="center" colspan="2" |[[Image:Stylianos.jpg|180px]]
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|align="center" colspan="2" bgcolor="gold"|of Paphlagonia
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|'''Born'''
|about 550, Adrianopolis, [[Paphlagonia]]
|-
|'''Died'''
|Unknown, [[Paphlagonia]]
|-
|'''Venerated in'''
|[[Roman Catholicism]], [[Eastern Orthodoxy]]
|-
|'''Major [[shrine]]'''
|None
|-
|'''[[Calendar of saints|Feast]]'''
|[[November 26]]
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|'''Attributes'''
|Child wrapped in swaddling
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|'''[[Patron saint|Patronage]]'''
|[[Children]], both born and unborn, and [[Orphans]]
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|colspan="2"|''Prayer''
<small>Holy Stylianos, thou wast a tower of abstinence and an unshaken pillar of the Church. Dedicated to God from thy youth, thou didst become a dwelling-place of the Spirit. O righteous Father, intercede with Christ our God to grant us His great mercy.</small> [http://www.goarch.org/en/chapel/saints.asp?contentid=311]
|}
 
Saint '''Stylianos''' (Latin: ''Stylianus'', Greek: ''Στυλιανός'', English: ''Stylian'') was born during the 6th century in Adrianopolis in the province of [[Paphlagonia]] (in modern day [[Turkey]]) into a very wealthy family. At a young age, Stylianos joined the hermits of the desert with a view toward cleansing his soul through a period of meditation and prayer, as well as through association with men likewise pledging their lives to [[Jesus]] [[Christ]]. Unlike most other hermits, however, he did not withdraw from society altogether, preferring to go among the people for whatever good he might do, and then returning to his little cave for rest and prayerful meditation.
According to the church tradition, one night while he prayed for guidance in helping others, Stylianos felt a divine presence and was consumed by the great glory of the [[Holy Spirit]], emerging from his cave the next day with a spirit of exultation and serenity he had never known before. In his customary rounds, wherein he counseled and comforted, he felt compelled to place his hand on a stricken child, something he had not up to that time dared to do; he felt the power of the Lord being transferred to the ailing youngster through his extended arm. The child immediately recovered, and thenceforth Stylianos was sought after by every suffering soul for miles around, young and old. His cave became a magnet for the sick and suffering, many of whom received complete cures not only through the power in this man but through their own faith as well, without which a sufferer’s case was hopeless.
[[File:Onuphrius,_Stylianos_and_Simeon_Stylites.jpg|thumb|left|[[Onuphrius]], Stylianos and [[Simeon Stylites]]]]
During this period, Stylianos concerned himself primarily with children, not just the physically afflicted but also with those who were in need of spiritual guidance. Families from all walks of life were said to have entrusted to Stylianos the enlightenment of their children, and he was forced to seek out larger headquarters and to recruit from the ranks of his hermit friends the assistance needed to tend to so many. His was probably the first day-care centre in the world, where mothers could safely leave their children while tending to other matters of the home.
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