Elder Daniel Katounakiotis: Stories of Apocalyptic and Demonic Delusions
Endowed with uncommon intelligence and thirsting for learning, Elder Daniel (+1929) had devoured the patristic books and plundered the treasures of the Spirit. Many monks who had fallen into various delusions through ignorance or a spirit of pride were saved by the intervention of Elder Daniel. Like his namesake, the Prophet Daniel, he in truth possessed “an excellent spirit, and knowledge, and understanding, interpreting dreams … and dissolving doubts” (Daniel 5:12).
Deluded Demos, For Whom Demons Danced
A good
Christian of simple faith named Demos, a builder by profession, lived in
Stika of Northern Epirus. One night he dreamt that in a certain place
there was a church buried in the earth. Rousing his compatriots,
therefore, they brought shovels and pickaxes and began the excavation.
The church was brought to light. Full of satisfaction, Demos took pride
in his success and pleasure in everyone’s wonder; and when the cunning
thought whispered to him, “Now, Demos, you are an important man, you
have been chosen by God…,” he accepted it without disputation.
A while
later he was exercising his trade as builder on the Holy Mountain,
working on a certain construction project of Vatopaidi Monastery.
In Vatopaidi St. Evdokimos is very much revered.
Nothing has been preserved about his life, but in 1840, by God’s
providence, his relics were miraculously revealed in the cemetery of the
Monastery. Demos displayed great devotion to him, and began to believe
that the Saint also regarded him with particular favor. Since the
tradition said nothing about his extraction, Demos imagined that he had
come from Albania.
“The Saint is an Albanian, like myself,” he began to declare.
“But how do you know?”
“An Albanian
he is. Don’t you see that his head is flat? Besides, one night I was
begging him on my prayer-rope to tell me his fatherland, and he appeared
to me as though he were alive. ‘I am an Albanian, from Stika; we are
even relatives…’ he said.”
The fathers suspected that he had been deceived by a demon.
“When he
appears to you again, make the sign of the Cross,” they told him. “If it
is the work of the evil one, he will disappear immediately.”
It was too late, however. The demon had conquered Demos’ heart and would not readily leave.
It happened
that a bishop was on Athos, Alexander of Rodostolos. He was informed of
Demos’ strange case, and his opinion was asked. He met with him and came
to the conclusion that the visions came from God.
“Since Demos takes delight in the prayer-rope and the Cross, the revelations were from God.”
Demos grew
very proud that even a bishop had confirmed the authenticity of his
visions. Later he wrote a massive volume full of supernatural mysteries,
revelations, prophecies of war, the coming of St. Constantine, signs
and monsters…all such things are found there.*
“But all
these stories can’t be from God! This is all confusion and raving,” the
fathers said among themselves. “Why don’t we ask Elder Daniel? He can
solve the problem for us.”
They therefore took Demos’ manuscript and set out for Katounakia.
As soon as Elder Daniel had read the first pages, he understood the truth. “The demons are dancing here!” he said.
He drafted a
text on this subject, with passages from the lives of Saints and
patristic writings, and sent it to Vatopaidi. There was no longer the
slightest doubt about the delusion. When Demos was told of the answer,
however, he went into a frenzy.
“Oreh, oreh, Despotis to’peh, oreh Prift!!!”
That is – since a bishop accepted the visions as coming from God, how dare Elder Daniel deny it!
Elder Daniel
was not content with a mere diagnosis, but his love moved him to pray
for Demos, with the result that the revelations ceased. At a later time
the fathers managed to bring Demos to Katounakia and Elder Daniel
welcomed him with love. When he began to demonstrate that the supposed
vision of St. Evdokimos was of demonic origin, however, Demos could not
endure the light of the truth. Flying upright, he cried out wrathfully:
“Oreh, oreh, Despotis to’peh, oreh, oreh Prift…!”
Nevertheless,
he was forced by the facts to admit the truth, because once the devil
was exposed he never appeared again. All the fathers were convinced as
to the delusion, and even Bishop Alexander sent congratulations to Elder
Daniel.
Truly, as
the Apostle Paul said, the devil “transforms himself into an angel of
light” (II Cor. 11:14), and woe to him who is taken in by the outward
radiance.
“A sinner
can easily repent, but it is difficult for one in delusion, unless the
demon is exposed. As soon as he is uncovered, he is unable to escape,”
Elder Daniel often said.
The Teacher From Kerkyra Who Worked Demonic Miracles
Among those
saved from delusion by the Elder’s help was also a teacher from Kerkyra,
who claimed to have a close collaboration with St. Spyridon. This man
had mixed Christianity with Spiritualism, and he believed he could
perform marvellous miracles. All of society had been debating about him;
and the hospitals and physicians knew him well.
The evil
spirit had been appearing to this man in the form of St. Spyridon. He
urged him to hold a lighted candle in his hand during prayer, and to not
blow it out when it burned down and scorched his hand, because if he
bore it patiently he would be as the martyrs. And he told him not to
receive Communion in church, but to lick the matter that ran from his
burnt hand, for this would be of equal value with Holy Communion. One
can understand what terrible burns and scars disfigured his hands.
During
excursions with his disciples, he would say a prayer with the result
that he would summon or disperse clouds, and bring rain. The disciples
received no profit, however, because after the prayer and the “miracles”
he would speak only nonsense.
This man,
whose hands were rendered useless by the burns, asked somebody to save
him. He went to Katounakia, where Elder Daniel told him that the
miracles of God differed from the devil’s miracles; and he delivered him
from the dominion of Satan.
The Apocalyptic Delusions of Fr. Antipas
The Elder
also released from delusion a monk from the Monastery of Patmos, named
Fr. Antipas, who for three years had been seeing what he thought to be
the Lord Himself. He claimed that the Lord had been dictating to him the
interpretation of the Apocalypse [Book of Revelation] in order to have
it published.
According to
this monk, various significant prophecies of the Apocalypse had been
fulfilled by the events of the Second World War. For example, the
activity of the two prophets of whom the 11th chapter of the Apocalypse
speaks, covers, according to the Prophet Daniel, 1290 days – which are
the number of days between May of 1941 and October of 1944. Also, the
number of Antichrist, 666, of which the 13th chapter speaks, he saw in
the name of Hitler, based on the Latin alphabet. (A corresponds with
100, B with 101, C with 102, etc.) Thus, H=107, I=108, T=119, L=111,
E=104, R=117. The total is 666.
Elder Daniel convinced him to burn his Interpretations.
He also
healed a man from Kalavrita, who with the help of the demons knew the
Gospels by heart and could walk through fire without being burnt; and
also a monk of the Russian Monastery who made 3000 prostrations a day.
* This
book was unfortunately translated into English and became popular in
“underground” circles among the Greek Orthodox of America. I [John
Sanidopoulos] personally acquired this book many years ago in my own
parish where a box full of copies were held.
SOURCE: Extracted from Contemporary Ascetics of Mount Athos by Archimandrite Cherubim.
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