Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Four Extraordinary Hierarchs of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad (ROCA)

By Protopresbyter Dr. James Thornton [+2024]

 

The late Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Etna often commented that we live in an era of theological, ecclesiological, and liturgical mediocrity. And while the statement is a model of the restraint typical of His Eminence, what was meant is that in our time the outrageous and unthinkable have become a reality, even a commonplace. From the standpoint of religious bodies outside of Orthodox Christianity the description is obviously and without any doubt true. Sadly, it is also true, to a large degree, regarding much of what is called “World Orthodoxy,” the Orthodoxy that is involved, directly or indirectly, in the so-called ecumenical movement and the World Council of Churches, and in the promotion of the “new” or Papal festal calendar, all flagrant betrayals of Holy Orthodoxy and of her Holy Canons. The accuracy of the Metropolitan’s observation about mediocrity, and much worse, becomes crystal clear when one reviews the final three quarters of the twentieth century, and the first decades of the twenty-first, during which the abuses mentioned above appear and then over time have become ever more pronounced within World Orthodoxy.

However, God does not abandon his people, as the Metropolitan knew well. Holy Scripture informs us: “Be strong and of a good courage, fear not, nor be afraid of them: for the Lord thy God, he it is that doth go with thee; he will not fail thee, nor forsake thee.” [1] And Christ Jesus Himself spoke the words “Fear not” many times, instructing us to believe in Him, [2] belief in Him being the antidote to fear. And so, God gives us holy men to protect us from evil and to direct us toward the good. We see proof of that in the lives of a number of Holy Church Fathers of the twentieth century, several of whom we discuss here and all of whom, in this case, were hierarchs of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad. Reading the biography of Archbishop Averky, which follows, one will note that Father Seraphim (Rose) refers to him as among the last of the giants of the contemporary Orthodox Church. All of the men featured here were precisely that; giants of the Church, giants standing courageously athwart the path of the heresies of our age.

1. BLESSED ARCHBISHOP ANDREI, OF ROCKLAND & NOVO-DIVEEVO

 

 

Archbishop Andrei of thrice blessed memory was born March 15, 1893 (O.S.) in Romny, Poltava, Russian Empire (now part of Ukraine). At his Baptism, he was given the name Adrian — Adrian Adrianovich Rymarenko. The Archbishop commented himself that he grew up

surrounded by that Orthodox way of life which for generations had been created by Holy Russia. In our family, life proceeded according to the Church calendar, according to the yearly Church cycle. [3]

He goes on to say,

Our family was wealthy. And the religious outlook with which our life was penetrated was naturally reflected in deeds as well: we participated in the building of churches, set out tables with food for poor people, sent donations to prisons, hospitals, workhouses. [4]

The Revolution of 1905 gave rise to a severe diminution of morale in Russia. The Archbishop writes that it caused much disillusionment and desolation in society. People tended to live more frivolously, their attention centered on what the Archbishop refers to as “egoistic interests.” Feeling this atmosphere of cold alienation, he became dissatisfied with the direction of his life, which aimed at secular success, and instead felt that he needed the same Orthodox Way of Life that had surrounded him during his childhood and youth.

During this stage of his life, he came across a group of Orthodox students led by Archpriest John Egorov. This group of about twenty-five students were given lectures by Father John on the traditional Orthodox way of life based on the Holy Church Fathers and their writings. The Archbishop explains that, among other things, he came to understand that the Divine Services are not merely ritual, “but that in them are revealed the dogmas of faith. They are the foundations of man’s reception of Divinity.” [5] Upon completion of these lectures and studies, he states that he had come back to life. He then came across Father Nektary, a disciple of Elder Saint Ambrose of Optina, who, he says, showed him the path of pastoral service. Thus, in the early 1920s he married and was ordained a Priest.

His pastoral duties began in his hometown, Romny, at the local Church of Saint Alexander Nevsky. However, in 1926 the Soviet authorities closed the church and sent Father Adrian to Kiev, where he was under surveillance. The Archbishop describes the reign of the militant Communists as “the frightful time of the reveling of the atheists, against a background of demonic carnivals, in the heat of persecution against the Church and believers, of massive arrests and executions.” [6]

In 1941 the Germans occupied Kiev and immediately reopened the churches and other Orthodox institutions including the Protection Hospital Convent, where he served as Priest, and a home for the crippled and aged. That time of the resurrection of Orthodox Church life lasted but a brief two years. With the return of the Soviets those associated with the Church or with any anti-Communist activities were evacuated, eventually finding themselves in war-torn Germany.

Father Adrian was assigned head of the Orthodox cathedral in Berlin where he assured that Divine Services were celebrated every day, despite the continuous bombings. The Archbishop comments,

The Lord helped us to preserve the Divine gift of the Eucharist of Christ so as to strengthen and confirm in faith the souls of our Russian people who had fled from communism or had been brought by force to Germany. The church was constantly filled with Russian youth, who for the most part knew neither their homeland nor God nor the Orthodox way of life, but now instinctively were drawn to the Church, to Christ. One had to help them, caress them, teach them, instruct them. [7]

As the war drew to a close and the communists began to occupy Berlin amidst the most horrifying Bolshevik atrocities, Orthodox clergy and people were evacuated, in the case of Father Adrian, to the small town of Wendlingen in the State of Württemberg. There was still danger, however. British and American leaders had signed a disgraceful repatriation agreement with Stalin, promising to return to the USSR, and to the “tender mercies” of the Red dictator, forcibly if necessary, all former Soviet citizens, and even Russians who had left Russia before or during the civil war and were never Soviet citizens. Thanks be to God, Father Adrian was not included in the “repatriation.”

Father Adrian and other Orthodox clergy were eventually allowed to immigrate to America. There, he was given the duty of establishing a convent for Orthodox nuns scattered about various countries by the revolution and the war. Thus, he founded Holy Dormition Convent, known also as Novo-Diveevo, [8] in Nanuet, New York.

In 1968 Father Adrian’s wife, Matushka Evgenia, reposed in the Lord and therefore, later that year, he was tonsured a monk, with the name Andrei, and consecrated Bishop of Rockland. He continued to serve as spiritual father to the nuns at Novo-Diveevo. He was also Spiritual Father to Saint Philaret, Metropolitan of New York. Archbishop Andrei reposed in the Lord July 12, 1978.

Blessed Archbishop Andrei is known for his excellent book The One Thing Needful which is a collection of his sermons for an entire year. The sermons are concise yet are sharply focused on matters important to our salvation. An example of this is his sermon for the Fifth Sunday After Pentecost, on which he speaks on the Gospel According to Saint Matthew 8:28-9:1. This Gospel lesson involves Christ’s encounter with two men possessed by demons.

The two demoniacs were, the Gospel says, “exceeding fierce, so that no man might pass by that way.” [9] In other words, the two demon-possessed men were very dangerous so that people avoided passing by that area, and for good reason. Being controlled by demons, they were capable of any evil and could easily injure or kill passersby. Moreover, they lived in tombs which, of course, were unclean, but were a natural environment for these hellish creatures. And so, these passages from Holy Scripture testify to the existence of demons and of evil. The Archbishop notes,

In our time such a reality doesn’t even require proof. Every day, every newspaper tells us about a whole list of crimes which simply cannot be explained without recognizing that the person [committing such crimes] is possessed by an external, evil power. [10]

Knowing that Christ is the Son of God and saying so, and knowing too that He has the power to cast them out of the two men, they ask if they might be allowed to enter into a herd of swine. Christ tells them to go. The swine were so violently agitated when the demons entered them that they rushed down a steep place and into the sea, perishing all.

Archbishop Andrei then comments,

Here is the most terrible passage in this Gospel. First the demons were in two possessed men. Later, we saw them in an entire herd of swine. And then, a whole town—possessed. With what? With a passion for profit. According to Jewish law, raising pigs was unlawful, sinful. But it made money, and huge amounts of money. And here an entire herd perished. [11]

The Gospel says that “the whole city came out to meet Jesus: and when they saw him, they besought him that he would depart out of their coasts.” [12]

The Archbishop states,

And the people seemed to be saying to the Lord: “You have only set foot on our land and have caused us a terrible loss. What will happen next if you stay here any longer? You will ruin us completely! We see, we understand your greatness: even the devils are obedient to you! But what does that do for us? What do the two healed men matter to us? We don’t need your miracles. We need thousands, millions of dollars. You are not for us. Go away, go away at once.” [13]

Since the people of that city rejected him, the Gospel says that “he entered into a ship, and passed over, and came into his own city.” [14]

Archbishop Andrei tells us to examine our own souls and then asks a painful question,

Doesn’t the same thing happen with us? Some kind of passion takes possession of us, but Christ becomes an obstacle. And in our soul, we whisper the same terrible words: “Go away from us.” May the Lord keep us from this! May our words directed to Him always be: “Come to us and never leave us.” [15]

All kinds of things can become passions. All of us must earn our livings, but earning money can become a passion if it goes too far. If it goes too far it can damage our relationship with our family, with friends, or, most serious from a spiritual standpoint, with Christ and His Church. Immoral thoughts or actions can easily become a passion so strong that it ruins our ability to think clearly and logically, almost like a form of insanity, blinding us, depriving us of the ability to see the consequences of our activity. Those passions obviously require a rejection of Christ. Sports and hobbies can become a passion if taken so far that they rob us of precious time which, at least in part, we owe to Christ. Let us be cognizant of the fact too that some of these passions can, so to speak, creep up on us without us realizing how serious they have become.

On this subject of unbridled passions leading to a rejection of Christ, the Archbishop writes, “May the Lord keep us from this! May our words directed to Him always be: ‘Come to us and never leave us.’” [16]

Blessed Archbishop Andrei was a true Church Father, like those in the early years of the Church and no different from those of the Golden Ages of the Fathers. We learn from him, by his life and by his writings. Another true Holy Church Father of our time, Saint Philaret, Metropolitan of New York and First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad until his repose in 1985, said of Archbishop Andrei in his Foreword to The One Thing Needful that he “possessed a most rich spiritual experience and a vast knowledge both in the realm of pure theology and in the realm of the spiritual-ascetic writings of the Holy Fathers. [17]

Let us study his writings and gain from his experience and knowledge.

2. BLESSED ARCHBISHOP AVERKY, OF SYRACUSE & HOLY TRINITY MONASTERY

 

 

Father Seraphim (Rose) of Platina refers to Archbishop Averky as “one of the last of the giants of 20th-century Orthodoxy, not merely of the Russian Church Outside of Russia, or even of Russian Orthodoxy—but of the whole of the 20th-century Orthodox Church.” [18] Indeed so! He was born Alexander Pavlovich Taushev on October 19, 1906 (O.S.) in Kazan, Simbirsk Province, Russian Empire. His family was of the Russian nobility. While still quite young, he especially preferred reading books of a spiritual nature which motivated him towards a monastic life.

Upon the outbreak of civil war after the revolution of 1917, the family left Russia, settling in Bulgaria, in the city of Varna. A major influence on young Alexander’s life at this time was Archbishop Theophan of Poltava, whom Father Seraphim describes as “a strict monk, a man of prayer, and theologian in the true Patristic tradition.” [19] It was with the blessing of Archbishop Theophan, that Alexander entered the Theological Faculty of the University of Sofia, from which he graduated magna cum laude in 1930. The following year he was tonsured a monk with the new name Averky and a year after that ordained a priestmonk. During this time he served several parishes in the Carpatho-Russian region of Czechoslovakia until that area was occupied by the Hungarians in 1940. From there he moved to Belgrade where he served under Metropolitan Anastassy, Chief Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.

With the seizure of Yugoslavia by the communists at the conclusion of the Second World War, the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad moved to Munich, in the American-occupied zone of Germany. There he centered his activities on the religious education of the young. In 1951 he came to America where he taught courses in the New Testament, Liturgics, and Homiletics to students at the newly established Holy Trinity Seminary at Jordanville, New York. On May 25, 1953, Archimandrite Averky was consecrated Bishop of Syracuse and in 1960 was appointed Abbot of Holy Trinity Monastery and elevated to the rank of Archbishop. He served his remaining years as Abbot and as teacher, transmitting all that he learned in his lifetime to his monks and his students. Vladika Averky reposed in the Lord on March 31, 1976 (O.S.).

Archbishop Averky wrote an impressive body of works. Currently available in English language editions are his massive three-volume Commentary on the Holy Scriptures of the New Testament and The Struggle for Virtue: Asceticism in a Modern Secular Society. Other of his works have yet to be translated. Those include A Guide to Homiletics, True Orthodoxy in the Contemporary World, Archbishop Theophan of Poltava and Pereyaslav, and Present Times in the Light of God’s Word.

Let us now read some excerpts from Vladika Averky’s book, True Orthodoxy in the Contemporary World, excerpts that have been translated from the Russian.

“The Christian world, it is frightful to say, presents today a frightful, cheerless picture of the most profound religious and moral decadence,” [20] says His Eminence. That observation is, without doubt, more true today than it was when the author wrote it decades ago. The decadence takes several forms including greed, on the one hand, and moral depravity, on the other. Obviously, social subversion also plays its important part.

We are rightfully obligated to donate money in support of our church. However, congregations with thousands of members are gulled by preachers into giving their money for the sole purpose of enriching the preachers, who live in multi-million-dollar palaces and travel about in chauffeur-driven limousines, while Christ Himself was poor and “had no place to lay his head.” [21]

So-called churches demolish centuries of liturgical tradition in favor of clown masses, rock and roll masses, jazz masses, and other blasphemous exhibitions designed to bring things into perfect conformity with the Zeitgeist, the “spirit of the times,” or, one might say, the Weltgeist, the “spirit of the world.” Thus, the promoters of such “churches” seek to satisfy the most vulgar of tastes.

The most basic moral laws are overturned to attract degenerates who transform everything, wishing to remake God in their own fallen image. Christ Himself is remade from the Son of God, consubstantial with the Father, and One of the Holy Trinity, into simply a nice man with nice ideas (though here and there a bit impractical) or remade into a political and social revolutionary wishing to overturn civilized ways, or remade thoroughly human with all of the faults of ordinary people, or remade into one’s “buddy” to whom sin is not taken seriously and therefore becomes a laughing matter. And even such men as Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin are mutated into modern apostles of “progress” but whom in reality are apostles of a totally murderous and satanocratic creed. To make matters even worse, practically every sect of what is loosely termed “Christianity” has enthusiastically embraced the heresy of ecumenism (even, sad to say, some in certain Orthodox national jurisdictions!), in which confessional differences are ignored, the truth is mingled with falsehood, and participants happily build what is, truth be told, the new religion of the Antichrist. Christ warned us, “Take heed that no man deceive you,” He warned, “for many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many.” [22] Vladika Averky was certainly correct that contemporary Christianity is decadent. It is decadence itself!

What is the purpose of this deliberate march towards decadence? In this matter Vladika is crystal clear. He writes, “All that is happening today of the highest levels of religion, government, and public life … is nothing else than an intense work of preparation for the servants of the coming Antichrist for his future kingdom.” [23]

When the Archbishop wrote these words the façade of normality was such that most people could not detect the sinister undercurrent in the course of events. That was true in part because of the threat posed by the Soviet Union, the evil empire, as it was rightly called by then American President Ronald Reagan.

To those living in what was called the “free world” it seemed as if they stood for all that was good. To a certain extent that was true, but life outside of the Communist world was still extremely materialistic. For example, the sign of our superiority to Communism was not that the free world encouraged a worldview that recognized God and the reality of the spiritual, but rather the fact that the non-Communist world could produce more material goods than the Communist. That is why, recognizing that an excessively materialistic outlook on life is antithetical to a Godly outlook, the Archbishop wrote as follows:

The servants of Antichrist more than anything else strive to force God out of the life of men, so that men … might not remember God, but might live as though He did not exist. Therefore, the whole order of today’s life in the so-called “free” countries, where there is no open bloody persecution against faith, where everyone has the right to believe as he wishes, is an even greater danger for the soul of a Christian (than open persecution), for it chains him entirely to the earth, compelling him to forget about heaven. The whole of contemporary ‘culture’, directed to purely earthly attainments and the constant state of emptiness and distraction which gives no opportunity for one to go at least a little deeper into his soul and so the spiritual life in him gradually dies out. [24]

He goes on to say,

Under the covering of a deceptive outward appearance that looks good and leads many into error, in actuality there is occurring everywhere today a hidden persecution against Christianity…. This persecution is much more dangerous and frightful than the previous open persecution, for it threatens a complete devastation of souls – spiritual death. [25]

Today, in what was once called the “free world,” there are now open attacks by the mass media and government on believers in more traditional forms of Christianity. The persecution is no longer hidden. For simply speaking words of truth, for example quotations from Sacred Scripture, these believers are, at the least, condemned as “rabid extremists” or “potential terrorists,” and at worst threatened with arrest, prosecution, and prison sentences, threats which in some places are actually carried out. In Archbishop Averky’s time the plans of the devotees of the Antichrist were better concealed, though he was not thereby misled.

How must we react to His Eminence’s warning? There can be no doubt that his answer to us is binding, that is if we truly believe: [26]

Now is the time of confession—of a firm standing, if need be even to death, for one’s Orthodox faith, which is being subjected everywhere to open and secret attacks, oppression, and persecution on the part of the servants of the coming Antichrist. [27]

We quote again from the pen of Father Seraphim (Rose) on the subject of Blessed Archbishop Averky:

There are few saints left in our pitiful times. But even if we do not see about us now such upright and righteous ones as he, his teaching remains with us and can be our guiding beacon in the even darker days ahead which he foresaw, when the Church may have to go into the wilderness … the Church of the last times. [28]

Let us thank God for giving us such men as Blessed Archbishop Averky.

3. BLESSED BISHOP NEKTARY OF SEATTLE

 

 

Born Oleg Mikhailovich Kontsevich in 1905 in Latvia, then part of the Russian Empire, while still a young man, Bishop Nektary was able to visit the Optina Hermitage before its closing by the Bolsheviks in 1923. While it was open he was under the spiritual guidance of Elder Saint Nektary of that monastery, a gift of God that dramatically altered the direction of his life. Upon graduating from school, Vladika entered the Communications Engineering Institute, earning a graduate degree. In 1930 he was tonsured a Reader by a Bishop of the suffering Russian Church. Near the close of the Second World War he was evacuated to Germany with millions of others to escape the clutches of that very embodiment of evil, Josef Stalin. There, in Berlin, he served at the Russian Orthodox Cathedral as a subdeacon under Father Adrian Rimarenko, who later became Archbishop Andrei of Rockland and Novo-Diveevo.

In 1953, Vladika Nektary emigrated to the United States where he was tonsured a monk and given the name Nektary in honor of his spiritual father. Following that, he was ordained to the deaconate, and, a week later, ordained to the holy priesthood. He was assigned at that time to the Russian Orthodox Cathedral in San Francisco. In 1962, he was consecrated Bishop of Seattle, Vicar of the Western American Diocese. In that role, he served the needs of the faithful in the more northerly region of the Western Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.

Although he resided in San Francisco, he traveled frequently to Seattle to celebrate the Divine Liturgy on Feast Days and for other matters requiring his presence. He encouraged Father Seraphim (Rose) in the establishment of the monastery in Platina, California and ordained him to the Holy Priesthood. After the repose of Father Seraphim on September 2, 1982, Vladika came to the monastery in Platina on the fortieth day to serve Divine Liturgy after which he spoke warmly of the deceased Hieromonk, calling him a Holy Righteous One.

Blessed Bishop Nektary, who had been ill for some years with heart ailments, reposed in the Lord only five months later, on February 6, 1983.

Vladika is remembered by those who knew him for, among other things, his beautiful sermons. One year, on the twenty-ninth Sunday after Pentecost, he spoke on the appointed Gospel for that day, which was from the seventeenth chapter of Saint Luke (17:12-19). That Gospel lesson deals with Christ’s healing of ten lepers, nine of whom were Jews and one, a Samaritan.

The Bishop relates that,

One could not but look with sympathy at these unfortunate men, for they suffered a terrible infectious disease which was at the time widespread and caused untold hardship. Victims were covered in putrid sores, their bodies rotting and decaying, and parts of their bodies would actually fall off, their faces turned unrecognizable. The sick also suffered bitterness, for by Mosaic law, they were obliged to show themselves to the priests, who, confirming their disease, were driven out from society and had no right to enter towns and villages, fated to wander the wilderness; they were even prevented from drinking from the same water sources. So, these ten ‘living corpses,’ rejected by all, dared not approach Christ, but believing in His great healing power, cried out: “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.” And when he saw them, he said unto them, Go shew yourselves unto the priests.’ For by the same law of Moses, the priests could declare them free of their ailment and they could return to society. [29]

As we know, the Lepers went to the city, where the priests were, and on their way discovered that they had been healed, healed so fully that the priests declared them free of disease. From having perhaps the most horrifying of diseases to being suddenly in perfect health, one can scarcely imagine the joy that must have overwhelmed each of these men.

Vladika then says,

Imagine their amazement, having been rejected by their relatives, their mothers, fathers, children and friends. Having lost all hope for healing, they had no choice but to wander the desert. Now by the word of the Lord, they headed to show themselves to the priests and saw their bodies miraculously healing, their pain subsiding, their limbs restored, and they became healthy human beings once again. Undoubtedly, this miracle and living joy of healing allowed them to sense the omnipotence of Jesus. Restored in body, they were purified and could return to the joys of life. [30]

The healing of these ten men was a kind of resurrection. The fullness of life had returned to them who were previously almost dead, with bodies that were decaying even while technically alive. One could easily picture them jumping up and down from pure unmitigated delight.

But then we come to the crux of the story. Of the ten who were healed, only one thought it necessary to go back to thank the Lord for the miracle He had worked, and that one man was a Samaritan. Remember that the Samaritans were, to the Jews, outsiders, foreigners, a thoroughly detested group. So, according to the Savior Jesus Christ, the nine Jews did not return to thank him but the Samaritan did. And not only did he thank the Lord, but the Gospel says he “fell down on his face at his feet.”

Bishop Nektary comments:

It would seem that a just sense of gratitude would have compelled them to return to their Benefactor and thank Him with all their hearts, which were now filled with joy over their healing. The Lord would have received this gratitude and given them the new light of His grace. But as the Gospel tells us, only one of them returned and with a loud voice praised God and fell to His feet, and that man was a Samaritan. How close is he to our hearts today. How good was he in his trembling and inspired elation, having seen himself healed, without hesitation hurrying back to his Savior. And how the Lord doubtless rejoiced over the return of this once lost lamb. But only one of them returned. What of the rest? They left, probably forever. The Lord was sorrowful over these nine and He said: “Were there not ten cleansed? but where are the nine? There are not found that returned to give glory to God, save this stranger.” For if they did not remember Him directly after being cleansed, would they remember Him when they return to the pleasures and cares of this world? [31]

Did Christ tell this story for the single purpose of condemning a group of Jews while exalting a Samaritan? No, that was not His purpose. That is why Vladika then says,

Let us not seek answers to this crude ingratitude of the healed Jews. Let us turn to ourselves, and alone with our conscience, with pure heart compare ourselves to those who were healed. Can we not join the Samaritan who humbly fell to the Savior’s feet in gratitude? How bold would that be of us! We are like the successors of the nine ungrateful Jews, and together with them we do not thank the Lord for His great mercies and His all-gracious providence for us sinners. The gifts and mercies of the Lord to us unworthy people are countless. The Lord summoned us from non-existence, creating us in His image and likeness. The Lord granted us a Divine gift—free will. He gave us the ability, in continually making ourselves more perfect, to approach our Creator. But when we abused this gift and willingly submitted to evil, caught and enslaved by the devil, God then sent His Only-Begotten Son for the absolution of our sins with at the dearest Cost—His Own Blood. If only we would repent. The Lord bestowed upon us countless material, physical, emotional and spiritual goods, leading us by His Providence towards salvation. But how often do we notice, with every single step we take, the Hand of the Savior in our lives? Even the fact that we live in this country, well-fed and free; that we now stand in church and are present at Divine Liturgy, is a great mercy of God. Shall we not fall to His feet in gratitude? [32]

However, not only do we fall down before Christ in thanks for the good things, the pleasant, happy things that He gives us, but also for the difficulties and hardships. You see, these He gives us for our benefit, to shape our characters and to shape our souls, making us fit to receive Him in this life, and, when the time comes, in the next life. Here he quotes from Saint Paul’s Epistle to the Ephesians (5:20) instructing us that whatever comes to us we must give “thanks always for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.” And, quoting from Saint Paul’s First Epistle to the Thessalonians (5:18): “In every thing give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.” To underscore this advice to give thanks in all circumstances, he provides the following edifying example:

There was a certain Hieromonk (now Saint) Nikon, who was arrested by the Bolsheviks in Optina Hermitage and sent to Turkistan. Suffering from tuberculosis, weak and feeble, enduring beatings and an unjust trial, sent to hard labor in a terribly hot region, this holy martyr wrote to his friends that he was limitlessly grateful to God that He allowed him to endure all this in His Holy Name. He wrote that he deemed the following words as though addressed to him personally: “Blessed are they who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” [33]

And so Vladika concludes by reminding us that “in thanking the Lord we should not just do so for joys and pleasures, but even for sorrows, even grave sufferings. For through great sufferings one can enter the Kingdom of Heaven.”

We hear from these excerpts from his sermon on the healing of the ten lepers how skillful and profound Blessed Nektary was in speaking to his spiritual children. May Almighty God continue to give us such wise and holy men for the sake of the salvation of our souls.

4. SAINT PHILARET, METROPOLITAN OF NEW YORK [34]

 

 

It has been thirty-eight years since of the repose of one of the great men of the twentieth century—not a great politician, nor a great military captain, nor a great celebrity, but a man great in the things of God: Saint Philaret, Metropolitan of New York. A true Holy Church Father and Champion of Orthodoxy, he was a man whose character was of precisely that unique melding of sanctity, fidelity, sobriety, and courage that we discern in all of the Holy Fathers, from the first-century Apostolic Fathers to those of the modern era.

Saint Philaret was born George Nikolaevich Voznesensky on March 22, 1903 in Russia, in the city of Kursk. Upon the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks and the onset of civil war, the Voznesensky family escaped the horrors then enveloping Russia and joined the large numbers of emigre Russians living in Harbin, Manchuria. His father, a Priest, took monastic vows after the death of his wife and was elected Archbishop of Hailar, a city in China where large numbers of Russian refugees also settled. The Saint, whose education began in Russia, completed his education in Harbin, graduating from the Russian-Chinese Polytechnic Institute in 1927 with a degree in electrical engineering. He then began classes in theology at the St. Vladimir Institute, completing these in 1931. In December 1931, he was ordained a Priest and tonsured a monk, and took the name Philaret, after St. Philaret the Almsgiver of Constantinople. Six years later he was elevated to Archimandrite and served in various capacities in the Diocese of Harbin.

In 1945, near the end of the Second World War, the Soviets attacked Japan, overrunning and occupying Manchuria (then a province of the Japanese Empire known as Manchukuo). During this period, after the Soviet occupation, Saint Philaret had as little contact with the Soviets as was possible. He flatly and repeatedly refused Soviet citizenship and a Soviet passport and was dauntless in his sermons, censuring the Godless Ones for their outrages. For example, when the Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate made reference to the mass-murderer Lenin as a benefactor of the human race, Saint Philaret was so indignant that he devoted a sermon to the subject, a sermon that received wide circulation in the Russian community. Since he had become the focus of anti-Soviet sentiment among Orthodox Russians in Harbin, Soviet agents decided to kill him by setting fire to his residence. The Saint suffered some serious burns in the conflagration, but escaped—thanks be to God—with his life.

In 1962 Saint Philaret was permitted to leave Harbin. He travelled first to the then British Crown Colony of Hong Kong and, after a short time, on to Australia. There, in 1963, he was consecrated Bishop of Brisbane and Vicar Bishop to Archbishop Savva of the Australian Diocese. The following year, 1964, Metropolitan Anastassy, First Hierarch of the Russian Church Abroad, decided to retire. At the Sobor of Bishops where Metropolitan Anastassy announced his retirement and asked for a new Metropolitan to be chosen, amazingly, Saint Philaret of Brisbane, the hierarch with the least seniority at that time, was unanimously elected the new First Hierarch and Metropolitan. It was a providential step since the years ahead would be difficult ones, requiring exactly a man with the qualities and strengths of the new Metropolitan.

One of the principal issues confronting the Church at that time was that of the growing importance of ecumenism. Ecumenism, as it appeared and developed in the twentieth century, was principally a movement of the Protestant left. Its agenda, its outlook, its ecclesiology, and its theology were thoroughly Protestant in nature. In its view, all Christian bodies were deficient and none represented the criterion of truth. Therefore, only in bringing these bodies together, in a union of churches, could the Church founded by Christ be, so to speak, re-founded. Moreover, its activities were distinctly worldly, emphasizing radical social reforms and multifarious utopian schemes and minimizing spirituality and the reality of the spiritual world and of personal salvation. By the 1960s and ‘70s, this movement had allied itself with various Marxist “liberation” movements across the globe, even to the extent of financing terrorist activities.

In 1969, on the Sunday commemorating the Sixth OEcumenical Synod, Metropolitan Philaret boldly wrote an open letter, known today as the “First Sorrowful Epistle.” It was addressed to “Their Holinesses and Their Beatitudes, the Primates of the Holy Orthodox Churches” and to “the Most Reverend Metropolitans, Archbishops, and Bishops” [35] of the Orthodox Churches throughout the world. In this First Sorrowful Epistle, the blessed Metropolitan called the attention of the Orthodox Bishops to the dangers of ecumenism, its intrinsic penchant for theological and moral relativism and its basically Protestant presuppositions, and to the uncanonical activities of certain of the Orthodox participants. He writes: “If initially the Orthodox participated in ecumenical meetings only to present the truth, performing, so to speak, a missionary service among confessions foreign to Orthodoxy, now they have combined with them....” [36] Therefore, he continued, “We regard it as our duty to protest in the strongest possible terms against this state of affairs. We know that in this protest we have with us all the Holy Fathers of the Church.” [37]

Unhappily, the Hierarchs of the various national Churches addressed by the Holy Metropolitan ignored these warnings. Consequently, in 1972, the Metropolitan penned a Second Sorrowful Epistle, in which he cautions:

In the [First] Sorrowful Epistle, we depicted in vivid colors to what extent the organic membership of the Orthodox Church in that Council [the World Council of Churches], based as it is upon purely Protestant principles, is contrary to the very basis of Orthodoxy. In this Epistle, having been authorized by our Council of Bishops, we would further develop and extend our warning, showing that the participants in the ecumenical movement are involved in a profound heresy against the very foundation of the Church. [38]

Once again, Saint Philaret’s counsel went unacknowledged.

In 1975, the final Sorrowful Epistle was issued, in response to a pro-ecumenist document published by the Constantinopolitan Patriarchate. In this open letter the Metropolitan writes:

We now warn our flock and call out to our fellow brethren, to their faith in the Church, to their awareness of our common responsibility for our flock before the Heavenly Chief Shepherd. We entreat them not to disdain our announcement, lest a manifest mutilation of Orthodox teaching remain without accusation and condemnation. Its broad distribution has moved us to inform the whole Church of our grief. We would wish to hope that our cry will be heard. [39]

From those Epistles most especially, the strictly Orthodox stand of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad was defined and made known to the world. Critics of the Metropolitan abounded, writing off his Epistles as the work of a fanatic. But nothing was more contrary to the truth. The Epistles, far from fanatical, were framed in pastoral and moderate tones.

It is well known that the Saint was especially concerned in the guiding and safeguarding of the souls of young people. One of his parishioners remembers him in these words: “He would take the youth that no one cared about and bring them into the church with nothing but kindness. He was a father to every single one of us.” [40] In connection with his dedication to young people, the Metropolitan produced a small book, On the Law of God, which is composed of a series of lectures to young people explaining basic Orthodox teaching, the benefit to them of this teaching, and their responsibility as Orthodox Christians. We draw now from that excellent work.

In the chapter entitled “The Christian ‘I’,” the Metropolitan explains:

The first, and the most important obligation which man has concerning himself, is the working out within oneself of a spiritual character, of our true Christian “I.” The spiritual character of a Christian is not something given to him at first. No, it is something sought for, acquired, and worked out by his personal toils and efforts. Neither the body of a Christian with its capabilities, powers, and strivings, nor his soul itself ... are his spiritual personality, the spiritual “I.” This spiritual character in an Orthodox Christian is what sharply differs him from every non-Christian. In the Holy Scripture it is not called a soul, but a spirit. This spirit is precisely the center, the concentration of the spiritual life; it strives toward God and the immortal, blessed, eternal life.

We define the task of the entire life of man as the necessity to use the earthly, transitory life for preparation toward the eternal, spiritual life. In the present instance, this can be said in other words: the task of the earthly life of man consists in that he is able, in the course of this life, to build up, to work out his spiritual character, his true, living, eternal “I.”

One can care about one's “I” in different ways. There are people who are called egoists and who cherish and are concerned very much with their “I.” An egoist, however, thinks only of himself and about no one else. In his egoism, he strives to obtain his personal happiness by any useful means—even though at the cost of suffering and misfortune for neighbors. In his blindness, he does not realize that from the true point of view, in the sense of the Christian understanding of life, he only harms himself, his deathless “I.”

And here is Orthodox Christianity (i.e., the Holy Church), calling upon man to create his spiritual character, directing one in the course of this creativity, to distinguish good and evil and the truly beneficial from the pretended beneficial and harmful. She (the Holy Church) teaches us that we cannot consider the things given us by God (ability, talents, etc.) to be our “I,” rather we must consider them gifts of God. We must use these gifts ... for the building of our spirit. For this, we must use all these “talents” given by God, not for ourselves egoistically, but for others. For, the laws of Heaven’s Truth are contradictory to the laws of earthly benefit. According to worldly understandings he who gathers for himself on earth, acquires; according to the teaching of God’s Heavenly Truth, he who, in the earthly life gives away and does good, acquires (for eternity). [41]

Thus, we are taught by Saint Philaret, that one's purpose in this life is to build and to shape one’s “I,” that is, one’s spiritual, inward self, so that it conforms to the wishes of God. We are taught that our abilities and talents are gifts from God that we must use for the sake of others. And, we are taught that he who gathers for himself on earth gathers treasure for his earthly existence. But he who gives and does good, for the sake of Christ, acquires treasure for all eternity. May we all pay heed to the Saintly Metropolitan’s admonitions!

 

NOTES

1. Deuteronomy 31:6.

2. e.g., St. Luke 8:50.

3. Archbishop Andrei of Novo-Diveevo, The One Thing Needful (Liberty, TN: The Saint John of Kronstadt Press, 1991), p. 5

4. Ibid.

5. Ibid. p. 6.

6. Ibid., p. 7.

7. Ibid., p. 8.

8. “New-Diveevo.” Called this after a famous convent and spiritual center in Russia, Diveevo, near Nizhny Novgorod. Saint Seraphim of Sarov served as spiritual Elder for the nuns during his lifetime.

9. St. Matthew 8:28

10. The One Thing Needful, p. 94.

11. Ibid., p. 95.

12. St. Matthew 8:34.

13. The One Thing Needful, p. 95.

14. St. Matthew 9:1.

15. The One Thing Needful, p. 95.

16. Ibid.

17. Ibid., p. 3.

18. Archbishop Averky, The Apocalypse of St. John: An Orthodox Commentary. Father Seraphim Rose, Trans. Introduction by Father Seraphim Rose. (Platina, CA: Valaam Society of America, 1985), p. 11.

19. Ibid., p. 12.

20. Ibid., p. 15.

21. St. Matthew 8:20.

22. Ibid. 24:4-5.

23. https://mindofthefathers.wordpress.com/2021/10/31/trueorthodoxy-and-the-contemporary-world/

24. Ibid.

25. Ibid.

26. Ibid.

27. Ibid.

28. Archbishop Averky, The Apocalypse St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, Platina, CA, 1995, p. 23.

29. https://www.synod.com/synod/engrocor/enser_bpnektaryo10prokazhennikh.html

30. Ibid.

31. Ibid.

32. Ibid.

33. Ibid.

34. This essay first appeared in a slightly different form in my book, Made Perfect in Faith: Sermons on the Lives and Works of Fifty Holy Church Fathers, Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, Etna, CA, 2006, pp. 316-322.

35. http://orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/sorrow.aspx

36. Ibid., p. 221

37. Ibid.

38. http://orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/sorrow2.aspx

39. Metropolitan Philaret, “‘The Thyateira Confession’: An Appeal to the Primates of the Holy Churches of God, and Their Eminences the Orthodox Hierarchs,” The Orthodox Word, Vol. XII, No. 1 (66) (January-February 1976), p. 11.

40. http://www.monasterypress.com/mphilaret.html

41. Metropolitan Philaret of New York, First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, On the Law of God, Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville NY: 2002, pp. 21-22.

 

Sources: The Good Word, Vol. 11, No. 5, May-June 2024 (pp. 1-8), and July-August 2024 (pp. 1-3). Footnote numbering combined.

 

 

 

Father Seraphim the Philosopher: Teacher of Ancient Piety

Reposed August 20 (+1982)

By Fr. Damascene [Christensen]

Source: Vita Patrum: The Life of the Fathers by St. Gregory of Tours, translated from the Latin and French by Fr. Seraphim Rose and Paul Bartlett, St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, Platina, CA, 1988, pp. 319-327.

 

 

In His love for mankind, God has placed in every person an innate longing for His Divine Truth. In order for the fullness of Truth to be revealed, however, one must first renounce the opinions of this world and inwardly die to it. This renunciation occurs through suffering, in which man’s spirit is torn, like the curtain of the temple, away from his fallen, carnal self and is led to seek enlightenment from above. It is then that our gracious Lord, if He finds a loving heart that may serve as a sure receptacle of His Truth, imparts a higher understanding to the devout seeker.

Few in our days have sought the Truth with such singleness of purpose as did the righteous Fr. Seraphim. He was a philosopher according to the original meaning of the word: a “lover of wisdom.” Just as Solomon once found favor in God’s sight by desiring wisdom above all else, so did Fr. Seraphim become chosen to be God’s servant through his earnest, painful longing to acquire the Truth at all costs. Having at last discovered it, he became free of the bonds of earth and ripe for eternity, as say the Scriptures: “You shall know the Truth, and the Truth shall make you free” (John 8:32).

1. Fr. Seraphim was born outside the saving enclosure of the Church, in order that, through his spiritual quest, conversion and subsequent missionary work, he might lead other searching souls into the Body of Christ. His quest for Truth became apparent at an early age. His mother, noticing how much her son was studying for school, once said to him, “You will be a smart man someday.”

“I don’t want to be smart,” the boy replied, “I want to be wise.” The older he grew, the more intense became his inquiry into the nature of his existence. His studies led him through the literature and traditional philosophies of many different cultures, and especially to the wisdom of the ancient Orient, for the acquisition of which he spent many years studying the languages of ancient China. But his hungry soul remained unfed, and he existed on the edge of despair, isolated and alone. For hours he would walk along deserted beaches at night, thinking that, without the Truth he sought, life was devoid of meaning, wondering if perhaps the oblivion of death was preferable to having such a burning yet unfulfilled desire. Little did he know then that his silent longings had not gone unnoticed, for God, in His limitless mercy, was soon to open to him another world.

God’s providence worked through one of Fr. Seraphim’s friends, who once recommended that he visit an Orthodox Christian Church. Heeding this advice, he walked into an Orthodox cathedral and witnessed a solemn and beautiful service, handed down from the times of the early Christians. Feeling as though he had stepped into the ranks of angels in Heaven, he joyfully said within himself, “I’ve come home.” His philosophic quest thus brought him at last into the presence of Christ, Whose true image he had not been able to find until he had made personal contact with the ancient Christian experience of the Orthodox Church. In this way he discovered that the Truth he had been seeking resided not in a single philosophy, but rather in the Divine Person of our Lord Jesus Christ, Who has said, “I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life” (John 14:6).

Not many years later, when he received Holy Communion for the first time, Fr. Seraphim felt a Divine taste in his mouth which lasted for several weeks. Being humble before God, he thought that all newly-baptized Christians had the same experience; and it was only later that he learned that he had indeed received a special gift of grace.

2. This rare man, Fr. Seraphim, not satisfied merely with being externally a member of the Church, begged God that He would bring him into the very heart of the Truth, wherein all the saints and righteous ones have found the means for their salvation. His newfound “pearl of great price” — the true Gospel of Christ — was so precious to him that he wanted to dedicate his entire life to serving it. He wanted to do something with what he had received, not just bury his talent in the ground.

While this yearning still burned within Fr. Seraphim, he fell ill with a serious ailment, which grew worse and worse until he feared that he would die from it. How great was his anguish when he thought that he would be taken away so soon, before he had even begun to serve God! In such a state, he went one day to a small store that sold, among other things, icon cards. He looked entreatingly at one of the icons, an image of the Mother of God, and spontaneously said within himself, from the depths of his troubled soul, “Most Holy Mother of God, please hear me! Before I die, let me do something to serve your Son!” The Holy Virgin did not withhold Her mercy from the needy supplicant; and thus it happened that shortly after this incident, Fr. Seraphim, already recovering from his illness, heard a knock at his door. When he opened it, he found a young seminarian, a man with ideals similar to his own, wanting to serve Christ but not yet knowing exactly how to do it. They later decided to open an Orthodox Christian bookstore, so that other seekers like themselves could be provided with soul-profiting reading. In this way was granted Fr. Seraphim’s wish to work for God. His other need, that of entering into the fullness of the Church, was fulfilled at about the same time through a righteous man who arrived in the city in which Fr. Seraphim was living, San Francisco. This man was Blessed Archbishop John Maximovitch, a wonderworker sent by God to Fr. Seraphim as a living vessel of Divine Truth, which Truth he did not hesitate to impart through his holy example and words of instruction. Fr. Seraphim deeply loved his spiritual teacher, and Archbishop John in turn did all he could to help his disciple.

With the blessing and encouragement of Archbishop John, Fr. Seraphim and his seminarian friend became co-laborers in a missionary brotherhood dedicated to St. Herman of Alaska. In addition to working at the bookstore, they began to publish a periodical, “The Orthodox Word,” for the mission of true Christianity. And here is where God, wanting to make use of His willing servant, provided Fr. Seraphim with the opportunity to exercise all his talents — his penetrating mind and his writing ability — for the spreading of the Gospel. Fr. Seraphim devoted all his energy to his God-pleasing literary work so that, at the time of final reckoning, he would be found not empty handed, but with his talents increased a hundredfold.

3. Ever since his conversion, Fr. Seraphim did much reading of the Holy Fathers of the Church, and he was especially drawn to the ancient desert-dwellers and ascetics. In these desert-dwellers, he found living illustrations of Christ’s otherworldly teaching: transfigured beings who disdained all attachment to things temporal and who sought only that which lies beyond this corruptible earth. So much was he inspired by their example that he longed to have a small taste of the life of silence and prayer, unhindered by the tumult of the world. For this reason, he and his partner decided to move their publishing work to the mountains. Soon they found some land suitable for their needs: a forested area high on the top of a ridge, miles away from the noise of cities. After they had lived there for a few years, they were tonsured monks, and thus their brotherhood became a monastic one. Their literary work continued, and expanded to include the printing of books.

Having been delivered from death and granted more years of life through the intercessions of the Mother of God, Fr. Seraphim cherished the time he was able to spend in his forest hermitage. His heart so overflowed with thanksgiving that he would be seen blessing and kissing the trees. Because he valued every moment of life as a gift from God, he was filled with a sense of urgency and repeatedly warned: “It is later than you think. Hasten, therefore, to do the work of God.”

Through daily Divine services, constant exposure to spiritual literature, and separation from the world, Fr. Seraphim’s experience of spiritual life deepened. He lived for another world, guarding himself against idle talk and soberly viewing ordinary events in the context of heavenly reality. His loving heart, warmed and softened by his early years of suffering and his profound conversion, combined with his brilliant mind, his noble, truth-loving character and his depth of spiritual experience, to make him a Christian teacher unparalleled in our days. Having steeped himself in the writings of the Holy Fathers, having come to them as a loving son and learned from them Divine wisdom, having lived like them and acquired their way of thinking and feeling, he became as one of them. He successfully transmitted the spirit of the Holy Fathers in his writings, thereby feeding the souls of thousands of readers and enabling them to attain oneness of soul with the Christians of past centuries.

4. When Fr. Seraphim was made a priest, his responsibilities increased even more. He was called upon to pastor a parish flock in a nearby town. For a man who longed for desert solitude, this was certainly a burden, and yet he bore it without a grudging word. “Whatever God sends us,” he would say, “we must accept and do our best with. Each day brings a new struggle, a new chance to increase our prayer and new ways in which to serve God.”

He was a loving pastor not only to those in the town parish, but also to the many brothers who came to the monastery. Late at night, he would be seen kneeling before the altar of the monastery church, praying fervently with tears for those souls which had been placed under his direction.

All of his pastoral work, as well as his literary work, he did solely for the glory of God and for the salvation of his neighbor. He shunned all ephemeral, earthly rewards which might be gained in this life, even those rewards which may be amassed through the institutional, purely human side of church life. And yet his holy life did not go unrewarded by God. Once, in the altar of the town parish, during the reading of the canons at Sunday Matins, one of the acolytes saw Fr. Seraphim surrounded by Divine, uncreated Light. From this it is known that during his life here on earth, Fr. Seraphim received a foretaste of the heavenly bliss prepared for him by Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Fr. Seraphim’s early mentor Archbishop John, although he had reposed many years before, did not cease to take care of his spiritual son. Once a certain Brother Gregory, having been entrusted by Fr. Seraphim with a large sum of money, went to buy food for the monastery. When the time came to make payment, he suddenly realized he did not have the money. Telephoning Fr. Seraphim in a state of great agitation, he was told to return to the church in which Fr. Seraphim was serving. As he approached the church, he was met by Fr. Seraphim. “You have it right there,” said Fr. Seraphim, pointing to the brother’s chest. “Archbishop John told me. You didn’t think of praying to him, did you?” The brother felt his chest and with simultaneous joy and shame he found the money in the pocket which he thought he had certainly searched. Fr. Seraphim then comforted him, explaining that after he had finished speaking on the telephone, he had gone to church and there, praying before a portrait of Archbishop John, had asked him to help find the money. Archbishop John mystically informed Fr. Seraphim that Brother Gregory had the money in his pocket. “Thus,” concluded this brother as he finished relating the tale, “a sure trial and temptation was transformed into a revelation of the mystery of holiness and grace.”

5. Fr. Seraphim was only forty-eight years old when Our Lord was pleased to take him into His kingdom. As it is written in the Wisdom of Solomon: “He, being made perfect in a short time, fulfilled a long time: for his soul pleased the Lord: therefore hasted He to take him away from among the wicked” (Wis. 4:13). When the course of his blessed life was drawing to an end, he was suddenly afflicted with acute pains in his stomach. Being of such a humble disposition, he never complained or tried to draw attention to his sickness, but only retired to his cell to pray. Soon, however, his brethren realized that his ailment was a serious one, and took him to a hospital for treatment. After the doctors had operated on him, they said that the disease would probably be fatal. The news spread, and people travelled from distant places to be at Fr. Seraphim’s bedside during his last hours. Day and night they stood near him, consoling him by singing the sacred hymns of the Church. How great was the lamentation, how fervent were the prayers of the faithful! So many people were about to be deprived of their beloved spiritual father and teacher. And yet there was joy mixed with the sorrow, for all were aware that, from among those assembled in that hospital room, one person was soon to step over the threshold of death and stand before the throne of Almighty God. It was as if the ceiling of the room had opened up, as if everyone was in the presence of the blessed world beyond death.

Here, during his last, painful days in the hospital, Fr. Seraphim finished the holy task he had begun when he first took on the yoke of Christ: he eradicated the vestiges of his selfish, human will so that he could belong wholly to God, with Whom he would spend eternity. Again it is written in Holy Wisdom: “And having been a little chastised, they shall be greatly rewarded: for God proved them, and found them worthy for Himself. As gold in the furnace hath He tried them, and received them as a burnt offering” (Wis. 3:4-5). In truth was the spiritual gold of Fr. Seraphim’s soul purified by suffering, for he was tied to the hospital bed as one crucified, his arms and legs shaking from the intense pain that ran through his body. He could not speak because of the air tubes which the doctors had placed in his mouth. All he could do was pray, gazing imploringly into heaven. As his co-laborer in the wilderness said, “Fr. Seraphim suffered as he did in order to receive the glory of Martyrs.”

A young catechumen was standing at his bedside when a priest came in the room to give Fr. Seraphim Holy Communion. Before administering the sacred Body and Blood of Christ, the priest read the Gospel and then, holding the book over Fr. Seraphim’s reclining body, began to bless him with it. Suddenly Fr. Seraphim, exerting every last bit of strength in his dying, convulsing frame, raised himself up to kiss that sublime and holy Book that had given him Life. There was not a face in the room that was not covered with tears. The catechumen standing there said later that this incident was so inspiring that it erased all thoughts of hesitation concerning his baptism.

6. Finally, when the soul of the blessed one was sufficiently purified, it departed unto the Lord. Fr. Seraphim’s body was brought to his monastery to be buried on his beloved mountain, and, for the three days following his repose, was kept in the monastery church. There, as Fr. Seraphim lay in his simple wooden coffin, his face became radiant and smiled with such a serene smile that all were moved by the sight.

During the funeral, the church was filled to overflowing with faithful pilgrims. All came up to his coffin to kiss the blessed hands which wrote so many soul-profiting books, articles and church services. When the coffin was about to be taken from the church and buried nearby, one of the pilgrims, a woman named Helen, was vouchsafed to see Fr. Seraphim shining with celestial light above the coffin, facing the altar and swinging a censer.

Forty days after Fr. Seraphim’s repose, a bishop named Nektary came to the monastery and led the singing of a Glorification hymn: “We glorify thee, our holy Father Seraphim, instructor of monks and converser with angels.” During his sermon, he called Fr. Seraphim “a righteous man, possibly a saint.” The verity of this appraisal is attested to by the numerous miracles which Fr. Seraphim has performed since his death. Here we will include a few of these, described by the priest Alexey Young on November 11, 1983:

“About two months after the repose of Fr. Seraphim it came to my attention that a cousin (non-Orthodox) of one of my spiritual children (Barbara M.) was in the hospital with a serious ailment. She asked to see me and asked that I pray for her. She was suffering from a constriction of vessels in the leg, causing shortage of circulation. The immediate crisis was a gangrenous big toe. I saw this toe myself: it was green and rotting — a terrible sight. The doctors were preparing to amputate the toe within a week or so, and said that it was likely she would lose the whole foot and possibly the limb from the knee down. I anointed her toe and leg with oil from Fr. Seraphim’s grave and asked his intercession on her behalf. Within a short period of time the gangrene had completely disappeared. The doctors decided it was not necessary to amputate the toe or anything else and announced that they were ‘amazed’ at what had happened. Today, more than a year later, she has had no re-occurrence of her affliction, to the continuing surprise of the doctors, who have no explanation for it. I’m convinced that this healing was worked through Fr. Seraphim. (By the way, I myself spoke to the doctor on more than one occasion, and so am able to personally verify the medical details as well as the initial prognosis.

“And now I have a second miracle to report: Two weeks ago today my brother-in-law, Stefan (whom I baptized last July and then married to my sister, Anna), was in a serious auto accident here in town. He broke both legs (compound fractures in the left leg) and also shattered the left ankle and the left big toe. He was immediately taken into surgery, where the doctors worked for 4½ hours to clean out the wounds (the bones had broken through the flesh in more than one place); road dirt had been ground into the flesh and bones and the danger of life-threatening infection was very great. I saw the photos of his left leg and foot just before they took him into surgery and it was an appalling sight: the left foot was just hanging; the ligaments and tendons had all been torn away, and the bones completely crushed.

“During that first operation we prayed in the waiting room. Remembering that Bishop Nektary had sung a Glorification to Fr. Seraphim, I served a Molieben to Fr. Seraphim on behalf of Stefan. Starting the next day, and every day thereafter, he was anointed with oil from Fr. Seraphim’s grave. Through the bandages we were even able to reach one of the mangled toes of the left foot.

“After the surgery the doctor told us there was a good chance that he would lose the foot. Also, there was a possibility that if infection set in it could become ‘life-threatening.’ But we had great confidence in the prayers of our Righteous One before the throne of God, and we waited, patiently.

“Six days later the surgeons operated again. This was a critical time, for based upon what they saw when they removed the bandages, they would have a good idea about whether or not the foot could be saved. Afterwards the surgeon himself said that it was a ‘miracle’! Not only was everything mending well, but there was no sign of infection — in itself a miracle.

“Of course Stefan now has three months in a wheel chair, and then he will have to learn to walk all over again. There are still many difficulties, and possibly more operations, in the near future. But I believe that in this, as in so many other things, Fr. Seraphim again heard our prayers, and turned on our behalf to God’s throne in order to give us help. Truly, God rests in His saints!

“Of both of the above miracles I am personally a witness. In addition, photographs exist of the second case which would quickly convince anyone — lay person or physician — that something of a truly extraordinary nature took place.”

Several other miraculous visitations did our Lord Jesus Christ work through His servant, Fr. Seraphim. To God, Who raised up such a man for our inspiration and enlightenment, may there be glory unto the ages of ages. Amen.

 

 

Indestructible Towers

Father George Poullas

 

It is not unusual to find in encyclopedic entries on the Orthodox Church, or even in some otherwise decent scholarly surveys of Orthodoxy, the hackneyed and ridiculous claim that a key feature of Eastern Christianity is caesaro-papism, or the constant submission of the Church to the state (the Empire). Notwithstanding the fact that there was never a Pope in the Orthodox Church—despite the trend towards a kind of neo-Papal Patriarchalism, in contemporary times, modelled on medieval Roman Catholicism, which was in fact more characteristically caesaro-papistic in polity than the Eastern Church—this myth persists. Father George presents us, here, with select evidence that Orthodox Bishops, in fact, called the Byzantine (Roman) Emperors to task, and even in matters related to their personal lives and comportment. His accounts are worthy of our careful attention, and especially since the courage of our Bishops through the centuries is sadly lacking today.

***

The Holy Fathers of our Holy Orthodox Church fought not only against heresies, but also against every kind of transgression. We will mention, here, a few heroic examples from the lives of these holy stragglers.

1. The Holy Patriarch Nicholas I Mystikos, who was “a model of Christian conscientiousness and courage,” according to the historian P. Paparregopoulos, did not hesitate to enter into conflict with Emperor Leo VI (the Wise) on account of his unlawful fourth marriage. He implored Leo not to persist in this iniquitous desire of his. The Emperor, however, paid no heed to him and went ahead with the marriage. Then the Saint, not reckoning with imperial authority, stopped the miscreant emperor on the threshold of Hagia Sophia, forbidding him to enter. Moreover, he deposed the Priest Thomas, who had celebrated this unlawful marriage. As a result of his valiant resistance, he was immediately exiled by the emperor. But not even did exile intimidate the Saint, who had no hesitation in writing a letter to the Bishop of Rome, to the effect that an emperor who gave orders to slander, to murder through treachery, to celebrate unlawful marriages, and to seize other people’s property, was not an emperor, but a brigand, a slanderer, an adulterer, and a thief (see “Epistle XXXII,” Patrologia Grceca, Vol. CXI, cols. 209-213).

2. About fifty years later, the Holy Patriarch Polyeuctos prevented Emperor Nikephoros Phokas from entering a Church and imposed a lengthy penance on him, because there was an impediment arising from spiritual kinship between him and his wife Theophano. But the strength of the Saint proved still more resplendent when John Tsimiskes murdered Nikephoros Phokas, with the cooperation of Theophano, in order to seize the throne. The Saint in that instance demanded that the murderers be punished and the Empress Theophano be exiled. This is, in fact, what happened.

3. Later on, the Holy Patriarch Leontios II of Jerusalem rebuked Emperor Andronicos I Comnenos for his unlawful marriage, and was, for this reason, persecuted and exiled.

4. Almost immediately after the Fall of Constantinople, Patriarch Joasaph I (1465-1466), together with Maximos, the Grand Ecclesiarch, who subsequently became Patriarch, opposed the evil desire of the ruler, Amiroutzes, a friend of the Sultan, to contract an illicit marriage. For this, the Patriarch was banished, while the Ecclesiarch had his nose split open. Let us see, therefore, with what great courage our Holy Fathers stood up to imperial transgressions, without fearing persecution, exile or death.

Today, on the other hand....

 

Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XXVI (2009), No. 2, pp. 15-16.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

1970 GOC / ROCOR Concelebration in Athens

 


From left: Bishops Akakios of Diavleia, Hilarion of Manhattan (ROCOR), Auxentios of Athens, Petros of Astoria, and Gerontios of Salamis.


Nikolaos Sotiropoulos (1934-2014): The 15th Canon of the First-Second Council combats schism and is worthy of praise.

“When a hierarch preaches heresy, then the priest has the right not to commemorate the name of that hierarch.”

 [Comment added May 13, 2026, below]


 

Nikolaos Sotiropoulos: You who are appointed unto eternal life. Brothers whom the Lord loved, for whom He became man and sacrificed Himself, and whom He ordained to obtain boundless eternity, to obtain His unshakable and indescribable Kingdom.

Your Church invited me to come and preach the word of God. I responded readily to your Church’s invitation. Your Church is accused of being schismatic. I came as an Orthodox theologian to refute this accusation. I came, as an Orthodox theologian, to defend the people of God who come to this church in order to worship the Lord of Glory. Your parish priest, the minister of the Most High, Father Alexander [Kavouros of Adelaide, Australia], has ordination from a canonical Bishop. He has canonical ordination, he has real priesthood, and he performs the Mysteries.

The congregation: Axios! Axios! Axios!

Nikolaos Sotiropoulos: The Patriarchate of Constantinople deposed Father Alexander, but it deposed him unjustly, incompetently; this Patriarchate did not have the competence to judge Father Alexander, and it did so without allowing him to defend himself, without summoning him to make a defense. For this reason, according to the Sacred Canons, his deposition is invalid, just as the notorious excommunication of the speaker is also invalid.

Those who govern the Church must learn justice; those who govern the Church must learn justice and respect the Sacred Canons, and not do arbitrary and dictatorial things within the Church of God.

What does the 15th Canon of the First-Second Council say, my brothers? When a hierarch preaches heresy, then the priest has the right not to commemorate the name of that hierarch, and to serve independently of that hierarch, and to commemorate—as I was moved when I heard earlier Father Alexander commemorating—“all Orthodox bishops who rightly divide the word of Truth.” Canon 15, I repeat, of the First-Second Council, concerning the priest who does not commemorate the heretical hierarch and serves independently of him, says that this priest does not cause schism, but combats schism, because he does not commemorate the heretical hierarch and because he serves independently of the heretical hierarch. I repeat: he does not create schism, but combats schism and is worthy of praise.

Congregation: Axios! Axios!

Nikolaos Sotiropoulos: Not of deposition. Even great Fathers and teachers of our Church were deposed, such as Athanasius, the pillar of Orthodoxy, and Chrysostom, the most universal Father and teacher of the Church. But the Fathers, although they were deposed by unjust fellow bishops, are the undeposed towers of the Church. We enjoy the Liturgy of sacred Chrysostom here on Sunday.

My brothers, your Church is not schismatic. It is canonical, Orthodox, and your parish priest is worthy of praise, because he declared: “I will serve independently of the Archdiocese of Australia, because the Archbishop preaches heresy!” Heresies. That is why I came here to speak; otherwise, I would not have come.

Do you know what another Canon says, the 31st Apostolic Canon? A priest may cease the commemoration of a hierarch and serve independently of the administration of the hierarch when the hierarch offends piety—that is, the Faith, and not only piety—and justice, when he does unjust things.

Do you know what another Canon says? If a hierarch does not combat the heresies, and all the more if the hierarch also preaches heresies, then another hierarch has the right, has the right to come and assume the pastoral care of his flock. Indeed! If there were heroic Bishops and heroic priests, they ought to have come here to Australia and assumed the pastoral care of the shepherdless flock of the Archdiocese of Australia.

Today we celebrate, the day before yesterday and today, Saint Paraskevi. After our Panagia, she is the most popular female saintly figure. Saint Paraskevi became holy, my brothers, because she had Faith. The first thing is Faith; all the other things come second. She believed, as the Apostle says today; she believed in Jesus as Lord, as God. She believed in the Lordship and the Divinity of the Author of our Faith, our Lord Jesus Christ. She also believed in the Resurrection of Christ, which the Apostle again speaks of. She believed in everything that the Church believes. She was a conscious member of the Church and struggled within the Church. And because the Church is a workshop of holiness, for this reason Saint Paraskevi, through her struggle and through the Grace of the Church, became a Saint and wonderworker.

On this occasion, my brothers, I shall briefly explain to your piety the article of the Symbol of Faith which refers to the Church, which brings forth Saints and wonderworkers and martyrs and great-martyrs. What did we say earlier, when reciting the Symbol of Faith? I believe in One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. It is one. Christ is not in many churches. He founded one Church: the one that has the correct Faith. The others are heresies and schisms. Here you are the Church with the right Faith, the Orthodox Faith. You belong to the One Church of which Christ said: “I will build My Church upon the rock of Faith.” He said “the” Church, “One” Church. One is the correct Faith, one is the Church.

Again, Christ said to the Jews: I do not have only you Jews, Christ said; I also have other sheep: us Gentiles, the Greeks and others, who were idolaters. I am going to lead them also, and there shall be one flock under one shepherd. What is the one Flock? The One Church. And who is the one Shepherd? He who sacrificed Himself for the sheep, our Lord Jesus Christ.

The Ecumenists speak of many churches. They say, Council, World Council of Churches. Let there be a union of the churches. Wrong! The Church is one: the one that changed nothing from the Faith of the first eight centuries. Many times, I challenge the heterodox, the heretics, to indicate and prove that we changed even one small Truth of Faith. They cannot prove such a thing. We changed nothing from the Faith. The Church is One; the others, I repeat, which are called churches, whether Papism, or Protestant confessions, or Monophysites, are heresies and schisms.

The Church is Holy. I believe in One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. Why is the Church Holy? Because her Founder is Holy; because the Spirit that gives her life is Holy, the Holy Spirit. Because the Gospel is Holy, the Scripture is Holy, her teaching is holy, her Tradition is holy. Because her Mysteries are Holy, because her purpose is holy. The Church is a workshop of holiness. Within the Church there is the Grace of God, which brings forth Saints, as it brought forth Saint Paraskevi. What am I saying? Millions of Saints and martyrs and great-martyrs and wonderworkers, whose holy relics also work miracles. The Church is Holy; she has produced millions of Saints. It does not matter that within the Church there are also impious and corrupt people. The impious and corrupt do not abolish the Saints and the holiness of the Church, the Church of God. The Church is not merely a human organism; she is a divine-human organism, and for this reason the enemies and betrayers of the Faith have not been able to tear her down.

The Church is Catholic. What does it mean that the Church is Catholic? The Papists call themselves the catholic church. Wrong; the Catholics are not a church, they are a Heresy. Their church, their so-called church, is not catholic. It is called catholic, but it is not; it has the name, but it does not have the Grace. Our Church is Catholic. Why? Catholic means that it has the whole Truth of the Faith. It has thrown away nothing from the truths of the Faith; it has distorted nothing from the truths of the Faith. Because our Church has the whole Truth of the Faith, which the Lord revealed for our salvation, for this reason our Church is called Catholic. The Papists, from the name “Catholic,” do not have the Grace. We Orthodox have both the name “Catholic” and the Grace.

The Church is Apostolic. What does this mean? God founded her through the Apostles. He chose twelve, thirteen simple, unlettered men; He sent them forth into the inhabited world; they preached the most beautiful words, words which the ages marvel at, incomparable words. The philosophers do not attain to the wisdom of the Apostles. And some years, and some decades, after the death and Resurrection of Christ, they founded in the inhabited world, among all states and above all states, the State of God, the Church. The Church has as her cornerstone, her very foundation stone, Christ Himself, and as secondary founders, the Apostles; and as stones of this edifice called the Church, the Church has all conscious Christians. We are living stones in the majestic edifice of Christ which is called the Church.

The Church, my brothers, is the ark of our salvation; it is the workshop of holiness; it is, to express myself differently, our mother, our sweet mother, who grants us hope and consolation and strength. Within the Church miracles take place; for this reason, the Church is not torn down. And what did one Father of the Church say? No one can have God as Father if he does not have the Church as mother. If he does not come every Sunday to this great family of Christ, to say, “Glory to Thee who hast shown us the light,” to say, “We hymn Thee, we bless Thee, we give thanks unto Thee, O Lord.”

My brothers, all things in the world are vain. The Church is not a vain thing. Let us remain faithful to the Faith, to Orthodoxy, to our sweet mother, the Church, until the end. And when we depart from this vain world, as children of the Church of Orthodoxy, we shall not go below, where the impious go. We shall go above, above the stars, above the galaxies, and we shall receive an unshakable, indescribable Kingdom, and we shall reign together with the King of kings, our Lord Jesus Christ, unto the boundless ages; and of our Kingdom there shall be no end. Amen!

 

Greek source: https://apotixisi.blogspot.com/2026/05/15_12.html

 

Comment by Dr. Dimitris Chatzinikolaou:

May 13, 2026, at 11:16 a.m.

Father Dimitrios, Christ is Risen!

Thank you for the information. I lived for five years, from 1994 to 1998, in Adelaide, and I know the matter very well. The reason for the walling off was not for the Faith, but for the property of the Community. The Greeks there had established schools, churches, nursing homes, houses which they rented very cheaply, at about one-tenth of the market rent, to poor fellow Greeks, etc. Long before the heresiarch Stylianos Harkianakis, the Archdiocese of Australia sought to appropriate all this property, which many of the Greek expatriates did not accept, and thus they separated. Since the Archdiocese of Australia belongs to the Patriarchate of Constantinople, if they had accepted, then the property would essentially have been transferred to a Turkish organization. The Greek Orthodox Community was considered schismatic by the circles of the Archdiocese, who insulted their churches as “chicken coops”! Many attempts at union have been made, but I do not know whether any of them has borne fruit.


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