The
year 2003 marked the repose of Saint
Mitrofan of Voronezh, one of
Russia's most illustrious hierarchs. His life holds an
important lesson for us today, teaching us to stand up
for the truth and to defend the principles and practices
of our holy Orthodox Faith, even when that means
opposing our friends or people of rank or authority.
Saint
Mitrofan was born in 1627 in
a religious family. He married and had a son. When he
was 39 his wife died and he entered the
Zolotnikov Monastery,
where he was soon made a priest. Within three years the
monks of the nearby Yakhromsk
Monastery chose him to be their abbot. His wise
rule came to the attention of Patriarch Joachim, who
entrusted him with the guidance of the much larger
Kostroma Monastery near Moscow. Finally, on
April 2,1682, he was
consecrated bishop of the newly-established diocese of
Voronezh.
Located
along the Don River some distance from Moscow, the
diocese encompassed a vast area whose very remoteness
attracted fiercely independent and unruly characters. It
was seldom visited by its ruling hierarchs, and even the
clergy had developed an attitude of doing as they
pleased. With a firm hand, the new bishop set to work to
bring order to his diocese. He established monasteries,
battled against superstition, preached tirelessly, and
took particular care for the welfare of family life
among his flock. His episcopal
residence was a haven for the needy, for wandering
pilgrims, and for the homeless. He himself lived very
simply, and was never idle. At his summer dacha he liked
to work in the fields. He recommended to people of all
ranks: "Labor willingly and preserve moderation, and you
will be rich; be temperate in drink and eat little, and
you will be healthy; do good and flee from evil, and you
will be saved!"
At the time
the young Tsar Peter I had some wharves constructed in
Voronezh for his fleet. He developed a close friendship
with the already aged bishop. Saint
Mitrofan explained to his flock the necessity of
Peter's generally unpopular reforms and on occasion he
even assisted the Tsar financially. He taught his flock
to be kind towards foreigners, many whom had come to
help with the ship building and other ventures
introducing Western technology. The bishop appreciated
the usefulness of their knowledge, although he cautioned
against undue familiarity, fearing the influence of
their loose morals.
The
friendship between tsar and hierarch was put to the test
when, one day in 1700, the Tsar invited Saint
Mitrofan to his palace.
Arriving on foot, the Saint was appalled to see statues
of naked pagan gods at the entrance. He immediately
turned heel and returned home. This infuriated the Tsar
and, hot with temper, he threatened the bishop with
death for having defied his will. "To live for me is
Christ, and to die is gain," replied the Saint calmly to
the Tsar's messenger. He asked that the bell be rung for
the All-night Vigil, that he might worthily prepare
himself for death. His strength of conviction so
impressed the Tsar that the latter ordered the statues
removed at once, and sent to reassure the hierarch, who
came the next day to the palace. One has to know the
Tsar's strong character to appreciate his great respect
for Saint Mitrofan, so
dramatically illustrated by this incident.
When the
Saint was dying, the Tsar quickened his trip to
Voronezh, arriving on the very day of the Saint's
repose, 23 November 1703. After bearing the coffin to
the grave, the Tsar said to his entourage, "Never will I
have another such holy elder." Miracles attributable to
the intercession of Saint Mitrofan,
and the discovery, in 1831, of his incorrupt relics, led
to his official glorification on 6 August 1832. Holy
Saint Mitrofan, pray to God
for us!
Having remained faithful
to the Apostolic Tradition, the
Russian Church never called
for the kind of doctrinal reforms which revolutionized
Europe in the 16th century. Nevertheless, it had its own
weaknesses born of historical circumstances and human
failings. The effect of more than two centuries of
Mongol rule, the shameful witness of the Greeks at the
Council of Florence, the subsequent Fall of
Constantinople, and interference by the Catholic Poles
during the Time of Troubles had combined to encourage a
protectionist policy on the part of both Church and
State. On a more general level this was translated into
a provincial attitude which showed itself suspicious of
anything and anyone foreign. The Church in particular,
conscious of its position as the 'Third Rome" and the
bastion of an Orthodoxy undefiled by compromise, was on
guard against anything that might undermine the Faith,
and placed great emphasis on uniformity, not only m
matters of dogma but also in ritual practice. The vision
of universal Orthodoxy--which allows for variation in
ritual among local Churches gradually narrowed to a
belief that Russian practice alone provided the
criterion for truth. At the same time, due in large
measure to a lack of educated clergy, ritual--the
external signs of faith-had come to represent the key to
salvation.
Under such
circumstances, it is not surprising that the reforms in
ritual insisted upon by Patriarch Nikon reforms based on
the usage of the "tainted" Greeks roused such fearful
anxiety and determined opposition. Following the Council
of 1666 1667 which anathematized the Old Rite, the rift
between the "Old Ritualists"
or "Old Believers,'' as they came to be called, and the
rest of the Russian Church exploded into a great
religious upheaval that very nearly rivaled the
revolutionary effect of Europe's Reformation a century
earlier. The ultimate victor in
Russia's "civil war" of
religion was the State. In their stubborn "all or
nothing" attitude, Nikon and the Old
Ritualists' leader
Avvakum both contributed to
weaken the very Church which each had sought so
zealously to defend. But if this tragic period in the
history of the Russian Church exposed her weaknesses, it
also gave opportunity for men of spiritual stature to
stand tall and prove themselves by turning people's
attention to the soul-saving essentials of Orthodox
Christianity. Among those hierarchs who endeavored to do
just that were St. Theodosius
of Chernigov, St. Dimitri of
Rostov and St. Mitrofan of
Voronezh.
St.
Mitrofan was born in 1623 in
the province of
Vladimir. According to his own testimony, he was brought
up by devout parents "in the unsullied piety of the
Eastern Church, in the Orthodox Faith." He began his
adult life as a married village priest, and even later,
as a hierarch, he continued to
manifcst a tender concern for his son, Ivan, who
became a scribe in a monastery. Widowed at the age of
39, he decided to concentrate his devotion to God by
leaving the world, and the following year he entered the
Zolotinsk-Dormition
monastery near Suzdal, where
he was soon tonsured.
Already a
practiced Christian, it is not surprising that within
three years he was chosen to be abbot by the brethren of
the nearby Yakhromsky
monastery, a position he accepted out of obedience
rather than desire. He was strictly ascetic in his
personal life, while he expressed himself as a loving
father towards his monks who reciprocated his care for
them with filial respect and obedience. The Saint's
success in meeting the challenges of his abbatial
responsibilities was communicated to the Patriarch of
Moscow and All-Russia, Joachim, and after ten years at
Yakhromsk he was entrusted
with a larger monastery of some renown in the
province of Kostroma,
outside Moscow. Under his guidance the monastery
flourished and expanded still further. One of his major
undertakings there was the construction of a splendid
heated church with a refectory and bell tower. The
Saint's accomplishments in both the spiritual and
physical arenas prompted the Patriarch to place several
other monasteries under his supervision. Everywhere he
won the hearts of men.
He was a particular
favorite with the young and pious Tsar Feeder who,
together with the Patriarch, saw in St.
Mitrofan a prime candidate
for the episcopacy in a time which demanded forceful and
enlightened leadership. The consecration took place in
April 1682, just weeks before the death of the frail
Tsar Feodor precipitated a bloody crisis over the
question of succession between his much younger
brothers--the mentally retarded Ivan, from Tsar Alexis'
first wife, and the bright, high spirited Peter from
Tsar Alexis' second marriage. Patriarch Joachim was
among those whose support of Peter as heir to the throne
threatened the ambitious designs of Ivan's older sister
Sophia. Anxious to secure power for herself, she
enlisted the support of the
Streltsy, an unruly force of musketeers who not
infrequently meddled in government affairs. The result
was a bloody uprising which abated only when a
compromise was reached with the double crowning of the
two half-brothers, aged 15 and 10, and the recognition
of Sophia as regent. The recently consecrated Bishop
Mitrofan participated in the
coronation where the tension between the two rival
families was still all too apparent.
The
Streltsy in particular were
dissatisfied with the double crown solution, and when
the Old Believers took advantage of the change in power
to raise their grievances in a debate with the official
Church, the Streltsy were
only too willing to take their side. The confrontation
took place in the presence of the Patriarch, various
bishops, the two young tsars and their imperious regent.
Here, too, Bishop Mitrofan
witnessed the clash of inflexible wills, of anarchy and
autocracy, defiance and despotism, an atmosphere which
precluded any meaningful dialogue, any effort towards
reconciliation. The debate very soon degenerated into a
frenzy of insults and, instigated by the
Streltsy, spread into the
streets in the form of mob violence. It was several
months before Sophie managed to subdue her erstwhile
supporters, which she did by executing their leaders. At
the same time she sanctioned an intensified persecution
of the Old believers who had long been pitted against
the State by virtue of its rigorous enforcement of the
Nikontan reforms.
The fires of
rebellion had not yet subsided when Bishop
Miltofan left the capital to
take up his archpastoral
responsibilities in the newly formed diocese of
Voronezh. It was a
difficult assignment which placed him in the midst of
those very elements whose disruptive influence on the
life of Church and State he had just witnessed. Located
along the Don some distance from Moscow, Voronezh was a
vast area which attracted malcontents of every
description: fiercely independent Cossacks, Old
Believers and' schismatics,
outlaws... Although formerly under the jurisdiction of
Ryazan, its remoteness discouraged frequent visits by
its ruling hierarchs; there was a shortage of priests,
and most of the existing clergy were poorly educated and
ill-equipped to battle against the loose morals and
pagan influences still present among the populace;
resentment towards authority extended even into the
ranks of clergy and monastics,
many of whom had lost sight of their high calling.
Indeed, the holy bishop discovered that "people of every
class have grown accustomed to live as they please."
Despite
such formidable obstacles, Bishop
Mitrofan proved himself worthy of the Patriarch's
confidence in appointing him to such a post. He turned
his attention first to raising the spiritual level of
the clergy, exhorting them to set examples of righteous
living: "You, the shepherds, must offer to the sheep of
the Scriptures the prepared manna of the Word of God,
like the angels prepared the physical manna in the
desert. You, as intercessors, must in your prayers
imitate Moses and Paul, who prayed with such fervor for
their people...!" He chastized
severely and even defrocked priests guilty of serious
offenses, while he upheld the authority of those priests
who suffered from disrespectful parishioners. He visited
all the monasteries of his diocese and shored up their
spiritual foundations, recalling the monks to a
disciplined life of prayer and fasting and putting a
stop to the worldly influence exercised for so long by
lay benefactors. Among the rest of his flock he worked
hard to root out superstition, to correct immoral
behavior-unlawful cohabitation was widespread, to teach
them the principles of true Orthodoxy, and to win back
into the Church's fold those who had strayed into
heresy. The episcopal
residence became a haven for the poor and homeless, and
the saintly bishop set an example for his clergy in
paying frequent visits to hospitals and prisons. To
everyone he recommended the same rule: "Employ labor,
preserve moderation--and you 'will be rich; drink with
restraint, eat little--and you will be healthy; do good,
flee from evil--and you will find salvation."
The combined effect
of his actions, his preaching and his prayers was to
renew the strength of the Church's authority among the
people. This was symbolized in the construction of the
large, Annunciation cathedral in
Voronezh. The magnificent
hierarchical services attracted not only the local
populace to prayer, but also the young Tsar Peter who
spent long periods of time in Voronezh overseeing the
building of his fledgling navy. A deep friendship
developed between the youthful tsar and the aging
hierarch. Bishop Mitrofan
helped to dispel the hostility which many natives bore
towards the 'heretical' foreigners employed in the
shipyards and to develop respect for their technical
innovations. At the same time he strictly cautioned his
flock not to mix too freely with the foreigners so as
not to be influenced by their bad morals and erroneous
religious beliefs.
This concern gave rise
to a confrontation between Bishop
Mitrofan and the Tsar – the most memorable
incident in the Saint’s life. At the Tsar’s invitation,
the Bishop was approaching his island residence on a
visit when he noticed that the entrance was adorned with
statues of pagan gods. The holy Bishop was offended by
the display of these enemies of Christianity, seeing in
them a great temptation for his flock. He refused to go
further and returned home. On hearing of this, the Tsar
– who was stubbornly attached to European fashion and to
having his own way – flew into a rage and demanded that
the Bishop present himself or accept the penalty of
death for disobeying the royal will. “To me to live is
Christ,” quoted the Bishop, “and to die is gain” (Phil.
1:21). Preparing
worthily to meet his fate, he ordered the bell to be
rung for a solemn vigil. The Bishop’s strength of
conviction brought the Tsar to his senses and he ordered
the statues to be immediately removed. One has to know
the Tsar’s character to appreciate the height of respect
which this action represented.
In August, 1703, the
Bishop became ill unto death and took the great schema
with the name Macarius. He
reposed in peace a few months later on Nov. 23, having
left a final exhortation to his flock in a will
expressive of the great beauty of his soul. News of his
repose reached the Tsar on his way to
Voronezh, and he asked that
the funeral be postponed a few days until his arrival.
The monarch himself was among those who bore the
hierarch’s coffin to his resting place in the
Annunciation Cathedral Afterward he said to his
entourage: “No more do I have such a holy elder. May his
memory be eternal!”
Miracles attributable
to the Saint’s intercession and the discovery in 1831 of
the incorrupt condition of his relics were reported to
the Holy Synod which prepared for St.
Mitrofan’s official
glorification on
August 6, 1832.
Professor N.
Talberg ends his Life of
this great hierarch with the following tribute:
“Saint
Mitrofan exemplified the
devout prelate, ascetic, and benefactor, who
is strict with those who
trespass against the teachings of the Church and kind
towards all others. This is what made him so dear to the
devout Russian people, who keenly recognize those who
are true servants of God.”
Tsar Peter did not,
alas, heed the warnings of his spiritual benefactor, and
even encouraged those Western influences which so
disastrously undermined the Church’s authority and
invited the intellegentsia’s
departure from an Orthodox worldview. But those faithful
to the true spirit of Orthodox Christianity found – and
will always find – in St. Mitrofan,
a sure guide to the values and virtues which bring
eternal life.