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THE MIGHTY MEEKNESS OF ST. JOHN THE RUSSIAN THE LIFE OF ST. JOHN 1690-1730 HE IS COMMEMORATED ON MAY 27TH
THE MIGHTY MEEKNESS OF ST. JOHN THE RUSSIAN
THE LIFE OF ST. JOHN 1690-1730
HE IS COMMEMORATED ON MAY 27TH
“But I
tell you a truly, there are some standing here, who
shall not taste death, till they see the
Kingdom of God.” (Luke 9:27).
One of the most popular Saints among
the Greek Orthodox people today is Saint John the Russian whose incorrupt
relics are the boast of the Island of Euboea, Greece. The multitudes who visit his shrine are such
that there is daily bus service to the shrine from Athens. Countless miracles flow from his relics and
icons, and even now when the spirit of the world is having such an oppressive
effect on traditional Greek Orthodox piety icons of the Saint are often found in
buses and nearly all Orthodox homes. St. John was neither a celebrated hierarch
nor an eloquent theologian but a simple young man who spent the better part of
his life in a stable.
St. John was born in the Southern part
of Russia, in the Ukraine, to pious Orthodox parents. He was still a young man
when he was conscripted by the Russian army to fight in a war against the
Turks. Sharing the unhappy fate of many
other Russian soldiers, the Saint was captured and sold as a slave to a Turkish
cavalry commander from the village of Procopi near Caesarea in Asia Minor.
Fanatic in their Muslim beliefs, the Turks inflicted cruel tortures upon their
Christian slaves in trying to force them to renounce their faith. While some succumbed to this form of
persuasion, many preferred to suffer death and a whole multitude of martyrs was
thus added to the heavenly choir. In
their misguided zeal the Turks would also kidnap the sons of Christians and
raise them as fanatical Muslim soldiers.
Procopi was the army camp of these Christian hating Janissaries and the
new slave of the Turkish Aga became a target of their derisions. But neither their insults nor the beatings of
his Turkish master were able to shake the faith of the pious Russian youth who
confessed that he would sooner die than lose what he treasured above all, the
Holy Orthodox Faith.
The blessed John was assigned to work
in the stable where he was also told to sleep.
Recalling the lowly Bethlehem cave and the manger where the Savior of
the world first laid His head, the Saint rejoiced in his rude dwelling
place. In his humility he regarded his
dark corner of the stable as a little paradise where he could freely offer
prayer and praise to the true God. The
unshakable firmness of his faith, his patience, fortitude, and gentleness of
spirit, gradually won the hearts of the Aga and his wife who offered the meek
stable boy to sleep in a small room near the hayloft. John, however, preferred to remain in the
stable where he could toil more assiduously in the ascetic life, bringing his
body into subjection to the spirit according to the Apostle’s command. He ate
very sparingly and spent long hours in prayer with the Psalms of David
continually on his lips. Weekly he
prepared himself to partake of the Body and Blood of Christ in the nearby
Church for he knew that without the strength of Christ he was powerless to
persevere on the path of the truth faith.
At night he would secretly go and keep vigil in the narthex of the
Church. The Lord rewarded the labors of His faithful servant and through him
bestowed blessings also upon his Turkish master who became one of the wealthy
and powerful men of Procopi. The Aga understood the cause of his new prosperity
and did not shrink from telling it to his fellow citizens.
Once, the Aga made a pilgrimage to
Mecca a city most sacred to the Muslims.
While he was away, his wife invited friends and relatives for a meal and
to pray for the Aga’s safe return from such an arduous journey. While they were
getting ready to eat the mistress turned to John, who was serving the guests
and said, “How much pleasure your master would have if he were here now and ate
this pilaf with us!” The pilaf, a common
grain dish of the Middle East, was a favorite of the Aga. Wishing the best for his master and firmly
believing in the almighty power of God, John asked for a plate full of pilaf
from his mistress, saying that he would send it to his master in Mecca. The guests laughed but the mistress asked the
cook to comply with the youth’s request thinking that he would take it to some
poor Christian family as was his custom.
Those who are familiar with the Gospel
should not be astonished at what happened next for did not the Lord say that
faith as small as a mustard seed is enough to move mountains? Strong in his faith, the blessed one returned
with the plate of pilaf to the stable and he petitioned the Lord to help him
fulfill his pledge to deliver the pilaf to his master in Mecca. In answer to
his prayer the plate of pilaf disappeared.
What amazed the entire household of Aga when he returned from Mecca was bringing
with him the copper plate which had held the pilaf. The Aga had been equally astonished to
discover the steaming plate of pilaf in his locked room when he returned from
the Mosque in Mecca. Still greater was his confusion when he realized that the
copper plate was engraved with his initials just as all the vessels in his
house. “For the sake of Allah, I cannot understand how it was brought to Mecca
and who brought it!” When his wife told
him of John’s request, they both recognized the strange occurrence to be a
miracle of God and henceforth all considered John as a righteous man who had
found favor with God.
Once again the Aga and his wife tried
to persuade the blessed one to change his dwelling place but the Saint preferred
to remain amongst the animals willingly fulfilling his duties and continuing
steadfast in his ascetic struggles. He
persevered in this manner of life until, after a few years, he became ill. Foreseeing his end, he called for a priest
and asked to receive Holy Communion. Fearing the fanaticism of the Turks, the
priest did not want to bring Holy Communion to the stable. He received wisdom
from above and did the following thing. He hollowed out an apple and lined the
cavity with beeswax. He placed the Holy Communion inside it and was thus able
to safely bring Holy Communion to the Saint.
Upon receiving the Body and Blood of the Lord, the blessed one
surrendered his holy soul into the hands of God whom he loved so much. He reposed on the 27th day of May,
1730 having spent some forty years in this temporal vale of sin and
sorrow.
The Saint was given a Christian burial
by order of the Aga who, as a token of his love and great respect for the
Saint, gave an expensive cloth to cover his relics. Three years later a light appeared over the
tomb of Saint John which was seen by many.
At the same time, the Saint appeared in a dream to his father confessor
revealing that it was the will of God that his relics be exhumed for his body
was incorrupt. Until 1924 the relics
were kept in the Church of St. George in Procopi. When, however, the exchange of populations
took place between Greece and Turkey and many of the Christian inhabitants of
Procopi were resettled on the Island of Euboea, the relics of their beloved
Saint John were also moved. They were
received with great joy and veneration by the Greeks who built a majestic
Church in his honor there in the village of New Procopi. To this day, streams of pious Greek pilgrims
make their way to this village on the Island of Euboea where the Saint answers
the faith of their earnest petitions with his strong and quick intercessions
before the throne of God.
This biography is based on the life of the
Saint by Photius Kontoglou the father of the renaissance of Byzantine
iconography of the 20th century.
MIRACLES OF SAINT JOHN
The Saint performed many wonders even
after his blessed repose. A descendent of the Aga told many of the following
miracles: “My children would not live
except for a short time and would die while yet infants. Their unfortunate mother, after she had lost
hope in the wisdom of medicine, fled without my knowledge to the relics of the
slave John so that he might grant her a little child which would not die while
yet young so that we also might rejoice to see it as a young man or even a
young girl. In truth the righteous John
heard the supplications of my wife. God
granted us a strong little boy whom we called, as you know, Kole Guwan Oglu
(that is, Son of the Slave John) and he lives through the power of God through the
prayers of John even until today.”
Several times St. John has appeared in
dreams and visions warning of impending dangers. Once he warned some Greek school children
that the roof of the school was about to fall; they had time enough to jump
underneath their desks and when the roof fell, its beams came down upon the
desks without striking even one of the children. More recently we have heard about the
miraculous healings of two severe cases of meningitis, one a 19 year old
shepherd boy in Southern Greece and the other a 3 year old boy in London. Today a part of the right hand of St. John is
enshrined in a special silver reliquary in the Holy Transfiguration Monastery
in Boston, MA where many people come to venerate it and to ask for the
intercessions of this simple Confessor of the Orthodox Christian Faith knowing
that the Lord who resists the proud hears speedily the prayers of the meek.
THE CANCER HOSPITAL OF ST. SAVAS IN ATHENS
In
the big Athenian hospital of St. Savas a mother had been battling advanced
cancer and the doctors had given up treating her and told her children to take
her home. The doctors said: “Do not tire
yourselves anymore by coming to the hospital to take care of your mother.” The family was from the northern city of
Kavala. The doctors said: “There is no hope for her life to be saved. Take her
home, for if she dies here you will have the problem of dealing with hospital
procedures and regulations.” Her five
children, who were gathered around their mother’s bed, began to weep on hearing
the news from the doctors. They wept for
it was their mother the root of life who was dying and we all have only one
mother in this life. As this was going
on, an unknown lady was passing by their room where they were gathered. She saw the tragic scene and understood what
was happening. She asked the children:
“Is this your mother? Listen to me; do not go on like this. Beyond the power of science and doctors there
is God and His Saints. Whatever was humanly possible you did. Recently I went on a pilgrimage to the shrine
of Saint John the Russian at Prokopi, in Euboea where his holy incorrupt body
is preserved. I took a little oil from the oil-lamp hanging over the Saint’s
body with which to make the sign of the Cross over someone who is ill here in
the hospital. I will do the same for
your mother and God will provide.”
How true
it is that a few words, a little compassion, a little support, can greatly
comfort and help one’s fellow man who is in distress or who is grieving. Even if one sit’s silently next to someone
who is ill gives them courage. With a
piece of cotton the unknown lady made the sign of the Cross on the forehead of
the sick woman and left. It is true that
divine energy can be generated not only directly but also through articles and
substances used in worship such as relics, holy water and oil for the Church
has absolute faith in the therapeutic power of Christ. This humble way of transmitting the powerful
and uncreated energies of God to sick bodies by making the sign of the Cross on
them using blessed oil or water from the Church is described by the Fathers of
the Church as the most beneficial and purist form of cure offered by God (St.
John Chrysostom). It can be understood
as a profound act of faith that someone should feel unworthy to ask Christ
Himself through the intercessions of His Saints to come to the aid of a sick
fellow human being. Is this not the essence of the power of Christ transmitted
to us human beings through the simple elements of bread and wine in Holy
Communion?
But let
us now return to our story. A little
while after the unknown lady had made the sign of the Cross over the sick
woman, she opened her eyes and seeing that her children were weeping, she
nodded to one of them to come close to her.
Her eldest daughter drew near to her and her mother whispered to her:
“Why are you crying, my child?” “Mother,
it has been so many days since you have been aware that we are here and have
talked to us and you ask us why we are weeping.” “Yes, my child but a little while ago a young
soldier came and told me that his name was Saint John the Russian and he made
the sign of the Cross on my forehead and told me that I will return to
life.” In spite of her incurable
disease, the mother recovered completely and now lives with her children and
grandchildren as ordained by God and His Saint.
A
WALKING STICK
If you enter the Church of Saint John
the Russian today you will see amongst many other things hanging before the
shrine of the Saint, like the spoils of war, a simple and poor gift, a walking
stick. It belongs to Maria Siaka, an old
lady from the village of Frenaro near Ammohostos, Cyprus. For eighteen years she had been a hunchback
and bent over so double that her face was but a short distance from the
ground. On the 11th of
August, 1978 relatives of the old lady, together with some one hundred Cypriots
brought her to the Church of Saint John.
Upon entering the Church they lifted her up to reverence the Saint’s incorrupt
body. Looking at the blessed body of
Saint John the old lady wept and beseeched him to grant her a little divine
help for the remainder of her life. Saint John saw the beauty of her soul, her
grief and her deep faith. At that moment,
before the eyes of everyone there it seemed that an invisible force seized her
shoulders with tremendous power and slowly began to unfold her body. The spine creaked and returned to its
original form; the old lady stood upright. Her fellow villagers wept, the bells
of the Church rang out in joy, and prayers of thanksgiving were offered by all
the Cypriots who could not hold back their tears. Anyone who has had the good fortune to be
present when a miracle occurs can understand these expressions of joy. Finally, the voice of the old lady was heard:
“What can I give you my young man, my Saint? I am poor. I will give you my walking stick which I will
not need for the rest of my life.” The
daily papers of Nicosia reported: “Maria Siaka, after her pilgrimage to the
Church of Saint John the Russian in Greece can now, after nearly twenty years
of being bent over double and seeing only the ground can now see the faces of
her fellow villagers. Thanks to the
miracle of the Saint she is restored and completely well.”
DO YOU HATE ME MY SAINT
Eight years have passed since the
wedding of M. Yiorgos K and his wife Archondoula and all this time they have
waited in the hope of having a baby. A deep and incurable sorrow afflicts
them. How sad life seems to be when a
woman cannot become a mother and does not have children. To give courage to his
wife, her husband whispered to her one day, “be patient it is God’s will. Nothing will be changed by tears and
grieving. The purpose of marriage is not
only to have children; above all it is to enable us to grow spiritually and to
become one with God here on earth and in eternity. Mrs. Archondoula continued to pray every day
with all her heart and soul. From the
time she was a little girl her mother had taught her to pray always because, as
she used to tell her, “strong people pray and prayer arms people with patience
and endurance during life’s difficulties.”
From her youth to the present day she
had come innumerable times with her family here to the Saint. Many were the times she said to Saint John:
“My great Saint John, I beg you, I beseech you, to intercede for me with God
that I might be worthy of becoming a mother.
But I have been told by men and science for eight years now that I am not going to become a mother and that
I am not going to clasp a baby in my arms.
My house will be empty and my heart full of grief. I will wait, my Saint, for an answer from
heaven that God will grant me a child so that my house, my heart and my life
will be full of joy and happiness. I will wait, my great Saint.”
After this prayer, It is the evening
of December 3rd, 1979. Mrs.
Archondoula, gloomy and tearful is trying to concentrate on her prayers. But she is unable to: she is tired, she does
not feel well and she has a bad feeling inside of her. She wants to weep, to scream and lash out. She turned to the icon shrine and on seeing
the icon of Saint John burst into tears.
She said: “What after all have I done to you, my Saint? Do you hate me?
Why? Why does not God give me this happiness my Saint, do you hate me?” Later
on that night a little after midnight someone was heard climbing the stairs of
their house. The couple woke up. “Do not
say anything,” whispered her husband.
“It is one of our employees who has mistaken the time and has come to
get the keys to the office. Do not talk
and he will leave.” Then there was a
knock on the door of their room, and the door opened. A glow appeared in the
darkness clearly revealing the figure of Saint John. Then they heard a voice: “Archondoula,
what was that you said in your prayers tonight? Saints do not hate
anybody. It is not God’s will for you to
have a baby yet. Another two years will
go by and then this happiness will be granted to you.” The light then vanished and the voice of the
Saint faded. Two years went by and the joy of God came abundantly with the
first child, and then with a second and a third. The sweet voices of the children filled the
house and the hearts of their parents.
“The righteous cry and the Lord hears and delivers out of all their
troubles.”(Psalm 34:17)
HOLY WEEK AND EASTER 1980
It
was the afternoon of Palm Sunday at the Shrine of Saint John the Russian. This couple said to the priest there: “Father,
my wife and I have come here to attend and celebrate with you the services of
Holy Week; the Passion of our Lord. We
both want to come to confession and if we are worthy to receive Holy
Communion. But before you hear our
confession we would like to tell you about our trials and tribulations.” The
wife had been on the phone to Thessaloniki. As soon as she put the phone down, the
wife and the husband decided to leave for Thessaloniki to find their daughter. They explained: “We live in a small town in
the province of Corinth. The owners of the house where our daughter had been
staying in Thessaloniki did not hide anything from us. Our daughter had left the
house eight days ago and they thought it likely she was being sought by the
narcotics division of the police.
Lately, she had been returning to the house at dawn and sleeping all
day. A lecturer at the university who
was a friend of ours cast us into a state of agony and fear with just one
sentence: “You must find your daughter at any cost, he said, she must be in
great danger.” We searched for her but
in vain.
Two months later she telephoned her
mother and using vulgar language that she never used before threatened my wife
saying that we should not try to find her again and that she was finished with
us. She did not want to know us and the
university was a waste of time for there were better things in life. For six months now, Father, we have abandoned
everything else and used all possible means to find her. She has vanished into thin air. Either she
has gone abroad or the drugs have killed her and her body has been disposed
of. The security police of Thessaloniki
told us that this year more than two hundred girls are missing in Greece and
most of them will never be found. Under
no circumstances could we stay at home this Easter. We went to Thessaloniki again and were
sickened to the depths of our souls by the filthy things we saw at those clubs
where we were trying to find our daughter.
We returned home but could not bear to stay there. We were at a complete loss as to what to
do. You see, we do not have any other
children. We are alone in the world. Our
last hope is Saint John the Russian whom you serve here. All Greece knows about his miracles. We have decided to spend Holy Week near him
in fasting beseeching him to save our child.”
On Holy Saturday they heard the words
of the troparion (hymn): “Before the mystery of God let everyone be silent and
stand with fear and trembling.” Father,
we will be going home tonight which is Holy Saturday. We thought we would attend the resurrection
service in our small village.” They left
with hope in their hearts. There was joy written all over their faces. On the afternoon of Easter Sunday all the
bells of the Church of Saint John the Russian were ringing for the Agape Service. I was wearing my festal priestly vestments
and holding the candle of resurrection and was about to start the service when I noticed through
the half-opened south door of the altar a couple coming towards me with a young
woman.
The couple called out to me: “Father,
Father, this is our daughter. Look, this
is our Effie, our beloved girl. We found
her in our home. She was waiting for us,
Father. How can we thank the great
Saint? Oh God, God, glory be to you and
your Saint.” “Share in your parent’s
joy, Effie. I am very joyful too seeing
you here at Saint John’s.” “Father, I survived.
This week I hovered between life and death. I had chosen death but an
invisible power, after a superhuman struggle that took place within me,
literally snatched me from the grasp of death and brought me back to life, to
my house. I will sing Father; I too will
sing Christ is risen from the dead.”
Effie dissolved into tears and her father embraced her shaking body in
his arms. The Agape Service was delayed
twenty minutes and people were waiting but in reality the Agape Service had
already begun with Effie’s resurrection.
“..And
let us cry and shout, arise O Lord You who resurrect the fallen.” This is taken from the Easter Service.
This article about the life and miracles of
Saint John the Russian is taken from the book “Life and Recent Miracles of
Saint John the Russian” by Father John Vernezos of the Holy Shrine of Saint
John the Russian Prokopi, Euboea, Greece, 1999.
Edited by:
+Fr. Constantine (Charles) J. Simones,
January 21, 2014, in Waterford, CT, USA, cjsimones300@gmail.com,
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