OBITUARY OF ARCHIMANDRITE PANTELEIMON
Archimandrite Panteleimon, founder of the Holy
Transfiguration Monastery in Brookline, Massachusetts, fell asleep in peace
this morning, Tuesday, December 14/27, at 5 a.m., of kidney failure, at the
monastery.
He was born John Metropoulos in Detroit, Michigan, on
June 21, 1935. When his elder brother was incurably sick he made a vow that if
his brother were healed, he would become a monk in the Russian monastery of
Saint Panteleimon on Mount Athos. His brother being healed, John went to Mount
Athos and fulfilled his vow, receiving as a monastic name that of the Patron
Saint of the monastery.
While on Mount Athos he made the acquaintance of the
saintly Elder Joseph the Cave-dweller (†1959), who spiritually took him under
his wing. Because of problems with his papers, Father Panteleimon had to return
to the United States in 1958 and, while in Boston seeking to return to the Holy
Mountain, he received a letter from the Elder Joseph in which he gave him the
obedience to found a monastery in the United States. Daunted by such a task, he
lived here and there in the Boston area, often almost homeless, until the Holy
Transfiguration Monastery was founded by him and the late Father Arsenius in
1961.
Over the fifty-five years that the Brotherhood has
existed, it has been spiritually guided by Father Panteleimon. While his
achievements are many, it should be noted in particular that he encouraged and
even insisted upon translating the Church services, such as the Menaion,
Pentecostarion, and Prayer Book, and patristic texts such as The Ascetical
Homilies of Saint Isaac the Syrian, into English, the language of the land,
which he considered a missionary and Apostolic labor; painting icons according
to the traditional style of Byzantine iconography as championed by the blessed
Fotios Kontoglou; producing incense in the Athonite style; and supporting
ourselves by the work of our own hands rather than depending on donations.
Above all he taught us to keep the Orthodox Faith with love and exactness as we
have received it from the holy Fathers, avoiding the two extremes of
compromising our confession of faith on the one hand, and of a fanaticism that
considers that only oneself will be saved on the other.
In 2012 he was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic
cancer and retired to our hermitage of the Holy Apostles on the coast of Maine,
where he spent the next three years in prayer and in composing a paper entitled
“The Controversy of the Holy Name on the Holy Mountain in 1912” which the
monastery hopes to distribute in the near future. In February of this year he
became so sick that he was rushed to the hospital in Boston, where they found
his kidney function so low they did not think he would be revived, having blacked
out. Yet he did, and they considered it something of a miracle. From then he
was forced to return to the monastery in Brookline, where he finished the
paper, composed his last will and testament, and then began to decline quickly
in November. By the mercy of God he was bed-ridden for only the last week, with
fluid in his lungs for the last few days. He is now at rest, with a deeply
peaceful expression on his face. The funeral will be held at the monastery on
Thursday at 10 a.m.
Holy Transfiguration Monastery, Brookline, MA
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