Archbishop
Dmitri of Dallas (1923-2011)
Above is an
image taken today of the incorrupt body of Archbishop Dmitri of Dallas. He died
in the summer of 2011, and was buried unembalmed, according to Orthodox
tradition. On Friday his body was disinterred for transferral to his new tomb
in St. Seraphim Orthodox Cathedral in Dallas, which was his own. When the
cemetery personnel opened his coffin, they found Vladyka Dmitri incorrupt.
That is to
say, his body had not decayed. He has been buried for four and a half years
under the Texas ground, and his body looks like it did the day he died.
This is a
miracle. In Orthodox Christianity, it is seen as a sign that the deceased was,
and is, a saint. If you read The Brothers Karamazov, you may remember that
whether or not the deceased Elder Zosima was incorruptible was a feature of the
narrative.
In Dallas
today, they found their incorruptible. I don’t suppose a soul who knew Vladyka
Dmitri is surprised. I knew him in the last five years of his life. What a dear
and holy man he was. He had an important part in my own coming to Orthodoxy. In
the summer of 2005, broken and grieving over years of scandal and corruption in
the Catholic Church, my wife and I began attending St. Seraphim Cathedral. We
did not intend to convert to Orthodoxy; we simply wanted to be in a place where
we could be confident the real presence of Christ was in the Eucharist
(Catholic doctrine recognizes the validity of Orthodox sacraments), the liturgy
was reverent and beautiful, and we could worship without being so overwhelmed
by anger.
After a
couple of visits, we received an invitation to a party at the Archbishop’s
house, after the Dormition feast. I felt divided about this. For one, I didn’t
want to go to a fancy archbishop’s house. For another, I had had enough of
bishops and archbishops, men who had wrecked the Catholic Church. I didn’t want
to get mixed up with an Orthodox one.
But we went
anyway, showing up on a rainy August afternoon at the address on the card. It
turned out to be not a palatial residence, but the modest two-story woodframe
house behind the cathedral. Could this house, with the paint peeling, really be
where the Archbishop of Dallas and the South lives? I knocked on the door, and
in we walked, with our kids.
The house was
jammed with people from the congregation. There were Russians and other Slavs,
and Americans too. You could hardly move for all the people. Every inch of
counter space in the kitchen was filled with dishes bearing up Russian food. At
the far end of one counter was a gorgeous flan, made by Vladyka Dmitri himself.
He loved to cook.
There he was,
sitting at the table, his long, Gandalf beard resting on his black cassock. His
eyes twinkled. He greeted us kindly. Later, we watched him remove himself to a
side room where kids were playing, sit down on a low couch, and talk to them
like they were his own children. He was 82 years old then, and was to those
children a kindly grandfather figure.
“Come see
this,” Julie said, pointing to Dmitri among the children. That’s not something
we were used to seeing.
A short while
later, in the kitchen, a Russian and a Ukrainian poured vodka shots for
themselves and for me, and raised a toast to the Archbishop. “To Vladyka!” we
said, then downed the vodka. Meanwhile, the ceiling began to leak in the poor
old house. We chose to ignore it, because it was time to bless the food.
Everybody became quiet as Vladyka turned toward the icon and began to pray.
It was a
family dinner. That’s how it struck us. Archbishop Dmitri, born Robert Royster
in Teague, Texas, was the opposite of everything I had come to expect in a
bishop. He was humble and kind and gentle. He loved his people, and his people
loved him. I remember thinking how good it would be to be led by such a man.
One day a few
years later, after had become Orthodox, we were at Forgiveness Vespers, the
pre-Lenten ritual that all Orthodox parishes do in which each parishioner must
ask each other for forgiveness, and then offer it in return. Watching that
tall, elderly archbishop bow before our three year old daughter Nora and ask
her forgiveness — it took my breath away.
Nora did not
know it at the time, but it was a saint of God who did her that honor.
Here’s what
will happen today in Dallas:
On Saturday
morning, March 5th, 2016 His Beatitude, Metropolitan TIKHON, will preside at
the Divine Liturgy in St Seraphim Cathedral at 9:30 AM. Following the Divine
Liturgy a Pannikhida will be served, after which we will solemnly process
around the cathedral carrying the coffin of Archbishop Dmitri and place it over
the prepared crypt in the Memorial Chapel. After the final litany, we will
lower the coffin containing the body of Archbishop Dmitri into his final
earthly resting place.
Holy Dmitri
of Dallas, pray for us. What a blessing he was to all of us who knew him.
A saint. Our
Vladyka. What a gift.
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