On the 27th of May we celebrate the memory of a
newly-revealed Saint, of Russian background, whose holy remains are found to be
– seemingly against human logic – incorrupt and whole, close to 270 years after
his bodily death, at the town of New Prokopi (formerly Emin Agha) in Evia
Greece. We are referring to the Venerable John (Ivan) the Russian, the New
Confessor.
Among the soldiers of the Russian Tsar Peter the
so-called Great, who fought against the Turks in 1711 in that unfortunate war
for the Russians during which Peter himself almost got killed, was also a young
handsome lad called Ivan. Ivan was about 20 years of age who came from the
region known as Little Russia.
An innocent and simple peasant boy, he had been
brought up with orthodox piety, the piety that transformed a vast and untamed
barbaric land and made it “Holy Russia“.
It seems that apart from Church books and texts Ivan
was not educated. He knew, though, very well how to distinguish between good
and evil, between temporary and eternal, and between that which was according
to God and according to the world. He knew that the meaning, taste and beauty of
life is Jesus Christ. He also knew that by being with Him (Christ) and close to
Him you are blessed and fortunate, regardless of any thing that may befall you
in this life, whatever the magnitude and size of temptations that may come upon
you! Therefore from a young age he had cast his anchor to God and lived
according to His holy will; humbly, quietly, without hollow egotism and
affinity to the worldly and vain things. His breathing consisted of “Gospode
Iisouse Christe, Sinye Bogou, pomiloui mne” (i.e. “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of
God have mercy on me”). His greatest joy was the Divine Liturgy, and his
enjoyment was to practice never ending prostrations and veneration before the
icon of the most sweet “Bogoroditsa”, the Theotokos (Mother of God). For pleasure
he had fasting, asceticism, and hardship. His hope and goal was the “Tsarstvo”
of heaven, the Kingdom of God!
However, God does not put aside a “flower strewn life”
on earth for His elect. On the contrary, in the world He promises them sadness,
distress, hardship and temptations, because narrow is the gate that leads to
Life and upward and difficult is the way which leads to salvation. The
Christian life is not one of ease and comfort and enjoyment, but a cross!
Likewise for the pious Ivan he kept a cross.
In the Russo-Turkish war to which we have already
referred to, the Tatars who fought with the Turks took Ivan prisoner and sold
him as a slave to a Turkish official from Prokopi in Asia Minor. How can anyone
describe the life of slavery? Can one describe the humiliation, the insults,
the put downs, the reproaches, the beatings and tyranny? If one also takes into
account that Prokopi was the camp of the Genitsari who were “double the sons of
hell” even of the Turks, then can one understand the tortures of the Christian
lad!
If that wasn’t enough, he had also the extreme
pressure put on him to change his faith, to confess the “salavat”, to have the
“sounet” performed on him, thus turning him into a Muslim! Pressures, at times
gentle and at times violent! Sometimes with promises and sometimes with
threats! You see, Satan has many ways and methods up his sleeve. However, they
had fallen on a “hard nut”, so to speak, or rather onto a hard rock that had
become harder because of its constant contact with the Precious Stone, the
Cornerstone, which is Jesus Christ! Therefore his reply was always, both to the
promises and to the threats, a firm “niet” i.e. no!
“Your promises do not move me. Whatever you promise is
worthless, since listening to you I will be separated from Christ. Your threats
do not frighten me. Whatever you threaten me with, I ignore with the grace of
my Lord! For me is ‘to live in Christ and to die is gain’. Nothing can separate
me from the love of the Son of the Virgin!”
And to his Turkish master he said, “If you leave me
free to practice my religion, I will be most eager to your directives. But if
you force me to change faith, be aware that I give you my head with great joy
but not my Faith! I was born a Christian, and death will find me a Christian!“
God, seeing the unbending faith of his servant and his
fearless confession, softened the hard heart of Ivan’s master and slowly he
started to respect and like the young slave. Ivan’s piety had a lot to do with
this as well. The master saw him as a conscientious worker (he was a stable
hand) performing every task with great humility. He practised endless fasting
and prayer. He attended church whenever it was possible for him and to partake
of Holy Communion every Saturday. He did not lift his eyes to look at anyone
but was always shy and reserved. He was eager for any kind of honest work. He
slept in a corner of the stables on the hay, though he was offered a room of
his own. He stayed up for all-night vigils constantly praying on his knees, sometimes
in the stables, as if it was the stable of Bethlehem, and at other times in the
church of St. George, near the estate of his master! He rushed to help everyone
with love in his heart and never had a bad word for anyone! He forgave
immediately and sought forgiveness even if he was not to blame! He looked after
the animals in the stable with great care and followed his mounted master on
foot with dignity, the signs of virtue permanently drawn on his cheeks and his
lips constantly moving to the never ending Jesus Prayer: “Lord Jesus Christ,
Son of God, have mercy on me”…
All this sounds strange to the ears of those who look
at things in a secular worldly way, but all this was the result of slavery! The
young Ivan was free within his slavery. Free from all kinds of ties with
passions and sin. He was internally free, in his soul, in the depths of his
heart, because freedom is not something of the body but principally a matter of
the inner man! You could be free in the body, but a prisoner of corruption, of
sin! You could also be a slave like Ivan but inside feel the fullness of the
freedom that the presence of Christ grants. In this way the young Russian
obeyed his master “in the Lord” (Eph. 6: 5-8 and Col. 3: 22-24), rendering
“Caesar’s things to Caesar”, and refused obedience on the subject of faith,
rendering “God’s things to God” (Acts 5:29).
We can therefore say that Ivan’s position and his
coping with slavery is for us a proposal for life in freedom. Ivan’s example
shows us the manner in which a human being becomes and is truly free.
We, who as subordinates and employees, protest and
grumble at every order given us by our superiors. We constantly wait for the
time we will become masters so as to take revenge on others who become our
subordinates. We who occasionally obey something and consider it a humiliation;
we who as children consider our parent’s advice as “oppression”; we who have
been spoken of as “the neck of a Greek does not carry a yoke”; and we who
within the depths of our soul have the remains of a four hundred year slavery,
a more recent triple occupation and a few dictatorships to boot, have much to
learn from lvan’s stance and the manner in which he confronted slavery.
The Saint was not a fatalist. He did not say,
“slaughter me Agha that I may become a saint”. He knew what was happening to
him, and he also knew the reality of things. He knew that it was up to him if
he wanted to be enslaved or to remain free. If he gave up his soul and became a
Muslim the Turks would let him free. They would give him plenty of “bakshish”,
wealth, money, honour, and glory! However, he also knew that he would then be a
true slave! Slave of self-love, love of life and of egotism! If he refused to
give his soul, even if he physically remained a slave (as it came to be) or
even lost his life, he would be free (as he was). The obedience which he
practised to the various tasks set to him and the obedience to the will of his
master (of course that which did not conflict with Christ and His holy will),
was in essence, according to the aforementioned presuppositions, an act of
freedom! Moreover, is was a voluntary offering, and a sacrifice of his own will
(such as that practised by monks, who give up their will to their Geronda
(spiritual Elder), and obey him in the Holy Spirit).
The diligence, in which he carried out the various
tasks assigned to him, was based on the surety that he was doing the work of
Christ. He
had accepted slavery as a service given to him by Christ himself. Therefore he
kept to the letter, St. Paul’s word:
“Slaves
obey your earthly masters with deep respect and fear. Serve them sincerely as
you would serve Christ. Work hard, but not just to please your masters when
they are watching, but as Slaves of Christ, do the will of God with all your
heart. Work with enthusiasm, as though you were working for the Lord rather
than for people. Remember that the Lord will reward each one of us for the good
we do, whether we are slaves or free” ( Eph. 6:5-8 NLT).
Truly
the way he approached this, was as though the sweat he poured out for his
master was as sweat poured out on behalf of Christ. The work of his slavery was
seen as work done on behalf of the Gospel!
In
this way, all this brought abundant divine Grace on this servant of God, and
the young slave received the charisma of working miracles!
His
master and other Turks, seeing the miracles worked by Christ through Ivan,
started to treat him with much respect and honour and asked him to accept his
own separate quarters equipped with all amenities. He politely declined and
continued to live in his stable until the day he gave up his soul to the
Freedom- and Life-giver Christ on the 27th May 1730 at the approximate age of
forty years. This was soon after receiving the All-holy Mysteries.
Ivan
was first buried at the humble little church of St. George, near the estate of
his master, where he usually went to pray throughout the night. From there, in
1845, the Christians translated his relics, which had remained incorrupt, to
the large church of St. Basil that had been built during that time. He remained
there until 1924, working miracles on both Christians and Turks. At the
exchange of populations in 1924, the people of Prokopi, forced to move to
mainland Greece, brought his relics – such a precious treasure – with them to
Evia where they settled at Emin Agha, which was renamed New Prokopi.
St. John (Ivan) the Russian
At the initiative of the late and of blessed
memory Bishop of the region, Gregory the Metropolitan of Chalkida, the piety of
the people built a grand and beautiful church in memory and honour of the sweet
smelling rose of “Holy Russia”. There at last rest his Holy Relics that are
venerated by thousands of people throughout the year and produce streams of
miracles and healing of all kinds “to those who approach with faith”.
The
Venerable Ivan shows a special love for children through the many miracles
bestowed upon them by Christ. With visible intervention, many times he saved
children from certain death during earthquakes when roofs fell on to children during
school hours at Prokopi and in Athens at the Holy Umercenaries (Aghi Anargyri)
some years ago. He also saved countless children from terrible diseases and
other calamities.
Even
his help and benefaction to adults is not limited! Whole streams of miracles
have been bestowed upon them as well! Deaf and dumb are able to hear and speak!
Paralysed are able to walk in good health! Blind see again! Cardiopathics
return to their former strength! Cancer sufferers are healed! A certain woman
from Cyprus bent over due to a spinal problem so that her head reached her
knees, like the one in the Gospel, was healed a few years ago immediately she
donned the belt of the Saint. This miracle was made known widely by the Press.
A non-believer physician (who at one time, with great disrespect, had called
the relics of the Saint a “mummy”), was healed from an incurable and terminal
illness when the humble Saint appeared to him and said, “I am he whom you
called the ‘mummy’, and I heal you by the Grace of my Lord Jesus Christ”!
Demoniacs are freed from the demons that possess them! Saddened people are
comforted! Disillusioned people find hope! Weakened people are supported!
Disbelievers become believers! Pious people are strengthened in their piety!
The name of God is constantly glorified because of the small-framed slave boy
from Russia. This was the suffering stable-hand who lived as a slave without
slavery, voluntarily poor, unimportant, dressed in ragged clothing, obedient,
but firm though in his holy Orthodox Christian Faith, having the “Slava tebie
Bozhie” (Glory to you God) constantly coming from his mouth!
God
is glorified, and he also abundantly glorifies his creation, who love in
gloriousness and humility. God glorifies his genuine child, who “through the
words of his lips stayed firm on tough paths” (Psalm 16(17):4). God glorifies
His Confessor who was not embarrassed or afraid to confess Him “before all
people” and now God confesses him before all people, before the Angels and
Archangels, all the Saints and the Bogoroditsa (Theotokos), before all creation
visible and invisible!
BY
METROPOLITAN JOSEPH OF PROIKONESSOS
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