The Death of a Repentant Sinner
From my birthplace where I had been
occupied for nearly twenty years, it pleased the Lord to move me first to St.
Petersburg and then to that blessed corner of the Novgorod province, to that
quiet and God-fearing little town of Valdai, where only recently one could
still hear the forlorn tinkling of the bell affixed to the arch of the
coachman’s troika, (which has since given way, alas! to a new railroad). There
my wife and I developed a close friendship with one of the local priests who
also became our spiritual father. Once, during confession with my wife, he had
occasion to say to her: “But you know, even in this day and age some people are
bestowed the gift of seeing their guardian angel!”
Our dear priest communicated no
details and I decided to question him properly at the first opportunity. Here
is what I discovered, as I recorded in my notebook.
Today (April 25, 1907) I reminded our
spiritual father about my wife’ s confession and asked: “Batiushka, what was it
that you told my wife during confession about an angel appearing to one of your
spiritual children?”
“Yes,” he replied, “that actually
happened, but I learned of it through the confession of one of my parishioners,
and confessions are to be kept secret.”
I wasn’t deterred and began to press:
“But,” I asked, “is this parishioner
still living?”
“No, he died.”
“In that case,” I said, “what can
hinder you from making it known, especially if what you have to tell can serve
to benefit us sinners?’’
My spiritual father thought and
thought, and then related to me the following:
I had among my parishioners in the
village a man by the name of Dimitri. He was a peasant and led a bad life; he
stole, he cursed, he was a drunkard and a debauch. In short, he appeared to be
at the bottom of the barrel. He had been living this way for a long time and
there was no hope for any change. Then one day, as he was preparing to go to
the fields to do some tilling, he came into the passage which led out from his
dwelling, and suddenly he felt as though someone with tremendous force hit him
on the back of the head. The blow was such that one minute he was standing
upright and the next minute he was lying with his face smashed flat to the
floor. There had been no one in the passageway at the time and Dimitri was
perfectly sober. The swiftness of what had happened stunned and terrified him.
“I arrived at the field,” Dimitri
later told me in confession, “my face a bloody mess, I washed it in the stream,
but couldn’t seem to get down to work; my mind was fixed on puzzling out what
had happened. I sat at the edge of the field lost in thought; I recalled my
wicked life. For a long time I sat, turning this over in my mind until finally
I determined that I was done with my sinful habits and that I will begin a new
life as pleases God and befits a Christian. In tears I stood on my knees in the
middle of my field. Making the sign of the cross, I loudly cried out to God:
‘In Thy Name I vow to Thee that from henceforth I shall sin no more!’ And since
then I have become a different man; I broke loose from my old ways: I stole no
more, I stopped drinking, stopped swearing, ceased my wanton behavior…”
“Do you mean to say,” I asked
Dimitri, “that since making your vow you haven’t even met with any temptations?
“How could that be! Of course I have,
Batiushka. Often times I have felt a strong pull towards my old habits, but God
has helped me and I have been able to resist. Once, however, it did happen that
I gave in, the neighboring village was celebrating its parish feast and holding
a fair. There I was making my way when what should I see lying in the road but
someone’s wallet. It was stuffed tight and without thinking twice I snatched it
up and into the pocket, l didn’t even stop to count the money—I was afraid someone
might be watching. I had time only to see that the wallet contained a lot of
bills and a lot of silver. I continued on my way, thinking to myself: Well, I
certainly won’t return this wallet, and if I should meet its owner… Hey, but
isn’t this a tidy sum that’s come my way! And suddenly… BAM! I was down flat
against the stoney surface of the road. And just as before, my whole face was
cut and bleeding, and I hadn’t been drinking. Getting to my feet, I saw—where
the dickens!—a monstrous rock lying in the middle of the road where it had no
business. I must have tripped over it. Here I let out with the blackest, most
foul curse, and at that very moment, above me, directly over my head, something
suddenly made a noise, like some gigantic bird. I glanced upwards and froze:
over me, face to face, hovered an angel beating its wings. “Dimitri,” he said
severely, “where is your vow to God? I heard you make it in your field, I saw
you pray. And now you’re again back to your old ways?”
My entire body was shaking when
suddenly I found courage to cry out to him: “Who are you? One of hell’s demons,
or an angel from heaven?”
“I am from those above, not from
those below!” replied the angel and became invisible.
“It was awhile before I came to
myself. When I did, I took from my pocket the wallet and flung it away from me
as far as I could.
I did not continue to the festival
but returned home pondering what I had seen.”
“That,” said Batiushka, “is what
Dimitri told me in confession. And here is what later happened. To the
amazement of all who knew him, reports began to spread of Dimitri’s goodness,
his kindness. He became utterly transformed to the good down to the very soles
of his feet. Ten years passed since the angel’s appearance. Dimitri remained
true to his vow. In the eleventh year I was called to Dimitri’s village.
‘Batiushka! Dimitri has fallen ill; he asks that you come to see him.” I went
without delay. Coming into his cottage I found Dimitri in bed, his eyes closed.
I called to him and was startled when he suddenly sat bolt upright and thrust
his arms towards me. I moved away, frightened, as I was carrying the Holy
Gifts.
“’Watch yourself!’ I said, ‘don’t you
see, I have the Holy Gifts! I all but dropped them!’
“’Batiushka!’ cried Dimitri gasping
excitedly, ‘just now before you came I again saw the angel. He told me to
prepare myself as I am to die this very night.’
“What was he like?” I asked.
“I was blinded by his light!” replied
Dimitri in a tone of spiritual rapture.
“Did you ask him if God will forgive
your sins?”
“God will forgive that which a
spiritual father absolves ,” replied Dimitri firmly. “Whatever you loose here
will also be loosed there!”
I prepared to hear his confession.
I gave him Holy Communion and, sinner
that I am, I didn’t think he looked so very sick. He was still a robust
peasant, not yet old. I left him fully persuaded that he would recover. About
the angel—I didn’t know what to think.
That night Dimitri reposed…
This is what I was told, according to
his priestly conscience, by the kind pastor of one of the churches in the
peaceful town of Valdai.
Source: “On the Banks of God’s River,” by St. Nilus (translated by the St. Herman Brotherhood, 1969).
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