A Brief Life of Our Father Among the Saints
ARCHBISHOP JOHN
WONDER-WORKER OF SHANGHAI AND SAN FRANCISCO
"This man, who appears weak is, in fact, a miracle
of ascetic steadfastness and determination in our time of universal spiritual
weakening." - Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky)
"If you desire to see a living Saint, go to Bitol
to Father John." - Bishop Nicholas (Velimirovich)
[Reprinted with permission and the blessing of Metropolitan
Laurus of Holy Trinity Monastery from "A Brief Life of Saint John, Wonder-worker
of Shanghai and San Francisco", The Russian Orthodox Church Abroad:
A Short History by Saint John of Shanghai and San Francisco, Holy Trinity
Moanstery, Jordanville, New York, USA, 1997]
[Click on the images for larger versions]
Saint John was born on the 4th of June 1896 on the country estate of
his parents, descendants of nobility, Boris Ivanovich and Glaphira Mikhailovna
Maximovitch in the little town of Adamovka in the Province of Kharkov.
At Baptism he received his name in honour of Saint Michael the Archangel.
His paternal ancestors were of Serbian extraction. One of his ancestors,
Saint John, Metropolitan of Tobolsk, was an ascetic of holy life, a missionary,
and a spiritual writer. Saint John of Tobolsk lived in the first
half of the 18th century and was glorified in 1916. His glorification
was the last celebrated during the reign of the Tsar Martyr Nicholas.
Saint John was an obedient child; his sister recalls that it was very
easy for his parents to raise him. Ruminating about his future during
his youth, he could not make a definite decision as to a career, being
unsure as to whether he should dedicate himself to military or civil service
He only knew that his future life would be guided by an insuperable desire
to stand up for the Truth, which was nurtured in him by his parents.
He was inspired by the examples of those people who live their lives for
the Truth.
He commenced his education at the Poltava Military Academy which, Vladyka
himself would later say, "was dedicated to one of the glorious pages of
the history of Russia." He was an exemplary student, but he disliked
two subjects; gymnastics and dancing. He was well liked at the academy,
but nevertheless felt he should choose a different path. This idea
was especially furthered by contact with the well known religious instructor
at the academy, Archpriest Sergei Chetverikov, author of books about Saint
Paisius Velichkovsky and the Holy Optina Elders, and with the rector of
the local seminary, Archimandrite Varlaam. The day of Michael Maximovitch's
completion of the military academy coincided with that of Archbishop Anthony's
(Khrapovitsky) investiture to the catherdra of the See of Kharkov.
This renowned hierarch and theologian was the main advocate of the restoration
of the patriarchate in Russia, subsequently the Metropolitan of Kiev and
Galich, and finally the First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.
Throughout his life this Archpastor inspired the church-oriented academic
youth in all matters spiritual thanks to his principal attribute - his
sincere love for them. Having heard about young Michael Maximovitch,
of whom many spoke in church circles, Archbishop Anthony desired to meet
him. It was in Kharkov that Archbishop Anthony became Saint John's
spiritual guide. This relationship continued throughout Archbishop
Anthony's whole life.
In Kharkov Michael entered Law School, which he completed in 1918, and
served for a while in the Kharkov court during the days when the Ukraine
was ruled by the Cossack leader, (Hetman) Skoropatsky. But the heart
of the future hierarch was far from this world. When not studying,
he spent all of his free time at the university reading spiritual literature,
especially favouring the lives of saints. "While studying the worldly
sciences," said the Saint during his election to the episcopacy, "I delved
all the more into the study of the Science of sciences, into the study
of the spiritual life." Visiting the monastery in which Archbishop
Anthony lived, Michael had the opportunity to pray at the tomb of an ascetic
of the first half of the 18th century, Archbishop Leletius Leontievish,
a deeply revered but not yet glorified righteous one. The soul of
the young saint was pierced by a thirst to obtain the true goal and path
of life in Christ.
A great impression was made upon Michael by Bishop Varnava (subsequently
the Patriarch of Serbia) during his visit to Kharkov. The young Serbian
bishop, who was warmly greeted by Archbishop Anthony, related to him the
suffering of the Serbian people under the Turkish Yoke. This was
in January 1917, before the revolution, when the Serbs, who were battling
against Germany, Austria and Turkey, had almost no territory which was
free of enemy occupation. Through the inspiration of Archbishop Anthony
the response of the Russian people in support of the Serbs was unanimous.
In this example, Michael recognised the universal significance of the Church
and the duty of a bishop to respond to the needs of all Orthodox people.
In turn, Bishop Varnava, upon becoming Patriarch, was particularly hospitable
and helpful to the hierarchy of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.
The Russian Revolution forced the Maximovitch family to flee their homeland
and evacuate to Yugoslavia, where Michael was able to begin his theological
studies at the University of Saint Sava which he completed in 1925.
During his last year, Michael was tonsured a reader in Belgrade by Metropolitan
Anthony, who also, in 1926, tonsured him a monk in the Milkovo Monastery
giving him the name John in honour of his distant relative, the recently
glorified Saint John of Tobolsk. Shortly thereafter he was ordained
hierodeacon. On the Feast of the Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos
into the Temple, the young monastic became a hieromonk. During these years
he was a religious instructor at the Serbian State High School, and in
1929 he became an instructor in the Serbian Seminary of the Holy Apostle
John the Theologian in the city of Bitol - part of the Ochrid Diocese.
In Bitol, Saint John won the love of his students
and it was here that his spiritual struggles became known to those around
him. Saint John prayed continually, served the Divine Liturgy daily,
or attended Liturgy and partook of Christ's Holy Mysteries, fasted strictly
and usually ate once a day late in the evening. With fatherly love
the Saint instilled in the seminary students high spiritual ideals.
They were the first to discover his great ascetic podvig noticing that
the Saint never lay down to sleep, and
when he did doze off, it was only from utter exhaustion and often during
a prostration in the corner under the icons. Bishop Nicholas (Velimirovich)
valued and loved the young hieromonk John. Upon leaving the seminary
once, he turned to a small group of seminarians and said, "Children, listen
to Fr. John. He is an Angel of God in the image of a man."
The seminarians themselves were convinced that Saint John truly lived an
angelic life.
His patience and humility were similar to the patience and humility
of the great ascetics and desert dwellers. He relived the events of
the Holy Gospel as if they were taking place before his eyes. He
always knew the chapter where to find an event and, when needed, could
always quote a given verse. He knew the character and details of
every student, so that at any moment he could assess what a student knew
or did not know. Saint John had a special gift of God: an unusually
good memory. Consequently, such assessments of his students could
be made without referring to any previous records or notes. Mutual
love bound Saint John and the seminarians together. For them he was
the incarnation of all of the Christian virtues. They did not see
any shortcomings in him, not even in his speech (Saint John had a slight
stammer). There was no problem, personal or social, which he could
not solve quickly. There was not a question for which he could not
find an answer. His answer was always concise, clear, complete and
exhaustive because he was truly an educated man. His education, his
"wisdom," was based on the most stable foundation, "the Fear of God."
The Saint prayed zealously for his seminarians. Each night he would
make his rounds, checking everyone; adjusting one's pillow, another's blanket.
Upon leaving the room he blessed the slumberer with the sign of the cross.
During the first week of Great Lent, Saint John ate nothing more than
one prosphora a day, the same during Passion Week. When Great Saturday
came his body was completely exhausted. But on the Day of the Holy
Resurrection of the Lord he was revived, his strength returned. At
Paschal Matins he triumphantly exclaimed, "Christ is Risen!" as if Christ
resurrected specifically on that holy night. His face shone.
The Paschal joy which the Saint radiated was imparted to everyone in the
church. Anyone who was ever in church with Saint John on Pascha experienced
this.
In 1934 the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad decided
to elevate Saint John to the rank of bishop and assign him to Shanghai
as vicar bishop of the Diocese of China. As for Saint John himself,
nothing could have been further from his mind, which is obvious from an
account of one of his acquaintances from Yugoslavia. Once, when meeting
him on the tramway she asked him what had brought him to Belgrade.
He answered that he came to Belgrade because he had mistakenly received
a notice in place of another hieromonk John, who was to be made a bishop.
When she saw him again the next day, he told her that the mistake was worse
than he had expected, because it turned out that they had decided to consecrate
him a bishop. When he objected, pointing out his stammer, he was
told that the Prophet Moses had the same difficulty. The consecration
took place on the 28th of May 1934. Saint John was the last bishop
to be consecrated by Metropolitan Anthony.
The young bishop arrived in Shanghai from Serbia
on November 21, 1935, the Feast of the Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos
into the Temple. Many people had gathered on the dock to meet their
new archpastor who wholeheartedly undertook his responsibilities and soon
became an established figure in the city of Shanghai. The completion
of a large cathedral as well as the resolution of an existing jurisdictional
conflict awaited him. Saint John quickly quelled this conflict and,
in time, established relations with the Serbs, Greeks, and Ukrainians in
his diocese. The Saint completed the construction of the huge cathedral
in honour of the Icon of the Mother of God "Surety of Sinners" and a three
story house with a bell tower. He dedicated special attention to
the spiritual education of the children. He personally taught the
Law of God to the upper classes of the
Commercial Institute and always attended the examinations for the religious
courses in all of the schools of Shanghai. He was the inspirer and
leader in the construction of churches, a hospital, an asylum for the mentally
ill, an orphanage, a home for the elderly, a community dining hall - in
short, all of the social undertakings of Russian Shanghai. The Saint
was one with his flock. He participated directly in the work of virtually
all emigrant organisations.
However, while participating actively in such an array of worldly affairs,
he was foreign to the world. From the first day of his arrival in
Shanghai, the Saint, as before, served Divine Liturgy daily. No matter
where he was, he was always present at Divine Services. Once, as
a result of his continual standing, the Saint's foot was severely swollen
and a group of physicians, fearing gangrene, prescribed immediate hospitalisation.
The Saint refused. The Russian doctors informed the Parish
Council, that they could not take any responsibility for the health and
even the life of the patient. The members of the Parish Council,
after extensive requests and even threats to forcefully hospitalise him,
compelled the Saint to agree, and he was sent to the hospital. That
evening however, he left the hospital on his own and at six o'clock was
serving the All-Night Vigil as usual.
He performed all of the daily services completely and unabridged, so
that, at Compline, five or more canons would be read, so as to honour all
of the Saints. The Saint did not allow unnecessary conversations
in the sanctuary and personally made sure that the servers behaved as they
should, compiling for them a rule of conduct, to which he strictly, yet
affectionately, constrained adherence. After Liturgy Saint John remained
in the sanctuary two or three hours, concerning which he once commented,
"How difficult it is to tear oneself from prayer and return to worldly
affairs." At night he remained vigilant as opposed to sleeping.
He never went "visiting" specifically, instead, he would appear unexpectedly
to those in need, in any weather and at the most unusual hours. Daily
he visited the sick with the Holy Gifts. Often he was seen, at some
late hour, in inclement weather, walking on the streets of Shanghai with
his bishop's staff in hand and his rassa blowing in the wind. When
asked where he was headed in such weather, the Saint would reply, "Not
too far away, I need to visit so-and-so," and when they escorted him to
that place the "not too far away" was frequently two or three kilometres.
"While concerning oneself with the salvation of men's souls," said the
Saint, "one needs to remember that people also have bodily needs which
clamorously declare their presence. One cannot preach the Gospel
without manifesting love in one's deeds." One of Saint John's manifestations
of such love was the founding of the Orphanage of Saint Tikhon of Zadonsk
for orphans and children of needy parents. He called together some
women and, with their help, began with eight little children and organised
an orphanage which gave refuge to many hundreds of children in its fifteen-year
existence in Shanghai. Vladyka himself gathered sickly and hungry
children from the streets and from the dark alleys of Shanghai.
Once he brought in a little girl to the orphanage, having "bought" her
from a chinaman for a bottle of vodka.
The parishioners of the Shanghai diocese had deep feelings of love and
respect for their archpastor, as is evident from the following excerpts
from a letter written by them to Metropolitan Meletius in 1943:
"We, worldly people, laymen, cannot touch his (Saint John's) breadth
of knowledge of theology, his erudition, his homilies, deeply penetrated
with apostolic faith, pronounced almost daily and often printed.
We, the people of Shanghai, will speak about what we see and feel in our
multiracial city from the day of arrival of our Bishop, that which we see
with our sinful eyes and that which we feel with our Christian heart."
"From the day of his arrival: the sorrowful phenomenon of the division
of churches has ceased; the Orphanage of Saint Tikhon of Zadonsk, which
currently feeds, clothes, and educates 200 children was built from nothing;
gradually the conditions of the alms house in the name of Saint Philaret
the Merciful have improved; the sick in all Shanghai hospitals are visited
by priests, are administered the Holy Mysteries on a timely basis and,
in the event of death, even the homeless are buried with a proper funeral;
the mentally ill, who are located in a hospital far from the city, are
visited by him personally; those incarcerated in the prisons of the "Settlement"
and the French Concession have the opportunity to pray in the place of
their imprisonment during the Divine Liturgy and to receive Holy Communion
monthly. He directs serious attention to the upbringing and education
of the youth in a strict Orthodox and nationalistic spirit. In many
of the non Russian schools our children are now taught the Law of God.
During all of the difficult moments in the life of our community we see
him leading the way, defending us and our age-old Russian moral principles
to the end. All of the sectarian organisations and heterodox confessions
now understand that to combat such a pillar of the Orthodox Faith is very
difficult. Our Bishop tirelessly visits the churches, hospitals,
schools, prisons, civil and military organisations, always bringing with
him reassurance and faith. From the day of his arrival not one infirm
person has been left without his prayer and personal visit. By the
prayers of our Luminary many have received relief and health. He,
like a torch, illuminates our sinfulness, like a pealing bell awakens our
conscience, and calls our sous to the Christian struggle, calls to us,
as the Good Pastor, so that for a minute we might be diverted from the
earth, from worldly corruption, and lift up our eyes to heaven, from whence
our help comes. He is the one, according to the words of Apostle
Paul, who is an example: in word, in life, in charity, in spirit, in faith,
in purity. (I Tim. 4:12)."
His flock was not mistaken in giving such a great assessment of the
work of its pastor. People truly felt in him a readiness "to lay
down his life" for the flock. During the Japanese occupation, when
two presidents of the Russian Emigration Committee were killed in succession
and fear gripped the Russian colony, Saint John, despite the undoubted
danger to himself, declared himself the temporary head of the Russian colony.
After the repose of Metropolitan Meletius and the end of the war in
1945, increased pressure was put upon the Russian emigrant clergy by the
Moscow Patriarchate, with the aim of subordinating them to the new Moscow
Patriarch Alexei I. He was the successor to Patriarch Sergius who,
in 1927, promulgated the declaration committing the church to cooperation
with the Soviet authorities. In the Far East almost all of the hierarchs
subordinated themselves to the newly chosen Patriarch. Saint John,
having denied such subordination, was exposed to extremely great pressure
and threats from his ruling bishop, Archbishop Victor. The Saint's
response to these threats was simple: "I am subject to the Synod
Abroad and I shall walk on the path that it directs for me."
After a long delay caused by the war, an order arrived from the Synod
of Bishops elevating Bishop John to Archbishop with direct submission to
the Synod. The Chinese National Government and the city authorities
acknowledged Archbishop John as the sole head of the Russian Orthodox Church
in China.
The miracle-working power and clairvoyance of Saint John were well known
in Shanghai. Once, during Bright Week, Saint John came to the Jewish
hospital to visit the Orthodox patients there. Passing through one
ward, he stopped in front of a screen, concealing the bed upon which an
elderly Jewish woman lay dying. Her family members were awaiting
her death nearby. The Saint raised a cross above the screen and loudly
proclaimed: "Christ is Risen!" upon which the dying woman regained consciousness
and asked for water. The Saint approached the nurse and said, "The
patient wants to drink." The medical staff were stunned by the change
which had taken place in one who only moments earlier was dying.
Soon the woman recovered and was discharged from the hospital. Such
incidents were numerous.
It so happened that Saint John was urgently called to administer Holy
Communion to a dying man in the hospital. Having taken the Holy Gifts,
the Saint headed there with another clergyman. When they arrived
they saw a young man, about 20 years of age, playing on a harmonica.
He had already recovered and was to leave the hospital shortly. The
Saint called him over saying, "I want to give you Holy Communion right
now." The young man immediately came up to him, confessed, and received
Holy Communion. The amazed clergyman asked Saint John why he did
not go to the one dying, but detained himself with an obviously healthy
young man. The Saint answered simply, "He will die tonight, but the other,
who is seriously ill, will live yet many years." That is precisely
what came to pass. The Lord manifested similar miracles in Europe
and America through His Saint.
At the end of the 1940's as the communists came
to power, Russians in China were forced to flee again, most via the Philippine
Islands.
In 1949 almost 5000 refugees from China were located in a camp of the International
Refugee Organisation on the island of Tubabao. They lived there in
tents under the most primitive circumstances. All of the children
of the orphanage were brought there, as were the elderly and infirm.
They lived under the continual threat of fierce hurricanes, since the island
is located in the path of seasonal typhoons which pass through that part
of the Pacific Ocean. During the twenty-seven-month existence of
the Russian encampment, only once was the island threatened by a typhoon,
which, however, changed its course and passed around the island.
Every night Saint John would walk around the entire camp blessing it with
the sign of the Cross on all four sides. Later when the people had
departed for various countries and the camp had been almost completely
evacuated, a fierce typhoon swept over the camp and leveled it to the ground.
More than once Saint John had to appear before representatives of civil
authority to intercede for the needs of the Russian refugees. It
was recommended to Saint John that he personally petition in Washington
D.C., so that those in the camp could come to America. He flew to
Washington and, contrary to all human obstacles, succeeded in having immigration
laws changed and the exodus of his flock was realised.
In 1951 Saint John was assigned to oversee the Western European Diocese.
At first he administered the diocese from Paris and later from Brussels.
He continually travelled throughout Europe serving Divine Liturgy in French
and Dutch, and, as before, in Greek, Chinese, and later in English.
The following was written about him in Paris: "He lives outside of
our plane (of existence)." It is no accident that in one of the Catholic
churches a priest said, addressing the youth: "You require proof.
You say that there are no more miracles, no saints. Why do you need
theoretical proof, when a living Saint walks the streets of Paris, Saint
Jean Pieds {Saint John the Barefoot}!"
While in Europe, Saint John collected information on a number of ancient
Saints venerated in the West, but forgotten in the East. Upon his
recommendation their veneration was restored and their names recorded in
the Church calendar.
Saint John's spirituality, his knowledge of languages, and, most of
all, his example, attracted many French, Dutch and other Europeans to Orthodoxy.
Such was the missionary significance of his stay in Europe.
In the Fall of 1962 Saint John arrived in his last Diocesan See, and
again, just as many years ago in his first Diocese, on the Feast of the
Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple. At first he came
to assist the aging and infirm elder, Archbishop Tikhon and after his repose
(March 17, 1963 o.s.) Saint John became ruling Archbishop of Western America
and San Francisco. Again the Saint arrived to find an unfinished
church, dedicated to the memory of the Mother of God, and once again, as
in China, the Church was torn by discord.
Saint John's first priority was to resume and complete the construction
of the new Diocesan Cathedral of the Most Holy Theotokos "Joy of All Who
Sorrow", which had been entirely halted due to a lack of funds and sharp
disputes as to the solution of the financial dilemma paralysing the church
community. The Lord mercifully helped His Saint in this, who was
suffering greatly as a result of this discord, yet continued both by prayer
and by tirelessly overseeing the construction, to inspire everyone to sacrifice
and work.
Saint John had to endure much at that time, even the necessity of appearing
in an American civil court. The last years of his life were full
of the bitterness of slander and persecution. Sometimes Saint John
aroused envy, unfavourable criticisms, or bewilderment in people, when
he dealt with them strictly adhering to church rules. At that time,
someone asked who was responsible for the division in the Church.
The Saint answered simply: "the devil".
In 1964, construction of the largest church
of the Russian Church Abroad in America, adorned with five golden domes,
was essentially complete. The elevation of the magnificent crosses,
the grandeur of which is visible when sailing in the San Francisco Bay,
was proceeded by a solemn procession (over a mile) with masses of people
participating. The procession was almost cancelled due to heavy rains,
but the Saint, without any hesitation, led the procession with hymns into
the drenched streets of the City. As the procession began the rain
stopped. The crosses were blessed in front of the new cathedral and
when the main cross was elevated, the sun broke through and a dove lighted
upon the brightly shining symbol of Christ. This visible triumph
of the elevating of Orthodox crosses, symbols of Christ's victory, shining
on the hills of a contemporary Babylon where satanism has been openly professed,
was the crowning victory of the life of the Saint on earth.
While accompanying the Wonder-Working Kursk-Root Icon of the Most Holy
Theotokos to Seattle, Saint John, having served Divine Liturgy there in
the Saint Nicholas Catherdral, remained in the altar for three hours. It
was the 19th of June (o.s.) 1966. Then having visited some of his spiritual
children who lived near the cathedral with the Wonder-working Icon, he
proceeded to a room in the church house where he was staying. Suddenly,
those accompanying the Archpastor heard the sound of someone falling to
the floor. When they ran up the stairs they discovered him lying on the
floor and already departing this world. They sat him up in an armchair
before the Wonder-working icon and the Saint peacefully reposed in the
Lord. At that moment, his extraordinarily difficult struggle of depriving
himself of rest and sleep ceased. They laid him on a bed that was in the
room, a blessed berth, giving him rest and sleep after 40 years of abstinence.
"Sleep now in peace!" cried Archbishop Averky of Syracuse and Holy Trinity Monastery,
who zealously loved him. In the conclusion of his homily during the funeral
he said: "Sleep now in peace, O our dear, beloved Vladyka. Rest from your
righteous works and struggles. Rest in peace until the General Resurrection."
The solemn funeral of Saint John took place on June 24, 1966 (o.s.) in
the Cathedral of the Most-Holy Theotokos, the Joy of All Who Sorrow, in
the city of San Francisco. The funeral began at 6.00 p.m. and finished
after 1.00 am, as a result of the multitude of people, who came to bid
farewell to their reposed archpastor. Metropolitan Philaret officiated
at the funeral in concelebration with Archbishops Leonty and Averky, Bishops
Sava and Nektary and a multitude of clergy.
The air of the funeral was strikingly poignant and exaltedly prayerful.
None of its participants shall ever forget it. Despite the deep sorrow
of the countless admirers of Saint John, a kind of special joy predominated,
enveloping all of the faithful.
The body of Saint John remained in an open casket in the cathedral for
five days and, despite the hot summer weather, was untouched by even the
slightest hint of corruption or stiffness. His hands were soft and pliant.
And all of this, despite the fact that nothing whatsoever was done to
his body at the mortuary.
The words of Bishop Ignaty (Brianchaninov) in
his work, Thoughts about Death, involuntarily come to mind: "Have you ever
seen the body of a righteous one which has been abandoned by the soul?
There is no smell of corruption. It is not frightening to be near it. During
his burial sorrow is mixed with a kind of intangible joy." All of this,
according to the words of the ever memorable Bishop Ignaty, is a sure sign
that "the reposed one has obtained mercy and Grace from the Lord."
After his blessed repose, just as during his life, Saint John continues
to perform various miracles and healings for those who turn to him with
faith. People, during difficult moments in their lives, when no earthly
power is capable of helping, have beseeched his intercession before the
Lord. Letters, as well as prayer lists, have been placed under the miter
on the tomb of the Saint and many have received the help for which they
had hoped.
In the fall of 1993 the Synod of Bishops charged
the Archbishop Anthony of Western America and San Francisco, together with a commission
comprised of two other archpastors, to examine Saint John's remains. In
the evening of September 28, 1993 (o.s.), after a pannykhida served in
the sepulcher by members of the commission, Archbishop Anthony gave a brief
homily, calling all participants of this holy work to be reconciled and
himself asking forgiveness of everyone, blessed those present to open the
tomb. Having removed the lid of the sarcophagus, the participants withdrew
the metal coffin of the Saint and noticed that in many places it had completely
rusted through. With the fear of God and with prayer, they opened the coffin.
The face of the Saint was covered and everyone immediately turned their
attention to his white, incorrupt hands. Having prayed, Archbishop Anthony
removed the "aer" from the brow of Vladyka and exposed the incorrupt face
of the God-glorified Saint. At this moment a kind of supernatural
spiritual peace, an extraordinary reverent silence was felt. No one
was amazed, no one spoke. All problems seemed
to vanish, such was the Grace-filled experience of standing beside the
Saint's relics.
At the next meeting of the Synod of Bishops, Archbishop Anthony reported
that the honourable relics of Saint John were examined by the Synodal Commission
comprised of himself, Archbishop Laurus of Syracuse and Holy Trinity, Bishop
Kyrill of Seattle and twelve other persons chosen by the diocesan bishop.
Having heard Archbishop Anthony's report and the Report of the Commission
for the examination of the relics of Saint John, the Synod of Bishops blessed
the continuation of the efforts in preparation of the Glorification of
Saint John, which was scheduled for June 19 (o.s.), the day of his blessed
repose.
In these frightening days of general apostasy from God, the Lord has
not abandoned his people and has sent them a great intercessor. Standing
before the throne of God is a courageous defender of the Church of Christ;
a struggler and ascetic according to the tradition of the stylites who
took upon themselves the strictest form of self-mortification and, at times,
taking upon themselves "foolishness for Christ's sake," which exceeds the
wisdom of this world; a good and loving pastor who laid down his life for
his sheep; a teacher and nurturer of Orthodox youth; a miracle-worker and
unmercenary healer; an apostle and missionary; a deep theologian; a beholder
of mysteries and a hierarch of universal significance, who unwaveringly
followed that which he had promised before God and men in his testimony read
during his election to the episcopacy: "What greater benefit can one bring
to one's neighbour, other than to prepare him for eternal life..."
Through the prayers of our holy father John, may the Lord God preserve
us from every evil, strengthen our faith, and help us to journey upon the
true path to salvation. To our God, Who is wondrous in His Saints,
be all glory, honour, and worship, now and ever, and unto the ages of ages.
Amen.
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