Met.Philaret of NY: 3 Hierarchs Feast

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Barbara
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Met.Philaret of NY: 3 Hierarchs Feast

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"Today we celebrate the feast of the Three Hierarchs. The Church glorifies the memory of these great laborers in the harvest-fields of the Lord, whom She singled out from the uncountable host of saints, calling them Universal teachers and hierarchs. The Church emphasizes that each one of them was in his own time a Diocesan Bishop, but that their spiritual influence spread far beyond their borders, and truly the entire flock of the Universal Orthodox Church learns of Christian wisdom, Christian knowledge and piety from them.

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The Church canonized them each individually. In early January, we celebrated the feast day of Saint Basil the Great, not too long ago, Saint Gregory the Theologian, and most recently the Translation of the Relics of St John Chrysostom. Today, the Church established a special feast day of these Three Hierarchs, for according to Church tradition, after each of them completed their Earthly path, there had been many conflicts among believers. Each of them represented great spiritual significance, they made an impression on all who met them and for this reason each of these three great hierarchs gathered devotees.

There were even groups who called themselves Basilites, Gregorians, and Johnites. There had been quarrels between them as to who among these bishops stood higher in the eyes of God. Church history teaches us that all three hierarchs once appeared once to Saint John Mauropous, and said “We are very sorrowful that there are so many quarrels among the believers because of us. We are all of equal glory before God. Speak out, let then establish one holiday for the three of us, not because we are in need of it, but in order to pacify these quarrels and unite the believers in the spirit of faith, love and concord.” This is how the feast day of the three hierarchs was first established.

Basil the Great is a lantern of the Church, a hierarch who is always and everywhere during commemorations of the saints named first, as though he presides over the host of saints. We know of his courage, his staunch character, how he rebuffed the attacks of the heresy of Arius. His enemies themselves said that “The Church [diocese] of Basil alone is greater than all of us.” And they told the Emperor, an Arian himself: “If we do not remove him, then all our efforts are in vain—he is not a man but a mountain. Victory is impossible over him, you must simply remove him.” But the emperor decided against it.

Basil the Great adorned the Church with his written works, his pious, holy life, and he left us an abundant legacy. First of all, of course, the inspired Liturgy he composed, which is celebrated ten times a year, his inspirational writings as well. He had a profound mind and ability to reason: if Basil the Great addressed and brought an explanation to some matter, then there was nothing left to say on the subject. How many prayers were penned by Basil! Recall the kneeling prayers to the Holy Trinity read during Pentecost! Remember the prayers from the hours: “Thou who at every season and every hour, in Heaven and on earth art worshipped and glorified, O Christ God!” A remarkably profound and powerful prayer which our ears are so accustomed to hearing, but which only skims over our consciousness, as do other prayers of his. At the end of the reading of the hours, we also come across the words of Basil the Great. He left a genuine treasure to the Church, adorning her with his works.

St Gregory the Theologian was a great friend of his, a person of equal genius, a colossal mind, and they shared a similar outlook. He and Basil lived as though with one soul their whole lives, with the exception of a brief period when Basil the Great forced him to receive the episcopal rank. Gregory’s meek soul sorrowed from this and was frankly bitter towards his friend.

St Gregory did not leave us with his own Liturgy, but he likewise adorned the Church through his works. Who does not know the canon of the Nativity, who doesn’t know the Paschal canon? One begins with the words: “Christ is born, glorify Him,” the other “Pascha of the Lord, o Pascha! It is the day of the Resurrection, let us be radiant!” The holy composers of the canons took these words from the inspired sermons of Gregory the Theologian.

When you read his works, you cannot but fall in love with its meaning. A deep, holy inspired meaning, crafted as though with a sharp blade in the hand of a master. We see this in his writings, in which he refuted heresy, the undeniable, unstoppable power of logic, the wealth of its content, the richness of thought and the utterly defeating critique of all that is in error. At the same time as he denounces heresy, when he writes about theology, his purified mind, illuminated and profound, is expressed in words of such loftiness, for which the church Praises him with the words “Rejoice, o Father of Theology of the uppermost Mind,” that is, a mind that reached the highest level possible for a human.

He and his friend Basil were of completely different temperaments. Basil was by nature a warrior, a leader, while Gregory was as they said, a dove of the wilderness, who sought solitude, so that he could be alone with God, as he said, to be with the angels and be free from all that was Earthly. But the Lord does not keep such lanterns hidden, and despite his striving for solitude, the Lord elevated his great God-loving soul to the lofty service of a bishop. Although it was a heavy burden for him, still, when needed, he held his archpastoral staff with a strong hand, as did his great friend Basil. They died different deaths, Basil among his weeping flock, Gregory completely alone with God and his holy Guardian Angel. How staunch were they when they needed to defend the truth of the Church. We remember when Basil the Great responded to the threat of the Emperor's officer.

The emissary had been sent to convince Basil to consent to the heresy of Arius. Seeing that he was faced with a “mountain” of a believer and not a simple mortal, he began to threaten to take away all his property, to send him into exile, and even torture and death. Remember how the great hierarch responded ? He smiled, and said, You can threaten me with anything, but you won't scare me! Take away my property? I don't have any, so you can't take anything away; you threaten exile, but it is the Lord's land and His Will, and I am a servant of the Lord, all the land belongs to God, I will feel at home wherever I am. Torturing my feeble body will not last long, maybe only the first strike will be yours, and death for me will be a blessing, for it will take me to God, for Whom I live, for Whom I labor, Whom I hurry to approach, and for Whom I am already half-dead.

His questioner was stunned by his boldness.

Gregory the Theologian was threatened to be driven away from Constantinople. But the bishop replied " If you exile me from the Jerusalem of Heaven, that I would fear, but your threats put wind in my sails and sprinkle me with refreshing water : that's how I view this exile. "

The third Great Hierarch was John Chrysostom. The church properly preserved his name, “Golden Mouth,” which one believing woman once exclaimed after hearing his words. There could not be a sermonizer and orator equal to John Chrysostom. We know that when he was still a priest, a certain bishop who loved him, Saint Flavian, asked him after divine services in his own church to come to a different church to read a sermon. Those who had prayed with him in the first church then rushed after him to hear his words again. Applause would often break out in church, for the temperament of the Greeks is not restrained, and they applauded the remarkable beauty and power of his words. He also died for the truth.

What wealth he left us all! Maybe more than any other figures in the Church ! The mass of his sermons, inspired, magnificent works, his Liturgy and also a great many other prayers. When the day of his death arrived, we read about what a great spirit he had. As he was being taken into exile, it was pure torture for him. They saw that he was faltering and could not continue, so they stopped at one point and placed him in a house of ill repute. One could imagine that this would bring anyone to grumble, but Chrysostom remained quiet in spirit. But Hieromartyr Basilisk appeared to him, who had also suffered there, and with brotherly love consoled him with the words, “Brother John, be bold, tomorrow we will be together !” And as he died in that environment, amid the filth, his final words were not in despair, but what the words he always uttered under both joyous and sorrowful circumstances: “Glory to God for all things!” He died upon uttering those last of his great words.

The Church glorifies these Three Great Hierarchs for all this. In our sorrowful times, in our time of tribulations, in our days of great temptations! But do not think that this is something new. Maybe in contemporary life evil has become so widespread and open, like never before. There were times of trouble in the past, we recently recalled the life of Gregory the Theologian, who wrote to his friend “Good is dying, evil is in the open, the Church is without pastors. We must swim through crashing waves, and there is not a lighthouse to be seen—it is as though Christ is asleep.” In such expressive terms he described the difficulty of those times, as did other holy hierarchs, during their service. We turn to them now in prayer for their intercession, so that the Lord heeds their powerful prayers and strengthens us of little faith in these troubled times. What thunderous denunciations would boom forth from these three Hierarchs if they lived in our time of weakness, feebleness of faith and apostasy.

But they now stand triumphant at the Altar of God, and they heed our prayers, we must firmly believe, and by their holy prayers, may the All-Merciful Lord strengthen us weaklings so that we would not only be called Christians, but BE Christians. Amen."
http://www.synod.com/synod/engrocor/ens ... aints.html

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Barbara
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Re: Met.Philaret of NY: 3 Hierarchs Feast

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To fully appreciate the Liturgy of St John Chrysostom in Slavonic, here is the lovely version by the monks of Valaam under direction of Fr German [Ryabtsev] :

Important : to erase the grating sound of "Patriarch Alexei" being commemorated here and on other recordings of this era from the MP, one could consider drowning out the name of the distasteful KGB agent by substituting those of appropriate True Orthodox Hierarchs.

Though unconventional, this method does remove the earsore... Same for other clergy, like Archimandrite Pankraty of Valaam.

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Barbara
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Re: Met.Philaret of NY: 3 Hierarchs Feast

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Today is the anniversary of Metropolitan Philaret's Birthday in 1903 !

For the occasion, so far just simple wikipedia - which nonetheless has a few new bits of information that I didn't know despite many years of study of Metropolitan Philaret's life - plus a tidy list of the various canonizations of the great Hierarch

For example did anyone know that then-Archimandrite Philaret served in Tryokhrechye from 1947-49 ? I have never heard of the place, but it must be not far from Harbin.

I'm not sure who wrote the wikipedia entry, though likely someone in Rocor. I made some small edits for clarity and correctness.

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Icon of St Philaret from Prague, Czech Republic on wood paneling

Metropolitan Philaret (Russian: Митрополит Филарет, secular name Georgy Nikolayevich Voznesensky, Russian: Георгий Николаевич Вознесенский; 22 March 1903 in Kursk, Russia – 21 November 1985 in New York City) was the First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia from 1964 until his death on November 21, 1985.

He was ordained a deacon in 1930 and a priest in 1931. He served in Harbin (1931-1947), Tryokhrechye (1947-1949), then again in Harbin (1949-1962). In 1945-1962 he was a cleric of the Moscow Patriarchate.

In 1962, he left China for Australia, joining the ROCOR. On May 26, 1963, he was ordained bishop of Brisbane, vicar of the Diocese of Australia and New Zealand.

On May 27, 1964, being a youngest bishop by ordination, he was elected the First Hierarch of the ROCOR. The years when Metropolitan Philaret headed the ROCOR became a period of making important decisions, including the anathematization of Lenin and the persecutors of the Orthodoxy (1970), the canonization of Nicholas II, his family and servants and the New Martyrs (1981) and the condemnation of ecumenism (1983).

Life

Georgy Voznesensky was born on March 22, 1903, in Kursk, Russia into a family of a priest, Father Nicholas Voznesensky and his wife Lydia. In 1909, his family moved to Blagoveschensk on the Amur River in Siberia.

In 1920, Georgy graduated from the local gymnasium. Later in 1920 in the midst of the Russian Civil War, his family moved to Harbin, Manchuria.

In 1921, his mother died, and his father accepted tonsure as a monk with the name Dimitri. Dimitri later became Archbishop of Hailar. He died in 1947 shortly after he repatriated to the Soviet Union.

Living in Harbin, Voznesensky entered the Russo-Chinese Polytechnic Institute from which he graduated in 1927 as an electromechanical engineer.

On 18 May 1930, he was ordained a deacon. On 4 January 1931, he was ordained a Hieromonk. On 12 December 1931 he was tonsured a monk with the name Philaret.

In 1931, he graduated from St. Vladimir University. Soon afterwards, he entered the Pastoral and Theological courses at the Institute of St. Prince Vladimir. The courses was launch by his father, Fr. Nicholas Voznesensky.

In 1933, he was elevated to Hegumen and 1937 to the rank of Archimandrite. During this period he was also a professor of New Testament, Pastoral Theology, and Homiletics at St. Vladimir University.

In mid 1945, after the Communist Chinese and Soviet forces took over Manchuria at the end of World War II, Archimandrite Philaret remained with the Orthodox believers in Manchuria, but he firmly rejected all attempts to get him to accept a Soviet passport. He held passport burning bonfires after church services in defiance of the communist authorities. Further, he fearlessly denounced the atheistic communists. His overt position against the Soviets placed him in great personal danger. Their hatred of him resulted in an attempt to burn him alive in his monastic cell. He escaped, but suffered severe burns.

Departure from China and serving in Australia

By that time, the Russian population was leaving China en masse, settling mostly on the West Coast of the United States or Australia. The Synod of Bishops of the ROCOR, aware of his irreconcilable position towards communism and the Soviet government, has been trying to rescue Archimandrite Philaret from China since 1953.

It was only by 1962 that the Archimandrite Philaret could come to Hong Kong.

Despite his anti-communist views and reputation as a confessor, Archimandrite Philaret had to repent that he had been under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate since 1945, and also sign a "penitential statement" in the form established by Bishops' Council of the ROCOR. This statement was approved on March 29, 1962, at a meeting of the ROCOR Synod.

He arrived to Sydney on 3 April 1962. From there archimandrite Philaret quickly traveled to Brisbane, Australia where many of his former flock in Manchuria had settled.

On October 22 of the same year, at the Council of Bishops of the ROCOR, where Archbishop Sabbas arrived, Archimandrite Philaret was proposed to appoint to the Diocese of Brazil, but Archbishop Sabbas began to insist that Archimandrite Philaret be left in Australia and appointed vicar of the Australian diocese with the title of Bishop of Brisbane.

Archbishop Sabbas reminded the bishops of his poor health and considered Archimandrite Philaret his possible successor, especially since many parishioners in Australia knew and respected Archimandrite Philaret, remembering his ministry in Harbin.

The Council agreed to Abp. Sabbas' request and it was decided to ordain Archimandrite Philaret as vicar bishop for Australia.

On May 24, 1963, at the bishop's residence in Croydon, Archimandrite Philaret was nominated as a bishop. Nomination was performed by: Archbishop Sabbas (Rayevsky), his vicar Bishop Anthony (Medvedev) and hierarch of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople bishop Dionysius (Psiahas) of Nazianzus. Archimandrite Philaret was consecrated as Bishop of Brisbane, vicar of the Australian diocese by archbishop Sabbas and Bishop Anthony of Melbourne on May 26, 1963. Bishop Dionysius attended, but did not concelebrate.
As Archbishop Sabbas' health deteriorated more and more, Bishops Anthony and Philaret assumed part of his duties.

First Hierarch

In the early 1960s, a confrontation broke out in the ROCOR between supporters of Archbishop John (Maximovich) and supporters of Archbishop Nikon (Rklitsky), who were considered as the most likely candidates for the First Hierarch position.

The conflict was fueled by 2 different visions of the ROCOR mission: the supporters of St. John saw the ROCOR open to everyone and were ready in some cases to sacrifice the rite and calendar, while the representatives of the opposite party were inclined to see the ROCOR as a structure whose main task was to preserve Russian traditions. The views on church administration also differed: St. John and his supporters saw sobornost as a living, functioning basis of church existence, while the supporters of Archbishop Nikon actually acted as defenders of the pre-revolutionary Synodal system, which in the conditions of emigration meant the dictate of the office of the Holy Synod.

On February 7, 1964, Metropolitan Anastasius announced his desire to retire due to his old age and state of health.

The real purpose of such a departure was the desire to control the election of his successor, with the help of his authority to prevent shocks, conflicts and possible division within ROCOR.

On May 27, 1964, at the Bishops' Council, 90-year-old Metropolitan Anastasius (Gribanovsky) retires. The votes cast for Archbishop John and for Archbishop Nikon were divided almost equally. None of the parties wanted to concede. To get out of a difficult situation, the First Hierarch advised the bishops to elect a "neutral" bishop who does not belong to any of the church parties and preferably a young one. The most suitable candidate was the youngest bishop by ordination — Bishop Philaret of Brisbane, whose candidacy was proposed by Archbishop John.

In order to avoid a split, he stated that he would withdraw his candidacy if the majority voted for Bishop Philaret. Archbishops Nikon (Rklitsky) and Averky (Taushev) did the same. At the end of the voting, Metropolitan Anastasius was asked either to approve the election of Bishop Philaret, or to remain in office. The Metropolitan rejected the second proposal and agreed with the Council's decision to elect a new First Hierarch.

On May 31, 1964, in the Synodal Cathedral Church the Sign, his introduction took place. After the Liturgy with the participation of all hierarchs, a white klobuk/cowl was placed on Metropolitan Philaret, and Archbishop John (Maximovich) of San Francisco, as the oldest hierarch, handed him an episcopal staff, and a second panagia was placed on Metropolitan Anastasius.

Metropolitan Philaret served as the first hierarch of the ROCOR for twenty one years. He reposed on November 21, 1985, and was buried in the cemetery of the Church of Dormition.

In November 1998, the Synod decided to transfer Metropolitan Philaret's relics to a new vault under the altar of Holy Trinity Cathedral at Jordanville, New York.

>>>When his tomb was opened, his relics were found to be incorrupt.


Canonizations

Metropolitan Philaret was canonized by the number of church groups which derive their succession from the ROCOR.

On May 19 – 20, 2001 Metropolitan Philaret was glorified by the Holy Orthodox Church in North America ("Boston Synod").

On April 30, 2003, Metropolitan Philaret was glorified by the Russian Orthodox Autonomous Church.

On November 20, 2008, Metropolitan Philaret was glorified by the (independent) Russian Orthodox Church Abroad headed by metropolitan Agathangel (Pashkovsky).

On October 23, 2009, Metropolitan Philaret was glorified at Holy Transfiguration Skete by the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad headed by archbishop Vladimir (Tselischev).

In 2012, the Eastern American Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad headed by metropolitan Hilarion (Kapral) established a committee to explore the formal glorification of Metropolitan Philaret."

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Barbara
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Re: Met.Philaret of NY: 3 Hierarchs Feast

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Classic pic of Metropolitan Philaret and his supporter, Protodeacon Nikita [Chakirov] :

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