Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
We are keeping today the feast of all the Saints of Russia, a country whose
history was remarkably short, barely a thousand years, and which has been
filled, from the beginning to the end, by tragedy, by bloodshed and by
martyrdom. The number of the Saints whom we knew are many, but innumerable are
those whose names are known only to God, who rest in His heart - men, women,
children who have lived according to His Gospel and of whom many have died,
following Him, as the Scripture say, whithersoever He went. And in the last
seventy years how many unknown martyrs have been the resplendence and the glory
of Russia! How many have lived, faithful to the Gospel to the point of laying
down their lives for their neighbour! How many of them have died for their
neighbours - or because of them! And how many indeed are now interceding for
their martyred country, and also for those who were the instruments of their
martyrdom and of their death.
Many years ago now has died in Russia Bishop Luka of Simferopol and of Crimea.
Before the Revolution he had been one of the best known surgeons of Russia whose
name was known even abroad, whose books could be found in the libraries of the
medical schools of all of Europe. When the Revolution came, he decided to become
a priest and on being asked, why, he said that he had thought that he could best
serve mankind, his neighbour, each one of them, by being a surgeon when times
were peaceful but now something else was needed: a testimony and a readiness to
live and to die... And he came, after his ordination, to give his lectures at
the University in his priestly clothes; he was arrested, deported to Tashkent,
and patriarch Tikhon made him Bishop of the city. And the respect he was
surrounded by was such that he did not die a martyr, but he was accepted, and he
was a witness throughout sixty years, or seventy years of his life.
I want to read to you now a part of a sermon which he preached on occasion of
Good Friday many, many years ago. "The death of Christ, - he said, - is a
tearing apart of an immortal body from an immortal soul, of the body that could
not die from a soul that remained alive, alive forever. This makes the death of
Christ a tragedy beyond our imagining, far beyond any suffering which we can
humanely picture or experience. Christ's death is an act of supreme love. He was
true when He said, No one takes My life from Me - I give it freely Myself... No
one could kill Him, the Immortal; no one could quench this Light which is the
shining of the splendour of God - He gave His life, He accepted the impossible
death to share with us all the tragedy of our human condition. The Lord Himself
has thus taken upon His shoulders the first cross, the heaviest, the most
appalling one; but after Him, thousands and thousands of men, of women, of
children have taken upon themselves their own crosses; lesser crosses perhaps,
but how often these crosses which are lesser than Christ's, remain as
frightening for us... Innumerable crowds of people have lovingly, obediently
walked in the footsteps of Christ, treading the long way which is shown by Our
Lord; a way tragic, but which leads from this earth on the very Throne of God,
into the Kingdom of God. They walk carrying their crosses, they walk now for two
thousand years those who believe in Christ; they walk on, following Him, crowd
after crowd. And on the way we see crosses, innumerable crosses on which are
crucified the disciples of Christ - crosses, one cross after the other; and
however far we look, it is crosses and crosses again... We see the bodies of the
martyrs, we see the heroes of the spirit, we see monks and nuns, we see priests
and pastors; but many, many more people do we see, ordinary, simple, humble
people of God, who have willingly taken upon themselves the Cross of Christ.
There is no end to this procession; they walk throughout the centuries, knowing
that Christ has foretold us that they will have sorrow on this earth, but that
the Kingdom of God is theirs... They walk, with the heavy cross, rejected, hated
because of truth, because of the name of Christ! They walk, they walk, those
pure victims of God, the old and the young, children and adults…
But where are we? Are we going to stand and look, to see this long procession,
this throng of people with shining eyes, with hope unquenched, with unfaltering
love, with incredible joy in their hearts pass us by? Shall we not join them,
this eternally moving crowd that is marked as a crowd of victims, but also as
little children of the Kingdom? Are we not going to take up our cross and follow
Christ? Christ has commanded us to follow Him, He has invited us to the banquet
of His Kingdom, and He is at the head of this procession - nay, He is together
with each of those who walk! Is this a nightmare? How can blood and flesh endure
this tragedy, the sight of all these martyrs, new and old? Because Christ is
risen! Because we do not see in the Lord Who walks ahead of us a defeated
Prophet of Galilee, as He was seen by His tormentors, His persecutors; we know
Him now in the glory of the Resurrection; we know that every word of His is true!
We know that the Kingdom of God is ours if we simply follow Him!”
These are the words of one who had a right to speak these words because he lived
not only in the twilight of history, but at the core of its tragedy, at the core
of its horror. But he knew that the Cross that had once been the object of
horror and the sign of defeat had become, through the death and resurrection of
Christ, victory, and this victory indeed was won by all these man, these
children, these women, unknown to the world, known to God alone. And it is their
blood that has been the renewal of Russia, it is their prayers that uphold now
the martyred country, and open up new ways, new possibilities.
And shall we not follow them? We are not called to that martyrdom, we are only
called, each in our place, to be faithful to our calling to the Gospel of the
Lord Jesus Christ. Shall we not, in the peace in which we live, be as faithful
as they were in the tragedy, in the darkness, in the terror that was theirs?
Amen. |