Saints Mark, Jonah and Bassa are venerated as the founders of the Pskov Caves monastery.
It
is not known exactly when the first hermit monks settled by the
Kamenets stream in the natural caves of the hill, which the local
inhabitants called “the holy hill.” The monastery Chronicle presents an
account of eyewitnesses, hunter-trappers from Izborsk nicknamed Selishi:
“We came with our father to the outlying hill where the church of the
Mother of God is now, and heard what seemed to be church singing. They
sang harmoniously and reverently, but the singers could not be seen, and
the air was filled with the fragrance of incense.”
Of the first
Elders of the Pskov Caves monastery only Mark is known by name. The
Chronicle says of him: “In the beginning, a certain Elder was living at
the Kamenets near the cave. Some fishermen saw him by the three rocks
above the cave of the Most Holy Theotokos church, but they were unable
to discover who he was, his lineage, how and from whence he came to this
place, how long he dwelt there, or how he died.”
The second
igumen of the Caves monastery is identified as Elder Mark in the
monastery Synodikon. St Cornelius (February 20) doubted the veracity of
this inscription and ordered that the name be removed from the
Synodikon. Suddenly he became grievously ill and it was revealed to him
that this was his punishment for ordering the name of St Mark to be
stricken from the monastery diptychs.
After begging forgiveness
at the grave of the Elder Mark, Igumen Cornelius restored his name. When
the cave church of the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos was dug out
and the burial caves expanded, the igumen Dorotheus found the grave of
St Mark in a state of neglect, but his relics and clothing were
preserved.
In the year 1472, the peasant Ivan Dementiev cut down
the forest on the hill. One of the felled trees rolled down the hill,
uprooting another tree from the ground. The slide opened up the entrance
to a cave, over which was the inscription: “The cave built by God”
(There is a tradition that St Barlaam, a fool-for-Christ, frequently
came to the cave and wiped out this inscription, but it miraculously
reappeared every time).
The priest John (nicknamed “Shestnik”)
came to this holy spot, where the first ascetics prayed. He was a native
of “the Moscow lands” and served as priest at Iuriev (now Tartu) in “a
right-believing church, established by people from Pskov” and dedicated
to St Nicholas and the Great Martyr George. He and the priest Isidore
spiritually nourished the Russians living there.
In 1470, Father
John was compelled to flee to Pskov with his family because of
persecution by the German Catholics. When he learned of the martyric
death of St Isidore (January 8), Father John decided to settle in the
newly-appeared “cave built by God,” so that there, on the very boundary
with the Livonians, he might found a monastery as an outpost of
Orthodoxy.
Soon his wife fell ill and died after receiving
monastic tonsure with the name Bassa. Her righteousness was evidenced
immediately after her death. Her husband and her spiritual Father buried
St Bassa (March 19) in the wall of “the cave built by God,” but at
night her coffin was “taken from the ground by an invisible power of
God.”
Father John and St Bassa’s Father Confessor were upset,
thinking that this had occurred because they had not done the complete
Service for the Departed. So they sang the funeral service a second
time, and they buried the body again. In the morning, however, it was
found above ground. Then it was clear that this was a sign from God, so
they dug St Bassa’s grave on the left side of the cave. Shaken by the
miracle, John became a monk with the name Jonah and devoted himself even
more fervently to spiritual struggles.
He dug out the cave
church and built two cells on pillars, then petitioned the clergy of the
Pskov Trinity cathedral to consecrate it, but they decided not to do so
at the time “because of its unusual location.” Then St Jonah sought the
blessing of Archbishop Theophilus of Novgorod.
On August 15,
1473 the cave church was consecrated in honor of the Dormition of the
Most Holy Theotokos. During the consecration there was a miracle from an
icon of the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos: a blind woman “sent
by the merciful God, beginning His great gifts to His All-Pure Mother”
received her sight (This icon, which they call the “old” to distinguish
it from another wonderworking icon of the Dormition of the Most Holy
Theotokos with scenes of Her life around the borders, was painted around
1421 by the Pskov iconographer Alexis Maly, and is now kept in the
altar of the Dormition church. The icon with scenes around the border is
the Cave church’s patronal icon).
The date of the consecration
of the cave church is regarded as the official date of the founding of
the Pskov Caves monastery. St Jonah labored at the Cave monastery until
1480, then peacefully fell asleep in the Lord. Upon his death they
discovered a chain mail coat on his body. This was hung over his grave
as a sign of his secret asceticism, but it was stolen during a German
invasion.
The relics of St Jonah rest in the Caves beside the
relics of the Elder Mark and St Bassa. Once, when the monastery was
besieged, the Livonian knights wanted to open the lid of St Bassa’s
coffin with a sword, but fire spurted forth from the coffin. Traces of
this punishing fire may still be seen on the coffin of St Bassa.
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