Commemorated on September 20
The Holy Prince Michael of Chernigov, son of Vsevolod Ol’govich the
Dark-Red (+ 1212), was noted from childhood for his piety and mildness.
His health was very poor, but in 1186, trusting in the mercy of God, the
young prince asked for the holy prayers of St Nikita the Stylite of
Pereyaslavl (May 24), who during these years received renown by his
prayerful intercession before the Lord.
After he received a
wooden staff from the holy ascetic, the prince was healed at once. In
1223 Prince Michael took part in a council of Russian princes at Kiev,
debating whether to aid the Polovetsians against the approaching
Mongol-Tatar hordes. With the death of his uncle, Mstislav of Chernigov
in the Battle at the Kalka River in 1223, St Michael became Prince of
Chernigov.
In 1225 he was invited to be prince of the Novgorod
people. Through his sense of justice, compassion and firmness he gained
the love and respect of Old Novgorod. This was particularly important
for the Novgorodians, since the accession of Michael as prince signified
a reconciliation of Novgorod with the city of Vladimir’s holy Great
Prince George Vsevolodovich (March 4), whose wife was the holy princess
Agatha, sister of Prince Michael.
But St Michael did not long
remain prince at Novgorod. He soon returned to his native Chernigov. To
the stipulations and requests of the Novgorodians to remain prince he
answered that Chernigov and Novgorod ought to become kindred lands, and
their inhabitants like brothers, and he would forge the bonds of
friendship of these cities.
The noble prince assiduously
concerned himself with the building up of his appenage realm. But it was
difficult for him in these troubled times. His activity provoked unease
in the Kursk Prince Oleg, and in 1227 internecine strife nearly
erupted, but Metropolitan Cyril of Kiev reconciled them. And in this
same year Prince Michael peacefully resolved a dispute between the Kiev
Great Prince Vladimir Rurikovich and the Galich prince. In 1235 Prince
Michael occupied the throne of Kiev.
Troublesome times ensued. In
1238 the Tatars (Mongols) laid waste to Ryazan, Suzdal, and Vladimir.
In 1239 they moved against South Russia, and ravaged the left bank of
the Dniepr River, and the lands of Chernigov and Pereyaslavl. By the
autumn of 1240 the Mongols were coming close to Kiev. The khan’s
emissaries proposed that Kiev surrender voluntarily, but the prince
would not negotiate with them.
Prince Michael rode urgently to
Hungary, to persuade the Hungarian king Bela to organize allied forces
to resist the common enemy. St Michael tired to recruit both Poland, and
the German emperor into the struggle against the Mongols, but the
moment for a combined resistance was lost. Rus was devastated, and later
Hungary and Poland. With no foreign support, Prince Michael returned to
the ruins of Kiev and for a certain time he lived near the city on an
island, and then he resettled in Chernigov.
The prince did not
abandon hope in the possibility of an united Christian Europe against
the Asiatic nomads. In 1245, at the Council of Lyons in France, his
co-worker Metropolitan Peter (Akerovich) was sent as emissary by St
Michael, calling for a crusade to march against the pagan Horde.
Catholic Europe in the persons of its chief spiritual leaders, the Roman
Pope and the German emperor, betrayed the interests of Christianity.
The Pope was involved in a war with the German emperor, and the Germans
took advantage of the Mongol invasion to attack Rus themselves.
In
these circumstances affecting Christianity in general, there is a
universal significance to the confessor’s deed of the martyred Orthodox
Prince St Michael of Chernigov in the midst of the pagan Horde. In Rus
emissaries of the khan soon appeared, in order to conduct a census of
the Russian population and to impose taxes upon it.
The prince
was ordered to make full submission to the Tatar khan, and for his
princely realm, the khan would grant a special charter. The emissaries
informed Prince Michael that it was necessary for him to journey to the
Horde for an affirmation of rights to rule the princedom under the
khan’s charter. Seeing the woeful plight of Rus, Prince Michael
recognized the need to obey the khan, but as a fervent Christian he knew
that he would not deny his faith before the pagans. From his spiritual
Father, Bishop John, he received a blessing to journey to the Horde and
be a true confessor of the Name of Christ.
With the holy Prince
Michael on the journey to the Horde went his faithful friend and
companion, the noble Theodore. At the Horde they knew about Prince
Michael’s attempts to organize an uprising against the Tatars in concert
with Hungary and the other European powers. His enemies had long sought
the opportunity to destroy him.
In 1246 when Prince Michael and
the boyar Theodore arrived at the Horde, they were instructed on how to
go to the khan, to proceed through a fire to cleanse them of their evil
intents, and to worship the primal elements considered gods by the
Mongols: the sun and fire. In answer to the pagan priests commanding
them to perform the pagan rituals, the holy Prince replied, “A Christian
worships only God, the Creator of the world, and not creatures.”
They
reported to the khan about the firmness of the Russian Prince. Batu’s
attendant El’deg delivered the conditions: either fulfill the demands of
the pagan priests, or die in torments. But this also was followed by
the resolute answer of holy Prince Michael, “I am prepared to submit to
the emperor, since that God has entrusted him with the destiny of the
earthly kingdoms, but as a Christian, I cannot worship idols.” The fate
of the brave Christians was sealed.
Taking courage in the words
of the Lord: “Whoever would save his life, shall lose it, and whoever
will lose his life for My sake shall save it” (Mt.16:25), the holy
prince and his devoted boyar prepared for a martyr’s death and received
the Holy Mysteries, which their spiritual Father gave them, foreseeing
this possibility. The Tatar executioners seized the prince and for a
long time they beat him fiercely, until the ground ran crimson with
blood. Finally, Domanus, an apostate from the faith in Christ, cut off
the head of the holy martyr.
The Tatars deceitfully promised St
Theodore great honor and his lord’s princely rank if he would fulfill
the pagan ritual. But St Theodore was not swayed by this, and he
followed in the path of his prince. After quite vicious torments they
beheaded him. The bodies of the holy passion-bearers were thrown to be
eaten by dogs, but the Lord miraculously guarded them for several days,
until faithful Christians could secretly bury them with reverence. Later
on, the relics of the holy martyrs were transferred to Chernigov.
The
confessor’s act of St Theodore amazed even his executioners. Persuaded
of the Russian people’s steadfast fidelity to the Orthodox Faith , and
their readiness to die for Christ with joy, the Tatar khans decided not
to try the patience of God as before, and ceased demanding that Russians
at the Horde perform any pagan rituals. But the struggle of the Russian
nation and the Russian Church against the Mongol Yoke continued for yet
a long time. The Orthodox Church was adorned in this struggle by new
martyrs and confessors. Great Prince Theodore was poisoned by the
Mongols. Also martyred were St Roman of Ryazan (+ 1270), St Michael of
Tver (+ 1318), his sons Demetrius (+ 1325) and Alexander (+ 1339). All
of these took courage from the example and holy prayers of the Russian
Protomartyr of the Horde, St Michael of Chernigov.
On February
14, 1572, at the wish of Tsar Ivan Vasilievich the Terrible, and with
the blessing of Metropolitan Anthony, the relics of the holy martyrs
were transferred to Moscow, to the temple dedicated to them. From there
in 1770 they were transferred to the Visitation cathedral, and on
November 21, 1774 to the Archangel cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin.
The
Lives and service to Sts Michael and Theodore were compiled in the
mid-sixteenth century by the renowned church writer, St Zenobios of
Otonsk.
“The generation of the upright shall be blessed,” says
the holy Psalmodist David (Ps. 111/112:2). This occurred in full measure
for St Michael. He is at the head of many famous families in Russian
history. His children and grandchildren continued the holy Christian
service of St Michael. The Church also numbers his daughter St
Euphrosyne of Suzdal (September 25), and his grandson St Oleg of Briansk
(September 20) among the saints.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2012(with 2011's link here also and further, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!)
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