Commemorated on November 5
Saint Jonah, Archbishop of Novgorod, in the world named John, was
left orphaned early in life and was adopted by a certain pious widow
living in Novgorod. She raised the child and sent him to school. Blessed
Michael of Klops Monastery (January 11), who chanced to meet John on
the street, foretold that he would become Archbishop of Novgorod. John
received tonsure at the Otnya wilderness-monastery, 50 versts from the
city, and he became igumen of this monastery. It was from here that the
people of Novgorod chose him as their archbishop in 1458, after the
death of St Euthymius (March 11).
St Jonah enjoyed great
influence at Moscow, and during his time as hierarch, the Moscow princes
did not infringe upon the independence of Novgorod. St Jonah,
Metropolitan of Moscow (1449-1461), was a friend of the Novgorod
Archbishop St Jonah, and wanted him to become his successor.
In
1463, Archbishop Jonah built the first church dedicated to St Sergius of
Radonezh in the Novgorod region. Concerning himself over reviving
traditions of the old days in the Novgorod Church, he summoned to
Novgorod the renowned compiler of Saints’ Lives, Pachomius the
Logothete, who wrote both the services and history of the best known
Novgorod Saints, based on local sources.
And to this time period
belongs also the founding of the Solovki monastery. St Jonah rendered
much help and assistance in the organizing of the monastery. To St
Zosimas he gave a special land-grant (in conjunction with the secular
authorities of Novgorod), by which the whole of Solovki Island was
granted to the new monastery.
The saint, after his many toils,
and sensing the approach of his end, wrote a spiritual testament to bury
his body at the Otnya monastery. On November 5, 1470, after he received
the Holy Mysteries, the saint fell asleep in the Lord.
There has
survived to the present day a Letter of St Jonah to Metropolitan
Theodosius, written in 1464. The Life of the saint was written in the
form of a short account in the year 1472 (included in the work,
Memorials of Old Russian Literature, and also in the Great Reading
Menaion of Metropolitan Macarius, under November 5). In 1553, after the
uncovering of the relics of Archbishop Jonah, an account of this event
was written by St Zenobius of Otnya (October 30). A special work
relating the miracles of the saint is found in manuscripts of the
seventeenth century.
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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