Saint Philip of Rabanga was the founder of the
Savior-Transfiguration monastery, near Kadnikov to the northeast of
Vologda. He spent the beginning of his monastic life in the monastery of
St Dionysius of Glushitsa (June 1), and was one of his closest
disciples.
Upon the death of his teacher and spiritual Father, St
Philip left the Glushitsa monastery and settled in a sparsely populated
area at the confluence of the Sukhona and Rabanga Rivers. The saint
wanted to lead his life in complete solitude. The local inhabitants
learned about him, and seeking his guidance to become monks, they began
to come to him in the wilderness. Accepting this as a mandate from
above, St Philip traveled to Rostov to the holy Archbishop Ephraim
(March 27) and asked the saint’s blessing to found a monastery and to
build a church in honor of the Transfiguration of the Lord (the temple
was built in 1447).
Tradition relates that the holy founder of
the Savior-Transfiguration monastery was extremely strict with himself,
but lenient towards the infirmities of others. St Philip died on
November 15, 1457 and was buried in the monastery he founded.
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