Commemorated on February 16
Saint Nicholas, Enlightener of Japan Ivan Dimitrievich Kasatkin was
born on August 1, 1836 in the village of Berezovsk, Belsk district,
Smolensk diocese, where his father served as deacon. At the age of five
he lost his mother. He completed the Belsk religious school, and
afterwards the Smolensk Theological Seminary. In 1857 Ivan Kasatkin
entered the Saint Peterburg Theological Academy. On June 24, 1860, in
the academy temple of the Twelve Apostles, Bishop Nectarius tonsured him
with the name Nicholas.
On June 29, the Feast of the foremost
Apostles Peter and Paul, the monk Nicholas was ordained deacon. The next
day, on the altar feast of the academy church, he was ordained to the
holy priesthood. Later, at his request, Father Nicholas was assigned to
Japan as head of the consular church in the city of Hakodate.
At
first, the preaching of the Gospel in Japan seemed completely
impossible. In Father Nicholas’s own words: “the Japanese of the time
looked upon foreigners as beasts, and on Christianity as a villainous
sect, to which only villains and sorcerers could belong.” He spent eight
years in studying the country, the language, manners and customs of the
people among whom he would preach.
In 1868, the flock of Father
Nicholas numbered about twenty Japanese. At the end of 1869 Hieromonk
Nicholas reported in person to the Synod in Peterburg about his work. A
decision was made, on January 14, 1870, to form a special Russian
Spiritual Mission for preaching the Word of God among the pagan
Japanese. Father Nicholas was elevated to the rank of archimandrite and
appointed as head of this Mission.
Returning to Japan after two
years in Russia, he transferred some of the responsibility for the
Hakodate flock to Hieromonk Anatolius, and began his missionary work in
Tokyo. In 1871 there was a persecution of Christians in Hakodate. Many
were arrested (among them, the first Japanese Orthodox priest Paul
Sawabe). Only in 1873 did the persecution abate somewhat, and the free
preaching of Christianity became possible.
In this year
Archimandrite Nicholas began the construction of a stone building in
Tokyo which housed a church, a school for fifty men, and later a
religious school, which became a seminary in 1878.
In 1874,
Bishop Paul of Kamchatka arrived in Tokyo to ordain as priests several
Japanese candidates recommended by Archimandrite Nicholas. At the Tokyo
Mission, there were four schools: for catechists, for women, for church
servers, and a seminary. At Hakodate there were two separate schools for
boys and girls.
In the second half of 1877, the Mission began
regular publication of the journal “Church Herald.” By the year 1878
there were already 4115 Christians in Japan, and there were a number of
Christian communities. Church services and classes in Japanese, the
publication of religious and moral books permitted the Mission to attain
such results in a short time. Archimandrite Nicholas petitioned the
Holy Synod in December of 1878 to provide a bishop for Japan.
Archimandrite
Nicholas was consecrated bishop on March 30, 1880 in the Trinity
Cathedral of Alexander Nevsky Lavra. Returning to Japan, he resumed his
apostolic work with increased fervor. He completed construction on the
Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ in Tokyo, he translated the
service books, and compiled a special Orthodox theological dictionary in
the Japanese language.
Great hardship befell the saint and his
flock at the time of the Russo-Japanese War. For his ascetic labor
during these difficult years, he was elevated to the rank of Archbishop.
In 1911, half a century had passed since the young hieromonk
Nicholas had first set foot on Japanese soil. At that time there were
33,017 Christians in 266 communities of the Japanese Orthodox Church,
including 1 Archbishop, 1 bishop, 35 priests, 6 deacons, 14 singing
instructors, and 116 catechists.
On February 3, 1912, Archbishop
Nicholas departed peacefully to the Lord at the age of seventy-six. The
Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church glorified him on April 10,
1970, since the saint had long been honored in Japan as a righteous man,
and a prayerful intercessor before the Lord.
TROPARION - TONE 4
O holy saint Nicholas / The enlightener of Japan, / You share a dignity
and the throne of the Apostles; / You are a wise and faithful servant of
Christ, / A temple chosen by the Divine Spirit, / A vessel overflowing
with the love of Christ. / O hierarch equal to the Apostles, / Pray to
the Life-Creating Trinity / For all your flock and for the whole world.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2013(with 2012's link here also and further, 2011, 2010, 2009 and even 2008!)
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