Saint Serapion of Pskov was born at Yuriev (now Tartu), which
then was under the rule of Germans, who sought to stamp out Orthodoxy.
His parents were parishioners of a Russian church in the name of St
Nicholas.
St Serapion was well versed in the Holy Scripture, and
more than once he entered into the defense of Orthodoxy. When they
wanted to convert him by force to the foreign faith, he departed to the
Tolvsk wilderness, not far from Pskov, where the Pskov ascetic monk
Euphrosynus (May 15) began his prayerful work.
Under his
nurturing, St Serapion began to acquire the wisdom of wilderness life.
But soon he happened to undergo temptations. Without a blessing, he
wanted to leave his guide and to live an ascetic life in complete
solitude. But the Lord brought the inexperienced novice to his senses:
after he seriously hurt his leg, he repented of his self-will and
disobedience and returned to the Elder.
After he received the
Great Schema, he dwelt constantly with St Euphrosynus for 55 years,
strictly keeping the vow of silence. Brethren began gradually to gather
around St Euphrosynus, for which the Elder built a temple in the name of
the Three Hierarchs and gave a skete rule.
St Serapion zealously
fulfilled everything commanded of him and was a role model for the
monks. The monk so strictly fulfilled the monastic vow of
uncovetousness, that a copyist of his life called him “an unburied
corpse.” He bore every insult with extraordinary humility, always
blaming himself alone, and he himself asked forgiveness of his insulter.
The monk deeply sensed the power of communal prayers and he said that
“the order of the twelve Psalms” sung alone in the cell cannot equal one
“Lord, have mercy” sung in church.
St Serapion died on September
8, 1480, on the Feast of the Nativity of the Most Holy Theotokos. Since
the day of repose of St Serapion coincides with one of the twelve Great
Feasts, his commemoration is on September 7. A Troparion and Kontakion
were composed for the saint.
St Euphrosynus himself committed the
body of his disciple to the earth. By his fervent deeds he had
transformed himself into mere “bones, covered by skin.” St Serapion was
not separated from his spiritual Father even after death: their holy
relics were placed beside each other. A common service was composed to
Sts Euphrosynus and Serapion (15 May), wherein St Serapion is glorified
as the first co-ascetic, “companion and friend” of St Euphrosynus.
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