The Holy Martyrs Theodore the Varangian and his son John
lived at Kiev in the tenth century, when the Varangians, ancestors of
the present day Swedes and Norwegians took an active role in the
governance and military life of Rus. Merchants and soldiers, they opened
up new trade routes to Byzantium and to the East, they took part in
campaigns against Constantinople, and they constituted a significant
part of the populace of ancient Kiev and the princely mercenary
retinues. The chief trade route of Rus, from the Baltic Sea to the Black
Sea, was then called “the Way from the Varangians to the Greeks.”
The
chieftains and organizers of the early Russian realm relied upon their
Varangian retinues in their undertakings. Just like the Slavs, among
whom they lived, many of the sea-faring newcomers under the influence of
the Byzantine Church accepted holy Baptism. Kievan Rus stood between
the pagan Scandinavians and the Orthodox Byzantines. Therefore, the
spiritual life at Kiev was affected by the vivifying influence of the
Christian Faith (under St Askold in the years 860-882, under Igor and St
Olga in the years 940-950), and then by the destructive whirlwind of
paganism, blowing down from the north from the Varangian Sea (under the
reign of Oleg, killing Askold in 882; under the revolt of the Drevliani
murdering Igor in 945; under Prince Svyatoslav, who refused to accept
Baptism despite the insistence of his mother, St Olga).
When
Svyatoslav was killed by the Pechenegs in 972 (other sources say in
970), the principality of Kiev was entrusted to his eldest son,
Yaropolk. Oleg, the middle son, held the Drevlianian land, while
Vladimir, the youngest son, held Novgorod. The reign of Yaropolk
(970-978), just like that of his grandmother Olga, again became a time
of predominating Christian influence in the spiritual life of Rus.
Yaropolk himself, in the opinion of historians, confessed Christianity,
although possibly of the Latin rite, and this did not correspond at all
to the interests of the Scandinavian mercenary retinue. They were
pagans, who were accustomed to consider Kiev a bulwark of their own
influence in the Slavic lands. Their leaders strove to create discord
between the brothers themselves. They incited a fratricidal war between
Yaropolk and Oleg. After this when Oleg was killed, they supported
Vladimir in a struggle against Yaropolk.
The future Baptizer of
Rus started on his way as a convinced pagan and he relied upon the
Varangians, especially those having come to him from over the sea, as
his military force. His campaign against Kiev in 978, crowned with
complete success, pursued not only military-political aims: it was also a
religious campaign of Russo-Varangian paganism against the outgrowth of
Kievan Christianity. On June 11, 978 Vladimir “sat on the throne of his
father at Kiev,” and the hapless Yaropolk, invited by his brother for
negotiations, was treacherously murdered when he arrived at the entrance
hall by two Varangians who stabbed him with swords. In order to
intimidate the Kievans, among whom were already many Christians both
Russian and Varangian, to renew and strengthen with new idols, human
sacrifices were made in the pagan sanctuary, a practice unknown to the
Dniepr Slavs until then. The chronicles speak of Vladimir setting up
idols: “And they brought them sacrifices, acclaiming them gods, and they
brought to them their own sons and daughters, and these sacrifices went
to the devils... both the Russian land and this hill were defiled with
blood”.
The martyrdom of Sts Theodore and his son John may have
taken place during this first period of the triumph of paganism at Kiev
with Vladimir’s accession to power. In that case, the date might be July
12, 978. It is probable, however, that the exploit of the holy martyrs
took place in the year 983, when the wave of pagan reaction rolled not
only through Rus, but throughout all the Slavic-Germanic world. Almost
simultaneously pagans rose up against Christ and the Church in Denmark,
Germany, the Baltic Slavic principalities, and everywhere the unrest was
accompanied by the destruction of churches, and by the killing of
clergy and Christian confessors. This was the year Vladimir went on
campaign against the Lithuanian tribe of the Yatvyagi, and gained
victory over them. In recognition of this victory the Kievan pagan
priests again decided to make a bloody sacrificial offering.
“Among
the Kievans,” reports St Nestor the Chronicler, “lived a Varangian by
the name of Theodore, who was in military service at Constantinople long
before this, and was baptized there. His pagan name, preserved in the
term “Turov pagan temple,” was Tur (Scandinavian Thor) or Utor
(Scandinavian Ottar), and this other signature is also found in the old
manuscripts. Theodore had a son John, a devout and handsome youth,
confessing Christianity like his father.”
“And the elders and
boyars said: let us cast lots upon the boys and girls. Upon whichever
one it falls, that one we shall slaughter in sacrifice to the gods.” The
lots thrown by the pagan priests, evidently not by chance, fell upon
the Christian John.
When the messengers told Theodore that his son
“had been chosen by the gods themselves to be sacrificed to them,” the
old warrior decisively answered: “This is not a god, but wood. Today it
is, and tomorrow it rots. They do not eat, nor drink nor speak, but are
crafted by human hands from wood. God however is One, and the Greeks
serve and worship Him. He created heaven and earth, the stars and the
moon, the sun and man, and foreordained him to live upon the earth. But
these gods, what have they created? They themselves are made. I shall
not give my son over to devils.”
This was a direct challenge by
the Christian to the customs and beliefs of the pagans. An enraged crowd
of pagans rushed at Theodore, smashed up his courtyard, and surrounded
the house. Theodore, in the words of the chronicler, “stood at the
entrance way with his son,” and with weapon in hand he bravely met the
enemy. (The entrance way in old Russian houses as mentioned was set up
on posts of a roofed gallery of the second storey, which was reached by a
ladder). He calmly gazed upon the demon-possessed pagans and said: “If
they are gods, let them send one of the gods to take my son.” Seeing
that the brave and seasoned warriors Theodore and John could not be
beaten in a fair fight, the besiegers knocked down the gallery posts.
When they were broken, the crowd rushed upon the confessors and murdered
them.
Already during the time of St Nestor, less than a hundred
years after the confessor’s deed of the Varangians, the Russian Orthodox
Church numbered them among the Saints. Theodore and John became the
first martyrs for the holy Orthodox Faith in the Russian land. They were
called the first “Russian citizens of the heavenly city” by the
transcriber of the Kiev Caves Paterikon, the holy Bishop Simon of Suzdal
(May 10). The last of the bloody pagan sacrifices at Kiev became the
first holy Christian sacrifice with a co-suffering for Christ. The
pathway “from the Varangians to the Greeks” became for Rus the pathway
from paganism to Orthodoxy, from darkness to light.
On the place
of the martyrdom of the Varangians, St Vladimir later built the Desyatin
Church of the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos, consecrated on May
12, 996. The relics of St Olga were transferred into it in the year
1007.
Wondrous is God in His saints! Time does not spare stones
and bronze, but the lower framework of the wooden house of the holy
Varangrian martyrs, burned a thousand years before, has been preserved
to our day. It was discovered in the year 1908 during the excavation of
the altar of the Desyatin church at Kiev.
Sts Theodore and John are invoked by women who have miscarried.
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