Commemorated on September 28
Saint Nestor the Chronicler, of the Kiev Caves, Near Caves was born
at Kiev in 1050. He came to Saint Theodosius (May 3) as a young man, and
became a novice. Saint Nestor took monastic tonsure under the successor
to Saint Theodosius, the igumen Stephen, and under him was ordained a
hierodeacon.
Concerning his lofty spiritual life it says that,
with a number of other monastic Fathers he participated in the casting
out of a devil from Nikita the Hermit (January 31), who had become
fascinated by the Hebrew wisdom of the Old Testament. Saint Nestor
deeply appreciated true knowledge, along with humility and penitence.
“Great is the benefit of book learning,” he said, “for books point out
and teach us the way to repentance, since from the words of books we
discover wisdom and temperance. This is the stream, watering the
universe, from which springs wisdom. In books is a boundless depth, by
them we are comforted in sorrows, and they are a bridle for moderation.
If you enter diligently into the books of wisdom, then you shall
discover great benefit for your soul. Therefore, the one who reads books
converses with God or the saints.”
In the monastery Saint Nestor
had the obedience of being the chronicler. In the 1080s he wrote the
“Account about the Life and Martyrdom of the Blessed Passion Bearers
Boris and Gleb” in connection with the transfer of the relics of the
saints to Vyshgorod in the year 1072 (May 2). In the 1080s Saint Nestor
also compiled the Life of the Monk Theodosius of the Kiev Caves. And in
1091, on the eve of the patronal Feast of the Kiev Caves Monastery, he
was entrusted by Igumen John to dig up the holy relics of Saint
Theodosius (August 14) for transfer to the church.
The chief work
in the life of Saint Nestor was compiling in the years 1112-1113 The
Russian Primary Chronicle. “Here is the account of years past, how the
Russian land came to be, who was the first prince at Kiev and how the
Russian land is arrayed.” The very first line written by Saint Nestor
set forth his purpose. Saint Nestor used an extraordinarily wide circle
of sources: prior Russian chronicles and sayings, monastery records, the
Byzantine Chronicles of John Malalos and George Amartolos, various
historical collections, the accounts of the boyar-Elder Ivan Vyshatich
and of tradesmen and soldiers, of journeymen and of those who knew. He
drew them together with a unified and strict ecclesiastical point of
view. This permitted him to write his history of Russia as an inclusive
part of world history, the history of the salvation of the human race.
The
monk-patriot describes the history of the Russian Church in its
significant moments. He speaks about the first mention of the Russian
nation in historical sources in the year 866, in the time of Saint
Photius, Patriarch of Constantinople. He tells of the creation of the
Slavonic alphabet and writing by Saints Cyril and Methodius; and of the
Baptism of Saint Olga at Constantinople. The Chronicle of Saint Nestor
has preserved for us an account of the first Orthodox church in Kiev
(under the year 945), and of the holy Varangian Martyrs (under the year
983), of the “testing of the faiths” by Saint Vladimir (in 986) and the
Baptism of Rus (in 988).
We are indebted to the first Russian
Church historian for details about the first Metropolitans of the
Russian Church, about the emergence of the Kiev Caves monastery, and
about its founders and ascetics. The times in which Saint Nestor lived
were not easy for the Russian land and the Russian Church. Rus lay torn
asunder by princely feuds; the Polovetsian nomads of the steppes lay
waste to both city and village with plundering raids. They led many
Russian people into slavery, and burned churches and monasteries. Saint
Nestor was an eyewitness to the devastation of the Kiev Caves monastery
in the year 1096. In the Chronicle a theologically thought out patriotic
history is presented. The spiritual depth, historical fidelity and
patriotism of the The Russian Primary Chronicle establish it in the
ranks of the significant creations of world literature.
Saint
Nestor died around the year 1114, having left to the other monastic
chroniclers of the Kiev Caves the continuation of his great work. His
successors in the writing of the Chronicles were: Igumen Sylvester, who
added contemporary accounts to the The Russian Primary Chronicle; Igumen
Moses Vydubitsky brought it up to the year 1200; and finally, Igumen
Laurence, who in the year 1377 wrote the most ancient of the surviving
manuscripts that preserve the Chronicle of Saint Nestor (this
copy is
known as the “Lavrentian Chronicle”). The hagiographic tradition of the
Kiev Caves ascetics was continued by Saint Simon, Bishop of Vladimir
(May 10), the compiler of the Kiev Caves Paterikon. Narrating the events
connected with the lives of the holy saints of God, Saint Simon often
quotes, among other sources, from the Chronicle of Saint Nestor.
Saint
Nestor was buried in the Near Caves of Saint Anthony. The Church also
honors his memory in the Synaxis of the holy Fathers of the Near Caves
commemorated September 28 and on the second Sunday of Great Lent when is
celebrated the Synaxis of all the Fathers of the Kiev Caves. His works
have been published many times, including in English as “The Russian
Primary Chronicle”.
SOURCE:
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