Act
of the Canonization of St. Seraphim of Sarov
The
Act of the Most Holy Synod
29 January 1903
In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
Seventy
years ago, on January 2nd, 1833, at the Sarov Hermitage, there
departed peacefully to the Lord the blessed elder Hieromonk
Seraphim, who by his exalted, truly Christian, ascetic life
acquired love for himself and faith in the active power of
his holy prayers from his contemporaries even during his lifetime,
and after his blessed repose memory of him, confirmed by ever
more frequent signs of the mercy of God, manifested through
faith in his prayerful intercession before God for those who
have recourse to him, is spreading far and wide among the
Russian Orthodox people and is honored by them with profound
reverence.
His whole life is comprised of highly edifying examples of
truly Christian asceticism, ardent faith in God, and self-denying
love for his neighbors. While yet a youth, he left his parentsÕ
home in the city of Kursk and, unbeknown to anyone, entered
the Monastery of Sarov. There he began his life with the first
degrees of obedience, and humbly passed through them, winning
from all love for himself and respect for his meekness and
humility. In eight years he passed through the preliminary
test of his readiness to enter upon the path of the monastic
life, and on August 18th, 1786, he received the monastic tonsure
and the new name Seraphim. Two months later, he was ordained
to the rank of hierodeacon.
Fortified by humility, Father Seraphim mounted from glory
to glory in the spiritual life. As a hierodeacon, he spent
all his days, from morning to evening, in the monastery, celebrating
the services, observing the monastic rule and performing obediences,
and in the evening he withdrew to a hermitÕs cell,
spending the night-time there in prayer. Early in the morning,
he would again appear in the monastery to carry out his duties.
On September 2nd, 1793, he was ordained to the rank of hieromonk,
and with exceptional zeal and intense love he continued to
struggle in the spiritual life. Yet prayers, fasting, obedience,
povertyÑthe toil of the monastic life, which for others
is difficult in an of itselfÑ were no longer enough
for him. There was within him a thirst for ever more intense
struggles. He left the monastic community and withdrew, to
undertake these struggles, to a lonely hermitÕs cell
in the dense pine forests. Fifteen years he spent there in
perfect solitude, fasting strictly and constantly exercising
himself in prayer, the reading of the word of God and bodily
labors. Imitating the ancient stylite saints, deriving strength
and comfort from the help of grace, he spent a thousand days
and nights standing on a rock, lifting up his hands to heaven,
repeating the prayer: ÒO God, be merciful to me, a
sinner!Ó When he was finished with his hermitÕs
life, he again went to the Monastery of Sarov, and there,
as in a tomb, he enclosed himself in reclusion for fifteen
years, for the first five of which he imposed upon himself
a vow of silence. Filled wholly with the radiance of the Holy
Spirit through the constant elevation of his mind and heart
in prayer to God, he was repeatedly deemed worthy of visions
from the world beyond.
Having matured in the spiritual life, he, already an elder,
dedicated himself wholly to the active service of others.
Rich and poor, highborn and low, came daily to his cell in
the thousands, and, prostrating themselves before the stooped-over
elder, laid bare the secrets of their conscience, confided
in him their sorrows and needs, and with sincere love and
gratitude hung upon his every word. He greeted everyone with
love and joy, addressing them: ÒLittle father! Little
mother! My joy!Ó He blessed, instructed and edified
everyone; heard the confessions of many; healed the sick;
allowed many to kiss the bronze crucifix which hung from his
neck (a gift from his mother), or the holy icon which stood
on a table in his cell. To some he gave as a blessing antidoron,
or holy water, or pieces of dried bread; on others he traced
the sign of the Cross with oil from his hanging-lamp; a few
he embraced and kissed, greeting them with: "Christ is
risen!"
Spiritual joy imbued the elder to such an extent that they
never saw him sad or despondent, and this joyful state of
his spirit he strove to impart also to others. Of the Christian
virtues he was most of all adorned with meekness and innocence,
extreme humility and a lack of acquisitiveness.
Having completed his earthly sojourn, pure of soul, humble
and full of love, the elder peacefully, serenely fell asleep
in the Lord, kneeling before the icon Òof CompunctionÓ
of the Mother of God, his head bowed, his hands folded upon
his breast. After his blessed repose in the Lord, memory of
his exalted ascetic life not only did not fade, but gradually
grew and became established among all classes of the Orthodox
people of Russia. In the depth of its heart, the Orthodox
nation honors the blessed elder as a true favorite of God,
and believes that in his intercession before the Lord, even
after his departure from this world, he does not forsake all
who have recourse to him. And the Lord God, Who is wondrous
and glorious in His saints, has been well-pleased to manifest
many wondrous signs and healings through the intercession
of Father Seraphim.
Sharing fully the faith of the people in the holiness of the
ever-memorable Elder Seraphim, the Most Holy Synod has repeatedly
acknowledged that it is must issue the necessary decrees for
the glorification of the righteous elder. In 1895, His Grace,
the Bishop of Tambov submitted to the Most Holy Synod the
report of a special Commission investigating the miraculous
signs and healings wrought through the prayers of Father Seraphim
for those who asked his aid with faith. This investigation,
begun by the Commission on February 3rd, 1892, was concluded
in August of 1894, and was conducted in 29 dioceses of European
Russia and Siberia. Ninety-four instances of the gracious
aid received through the prayers of the Elder Seraphim were
investigated by the Commission, the majority of which were
fully confirmed by the necessary affidavits of witnesses.
Yet this number of cases of gracious aid obtained through
the prayers of the elder far from corresponds to their actual
number: in the archives of the Monastery of Sarov, according
to the testimony of the above-mentioned Commission, are preserved
hundreds of letters from various persons, reporting on the
benefactions they have received in turning to the Elder Seraphim
in prayer. Since these statements were not only not investigated,
but were nowhere registered, the Most Holy Synod asked His
Grace, the Bishop of Tambov, to direct the abbot of the Sarov
Hermitage to collect and record accounts of the more remarkable
cases of gracious aid through the prayers of the elder (those
which had not hitherto been recorded), and to keep a careful
record of any new miraculous signs wrought through the prayers
of Father Seraphim in the future. After this, His Grace, the
Bishop of Tambov, twiceÑat the beginning and the end
of the year 1897Ñpresented to the Most Holy Synod collections
of copies of the written statements of various persons concerning
miraculous signs and healings wrought through the prayers
of Father Seraphim. Still not finding it timely then, on the
occasion of the aforementioned petitions of His Grace, the
Bishop of Tambov, to enter into final discussions on the glorification
of the ascetic of Sarov, the Most Holy Synod reiterated that
the abbot of Sarov Hermitage was to continue to record as
many new miraculous signs as might be worked through the prayers
of the elder.
This past year, 1902, on July 19th, the date of the Elder
SeraphimÕs birth, His Imperial Majesty was pleased
to take note of both the prayerful struggles of the departed
one and the universal ardor of the people for his memory,
and to express the desire that the work already begun by the
Most Holy Synod toward the glorification of the revered elder
might be brought to a conclusion.
Having reviewed the circumstances of this important case in
great detail and with all possible care, the Most Holy Synod
has found that the multitude of cases of the gracious help
received through the prayers of the Elder Seraphim, which
have been investigated in an appropriate manner, do not allow
any doubt whatever as to their validity, and in their nature
belong among the events which manifest the miraculous power
of God, which is being poured forth, through the mediation
and aid of Father Seraphim, upon those who with faith and
prayer have recourse in their spiritual and bodily infirmities
to his gracious intercession.
Also, desiring that the most precious remains of the ever-memorable
Elder Seraphim be the object of reverent veneration by all
who flee to his prayerful intercession, the Synod ordered
His Grace, the Metropolitan of Moscow, to conduct an examination
thereof. On January 11th of this year, Metropolitan Vladimir
of Moscow, and Bishops Dmitri of Tambov and Nazary of Nizhegorod,
joined by Archimandrite Seraphim of SuzdalÕ and the
procurator of the Moscow Synodal Chancery, Prince Shirinsky-Shikhmatov,
and four other clergymen, conducted a detailed examination
of the coffin, and the remains themselves, of Father Seraphim,
concerning which they drew up a special affidavit, which they
all signed. Hence, the Most Holy Synod, fully confident of
the veracity and authenticity of the miracles wrought through
the prayers of the Elder Seraphim, giving praise to the Lord
God Who is wondrous in His saints, and Who ever showers His
benefactions upon the Russian Realm, which is firm in its
ancestral Orthodoxy, and Who now, in the days of the blessed
reign of the most pious Sovereign, Emperor Nicholas Alexandrovich,
as of old, has been well-pleased to reveal through the glorification
of the piety of the ascetic a new and great sign of His benefactions
for the Orthodox Russian nation, has submitted to His Imperial
Majesty its most dutiful report, in which it has set forth
its decision as follows:
1) To acknowledge as among the choir of the saints glorified
by the grace of God the most reverent Elder Seraphim, who
lies in the Sarov Hermitage, and his most precious remains
as holy relics, and to place them in the special coffer prepared
by the fervor of His Imperial Majesty, to receive the veneration
and honor of those who have recourse to him with prayer;
2) to compose a special service to the venerable father Seraphim,
and prior to the composition of such, but after the day of
the glorification of his memory, to use the general service
of a monastic to celebrate his memory both on the day of his
repose (January 2nd) and the day of the uncovering of his
holy relics; and
3) to have the Most Holy Synod announce this to all the people.
Attached
to this report were submitted for the MonarchÕs discretion
the original report on the examination of the most precious
remains of Father Seraphim and a brief account of instances
of his miraculous assistance of those who had recourse to
his aid. To the humble report of the Most Holy Synod on this,
the Sovereign Emperor, on January 26th of this year, deigned
to write in his own hand: ÒI have read [this] with
a sense of true joy and profound compunction.Ó Hearing
these most merciful words, the Most Holy Synod, by a decision
dated January 29th, 1903, resolved to order His Grace, Metropolitan
Anthony of St. Petersburg and Ladoga, together with Their
Graces, [the Bishops] of Tambov and Nizhegorod, to perform,
on July 19th of this year, the solemn uncovering of the relics
of the venerable father Seraphim, wonder-worker of Sarov
The Most Holy Synod proclaims this to the pious children of
the Orthodox Church, that they may render glory and thanksgiving
to the Lord Whose good pleasure this has been, and that they
may receive this revelation of a new helper and wonder-worker
as a new blessing from heaven upon the reign of our most august
Monarch, who undertakes tireless labors for the good of the
Orthodox nation of Russia, and in his royal love and care
embraces all his faithful subjects of every calling and station.
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