Synaxis of the Saints of Optina
Commemorated on October 11
Commemorated today are our holy fathers Moses, Antony,
Leonid(Lev), Macarius, Hilarion, Ambrose, Anatolius I, Isaac I, Joseph,
Barsanuphius, Anatolius the Younger, Nectarius, Nikon the Confessor, and
Hieromartyr Isaac the Younger. Hieromartyr Isaac was shot by the Bolsheviks on
December 26 1937.
This feast commemorates a few of the holy Fathers who made the Optina
Hermitage (Pustyn) a focus for the powerful renewal
movement that spread through the Church in Russia beginning early in the
nineteenth century, and continuing up to (and even into) the atheist
persecutions of the twentieth century. Saint Paisius Velichkovsky (November 15)
was powerfully influential in bringing the almost-lost hesychastic tradition of
Orthodox spirituality to Russia in the eighteenth century, and his labors found
in Optina Monastery a 'headquarters' from which they spread throughout the
Russian land. The monastery itself had been in existence since at least the
sixteenth century, but had fallen into decay through the anti-monastic policies
of Catherine II and other modernizing rulers. Around 1790, Metropolitan Platon
of Moscow undertook a mission to restore and revive the monastery in the
tradition set forth by St Paisius. By the early 1800s the monastery (located
about 80 miles from Moscow) had become a beacon of Orthodox spirituality, partly
through their publication of Orthodox spiritual texts, but more importantly
through the lineage of divinely-enlightened spiritual fathers (startsi,
plural of starets) who served as guides to those,
noble and peasant, who flocked to the monastery for their holy counsel. The
fathers aroused some controversy in their own day; a few critics (some of them
from other monasteries) disapproved of their allowing the Jesus Prayer to become
widely-known among the people, fearing that it would give rise to spiritual
delusion (prelest). For a wonderful depiction of
the deep influence of the Jesus Prayer on Russian life during this period, read
the anonymously-written Way of a Pilgrim.
With the coming of the Russian Revolution in 1917, the monastery was of course
officially shut down, but some of the Fathers were able to keep it running for a
time as an 'agricultural legion'. Over the years, most of the Fathers were
dispersed, to die in exile, in prison camps, or by the firing squad. Many of
them are known to have continued to function as startsi
to their spiritual children, despite great danger and hardship, for the
remainder of their time on earth.
Commemoration of the Optina startsi was approved by
the Synod of the Russian Church Abroad in 1990, and by the Moscow Patriarchate
in 1996. The Optina Monastery itself was officially re-established in 1987.