1. The Significance of the Lives of the Saints
|   | 
| St. Justin Popovic | 
In
 order to begin to understand the importance of the
 Lives of the Saints for our spiritual lives, I
 believe we can turn to no better or more thorough
 source than St. Justin Popovich's
 Introduction to his own compilation of the
 Lives of the Saints. A theologian, St. Justin saw no
 dichotomy between the Lives of the Saints and the
 theological writings of the Church. For him, as for
 the Church, theology and the Lives of the Saints form
 one whole. He called the Lives of the Saints
 "experiential theology" or "applied
 dogmatic theology," and he viewed them and wrote
 about them in a theological manner. Likewise, he
 viewed theological writings as an expression of the
 experience of the life of Grace in the Church, and
 not just an intellectual, abstract or polemical
 exercise.
 How does St. Justin view the Lives of the Saints
 theologically? At the center of all of St. Justin's
 thought is the Theanthropic vision: the fact that
 God became man in Jesus Christ, uniting human nature with
 Divine Nature. The fact of the God-man, the Theanthropos,
 is the axis of the universe: it is the reality according
 to which everything else must be viewed, whether it be the
 nature of the Church or the problems and issues of
 everyday life.
 Thus, when St. Justin looks at the Lives of the Saints, he
 does so in the light of the God-man. Real and true
 life—eternal life in God—became possible only
 with the Incarnation, death and Resurrection of the
 Saviour, and this life is the Life of the Saints. St.
 Justin saw the Lives of the Saints as bearing witness to
 one life: the Life in Christ.
 St. Justin wrote: "What are Christians? Christians
 are Christ-bearers, and, by virtue of this, they are
 bearers and possessors of eternal life.... The Saints are
 the most perfect Christians, for they have been sanctified
 to the highest degree with the podvigs of holy
 faith in the risen and eternally living Christ, and no
 death has power over them. Their life is entirely Christ's
 life; and their thought is entirely Christ's thought; and
 their perception is Christ's perception. All that they
 have is first Christ's and then theirs.... In them is
 nothing of themselves but rather wholly and in everything
 the Lord Christ."[1]
 The Saints live in Christ, but Christ also lives in them
 through His Divine Energies, His Grace. And where Christ
 is, there is the Father and the Holy Spirit also. Christ
 says, Abide in Me, and I in you; and elsewhere He says,
 If a man love Me, he will keep My words: and My Father
 will love him, and We will come unto him, and make Our
 abode with him (John 15:4; 14:23).
 Thus, St. Justin makes bold to say that the Lives of the
 Saints not only bear witness to the Life in Christ: they
 may even be said to be the continuation of the Life of
 Christ on earth. "The Lives of the Saints," says
 St. Justin, "are nothing else but the life of the
 Lord Christ, repeated in every Saint to a greater or
 lesser degree in this or that form. More precisely, it is
 the life of the Lord Christ continued through the Saints,
 the life of the incarnate God the Logos, the God-man Jesus
 Christ Who became man."[2]
 This is an amazing thing that St. Justin is saying: when
 we read the Lives of the Saints, we are reading the Life
 of our Lord Jesus Christ. This in itself should be enough
 to convince us of the importance of filling our souls with
 the Lives of the Saints.
 St. Justin also says that the Lives of the Saints are a
 continuation of the Acts of the Apostles. "What are
 the 'Acts of the Apostles'?" he asks. "They are
 the acts of Christ, which the Holy Apostles do by the
 power of Christ, or better still: they do them by Christ
 Who is in them and acts through them. "And what are
 the 'Lives of the Saints'? They are nothing else but a
 certain kind of continuation of the 'Acts of the
 Apostles.' In them is found the same Gospel, the same
 life, the same truth, the same righteousness, the same
 love, the same faith, the same eternity, the same 'power
 from on high,' the same God and Lord. For the Lord
 Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and for
 ever (Heb. 13:8): the same for all peoples of all
 times, distributing the same gifts and the same Divine
 Energies to all who believe in Him."[3]
 With these words of St. Justin before us, we might well
 ask ourselves if Orthodox spiritual life is even possible
 without the testimony of the Lives of the Saints. The
 answer to this, I believe, must be "no." True
 spiritual life begins when we live in Christ and Christ
 lives in us, right here on this earth. And the Lives of
 the Saints bear witness to us that the Life of Christ on
 earth did not end with His Ascension into Heaven, nor with
 the martyrdom of His Apostles. His Life continues to this
 day in His Church, and is seen most brilliantly in His
 Saints. And we, too, in our own spiritual lives, are to
 enter into that continuing, never-ending Life.
 I spoke recently to an Orthodox priest who had converted
 to Orthodoxy from Protestantism. He told me that, when he
 was received into the Church, the officiating priest told
 him: "You will never be truly Orthodox without
 reading the Lives of the Saints." Later, when he
 himself became a priest, he found that the most pious
 people in the churches are those who read the Lives of the
 Saints, and that those who make the most progress in the
 spiritual life are those who read the Saints' Lives.
 The Orthodox Faith is not, first of all, of the head.
 First of all, it is of the heart: it is felt
 and believed by the heart. Through the Lives of the
 Saints, we develop an Orthodox heart. Our monastery's
 co-founder, Fr. Seraphim Rose, emphasized constantly this
 "Orthodoxy of the heart," especially in his
 writings and talks at the end of his life; and he
 frequently referred to Lives of the Saints as a means of
 developing this.
2. How to Make Use of the Lives of the Saints
 Having looked at the importance and meaning of the Lives
 of the Saints, let us look now at the various ways we can
 make use of them in our spiritual lives.
 First, we look to the Saints as our examples. Be ye
 imitators of me, even as I also am of Christ (I Cor.
 11:1), the Saints say to us along with the Holy Apostle
 Paul. As Christians, we want to grow in the likeness of
 Christ, to have that likeness shine in us. For this to
 occur, we need to look often to the Saints to see that
 shining likeness: we must look to them for real, practical
 examples of how to live. St. Basil the Great gives this
 analogy:
 "Just as painters, in working from models, constantly
 gaze at their exemplar and thus strive to transfer the
 expression of the original to their own artistry, so too
 he who is eager to make himself perfect in all kinds of
 virtue must gaze upon the Lives of the Saints as upon
 statues, so to speak, that move and act, and must make
 their excellence his own by imitation."[4]
 Secondly, we must look to the Saints as our heavenly
 friends, as our brothers and sisters in the Faith, and as
 our preceptors. We read about them not as people who are
 dead, but as people who are living. And this is even more
 immediate than just reading a biography about someone who
 is still alive. Let's say we are reading the biography of
 some famous living person. As we read it, we may dream of
 perhaps one day meeting this person, or perhaps of writing
 him a letter and having it actually reach him, and even of
 receiving a reply from him, despite the fact that he is so
 famous that thousands of people are probably writing to
 him. Reading the Lives of the Saints offers us much more
 than this, because the Saints are alive in God, and are
 not bound by time and space in the same way we are. We can
 address them in prayer immediately and at any time, even
 right in the middle of reading their Lives. And they will
 hear us. Besides our private prayers to them, the Church
 offers us many other ways of communing with them as our
 friends and honoring them as our preceptors. We sing their
 troparia, we venerate their icons, we perform services to
 them, and with a blessing from our Bishop we can even
 compose services in their honor.
 As we read the Lives of the Saints each day, we will
 discover little by little those Saints whom our hearts go
 out to. They will become our close friends, those whom we
 pray to most of all, those in whom we confide our joys and
 sorrows. As Archimandrite Aimilianos, the present Abbot of
 the Holy Monastery of Simonos Petras on Mount Athos,
 writes: "These close friends will be the guides of
 our choice and a great comfort to us along the strait and
 narrow way that leads to Christ. We are not alone on the
 road or in the struggle. We have with us our Mother, the
 All-Holy Mother of God, our Guardian Angel, the Saint
 whose name we bear, and those close friends we have chosen
 out of the Great Multitude of Saints who stand before the
 Lamb (Rev. 7:9). When we stumble through sin, they will
 raise us up again; when we are tempted to give up hope,
 they will remind us that they have suffered for Christ
 before us, and more than us; and that they are now the
 possessors of unending joy. So, upon the stony road of the
 present life, these holy companions will enable us to
 glimpse the light of the Resurrection. Let us search,
 then, in the Lives of the Saints, for these close friends,
 and with all the Saints let us make our way to
 Christ."[5]
 St. Justin Popovich, as we have said, called the Lives of
 the Saints "applied dogmatic theology." The
 Saints are proofs and illustrations of the reality of
 Christ, of His saving work of redemption. The Saints are
 transformed human beings, proof positive that people are
 redeemed, purified, illumined, transformed and recreated
 by Jesus Christ.
 St. Justin also calls the Lives of the Saints
 "applied ethics." They are embodiments of the
 life of Divine virtue that is possible only in Jesus
 Christ. They are embodiments of the life of Grace in the
 Church, through the Holy Sacraments, through the
 life-giving Body and Blood of the Lord.
 Fr. Seraphim Rose once counseled a budding Orthodox writer
 to make use of the Lives of the Saints as "applied
 dogmatic theology" and as "applied ethics."
 Fr. Seraphim said that, when one is writing on a spiritual
 subject, one should try to not only discuss it in the
 abstract, but to give living examples from the Lives of
 the Saints. Fr. Seraphim wrote to his fellow Orthodox
 writer: "If I have any suggestion for your future
 articles, it would simply be to keep in mind the Lives of
 the Saints. In your article, there is a point that would
 be more forceful by references to the life of the author
 of the citations, who is a Saint. You quote St. John of
 Kronstadt on 'love'—but he is not merely a great
 Orthodox Saint of this century, he is a very incarnation
 of the love he talks about, and there is scarcely to be
 found a parallel in the Lives of other Saints to his
 absolute self-crucifying love and service to others,
 blessed by God in the manifestation of an abundance of
 miracles that can only be compared to those of St.
 Nicholas."[6]
3. An Example of How to Make Use of the Lives of the
 Saints
 I will now attempt to implement Fr. Seraphim's advice
 here. In speaking about how to make use of the Lives of
 the Saints, I will give the example of a Saint who made
 use of them to an astounding degree. This is Fr.
 Seraphim's mentor, and the Bishop who blessed the
 establishment of our Brotherhood: St. John Maximovitch,
 Archbishop of Shanghai and San Francisco.
 Archbishop John was born Michael Maximovitch in the city
 of Kharkov in southern Russia in 1896. As a boy he
 collected religious and historical books, and loved above
 all to read the Lives of the Saints. Being the oldest
 child, he had a great influence on his four brothers and
 one sister, who knew the Lives of the Saints through him.
 When he was eleven years old Michael was sent to the
 Poltava Cadet Corps (military academy). When he graduated
 in 1914, he wished to attend the Kiev Theological Academy.
 His parents insisted, however, that he attend Law School
 in Kharkov, and out of obedience to them he put away his
 own desire and began to prepare for a career in law.
 It was during his university years that the Orthodox
 education and outlook which Michael had received in his
 childhood came to maturity. Young Michael saw the point of
 this upbringing. He saw that the Lives of the Saints, in
 particular, contain a profound wisdom which is not seen by
 those who read them superficially, and that the proper
 knowledge of the Lives of the Saints is more important
 than any university course. And so it was, as his
 classmates noticed, that Michael spent more time reading
 the Lives of the Saints than attending academic lectures,
 although he did very well in his university studies also.
 One could say that he studied the Orthodox Saints
 precisely "on the university level': he assimilated
 their world-outlook and their orientation toward life, and
 studied the variety of their activity and ascetic labors
 and practice of prayer. He came to love them with all his
 heart, was thoroughly penetrated by their spirit—and
 began to live like them. Many years later, during the
 sermon he gave when he was consecrated a Bishop, he said:
 "While studying the worldly sciences, I went all the
 more deeply into the study of the science of sciences,
 into the study of the spiritual life."
 In 1921, as the Russian Civil War was raging,
 Michael—then twenty-four years old—was
 evacuated with his entire family to Belgrade. There he
 entered the University of Belgrade, from which he
 graduated in 1925 in the faculty of theology. A year later
 he was tonsured a monk in Serbia and was given the name
 John, after his own distant relative, St. John Maximovitch
 of Tobolsk. During the same year he was ordained a
 hieromonk.
 For five years Hieromonk John was a teacher and tutor at
 the Seminary of St. John the Theologian in Bitol, Serbia.
 The city of Bitol was in the diocese of Ohrid, and at that
 time the ruling bishop of this diocese was another future
 Saint: St. Nikolai Velimirovich. St. Nikolai valued and
 loved the young Hieromonk John, and exerted a beneficial
 influence on him. More than once he was heard to say,
 "If you wish to see a living Saint, go to Bitol to
 Father John."
 One of the seminarians who was at the Bitol Seminary at
 that time recalls: "Bishop Nikolai often visited the
 seminary and spoke with the teachers and students. For us
 his meeting with Fr. John was unusual. After mutual
 prostrations, there was an unusually cordial, loving
 conversation. Once, before parting, Bishop Nikolai turned
 to a small group of students (of whom I was one) with
 these words: 'Children, listen to Fr. John; he is an angel
 of God in human form.' We ourselves became convinced that
 this was the correct characterization of him. His life was
 angelic. One can rightly say that he belonged more to
 Heaven than to earth. His meekness and humility were like
 that recorded in the Lives of the greatest ascetics and
 desert-dwellers."
 By this time, it had indeed become evident that Fr. John
 was an entirely extraordinary man. It was his own students
 who first discovered what was perhaps his greatest feat of
 asceticism. They noticed at first that he stayed up long
 after everyone else had gone to bed; he would go through
 the dormitories at night and pick up blankets that had
 fallen down and cover the unsuspecting sleepers, making
 the sign of the Cross over them. Finally it was discovered
 that he scarcely slept at all, and never in a bed,
 allowing himself only an hour or two each night of
 uncomfortable rest in a sitting position, or bent over on
 the floor praying before icons. Years afterward he himself
 admitted that since taking the monastic vows he had not
 slept lying in a bed. Such an ascetic practice is a very
 rare one; yet it is not unknown in the Orthodox tradition
 of the Lives of the Saints. In the fourth century, St.
 Pachomius the Great of Egypt was told by an angel to have
 his monks follow this practice.
 In 1934, Fr. John was consecrated a Bishop in the Russian
 Church in Belgrade, and he was assigned to the diocese of
 Shanghai in China. The first thing he did in Shanghai was
 to restore Church unity, establishing contact with the
 Serbs, Greeks, and Ukrainians. He paid special attention
 to religious education. He actively participated in
 charitable activities, especially after seeing the needy
 circumstances in which the majority of his flock, refugees
 from the Soviet Union, were placed. He organized a home
 for orphans and the children of needy parents. He himself
 gathered sick and starving children off the streets and
 dark alleys of Shanghai's slums: Russian children, Chinese
 children, and others. The orphanage housed up to a hundred
 children at a time, and some 3,500 in all.
 It soon became apparent to his new flock that Archbishop
 John was a great ascetic. The core of his asceticism was
 prayer and fasting. He ate once a day at 11 p.m. During
 the first and last weeks of Great Lent he did not eat at
 all, and for the rest of this and the Christmas Lent he
 ate only bread from the altar. His nights he spent usually
 in prayer, and when he finally became exhausted he would
 put his head on the floor and steal a few hours of sleep
 near dawn.
 Then it became known that Archbishop John not only was a
 righteous man and an ascetic, but was also so close to God
 that he was endowed with the gift of clairvoyance, and was
 a great miracle-worker. There are many, many firsthand
 accounts of both his clairvoyance and his miracle-working,
 which show him to be equal to the great Saints of ancient
 times. On more than one occasion, he was seen surrounded
 in the Uncreated Light of deification while praying.
 In 1949, the Communists took over China. Archbishop John
 was forced to evacuate his flock, including his entire
 orphanage. He brought 5,000 refugees to camps in the
 Philippines. He himself went to Washington, D.C. to get
 his people to America. Legislation was changed and almost
 the whole camp came to the New World—thanks to St.
 John. Later he was assigned to Western Europe, and then to
 San Francisco, where reposed in 1966.[7]
 Perhaps the most remarkable thing about St. John's life is
 that he manifested in himself so many different kinds of
 sanctity. It was as if, through the intense study of the
 Lives of the Saints that he had undertaken in his early
 years, he had internalized and made his own the whole
 realm of Orthodox sanctity, in all its varied forms. He
 was a true student of the Saints, one who sought to follow
 in their footsteps, and thus to follow in the footsteps of
 Christ. By living like the Saints, he became one of them.
 Let's look at some of the varied forms of sanctity that
 could be seen in Archbishop John:
 1. He was first of all a great ascetic in the tradition of
 the ascetic, monastic Saints of old, such as St. Macarius
 the Great, St. Pachomius the Great, and others.
 2. He was a clairvoyant reader of hearts, and one who
 could identify and name people he had never seen before.
 Enlightened by the Grace of God, he could hear and answer
 people's thoughts before they would express them. He also
 foretold the future, including the time of his own death.
 In this way, he was very much in the tradition of the
 great monastic elders of the past, especially the
 clairvoyant Russian elders such as those of Optina
 Monastery.
 3. He was an almsgiver in the tradition of St. Philaret
 the Almsgiver, St. John the Almsgiver, etc. We have seen
 how he sacrificed himself for orphaned children, going
 himself into dangerous slums and houses of prostitution in
 order to rescue children from starvation or unhealthy
 environments. He was constantly giving to and working to
 help the needy. He himself wore clothing of the cheapest
 Chinese fabric. He often went barefoot, sometimes after
 having given away his sandals to some poor man.
 4. He was a hierarch and theologian, a Church writer and
 apologist who defended the Church against error, much in
 the tradition of St. Athanasius the Great, St. Gregory the
 Theologian, and others. Besides his many published
 sermons, rich in theological content, he wrote valuable
 theological treatises in order to defend traditional
 Orthodox teachings which were being undermined in modern
 times. One of these works, in which he presents the
 Orthodox teaching on the Mother of God in contrast to
 Protestant and Roman Catholic distortions, has been
 published in English.[8]
 He also wrote an extensive essay pointing out the
 fallacies of the modern teaching of Sophiology.
 5. He was an apostle, evangelist and missionary to new
 lands, in the tradition of Sts. Cyril and Methodius, St.
 Nahum of Ohrid and others. When he was in Western Europe,
 he worked hard to establish indigenous Orthodox Churches
 in France and the Netherlands: churches made up of the
 native peoples of these lands who had converted to the
 Orthodox Faith. He understood that the Orthodox Church is
 universal, and he said that the Orthodox Gospel of Christ
 must be spread throughout the world. Later, when he came
 to America, he instituted English Liturgies in addition to
 Slavonic Liturgies, in a Cathedral that had only known
 Slavonic Liturgies. He helped and supported our newly
 begun St. Herman Brotherhood, which was dedicated to
 bringing Orthodoxy to the English-speaking world.
 6. He was a healer and miracle-worker, in the tradition of
 St. Martin of Tours, St. Nicholas of Myra in Lycia, and
 others. Through his prayers, he healed people of almost
 every imaginable malady; and he continues to do so after
 his repose.
 7. He was a loving and self-sacrificing pastor, in the
 tradition of St. John of Kronstadt and all the other
 hierarch and priest Saints of ages past. So great was his
 love that everyone felt that he or she was his
 "favorite." He was overflowing with
 self-sacrificing love for his flock, and for those outside
 of his flock as well, such as a dying Jewish woman whom he
 suddenly healed with the words "Christ is
 Risen."
 8. He was a deliverer of his people from captivity, in the
 tradition of St. Moses the God-seer. As we have seen, he
 brought 5,000 Orthodox believers out of Communist China
 and into freedom in America.
 9. Finally, he was to a limited degree a fool-for-Christ
 in the tradition of St. Andrew the fool-for-Christ and
 others. He could not be a fool-for-Christ in the full
 sense of the term, since this would compromise the dignity
 of his hierarchical office. And yet at many times he did
 things which were at odds with the ideas of the world, and
 thus he evoked censure from people who did not see him for
 what he was: a man of God. He was criticized, for example,
 for serving barefoot, and for wearing a collapsible
 cardboard mitre that had been lovingly made for him by his
 orphans.
 We have now looked at nine different types of sanctity
 manifested in this one Saint, St. John of Shanghai and San
 Francisco. Nine types which he had learned about through
 his study of the Lives of the Saints.
 What the contemporary hagiographer Constantine Cavarnos
 says of modern Saints in general applies perfectly to St.
 John: "Modern Saints admire and imitate the older
 ones: they follow closely their example, study their
 teaching carefully, and—what is extremely
 significant—they confirm it. Those of the modern
 Saints who write or preach amplify and illustrate the
 teaching of the older Saints, and relate it to modern
 realities."[9]
4. "Remember the Saints of God"
 It should not be thought that, after his formative years
 at the Cadet Corps and at the University of Belgrade, St.
 John finished his profound study of the Lives of the
 Saints. Quite the contrary: he continued to learn about
 the Saints right up until the time of his repose.
 St. John believed that, in whatever land an Orthodox
 Christian found himself, it was his responsibility to
 venerate and pray to its national and local Saints.
 Wherever St. John went—Russia, Serbia, China,
 France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Tunisia,
 America—he researched the Lives of the local
 Orthodox Saints. He went to the churches housing their
 relics, performed services in their honor, and asked the
 Orthodox priests there to do likewise. By the end of his
 life, his knowledge of Orthodox Saints, both Western and
 Eastern, was seemingly limitless.
 Here is a story which illustrates St. John's love for the
 Saints, and how he went out of his way to learn about them
 and venerate them:
 One of St. John's spiritual children was Archimandrite
 Spyridon, who later became the father confessor of our
 monastery in the 1970s. Like St. John, Fr. Spyridon was
 born in Russia, but went to Serbia following the Russian
 Revolution. He knew St. John from a young age, when St.
 John was still studying at the University of Belgrade.
 When Serbia fell to the Communists, Fr. Spyridon and many
 of his fellow Russians settled on the border of Italy and
 Serbia, in a refugee camp in the Italian city of Trieste.
 Fr. Spyridon was ordained to the priesthood in 1951 and
 was assigned as a pastor of the camp church in Trieste.
 At this time, St. John had just been assigned as the
 Bishop of Western Europe, and so he would visit Fr.
 Spyridon and his flock in the refugee camp in Trieste.
 When St. John came to the place where Fr. Spyridon served,
 he was already fully informed about the early Western
 Saints of Trieste—such as Justus the Martyr, after
 whom the city had originally been called Justinopolis, St.
 Sergio the Martyr, and St. Frugifer, the first bishop of
 Trieste. Finding that nothing had been done to venerate
 the local Saints, Archbishop John was disappointed. Fr.
 Spyridon later said how he regretted not having thought of
 it before. No one had done such a thing: the Saints of
 Trieste had largely been forgotten, and it was St. John
 who restored their local veneration. Before doing anything
 else in Trieste, he took Fr. Spyridon to the relics of the
 Saints, vested in an epitrachelion and a small omophorion.
 With a censer and a cross in his hand he would descend
 into the crypts under cathedrals where, according to his
 long lists of information, the Saints had been buried. He
 would sing troparia and kontakia written on pieces of
 paper which he would pull out his pockets, imploring the
 Saints to intercede for the city. And only then would he
 go to celebrate the services in Fr. Spyridon's camp
 church.
 As Fr. Spyridon recalled, St. John acted as if the ancient
 local Saints were present wherever he walked. Before
 leaving Trieste, he contacted local Roman Catholic clergy,
 acquiring from them various permits so that the Orthodox
 church in Trieste would have free access to the relics and
 sites of the Saints. Then he gave Fr. Spyridon strict
 instructions on how to commemorate the Saints, how he
 should take his parishioners to the shrines of all local
 Saints on their feast-days, venerate them, sing services
 to them, and so on. St. John said that no services should
 be conducted without first addressing these local Saints,
 and no Liturgies performed without first commemorating
 them at the proskomedia.[10]
 While in Western Europe, St. John collected the Lives and
 icons of Orthodox Saints from many different Western
 European countries, who lived before the time of the
 schism of the Latin Church. Since most of these Saints
 were included in no Orthodox Calendar of Saints, St. John
 compiled a list of these Saints with information about
 their lives, and submitted this to his Synod of Bishops
 for inclusion in the Orthodox Calendar.
 Since he was an Apostle of Christ, St. John called upon
 each local Saint he learned about to provide heavenly help
 in evangelizing new lands. As Archbishop of San Francisco,
 he called upon all the Saints of America, including the
 most local of all Saints, the Native American St. Peter
 the Aleut, who was martyred in California.
 Archbishop John had an especially great devotion to St.
 Herman of Alaska as a patron of the American Orthodox
 mission. He sought to have St. Herman canonized, and this
 occurred four years after St. John's repose, in 1970.
 On June 28, 1966, St. John came to the Orthodox bookshop
 in San Francisco that had been started with his blessing
 by our St. Herman Brotherhood. After he had blessed the
 shop and printing room with the icon, he proceeded to talk
 to the brothers about Saints of various lands. As Fr.
 Seraphim Rose later recalled: "He promised to give us
 a list of canonized Romanian Saints and disciples of
 Paisius VelichkovskyPaisius Velichkovsky, Elder. He
 mentioned having compiled (when in FrancFrancee) a list of
 Western pre-schism Saints, which he presented to the Holy
 Synod."[11]
 In particular, St. John Maximovitch, Archbp talked to the
 brothers in the shop about St. Alban, St.n, the first
 martyr of Britain. Out of his little portfolio he pulled a
 short life of the Saint, together with a picture postcard
 of a Gothic cathedral in the town of St. Albans, England.
 St. Albans near, London in which he had been buried. St.
 John looked into the brothers' eyes to see if they got the
 point. St. Alban, like most of the Saints of Western
 Europe, was not in the Orthodox Calendar; and St. John was
 letting them know that he should be venerated by Orthodox
 Christians, especially in English-speaking lands.
 This turned out to be St. John's last contact with the
 shop and our Brotherhood while he was alive on this earth.
 Four days later he reposed in Seattle.
 Right after St. John's repose, Fr. Seraphim Rose wrote in
 his Chronicle of our Brotherhood: "Amid the talk of
 the 'testament of Vladika John,' what has our Brotherhood
 to offer? This seems to be clearly indicated both by our
 very nature and by Vladika John Maximovitch, Archbp's
 instructions to us. On his last visit to us especially, he
 talked of nothing but Saints—Romanian, English,
 French, Russian. Is it not therefore our duty to
 remember the Saints of God, following as closely as
 possible Vladika's example? I.e., to know their lives,
 nourish our spiritual lives by constantly reading of them,
 making them known to others by speaking of them and
 printing them—and by praying to the
 Saints."[12]
 This, then, is St. John's testament to our Brotherhood,
 and I believe to all Orthodox Christians: To remember
 the Saints of God.
 St. John himself wrote beautiful words about the Saints.
 These words well express what he saw as the essence of
 sanctity, as well as the blueprint of his own life.
 "Holiness is not simply righteousness," St. John
 wrote, "for which the righteous merit the enjoyment
 of blessedness in the Kingdom of God, but rather it is
 such a height of righteousness that men are filled
 with the Grace of God to the extent that it flows from
 them upon those who associate with them. Great is their
 blessedness; it proceeds from personal experience of the
 Glory of God. Being filled also with love for men, which
 proceeds from the love of God, they are responsive to
 men's needs, and upon their supplication they appear also
 as intercessors and defenders for them before
 God."[13]
5. The Call to Sanctity
 In remembering the Saints of God according to the
 testament of St. John, we must always remember, as he did,
 that each one of us is called to be a Saint.
 The Saints, says St. Justin Popovich, are the most perfect
 Christians, who have been sanctified to the highest
 degree. The Saints, says St. John Maximovitch, are those
 who show forth in themselves a height of righteousness and
 are filled with the Grace of God to such an extent that it
 flows from them upon those around them. Both St. Justin
 and St. John are saying the same thing. The Saints are
 deified human beings, who are filled with the Grace, the
 Uncreated Energies of God, and who live the Divine-human
 life of Christ in the Church.
 Every Orthodox Christian partakes to some extent of this
 Divine-human life. St. Justin Popovich writes:
 "Christ's life is continued through all the ages;
 every Christian is of the same body with Christ, and he is
 a Christian because he lives the Divine-human life of this
 Body of Christ as Its organic cell.
 "Life according to the Gospel, holy life, Divine
 life, that is the natural and normal life for Christians.
 For Christians, according to their vocation, are
 holy." To become completely holy, both in soul and in
 body—that is our vocation. This is not a miracle,
 but rather the norm, the rule of faith. "Having
 united themselves spiritually and by Grace to the Holy
 One—the Lord Christ—with the help of faith,
 Christians themselves receive from Him the Holy Energies
 that they may lead a holy life."[14]
 It is our task as Christians, then, to acquire more and
 more of this Divine-human life, to go deeper and deeper
 into it, to grow more and more in the likeness of Christ,
 to be filled with more and more of his Grace. Perhaps we
 will never acquire such Grace as was seen in St. Nicholas
 the of Myra in Lycia, St. Sava of Serbia, St. Seraphim of
 Sarov, St. Nektarios of Pentapolis, or St. John of
 Shanghai and San Francisco, but we are called to be
 growing toward such an overflowing measure of Grace.
 If we have much further to go in the spiritual life, we
 are not alone: even the greatest Saints had further to go.
 "Sanctification admits of degrees," explains
 Constantine Cavarnos. "The sanctification or
 perfection of a human being attained even in
 theosis [deification] is not complete during this
 life. It is an 'unfinished perfection,' as it is called in
 the Ladder of Divine Ascent by St. John
 Climacus."[15]
 Furthermore, spiritual perfection or holiness is not even
 complete in the other world; it grows endlessly in the
 life to come. St. Symeon the New Theologian, himself a
 deified human being, writes concerning this: "Through
 a clear revelation from Above, the Saints know that in
 fact their perfection is endless, that their progress in
 glory will be eternal, that in them there will be a
 continual increase in Divine radiance, and that an end to
 their progress will never occur."[16]
6. Overcoming Doubt and Discouragement
 The Saints of God—the martyrs and ascetics,
 miracle-workers and apostles—truly did accomplish
 those great feats which we read about in their Lives. If
 we have underlying doubts regarding the veracity of these
 accounts, we should acquaint ourselves more thoroughly
 with the Lives of Saints who lived in times close to our
 own—Saints like Archbishop John of Shanghai and San
 Francisco—so that by seeing what is possible in our
 own times through the power of Christ, we may believe in
 what occurred through that same power in the remote past.
 St. Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain, in his Introduction to
 The New Martyrologion, discusses this in connection
 with the New Martyrs of the Church: "The antiquity of
 the period during which the early Saints lived, the long
 time that has intervened from then to the present, can
 cause in some, if not unbelief, at least some doubt and
 hesitation. One may, that is, wonder how humans, who by
 nature are weak and timid, endured so many and frightful
 tortures. But these New Martyrs of Christ, having acted
 boldly on the recent scene of the world, uproot from the
 hearts of Christians all doubt and hesitation, and implant
 or renew in them unhesitating faith in the old Martyrs.
 Just as new food strengthens all those bodies that are
 weak from starvation, and just as new rain causes trees
 that are dried from drought to bloom again, so these New
 Martyrs strengthen and renew the weak, the withered, the
 old faith of present-day Christians."[17]
 What St. Nicodemus says about the relevance of the New
 Martyrs to contemporary Orthodox Christians can, of
 course, be applied to all the other orders of modern
 Saints: hierarchs, missionaries, monastics, etc.
 Even if we do not have doubts concerning the veracity of
 the Lives of the Saints, we may come up against another
 stumbling block: discouragement that their feats of
 asceticism and faith are beyond us. If we ever experience
 this, we must pray for more humility. As Archimandrite
 Aimilianos of Simonos Petras says, "Reading about the
 exploits of the Saints discourages only the proud who rely
 on their own strength. For the humble it is a chance to
 see their own weaknesses, to weep over their insufficiency
 and to implore God's help."[18]
 St. John Climacus tells us: "The man who despairs of
 himself when he hears of the supernatural virtues of the
 Saints is most unreasonable. On the contrary, the Saints
 teach you supremely one of two things: Either they arouse
 you to emulation by their holy courage, or they lead you
 by way of thrice-holy humility to deep self-contempt and
 the realization of your inherent weakness."[19]
 As we study the Lives of the Saints, humility must be our
 safeguard. We need to soberly apply what we read to
 our own conditions and circumstances, realizing our own
 infirmity, not thinking too much of ourselves, not
 dreaming of ascetic feats that truly are beyond us.
 As Fr. Seraphim Rose used to say, we must take spiritual
 life step by step, and not expect to make one great leap
 into sanctity.
 At the same time, however, we must not make excuses for
 ourselves, as if we are somehow separated from the Saints
 by some eternally unbridgeable gulf. The Saints are our
 fellow Orthodox Christians. The Saints have lived, and
 still live, the same life in the Church that we live. They
 are sinners like we are, but they have borne the fruits of
 repentance and have been transfigured by Christ. They are
 more perfect than we are, but we are called to seek their
 "unfinished perfection" as God gives us
 strength.
 May St. Justin Popovich be a guide to us in understanding
 the theological significance of the Lives of the Saints,
 and may St. John Maximovitch be an example to us of how to
 make us of the Lives of the Saints in our own spiritual
 lives. The Saints are called stars in the spiritual
 firmament. May we, by remembering the Saints of God, also
 begin shine in that firmament. And by making the Saints
 our friends and preceptors now, may we have them as our
 heavenly companions in the never-ending Kingdom of Light.
 Amen.
 From The Orthodox Word, Vol. 37, No. 6 (221,
 Nov.–Dec. 2001), pp. 261-281. Copyright 2001 by the
 St. Herman of
 Alaska Brotherhood, Platina, California. Used
 with permission.
 
