Beloved, even if we should attain the very pinnacle of
virtue, let us consider ourselves least of all, as we have learned that pride
is able to cast down even from the heavens the person who does not take heed,
and humility of mind is able to bring up on High from the very abyss of sin the
person who knows how to be sober. For this is what placed the Publican before
the Pharisee. By pride I mean an overwhelming boastful spirit, surpassing even
incorporeal powers, that of the devil himself while humility of mind and
acknowledgment of sins by the robber is what brought him into Paradise before
the Apostles. — St. John Chrysostom
In preparation for the celebration of the
Bicentennial of Orthodoxy in America, we present the Life of a modern Serbian
Saint who was a missionary to America, coming to this land four times, spending
the last eleven years of his life here, and finally dying on American soil.
Bishop Nikolai was canonized by the Serbian Orthodox Church in 1987. He is
remembered by American Orthodox Christians as a protector, mover and inspirer
of the Serbian Orthodox Church in America, as an instructor at the St. Sava
Seminary in Libertyville, Illinois, as the dean and rector of the St. Tikhon of
Zadonsk Seminary in South Canaan, Pennsylvania, and as the author of the
valuable Prologue
of Ochrid which has been published in English in four volumes.
(from the original introduction to this article in The Orthodox Word—Webmaster)
Our holy and God-bearing Father, Bishop Nikolai
of blessed memory, was born at dawn on December 23, 1880, on the feast of St.
Naum of Ochrid, to pious Serbian Orthodox parents, Dragomir and Katarina
Velirnirovich, in the small village of Lelich, only five miles southwest of
Valjevo, a city located in the valley of the Povlen Mountains of western
Serbia. Because he was born physically weak, this divine child of God was
baptized soon after his birth. He was given the name Nikolai, after his familys
Krsna Slav (family Patron Saint), Sveti Nikola (St. Nicholas of Myra, Lycia;
honored December 6th). Nikola was the first-born of Dragomir and Katarina, who
had eight other children, all of whom unfortunately perished later during World
War II. The baptism of young Nikola took place in Chelije Monastery; and was
performed by beloved Pop Andrija (Fr. Andrew), the parish priest of the Serbian
Orthodox Church in Lelich.
Nikolas parents were pious farmers who always
interrupted their work schedule for daily prayer, which included keeping the
yearly fasting routine as well as the liturgical cycle of the Orthodox Church.
His mother Katarina, quite pious and truly a holy woman, provided Nikola with
his first lessons about God, Jesus Christ, the lives of the saints, and the
holy days of the Church year. Often Nikola was seen being led by the hand of
his mother to Chelije Monastery—a walk of three miles—for prayer and Holy
Communion. Later Nikola (as Bishop Nikolai) recalled these lessons on God and
walks with my mother as being some of the most influential experiences in his
life. He wrote of them in an autobiographical poem, written in Serbian,
entitled Prayers of a Captive in Prison (1952).
Nikolas formal education began in Chelije
Monastery; dedicated to the Holy Archangels Michael and Gabriel, where his
father Dragomir had hoped he would learn to read the call to service from the
government, in order to be a leading man and protector of his village Lelich.
Pop Andrija taught mali Nikola (Little Nicky), as he was known in Lelich, his
first lessons in reading, writing and mathematics. Besides these lessons, Fr.
Andrew, being Nikolas spiritual father, taught him about the Scriptures and the
teachings of the early Fathers of the Church, as well as the religio-national
traditions of his Serbian heritage. This latter education was inspiring to
Little Nicky from the very beginning. He demonstrated, even as a youngster, a
tremendously penetrating mind and a zeal for learning. Quite often during
summer breaks Nikola would climb the bell tower of the catholicon (main church)
of Chelije Monastery and hide there all day long, occupying himself with prayer
and the reading of books. Thus, due to the influence of his mother Katarina and
the lessons of beloved Pop Andrija, Nikola seemed headed for far more than just
being a leading citizen of his small village of Lelich.
After finishing sixth grade in grammar school in
Valjevo, Nikola petitioned for entrance into the Military Academy. However, he
could not pass the physical exam, as he was, in the words of the physical
fitness commission, too small, not having large enough shoulders and a frame
strong enough for such activities. This was certainly the divine will of our
Heavenly Father, Who desired that Nikola travel on another path—to be a soldier
of the Heavenly Kingdom and not of the earthly one. Immediately thereafter,
Nikola applied for entrance into the Seminary of St. Sava in Belgrade, where he
was accepted to begin studies as a seminarian. Besides studying the usual
subjects, Nikola began reading the significant texts of the most famous writers
of western and eastern European culture: Shakespeare, Voltaire, Nietzsche,
Marx, Pushkin, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky; and others. His favorite author was without
a doubt the Montenegrin Peter Njegosh, whose writings he had been reading since
his early school days in Valjevo. His final examination for seminary studies
was a discourse on the poetry and thought of Njegosh. This discussion, held in
1902 in Rakovica Monastery, located just ten miles south of Belgrade, amazed
not only his fellow students, but even his professors and instructors as well.
Life was difficult for Nikola during his years as
a seminarian in Belgrade. Due to his poor eating habits and the terrible living
conditions of the Seminarys housing facilities, Nikola contracted scrofulosis,
a disease affecting the bodys glands. After his seminary days, Nikola taught
for a short while in the villages of Drachich and Leskovac, as well as in
Valjevo. In Valjevo, he befriended Fr. Sava Popovich, whom he helped in parish
activities and from whom he learned the ropes of being involved with the
faithful on an everyday basis. During summer breaks, at the advice of his
doctor, Nikola spent time on the sea coast. It was during these resting times
that he wrote the life of Bokel the Montenegrin and Dalmatian. Also at this
time, Nikola founded a newspaper, Chrischanskj Vesnik (Christian News), in which
appeared his first writings and articles.
In 1905, due to his astute knowledge and
evangelical activities, Nikola was chosen, along with several other students,
to continue studies in Russia or Western Europe. Nikola chose to study in
Europe, in the Old Roman Catholic Theological Faculty at the University of
Berne, Switzerland. Besides studies in Berne, Nikola studied in Germany,
England, and later in Russia. He was exposed to the finest education Western
Europe had to offer. He even became knowledgeable in the spiritual and
philosophical books of ancient India. This learning made Nikola into a
Renaissance man, whose erudition and profundity of thought were considered by
everyone as both a wellspring of knowledge and a unique treasury of wisdom and
spirituality. In 1908, Nikola received his Doctorate in Theology in Berne, with
the dissertation entitled Faith in the Resurrection of Christ as the Foundation
of the Dogmas of the Apostolic Church. This original work was written in
German, published in Switzerland, and later translated into Serbian. In the
following year, 1909, this veritable genius, at age twenty-nine, prepared his
Doctorate in Philosophy at Oxford, England; and during the summer of that same
year, in Geneva, Switzerland, Nikola wrote his second doctoral dissertation,
entitled The Philosophy of Berkeley, in French.
In the fall of 1909, Nikola returned home from
Europe and became grievously ill with dysentery. This illness changed his life.
Like the great theologian of the early Church, St. Gregory of Nazianzus (+390;
honored January 25th and 30th), whose life was also dramatically changed due to
a personal difficulty , Nikola decided to
apply all his gifts and talents in service to God and His holy Orthodox Church.
Lying in the hospital for over two months, Nikola prayed in his heart, saying,
If service to the Lord is needed, He will save me. He then vowed that if he
were returned to health he would become a monk and serve Gods people in His
Church. Thus as a Doctor in Theology and Philosophy, Nikola became the lowly
monk Nikolai. After his tonsure into the monastic ranks, Monk Nikoli was
ordained to the priesthood on the same day, December 20, 1909, in Rakovica
Monastery. Hieromonk Nikolai now placed his entire being—his knowledge and all
his talents—in the service of God and His Serbian Orthodox people; and within a
short period of time, pious Fr. Nikolai was elevated to the rank of
Archimandrite.
After his tonsure and ordination, Archimandrite
Nikolai was chosen to be a teacher in the Seminary of St. Sava in Belgrade.
However, it was discovered that he had not completed the final two years of
gymnasium (grammar school), the seventh and eighth grades; he had to take a
test in order to fulfill these requirements which would in turn validate his
status as a teacher. The commission before whom Fr. Nikolai spoke was amazed
with his wealth of insight. According to the words of one of its members,
Listening to his discourse on Christ, we were astonished, as no one could ask
him one question or even say one word in reply. Yet it was decided that before
Fr. Nikolai could become a teacher in the Seminary; he would be sent, with the
blessing of Metropolitan Dimitriji of Serbia, to Russia. Spending over a year
in Russia, Archimandrite Nikolai learned of the passionate Russian spirit and
of the rich Orthodox soul of the peasantry. It was during this time that
Blessed Nikolai wrote his first great work—The Religion of Njegosh. One of the
contemporary critics said of this work that from a religious-philosophical
point of view, or a religiously critical point of view, the young seminary
professor [Fr. Nikolai] is no less interesting than the Bishop of Cetinje
[Njegosh].
Returning to Belgrade as a seminary professor,
Nikolai published, in 1912, an anthology of homilies entitled Besede Pod Gorom
(Sermons at the Foot of the Mount). Explaining the title, the
humble Nikolai wrote, Christ spoke on the Mount; I dare to speak only at the
foot of the Mount. In 1914 Fr. Nikolai wrote the book Iznad Greha i Smrti
(Beyond Sin and Death), a writing of immense profundity yet with
the ability to reach the soul of the common person. Nikolai was most inspiring
to his students. Under his spiritual influence and guidance, many went on to
become monks, clergy and theologians. One of them, Justin Popovich, a spiritual
disciple of Fr. Nikolai, became one of the greatest theologians in the history
of the Serbian Orthodox Church (commemorated March 25th). Thus, besides
teaching philosophy, logic, history, and foreign languages in Belgrade, Rev.
Dr. Nikolai Velimirovich was fast becoming a great Serbian literary figure as
well as a beloved spiritual pastor; soon he would become a well-respected
international figure as well.
With the outbreak of World War I in the summer of
1914, the entire Balkan peninsula was thrown into turmoil. The imperiled
Serbian nation badly needed a leader to help them survive this international
crisis. To this end, Archimandrite Nikolai was called to embark upon an
official diplomatic mission to England in order to obtain support from the
British government for the suffering Serbian people. Having received a
doctorate from Oxford, Nikolai was received with honor and dignity by the
British authorities. His political astuteness was revealed in several lectures
and homilies delivered in England, which not only invoked a profound concern
for the suppressed Serbs, but also addressed the issue of world peace and the
methods to attain such a political ideal. Besides receiving British support for
the Serbs, Nikolai was also personally awarded a Doctorate of Divinity—honoris causa—from
Cambridge University. His short tracts, The Lords Commandments and Meditations
on the Lords Prayer, electrified the Church of England, and also shattered many
false conceptions of what the Orthodox Faith entailed.
In the late summer of 1915, Archimandrite Nikolai
continued his war mission by traveling across the Atlantic Ocean to New York
City; America. His mission was to rally the emigrant Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes against the Austrian government, for the majority of them had fled to
America. His mission was quite successful, as America sent over 20,000
freedom-loving Slavic volunteers—called the Third Army of Bishop Nikolai, most
of whom fought on the Salonican Front—and hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of aid to their suffering brothers and sisters in the homeland. This trip
was also quite revelatory for Nikolai: in a dream he received a message from an
Angel of the Lord, who revealed to him that he would someday return to America
and help organize the fledgling Serbian Orthodox communities into an American
Serbian Diocese totally united with the Dioceses in the motherland.
In early 1916 Nikolai returned to his beloved
England, where he decided to sojourn until the end of the war. He continued his
literary activities by writing several articles and books: The Religious Spirit of
the Slays (1916, sent to the soldiers in the homeland); Serbia in Light and
Darkness (1916); The Serbian Soul, The Agony of the Church, The Serbian
Orthodox Church, and The Spiritual Rebirth of Europe (all in 1917).
Oriented towards a British audience, these essays and books appealed to their
sense of justice for suffering Serbia. In particular, The Spiritual Rebirth of
Europe was of great interest to the Anglicans, for it promoted the
possibility of a return of the Anglican Church to her rightful mother, the
Orthodox Church. As a result of his academic excellence, Nikolai received
another Honorary Doctorate of Divinity; in 1919, from the University of Glasgow
in Scotland.
Feeling tremendously homesick, the patriotic
Nikolai returned to Belgrade toward the end of the war. He then became involved
in the formation of the new Yugoslav state as the interpreter for the then
President of the government Nikola Pashich. Yet Nikolai felt that there was
something missing in his life. He wanted to be involved with his suffering
people on a more daily basis. The fulfillment of this yearning came quickly on
March 12, 1919, the Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church selected Fr.
Nikolai, at age 39, as the new Bishop of Zhicha, the historical seat of the
First Archbishopric of Serbia. During his episcopal consecration, Blessed
Nikolai cried as a newborn babe in the Lord. Thus after four years of seeking
support from England and America in behalf of Serbia, Bishop Nikolai was now
ready to personally help in healing the war-torn hearts and souls of his
beloved Serbian people.
For two years (1919-1921), Bishop Nikolai
spiritually soothed pious Serbs not only in the Diocese of Zhicha, but also
throughout newly formed Yugoslavia. Like the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,
Archpastor Nikolai healed the sick, set free the spiritually captive and
preached salvation to these humble souls. In 1921, Bishop Nikolai was
transferred to the Diocese of Ochrid and Bitola. This was done to facilitate
the union of the Serbian and Macedonian Churches which occurred as a result of
the formation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Blessed Father Nikolai, always a
man of unity, peacefully engaged in the union of the Serbs and Macedonians of
these regions. Besides sowing seeds of unity in his diocese, Nikolai also
visited Athens, Constantinople, and the Holy Mountain, where he was received as
a unifier of all Orthodox in the bond of love for Christ and His Church. During
this time Nikolai wrote two books: Rechi O Svechoveku (Orations on the Universal
Man, 1920) and Molitve Na Jezeru (Prayers at the Lake, 1921). This
latter work, written during his resting periods at Lake Ochrid, was in
poetic-prose style, so deep and profound, similar in spirituality to the great
Psalms of David. Yet Bishop Nikolai was not destined to stay in his homeland.
Like a beacon set upon a hill, his divine radiance was seen from afar, as he
was invited to deliver lectures at various universities and Anglican Churches
in America. At first, the Royal Government of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia as well
as the Holy Synod of Bishops refused these requests for Bishop Nikolai; but the
invitations kept coming, so that in the end they both resolved to send beloved
Nikolai to America for a second time.
On June 24, 1921, Blessed Bishop Nikolai arrived,
by the grace of God, in New York City; He had three immediate goals while in
America: 1) to deliver lectures and homilies in universities and churches with the
purpose of presenting World War I from the Eastern European viewpoint; 2) to
collect funds for the setting up of orphanages in Serbia for those poor
children who lost parents and relatives during World War I; and 3) to visit
many Serbian Orthodox communities in order to thank them for their patriotic
war efforts, along with making a report on the possibility of creating an
American Serbian Diocese of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
The brilliant Bishop Nikolai was successful in
all three phases of his mission. He delivered approximately 150 lectures and
homilies in the following three months. He spoke at a variety of places
including Columbia University in New York City, various Serbian communities,
and even the African-American Congregation of St. Philip in Harlem, New York,
to over 1,500 parishioners. Wherever he spoke concerning the past World War,
his message was clear. Do not blame the (Eastern) European peasant for the war,
he proposed, but rather, look to the artificially created intellectual class of
the European university system. He wrote, The European peasant is a noble
spirit, but it is the intellectuals in charge of the peasants who are on the
wrong track. Nikolai said that if these conditions in Western Europe continued,
a second world war was likely to happen. And how right he was. One of his most
enlightening sermons was delivered on the Sunday after Ascension, 1921, in the
Episcopalian Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City, entitled The
Stone which the Builders Rejected (Matt. 21:42), in which he called for a
return on the part of Western Europe to the true source and rock of their
entire culture and civilization, to the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, the Way,
the Truth, and the Life.
Nikolai also proposed that America, such a rich
multi-national country, could possibly hold high the torch of hope for all of
humankind. The world has become small, but it waits to be proclaimed a united
being. Europe has discovered the world. Can America organize it? proclaimed
Nikolai time and time again, with the hope that America would lead the way to a
peaceful and just world for all. As a result of these speeches, Nikolai was
called a second Isaiah and a New Chrysostom of our times; furthermore, his
activities helped in obtaining acceptance of Yugoslavia into the League of
Nations.
Concerning the development of orphanages for
suffering Serbians both in the United States and Yugoslavia, Nikolai was
motivated by the commandments of the Lord Jesus Christ: Let the children come
unto Me, and do not hinder them; for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.... Take
heed that ye despise not one of these little ones; for I say unto you, That in
heaven their angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven (Mart.
18:10). Come
unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest... For
my yoke is easy and my burden is light (Mart. 11:28, 30). For I was an hungered,
and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger and
ye took me in: Naked, and ye clothed me. I was sick, and ye visited me: I was
in prison, and ye came unto me.... Verily.., inasmuch as ye have done it unto
one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me (Matt.
25:35-36, 40).
Nikolai felt the pain of the loss of beloved ones so acutely that he often
broke into tears upon visiting orphans and the poorest of the poor in his
homeland. Prior to coming to America he set up an orphanage in Bitola, placing
at its head the exiled Abbess Anna—previously known as the social worker Nada
Adjichin Vrachevshina Monastery. To the poor children in Yugoslavia, Bishop
Nikolai became known as Deda Vladika (Grandfather Bishop), as one who really
cared and practiced what he preached to alleviate their plight and
difficulties. As head of the Council of Serbian Child Welfare in Belgrade,
Nikolai, while in America, secured thousands of dollars for the cause of taking
care of these little ones. With this money he personally organized and
supervised orphanages in Kraljevo, Chachak, Gornji Milanovac and Kragujevac,
where over 600 poor children were granted the love of Christ in personal social
action.
Finally, concerning the creation of an American
Serbian Diocese of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Bishop Nikolai wrote a Paschal
Epistle in 1921 to all the Serbian Orthodox parishes in America. Blessed
Nikolai extended greetings from the re-established Patriarchate of Serbia, from
His Holiness Dimitrije, Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church. He also
outlined plans for the establishment of a Serbian Diocese in America. Nikolai,
being the first Serbian hierarch ever to travel in America, was greeted with
utmost respect upon visiting the Serbian communities. The problems of the Serbs
in America were many: they were often pastored by Russian priests who did not
understand their language; there were no monasteries to lead the people in the
spiritual life; there was no seminary for education of clergy and the faithful;
mixed marriages created confusion among the faithful; schisms in other Orthodox
jurisdictions created a general mistrust of leadership among all Orthodox in
America; Protestant and Roman Catholic church practices, as well as American
secularism, were creeping into the life of the churches; and, above all, a lack
of organization among the Serbian parishes made the Serbs feel like an island
in a great ocean. In the words of a letter of a Pittsburgh clergymen sent to
the Patriarch in early 1921, the Serbs in America were like bees in a hive
without a queen bee.
Bishop Nikolai returned to Belgrade on June 16, 1921,
after six months of missionary activities in America. When he left, the
American Serbians mourned the loss; but they all hoped that he would return as
their new Bishop of the American Diocese. Yet this was not the will of the
Lord. Ten days later, on June 26th, he gave his report on the American
situation in a session of the Synod of Bishops held in Sremski Karlovac; and on
September 21st, Metropolitan Varnava nominated Bishop Nikolai to assume the
duties of Bishop of America, with Archimandrite Mardariji Uskokovich of
Rakovica Monastery (south of Belgrade) as his administrative assistant. This
decision upset many pious Orthodox Serbs in the homeland, as none of
them—bishops, clergy, monastics, and faithful—were ready to relinquish their
beloved Serbian Chrysostom and Evangelical Leader to the American Serbs.
Somewhat frustrated over this situation, in January 1922, Bishop Nikolai went
on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, then traveled to the Holy Mountain, to
Hilandar Monastery, to spend Pascha with the monks there. This sojourn was a
spiritual necessity for Bishop Nikolai, as he retreated from the pressing
problems and sought counsel from his Heavenly Father.
Upon his return fur the gathering of the Synod of
Bishops, Nikolai was convinced that the American situation needed a full-time
bishop to carry out the ecclesiastical plans which the Angel of the Lord had
previously revealed to him in his dream. Thus, he himself nominated
Archimandrite Mardarije Uskokovich to be the future first permanent Bishop of the
Serbian Orthodox Church in America. This nomination was confirmed by the entire
Synod of Bishops, and on October 18, 1923, Archimandrite Mardarije was
appointed the sole administrator of the Serbian Church in America. This
decision was not only a spiritual blessing for Bishop Nikolai himself—relieving
him of some of the many duties forced upon him—but it was also a divine
blessing for the pious Serbs in the homeland. Nikolai was now able to devote
himself fully to writing inspiring works as well as pastoring his faithful to
be more fully immersed in the love of Jesus Christ and His Church. In 1923,
Nikolai wrote Nove
Besede Pod Gorm (New Sermons at the Foot of the Mount), Misli o Dobru i Zlu
(Thoughts on Good and Evil), and a lengthy work entitled, Omilije na Nedeljna i
Praznichna Evandjelja (Homilies on the Sunday and Festal Gospels).
Besides writing, Nikolai began a popular
religious movement, later affectionately called Bogomoljacki Pokret (Movement of
God-Prayers). The venerable Bishops disciples loved to gather at
his episcopal residence to sing the very moving and edifying songs he had
written. Praising the Lord in their mother tongue was a joy and delight to
these zealous Orthodox Serbs. The once-maligned Serbian Christians experienced
in Nikolai an evangelical freshness which renewed their spirits after the war
and which allowed them to once again be fully immersed in the love of Jesus. By
praying to the Lord in the vernacular Serbian, these Serbs desirous of a fuller
Christian life were able to be built up into a people of God with the
God-praising Nikolai leading the way. There were many priests who were jealous
of Nikolais Bogomoljacki Pokret, but as they began to experience the spiritual
growth among their parishioners, they slowly supported this prayer movement.
These Orthodox Serbian zealots—by their constant reading of the Scriptures,
singing of spiritual songs, quickness of prayer, travels from monastery to
monastery, regular confession of their sins, keeping of the fasts, and frequent
communing of the precious Body and Blood of Jesus Christ—began to slowly
transform the clergy of the various Serbian Dioceses. Bishop Nikolai, a master
at pastoring his people, allowed his passionate God-seekers to lead the way in
renewing the Serbian Church. Through this prayer movement, monasticism was
revitalized as well as the study of theology, as was clearly evidenced, for
example, in the life of the great theologian and ascetic, Archimandrite Justin Popovich of Blessed
Memory.
In 1927, at the invitation of the American
Yugoslav Society, the Institute of Politics in Williamstown, Massachusetts, and
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Bishop Nikolai once again
traveled to America for his third visit. He spent only three months in America,
speaking at various universities and churches as well as inquiring into the
progress of the St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery in Libertyville, Illinois,
under the direction of newly consecrated Bishop Mardarije. On his way home to
Serbia, Nikolai stopped in London where he stayed for two weeks, prophesying
that an impending catastrophe was threatening Europe. The Prophet Nikolai, a
man rooted in the present with a clear vision of the future, was a voice crying
in the wilderness to a people in search of hope for a peaceful future. His
message was clear: Repent, for the Kingdom of God is at hand!.
Returning to Ochrid, the venerable bishop began
writing once again. It seemed as though his sojourns in foreign lands filled
his mind and heart—his total being—with restless divine thoughts of the
promised Eternal Paradise; and the only way to relieve himself of these
majestic longings was to write of them. In 1928 he wrote Vera Obrazovanih Ljudi
(The Faith of Educated People), Rat i Biblija (War and the Bible) and
Ochridski
Prolog (The Prologue of Ochrid). This latter book, over 1,000
pages, was patterned after ancient hagiographical literature which included
both brief Lives and edifying incidents from the lives of holy men and women,
as well as ordinary sinners. Also entitled Zhitije Svetih (The Lives of the Saints), this
text was based upon the daily calendar of Orthodox Saints. Translated into
English in 1985, The Prologue of Ochrid has become a spiritual classic
to all Christians living in the West. The Bishop of Montenegro, Amphilocije
Radovich, a disciple of Nikolai, once said that the only two books one needs to
digest and put into practice to obtain salvation are the Bible and The Prologue of Ochrid.
In the town of Bitola in Bishop Nikolais diocese
was the Serbian Seminary of St. John the Theologian. From 1929 to 1934, one of
the theology instructors there was the young Hieromonk John Maximovitch, the
future Archbishop John. Bishop Nikolai valued and loved Fr. John, and exerted a
beneficial influence upon him. More than once he was heard to say, If you wish
to see a living saint, go to Bitola to Fr. John. The lives of Bishop Nikolai
and Fr. John would one day parallel each other: both of them would spend the
last years of their lives in America and die there, and both would be canonized
as saints.
In early 1930, Bishop Nikolai participated in the
Pan-Orthodox Conference held at Vatopedi Monastery on the Holy Mountain. It can
be said that Bishop Nikolai was the Voice of Orthodoxy during this time, as he
was not only able to lead pious Orthodox Greeks, Serbs, Russians, and
Bulgarians to transcend any nationalistic tendencies which might threaten the
bond of love and unity of spirit among them; but also, perhaps more
importantly, the venerable Bishop, by his ability to abstract the true Holy
Orthodox Tradition from all local Orthodox Church traditions, was able to
present to Western Christians in a precise and comprehensive manner the true
and eternal faith of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
Prior to World War II, Nikolai wrote Simvoli i Signali
(Symbols and Signs, 1932) and Nomologija (Nomology, i.e., The Science of Law, 1940);
and in 1937 until the outbreak of war in 1941, Nikolai began a compilation of
his letters entitled Misionarska Pisma (Missionary Letters). This anthology
of hundreds of letters witnessed to the amazing evangelical activity of Bishop
Nikolai, as he was uniquely attuned to the spiritual crises of these perilous
times.
In 1941, with the German occupation of
Yugoslavia, Bishop Nikolai, together with Patriarch Gabriel Dozhich, was
arrested and sentenced to imprisonment in the infamous Dachau Prison Camp in
Germany. He spent two years in Dachau, witnessing and suffering some of the
cruelest torture of human beings the world has ever known. Nikolai attributed
his survival of this terrible ordeal to the Virgin Mary While in prison, he
wrote Molbeni
Kanon i Molitva Presvetoj Bogorodici (Petitionary Canon and Prayers to the Most
Holy Mother of God), along with Tri Molitve u Senci Nemachkih Bajoneta (Three
Prayers in the Shadow of the German Bayonets) which reads as a
spiritual diary of his captive years. On May 8, 1945, as a result of the
freedom secured by the 36th American Division of the Allied Forces, holy
confessors Nikolai and Gabriel were released from prison. They both then sought
sanctuary in England. Afterwards, the confessor Gabriel returned to Belgrade as
Patriarch,
while the confessor Nikolai moved on to America for the fourth and final time.
After recuperating from an aching back and leg problems, the exiled Bishop
began lecturing, as usual, in various educational institutions. In June 1946,
he was awarded for his academic excellence his final Doctorate of Sacred
Theology from Columbia University. In all, Bishop Nikolai obtained five
doctorates.
From 1946 to 1949, Venerable Nikolai, always
loyal to his Serbian people, taught at the St. Sava Seminary in Libertyville,
Illinois. Realizing the need for Amencan-born Serbians to have an Orthodox
catechism in English, he published The Faith of the Saints (1949). In
1950, he wrote an essay on Orthodox mysticism in English, The Universe as Signs
and Symbols and a book in Serbian entitled, Zemlja Nedodjia (The
Unattainable Land). In 1951, his last book written while
teaching at St. Savas was, fittingly, The Life of St. Sava. According to
the words of the distinguished professor Dr. Veselin Kesich, this book reveals
something about [Bishop Nikolai] himself in his meditation on the end of St.
Savas Life: Sava withdrew to his House of Silence in Studenica and offered a
prayer to God to let him die in a foreign country Why did he pray for this?
Bishop Nikolai considers several reasons: Savas protest against political
disorder at home, his appeal to the conscience of his people, and his
conviction that he would work for their salvation from the outside. These three
reasons probably influenced the Bishops decision to come to America and not to
return to Yugoslavia after the war.
In 1951, beloved Bishop Nikolai moved to St.
Tikhons Russian Orthodox Monastery in South Canaan, Pennsylvania. Here he spent
the last five years of his earthly life as a professor, dean, and eventually
rector of the Seminary. Being all things to all people, Nikolai published
articles in Russian for the God-seekers at St. Tikhons. His ease and facility
with languages was amazing to all. Nikolai could read, write, and speak
fluently seven different languages. Besides his activities at St. Tikhons,
Bishop Nikolai lectured at St. Vladimirs Seminary in Crestwood, New York, as
well as at the Russian Orthodox Seminary and Monastery of the Holy Trinity in
Jordanville, New York. Yet he did not forget his Serbian flock, as he
published, in 1952, Zhetve Gospodnje (The Harvests of the Lord) and Kasijana (Cassiana), a
story of a penitent. In 1953, he wrote Divan (Conversations), a book on the
Bogomoljci and their miracles. His final book, Jedini Chovekoljubac (The Only Love of Mankind) was
published posthumously in 1958. Bishop Nikolais final undertaking was the
Serbian Bible Institute, which published a series of seven short tracts on
various theological topics: Christ Died for Us, Meditations on Seven Days,
Angels Our Elder Brethren, Seven Petitions, Bible and Power, Missionary
Letters, and The Mystery of Touch.
Our holy and God-bearing Father Bishop Nikolai of
blessed memory fell asleep in the Lord while in prayer during the night between
the 17th and 18th of March, 1956, in his humble cell at St. Tikhons Russian
Orthodox Seminary; He was 76 years old. He was given an honorable Orthodox
Christian burial service in St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Cathedral in New York
City; as pious Christians from all parts of the world came to hear eulogies in
honor of one of the greatest hierarchs of the entire Orthodox Church in the
twentieth century. From New York City his life-giving body was transferred to
Libertyville, Illinois, just north of Chicago, to St. Sava Serbian Orthodox
Monastery, where more Pomeni (memorial services) were held. He was laid to
rest on the south side of the monastery church, on March 27, 1956.
Like St. Sava, the Enlightener of Serbia, holy
Bishop Nikolai died in a foreign land. Behind the main church of Chelije
Monastery in his home village of Lelich, next to the grave of Archimandrite
Justin Popovich of blessed memory (+1979), was marked a place for his return to
the homeland and the people he so very much loved. Thus, on April 27, 1991,
after twenty-five years of repose in the Lord in America, holy Bishop Nikolais
body was returned to his homeland in Western Serbia. Pious American Orthodox,
particularly many Russian Orthodox, did not forget the blessed Nikolai, as at St.
Tikhons Monastery his room was made into a shrine for prayer and meditation.
His beloved disciple, Justin Popovich, wrote these words in 1961, at the fifth
anniversary of Blessed Nikolais repose in the Lord: Thank you, Lord—in him we
have a new Apostle! Thank you, Lord—in him we have a new Evangelist! Thank you,
Lord—in him we have a new Confessor! Thank you, Lord—in him we have a new
Martyr! Thank you, Lord—in him we have a new Saint!
Holy Father Nikolai, the magnificence of your
glory shines forth for all to see, as your divine brilliance illumines us all
with the superabundant love of Christ the Prince of Peace and Humble Shepherd.
Pray to Christ the only Lover of Mankind, O most loving Archshepherd, for us
weak and decrepit sinners, that His mind, His brilliance, His care, His energy,
His divinity, His strength, His sacrifice, His humility and His resurrected
glory may shine within our hearts so that we may in some small way spread His
love to the ends of the earth, to Whom belongs glory honor and worship,
together with His Unoriginate Father and Life-giving Spirit, now and ever and
unto ages of ages. Amen.
FROM ST. TIKHONS SEMINARY, SOUTH CANAAN,
PENNSYLVANIA
IN 1951, Bishop Nikolai came to St. Tikhons
Seminary first as a professor and finally, with the death of the former
Rector, Bishop Jonah, as Rector of the Seminary Here he lived out the last
years of his life as an example of humility, as well as an elder to the
monastics at St. Tikhons Monastery. To the students of the Seminary, the old
Bishop was a loving father figure whom they would never forget. To the laity
and faithful of the monastery parish, as well as all who came in contact with
the Bishop, he was a hierarch in whom they saw manifest the grace of God. And
to all, he was an example of humility. During his years as an educator at St.
Tikhons Seminary Bishop Nikolai was seen to be a very unusual person in that
his courses were profoundly simple, informal and very warm. His requirements
were very basic: he taught, you learned, and he corrected.
Perhaps one of the most striking characteristics
of his classes was that he taught solely in the English language, at a time
when very few courses were taught in that language (and these usually by
outside lecturers). This often caused friction with other faculty members, but
Bishop Nikolai held fast to his position, for he knew the importance, for the
seminarians, of hearing lectures in their native language. Indeed, without this
use of English, much of the subtlety of his teachings would have been lost from
memory. The use of English extended even to the monastery church, and on most
occasions he would preach in that language. Often the parishioners would
complain about this, but his answer would be: You have learned and heard
enough. Its time for [the seminarians] to learn something.
Bishop Nikolais classes, sermons and
conversations were always geared to his audience, whether they be students,
professors, theologians or simple parishioners, and his vocabulary never
extended itself beyond the comprehension of his hearers. For him, class could
be any time. Anything said to him could be turned around and assigned a deeper
meaning. He would always take examples from conversations in class, at the
dinner table, or that which occurred as he walked about the grounds, and would
always introduce examples from Holy Scripture, relating them to life at hand.
For example, one day in class a student mentioned the fact that it was such a
terribly dismal day because of the rain. Bishop Nikolai walked over to the window,
looked out, and expounded on the further dimensions of rain, from Noah until
the present time: What is rain? It is like Christ Who was also sent by the
Father from Heaven to water a thirsty earth.
On Sunday, March 18, 1956, Bishop Nikolai fell
asleep in the Lord. As related by the late Abbot Afanasy; The Bishop served the
Holy Liturgy on Saturday, March 17. Everything was unusually beautiful.
Following the service, he went to the monks dining room. After a short talk,
with a low bow, three times he humbly muttered, Forgive me, brothers, as he was
leaving. This was something special, for he never did that before.... He
frequently spoke about wanting to be buried here at St. Tikhons Monastery;
since he taught, prayed, and served God here. He had lived among the monks, and
had said, 'It is more natural that I should be buried here. That Sunday
morning, the late Fr. Vasily went down to Bishop Nikolais room at the Seminary
and upon knocking at the door, received no answer. Opening it, he found the
Bishop dead, stretched out on the floor in a kneeling position. In all
probability, he had died between seven and eight that morning. The next day, a
Memorial Service was served in the Monastery Church for the departed Hierarch
by the Serbian Bishop Dionysius.
With deep humility and thankfulness for Gods
mercy; we fall down before our beloved Saint and Friend of God, crying out:
Holy Hierarch Father Nikolai, pray unto God for us! (From The Tikhonaire for
1986 and 1988.)
+ + +
TROPARION TO ST. NIKOLAI Velimirovich
Tone 4
Thy righteous acts have revealed thee
to thy flock
As a model of frith, a reflection of humility
And a teacher of abstinence, O Father Bishop Nikolai;
Therefore, through humility thou hast obtained exaltation and through poverty,
riches;
Pray to Christ God to save our souls.
ANOTHER TROPARION TO ST. NIKOLAI
Tone 8
Loving thy homeland thou didst
sojourn as a patriot to secure aid for Gods suffering children,
And as a new Chrysostom thou didst preach to those in darkness
The rediscovery of the Foundational Rock, Christ the Lord,
In the Eternal Homeland of Gods Kingdom.
Thy pastoral love for all, O Confessor Nikolai, was purified in captivity by
the godless,
Demonstrating thy commitment to the truth and thy people;
Therefore, O venerable Bishop, thou hast attained the crown of eternal
life.
St. Gregory of Nazianzus life was
dramatically changed after the boat in which he was traveling from Athens to
Cappadocia (Asia Minor) was wrecked in the Aegean Sea. He then vowed, God
desired him to be saved, to place all his talents in service of the Lord Jesus
Christ and His Church.
This paragraph has been added by
the editors from the Prima Vita
of Archbishop John Maximovitch, by Fr. Seraphim Rose.
Composed by Fr. Daniel Rogich.
From The Orthodox Word, No. 171 (1993), pp. 161-183.
Reprinted along with the lives of many other Serbian Orthodox Saints
in Serbian Patericon, Volume I (Platina, CA: St. Herman Press, 1994).
From the book Saints of the Serbian Orthodox Church, by Fr. Daniel Rogich