Saint Bogolep
THE RIGHTEOUS CHILD SCHEMA-MONK OF CHERNY YAR
COMMEMORATED ON JULY 29/AUGUST
11
The editors of RUSSIAN
PILGRIM* have obtained a
copy from an ancient manuscript of the Life of the divinely-wise child, Schema-monk
Bogolep, Wonderworker of Cherny Yar (Astrakhan). In the printed catalogues
of Saints there is only very brief information about him. Thus, in the work
of N. Barsukov, SOURCES OF RUSSIAN
HAGIOGRAPHY, it is said only that the holy
child Bogolep died in the year 1632. In the Manual of Icon painting, under
July 29, it is said that the child Bogolep "in appearance is young, on
his head a cowl, garments of a monk" (Filimonov). In the book of Archimandrite
Sergius there is a brief account of the Blessed Child in Volume 3, Appendix
3, page 60; and in Archimandrite Leonid's book, HOLY
RUSSIA, it is said that Bogolep, Wonderworker
of Cherny Yar, was buried in the city of Cherny Yar in the province of Astrakhan.
In the manuscript which we have obtained, the Life begins
with a text from the book of Tobit: "It is good to keep the secret of
a king, but it is glorious to preach the works of God" (Tobit 12:11);
and further it says, "Therefore, remembering the miracles of this righteous
and divinely-wise child, one must not think that God, Who is wondrous in His
Saints, will fail to glorify this righteous one also, for the sake of the
miraculous glorification of His Most Holy Name."
| I |
N THE REIGN of Tsar Alexei Michaelovich there lived in Moscow
a certain pious nobleman by the name of Jacob Lukin Ushakov, who had a wife,
just as pious, whose name was Catherine. The Lord God blessed their virtuous
married life with the birth of a son, who was called in Baptism Boris, in
honor of the Passion-bearer, the Russian Prince Boris, who is commemorated
on May 2/15.
Soon after the birth of Boris, Ushakov was sent from Moscow
to the outpost of Astrakhan for government service by order of the Tsar. The
place of Ushakov's residence was to be the city of Cherny Yar, which was on
the river Volga, 256 kilometers from Astrakhan.
Having entered upon the governance of the post assigned
to him, Ushakov, faithful to his character, exercised the authority given
him by God and the Sovereign wisely and virtuously. His wife was completely
occupied with rearing the child. Boris, while still in his swaddling clothes,
revealed in himself an extraordinary inclination for ascetic labors, which
were completely un-childlike, and evidently he was foreordained by God's Providence
to be a chosen vessel of the Holy Spirit, for the glorification of the Almighty
Lord.
The first extraordinary manifestation of the glorification
of the Name of God in the child was the fact that on the days established
by the Holy Church for fasting, Wednesday and Friday, in remembrance of the
sufferings and death of the Saviour, Boris would not drink milk from his mother's
breast and spent these days without food. The second extraordinary manifestation
of piety in the child was expressed in his striving to hear the Divine service,
so that no sooner would the bell begin to ring in the local belfry for the
Divine service than Boris would begin to cry very loudly, and his childish
cry would cease only when he was brought to church; and so his mother and
their servants soon became accustomed to brining him to church immediately
after the bell would ring. In the church a joyful feeling would be expressed
in the child's face, and only at the end of the Liturgy would he accept food.
Then, with every day, Boris was strengthened more and more by the grace of
the Holy Spirit, to the joy of his parents and the astonishment of all who
knew him and heard about him.
In one of the sorrowful years when the plague had seized
with its death-dealing poison the whole extent of the Russian land, from the
royal city of Moscow to the boundaries of Astrakhan, the son of the Commander
Ushakov, the pious child Boris, also became ill. His right leg was covered
with deep sores, and the intolerable pain gave him no rest either day or night,
but, faithful to his calling, the child Boris, limping, did not cease to go
to the temple of God to offer his holy child's prayers, acting according to
the Psalmist: I have chosen to be an abject in the house of my God, rather
than to dwell in the tabernacles of sinners (Psalm 83:11). By the zealous
concern and car of his parents and physicians, the disease of the legs finally
passed. But following upon this disease it was pleasing to God to send the
young righteous one a different temptation: on his face there appeared a form
of leprosy. But behold, during the time of this illness a certain monk came
to the house of Jacob. Being hospitably received by the Commander, the Elder
blessed all who dwelt in the house and visited the Commander's sick son. Seeing
the monk, Boris became yet more inflamed with love for God. Seeing in him
one sent from God, he began to entreat his parents that he be allowed immediately
to be clothed in the Angelic habit. The desire of their beloved son was strange,
but feeling beforehand that their dear child was not fitted for life in this
present world, and knowing from the Lives of the Saints examples of children
receiving the Angelic habit, they decided to give their seven-year-old son
this great joy. In the cathedral church of the Resurrection of Christ, Boris
was tonsured in the monastic habit and called Bogolep. Then, soon after receiving
the monastic habit, the righteous child was clothed also in the Schema (great
habit).
The newly-made Schema-monk was not long to rejoice his
parents and astonish everyone by his labors and his example of divinely wise
life. Two days after receiving the Schema, the righteous boy grew ill, and
on the third day he was already called into the heavenly kingdom for the eternal
glorification of the Lord, together with the Angels and all the Saints who
have pleased God. The parents of the newly-reposed one experienced a double
feeling: great sorrow, expressed in lamentation and weeping over their beloved
son, and also an inexpressible joy at the thought that the Almighty Lord had
chosen the boy from their family for the inheritance of the heavenly kingdom.
With great honor the blessed child was buried in the same
city of Cherny Yar near the very church of the Resurrection of Christ where
he had received the Schema, at the left side of the Altar, so that form their
mansion his parents might daily see the place of their son's repose and might
pray to the Lord Who glorifies His Saints, that He, being All-merciful, might
not fail to glorify also this God-pleasing child, the Schema-monk. For did
not the Lord Himself say, Suffer little children to come unto Me, and forbid
them not, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven? (Matthew 19:14).
The Lord Who is wondrous in His Saints soon glorified His
new chosen one. In the reign of the same Sovereign, the Tsar and Great Prince
Alexei Michaelovich, the rebellion of Stenka Razin infected the whole of Russia
with a great turmoil. Having laid waste a multitude of cities and villages,
Razin came also as far as Cherny Yar, where he destroyed many houses and took
many inhabitants captive for his own evil purposes. On leaving Cherny Yar,
however, he remembered that he had not yet destroyed the city completely and
that the soldiers from Moscow might find a point of support for their pursuit
of him. Therefore, he sent a regiment of Tatars who had surrendered to him,
so that they might destroy utterly the unfortunate city. But what were the
astonishment and confusion of the Tatar regiments when, approaching the city,
they saw, walking on the walls, a boy Schema-monk! Those who succeeded in
going closer to the wall heard the voice of the holy Monks saying, "Depart
from here, wretched ones! You cannot do anything to this city, because God
has placed me to guard this city." Nevertheless, there were stubborn
ones found among them who, despite everything, wished to enter the city, but
an invisible power held them; finally, being struck by blindness, against
their will they were forced to depart, and only a mile away from the city
walls did they receive their sight back, by God's power, after having done
nothing to the city because of the prayers of the righteous child Bogolep,
being pursued by holy guards of Angels. They returned in disgrace to their
Ataman, Razin, in the city of Astrakhan. But the outlaw did not believe the
tale of the disgraced regiment and became extremely angry at them, sending
another regiment to lay waste the city. This regiment met the same fat, and
so the Moscow troops under the leadership of Ivan Bogdanovich Milaslavsky
could enter the city and firmly establish themselves in it.
During the reign of the next Tsars, John and Peter Alexeivich,
by the help and intercession of the child Bogolep, Cherny Yar was saved from
the Kuban Tatars. When they came up to the city to lay it waste, there suddenly
appeared before them a Child-monk on a white horse who strictly commanded
them to go away. The Tatars were seized with an indescribably fear and returned
without doing any harm to the city.
In 1695 a priest at the church of the Nativity of the Mother
of God in the city of Astrakhan, whose name was John, was struck by an affliction
of the eye. Praying to the Lord to grant him healing, he had the joy after
prayer one night to see the child, Schema-monk Bogolep, who commanded him
to pain his image and sent it to his tomb in the city of Cherny Yar, adding,
"When you will have fulfilled this command, you will be healed of your
affliction." Rising from sleep, the priest, who was also an icon painter,
was perplexed as to how, being almost blind, he was to paint an icon of the
child Schema-monk whom he had seen. However, using all his strength so as
to depict the righteous one, he took a board and made a sketch on it. What
was his astonishment when, after undertaking the work, he began to feel that
with every minute he was getting better, and at the end of the work he was
almost completely healed! Having received help for his affliction, the priest
began, day by day, to put off the finishing of the work, and he did not send
the icon to the designated place; and finally he forgot about it altogether.
Thus a year passed. The priest again became afflicted, even more severely
than before, with a disease of the eyes. A second time the child Bogolep appeared
to him, reproaching him for his negligence, and a second time commanding him
to finish painting the icon which he had begun and not completed, and to send
it to his tomb in Cherny Yar. Then the priest promised with an oath to fulfill
the commandment of the blessed child if only he would receive healing. Immediately
after this he undertook the completion of the work and, having finished it,
with the blessing of Archbishop Sabbatius he set out with the icon for Cherny
Yar, where, with a procession and the ringing of bells, the icon was triumphantly
greeted and placed on the tomb of the child Bogolep.
In the manuscript which we have there are set forth several
miracles received from the holy child. Without giving them all, we cannot
fail to make a remark about eh following extraordinary manifestation of the
miraculous power of God through His chosen one.
In Cherny Yar there was a city guard whose name was Gerasimus,
who was deaf and dumb from birth. Once at night, when as usual he was on guard
at the tower which is called Zaklikusha, he saw before him the child Bogolep
surrounded by an extraordinary light. Gerasimus was frightened and signed
himself with the sign of the Cross and, not moving, with piety and reverence
he looked at the light-bearing righteous one who said to him, "Do not
fear, Gerasimus, but bow your head"; and when he had bowed his head,
the holy child touched him with his hands and became invisible. From this
hour Gerasimus was completely healed and was not deaf and dumb any more, and
he began loudly to glorify the Lord and His servant, the child Schema-monk
Bogolep.
The illustration of the righteous child which is here presented
is taken from a rare copy of the above-mentioned icon which was painted by
the Priest John.
|
SAINT BOGOLEP REJOICE, O BOGOLEP,
divinely wise child,* thou didst appear |
Reproduced from The Orthodox Word
Vol. 10, No. 1 (54) January-February, 1974
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