Metropolitan Laurus on the place of the Kursk Root icon in the Church Abroad
From Orthodox Parish of St Nicholas
The following address was given by Metropolitan Laurus, First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, on the occasion of the Kursk Root icon's visit to the Patriarchal Cathedral of St Nicholas, in the presence of Bishop Mercury of Zaraisk, in December 2004.
Your Grace, Right Reverend Vladyka! Deeply-respected Sergei Viktorovich!
Dear in the Lord clergy, parishioners and worshipers of St Nicholas Cathedral!
I greet you with all my heart, Right Reverend Vladyka, and all the participants of today's celebration on this Sunday, this little Pascha of Christ, when St Nicholas Cathedral is visited by the Most-Blessed Virgin Mary through Her Kursk-Root Icon, which is the Hodigitria, that is, the Guide, of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia and the faithful children of the God-preserved Russian people in the diaspora.
In 1919, the Kursk-Root Icon, escorted by Archbishop Feofan of Kursk and Oboyan and a few brethren of Znamensky Monastery, burning with the desire to preserve the holy icon from desecration by the Bolsheviks, left the Russian Land and ended up in our fraternal Serbian land. In 1920, at the request of General Wrangel, who is now buried at Holy Trinity Church in Belgrade, the Icon returned to Russia and remained in the Crimea until the great evacuation of General Wrangel's Russian Army in early November, 1920, when the holy Icon returned to Serbia, where it remained until 1944. Then, together with Metropolitan Anastassy (Gribanovsky, +1965) of blessed memory, along with the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, the Icon departed for Germany. Blessed Metropolitan Anastassy, the second First Hierarch of the part of the Russian Church located abroad, moved from Munich to the USA in 1950. Since 1957, the Kursk-Root Icon has resided at the Cathedral of the Synod of Bishops of the Church Abroad on 93rd Street. The Icon regularly travels throughout the dioceses of the Russian diaspora, visiting all corners of the world, wherever Russian Orthodox people live, bringing them consolation and strength. During one such trip in the Western American Diocese, the great saint of the Church Abroad, Archbishop John of Shanghai and San Francisco (Maximovich, +1966) died before the Icon. He now rejoices with the Queen of Heaven, our Mother of God, abiding among the host of saints together with St Seraphim, who as a youth received healing from this Icon, along with many other saints of our Fatherland who prayed before this miraculous Icon.
And so, since 1920, the presence of our Protectress of Kursk illuminates and blesses our celebrations, the sessions of the Synod of Bishops, the work of the Council of Bishops and other events in the life of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, showing us the way in the modern world. And now, as always, we fervently pray before Her to heal those wounds which were inflicted upon the Body of the Russian Church in the 20th century, so that Christ's peace would reign in the All-Russian Local Church; that very peace of which the Lord spoke to His disciples: "Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you" (John 14:27), so that the healing process of the division would be successful and would lead us to unity in mutual repentance and truth. May this historic event help us to develop the experience of brotherly cooperation and peaceful and amicable witness of the Resurrected Christ and the truth of Orthodoxy here, in the USA. For this shall we pray without ceasing, dear in the lord Right Reverend Vladyka, fathers, brethren and sisters.
Let us pray to the Most-Holy Virgin Mother of God that She helps us heal all the wounds in our church life.
With love in the Lord,
+METROPOLITAN LAURUS
First Hierarch of the Russian Church Abroad
November 30/December 12, 2004
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The photograph on this page comes from the photo-report on the Synodal web site.
