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Theophan the Recluse

Theophan the Recluse (Russian: Феофан Затворник, romanizedFeofan Zatvornik), also known as Theophanes the Recluse or the Enlightener Theophan the Recluse of Vysha (Russian: святитель Феофан Затворник Вышенский;[2] January 10, 1815 – January 6, 1894) was a bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church and theologian, recognized as a saint in 1988.


Theophan the Recluse
Born(1815-01-10)January 10, 1815
Chernavsk, Oryol Governorate, Russian Empire
DiedJanuary 6, 1894(1894-01-06) (aged 78)
Vysha Monastery, Russian Empire
Venerated inEastern Orthodox Church
Canonized6 June 1988, Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius by 1988 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church, (Patriarch Pimen I of Moscow)
Feast29 June
19 January
23 January[1]

He is best known today through the books and letters he wrote concerning spiritual life, especially on the subjects of the Christian life and the training of youth in the faith. He also played an important role in translating the Philokalia from Church Slavonic into Russian. The Philokalia is a classic of Orthodox spirituality, composed of the collected works of a number of Church Fathers which were edited and placed in a four volume set in the 17th and 18th centuries. A persistent theme is developing an interior life of continuous prayer,[3] learning to "pray without ceasing" as St. Paul teaches in his first letter to the Thessalonians.

Early life edit

He was born on January 10, 1815, as Georgy Vasilievich Govorov (Russian: Георгий Васильевич Говоров), in the village of Chernavsk, in the Oryol Governorate of the Russian Empire. His father was a Russian Orthodox priest.

In 1823, he was sent to study at the Theological College in Livny. The moral and spiritual climate in the school was the most favorable. A capable, well-trained boy easily passed the course of the theological school and six years later (in 1829), among the best students, he was transferred to the Oryol Theological Seminary. At that time, Archimandrite Isidore (Nikolsky) was appointed rector of the seminary; the philosophical sciences were taught by Evfimy Ostromyslensky, the literature teacher was Hieromonk Platon (Gorodetsky), later Metropolitan of Kyiv and Galicia. Georgy Govorov studied at the seminary successfully. It was here that the young man first began to consciously work on himself. Already at this time, his characteristic feature was a love of seclusion. The seminary bulletin noted that he is distinguished by "a penchant for solitude; edifying in his treatment of comrades; sets an example of diligence and good morals; meek and silent." After graduating from the seminary, in 1837, as the best of the pupils of his course, he was sent to the Kyiv Theological Academy.

Career edit

During his studies in Kyiv, events occurred that influenced the choice of Georgy Govorov's life path: in 1838, his mother died, and a year later, his father. On October 1, 1840, he submitted to the academic authorities a petition for monastic tonsure; on February 15, 1841, 26-year-old Georgy Govorov received monastic tonsure from the rector of the Kyiv Theological Academy, Archimandrite Jeremiah Solovyov with the name Theophanes in honor of the Theophanes the Confessor. On April 6 of the same year, on the day of his episcopal consecration, Jeremiah ordained him to the hierodeacon, and on July 1 of the same year to the hieromonk.

In 1841, Hieromonk Theophan was among the first to graduate from the Academy with a master's degree in theology for a course essay "Review of Sublaw Religion" (Обозрение подзаконной религии), which, among the best works, was sent to the Most Holy Synod, a permanent member of which Metropolitan Philaret Drozdov of Moscow indicated in his review: "This work contains so much information and considerations about the law of Moses that they serve as sufficient evidence of the knowledge of the writer, giving him the right to a master's degree." Immediately after graduating from the Academy, Theophan was appointed rector of the Kyiv-Sofia Theological College, where he began to teach Latin.

On December 7, 1842, he was appointed an inspector and teacher of psychology and logic at the Novgorod Theological Seminary. On December 18 of the same year he was confirmed in the degree of Master of Divinity.

On October 16, 1844, he was appointed teacher of the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy in the Department of Moral and Pastoral Theology. Since March 22, 1845, Hieromonk Theophan has been an assistant inspector of the Academy. On July 3, 1845, he was appointed a member of the committee to review the summaries of academic subjects taught at the seminary.

However, at this time he was already attracted to a solitary monastic life; in a letter to his spiritual father Jeremiah, who tonsured and ordained him, he wrote: "I am beginning to be burdened by my academic position to the point of unbearability. I would like to go to church, and sit there". On August 21, 1847, at his request, he was appointed a member of the Russian Orthodox Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem, headed by Archimandrite Porphyrius (Uspensky). In Jerusalem, Theophan learned iconography, studied Greek, French, Hebrew and Arabic. In Palestine, he became acquainted with the ancient asceticism of the Eastern monasteries, with the monuments of ascetic writing of the past centuries; engaged in the translation of the works of the holy fathers of the Philokalia. In addition, he became intimately acquainted with the non-Orthodox Christian beliefs, knowing both the strength and weakness of their propaganda. Theophan's works did not go unnoticed: on May 5, 1851, he was awarded the gold pectoral cross.

In 1853, the Crimean War began, and on May 3, 1854, the mission was withdrawn to Russia. The return took place through Western Europe: Theophan visited many cities, visited churches, museums, libraries, educational institutions; Archimandrite Porphyrius and Hieromonk Theophan had an audience with Pope Pius IX.

Upon his return to Russia, he was appointed a teacher of canon law at the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy; on April 14, 1855, he was elevated to the rank of Archimandrite. In September of the same year, he was appointed rector of the Olonets Theological Seminary, which was located in the building of the Petrozavodsk Theological College; Archimandrite Theophan had to organize the construction of his own building for the seminary. At this time he was writing: "We don't have a seminary. By right of the strong, we live in a building bought for a school, and it is in an apartment. The seminary bursa is also in the apartment, which is very, very inconvenient". In October 1855, he was appointed a member of the Olonets Ecclesiastical Consistory. At the suggestion of Archbishop Arcadius (Fyodorov), he was appointed censor of the sermons of the Olonets diocese. At the seminary, he organized an anti-schismatic library.

Less than a year later, on May 21, 1856, he was appointed rector of the Russian embassy church in Constantinople (Ottoman Empire), as he was well acquainted with the Orthodox East. Theophan was charged with collecting information about the Greco-Bulgarian Schism that was brewing at that time. For his labors, on April 17, 1857, he was awarded the Order of St. Anna, 2nd degree.

In May 1857, he was appointed rector of the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy. In addition to the rector's office, he was entrusted with overseeing the teaching of the Law of God in secular educational institutions of the St. Petersburg district; he was chairman of the committee at the Academy of Sciences for the publication of works of Byzantine historians, and since 1858 he was a chairman of the committee for the translation of Holy Scripture into Russian.

On May 29, 1859, Archimandrite Theophan was elected Bishop of Tambov and Shatsk, and on June 1, in the Trinity Cathedral of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, he was consecrated bishop. On July 5, he took over the diocese. The Tambov diocese was one of the most extensive and populous: there were only 1,172 priests, 681 deacons, several hundred monastics; there were many sectarians and Old Believers among the population. Bishop Theophan paid special attention to preaching; he accompanied almost every service with a sermon. Bishop Theophan and the clergy were convinced "that preaching is his first, direct and sacred duty, and at the same time should be an internal need, if only to properly and consciously treat his high ministry". The Tambov male monastery of Our Lady of Kazan at the bishop's house became the center of preaching. In the Tambov Diocesan Gazette, Bishop Theophan published his homiletic treatise "How to compose a sermon", in which he pointed out the distinctive features of the sermon, gave practical advice on how to compose it, gave his own example: "the peculiarity of my sermons is that they are not composed […] These are written impromptu."

On July 22, 1863, Bishop Theophan was moved to the ancient Vladimir diocese. At the Diocese of Vladimir, which needed Orthodox missionary work, since there were many schismatics and sectarians here, Theophan's fame as a preacher finally strengthened. Of great importance was his "Instruction for Preaching the Word of God", published on November 27, 1864 in the Vladimir Diocesan Gazette; in the same year he sent Hieromonk Moses to Moscow to verify old printed books; in Vyazniki county he opened the "Epiphany Orthodox Brotherhood". In 1865, a women's diocesan school was opened under his care. For his archpastoral activity, on April 19, 1864, he was awarded the Order of St. Anna, 1st degree.

In retirement edit

The petition for his retirement was granted on June 17, 1866, with his appointment as rector in the Vysha Hermitage in the Tambov Governorate. But already on September 19, at his request, he was dismissed from the management of the monastery. While living in Vysha, he read and wrote a lot.

In his later years, he suffered from rheumatism, neuralgia, cardiac arrhythmia and dizziness, as well as progressive cataracts, as a result of which he became blind in his right eye in 1888.

Death edit

Theophan the Recluse died on January 6, 1894, and lay in state for three days in his church. Even after that length of time there was no sign of decay in his unembalmed body. He was buried in the Kazan church of the Vysha Monastery.[4]

The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It edit

The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It was originally written in response to Theophan's encounter with a young woman. While at a ball, this upper class Moscow woman began having irrational thoughts about the meaning of life and the immortality of man. After contacting Theophan, the two began corresponding through letters, the lady writing on her spiritual difficulties and Theophan responding with spiritual advice. This correspondence had a significant impact on the woman; she later became a nun.[5] The Saint Herman Press, the publisher of the illustrated edition of The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned to It, notes that it was of great importance to Theophan that the young woman should "be able to keenly hear the right 'tone' of spiritual life".[6]

Veneration as a saint edit

 

Theophan was canonized by the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church of 1988. The act of canonization declared that his "deep theological understanding of the Christian teaching, as well as its performance in practice, and, as a consequence of this, the loftiness and holiness of the life of the sviatitel' allow for his writings to be regarded as a development of the teaching of the Holy Fathers, preserving the same Orthodox purity and Divine enlightenment." His feast day is celebrated January 6 or January 10.

Quotes edit

  • "He who believes in God, but does not confess Him as the Father of the Son, does not believe in a god that is the true God, but in some personal invention."[7]
  • "You ask, will the heterodox be saved... Why do you worry about them? They have a Saviour Who desires the salvation of every human being. He will take care of them. You and I should not be burdened with such a concern. Study yourself and your own sins... I will tell you one thing, however: should you, being Orthodox and possessing the Truth in its fullness, betray Orthodoxy, and enter a different faith, you will lose your soul forever."[8]
  • "Where there is no prayer and fasting there are the demons."[This quote needs a citation]

Books in English translation edit

  • Theophan the Recluse (1995). The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It. St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood. ISBN 9780938635369.}.
  • Theofan the Recluse. The Path to Salvation: A Manual of Spiritual Transformation. Holy Trinity Orthodox School. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  • Turning the Heart to God (Partial translation of The Path to Salvation)
  • Theophan the Recluse (1994). Kindling the divine spark : teachings on how to preserve spiritual zeal. St. Xenia Skete Press. ISBN 9780938635444.}.
  • Theophan the Recluse. Four Homilies on Prayer. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  • Theophan the Recluse (2014). Psalm 118: A Commentary by Saint Theophan the Recluse. St. John of Kronstadt Press. ISBN 978-1-928920-87-8.}
  • Theophan the Recluse (1992). Amis, Robin; Williams, Esther (eds.). The Heart of Salvation: The Life and Teachings of Russia's Saint Theophian the Recluse. Praxis Institute. ISBN 978-1872292021.
  • Theophan the Recluse (1989). Raising Them Right: A Saint's Advice on Raising Children. Conciliar Press. ISBN 0-9622713-0-6.}. This book consists of excerpts from his "The Path of Salvation"

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Святитель Феофа́н Затворник Вышенский, епископ Тамбовский". azbyka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  2. ^ "Святитель Феофа́н Затворник Вышенский, епископ Тамбовский". azbyka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  3. ^ A Prayer Rule by St. Theophan the Recluse
  4. ^ "St Theophan the Recluse: The Bishop of Tambov biography (Orthodox Church in America website)".
  5. ^ "Spiritual Life - And How to be Attuned to it". Writings of St. Theophan the Recluse. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  6. ^ The Spiritual Life: And How to be Attuned to it. St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood. 1995. ISBN 0938635360.
  7. ^ according to the Daily Church Readings from the Word of God By St. Theophan the Recluse
  8. ^ "Will the Heterodox Be Saved". Retrieved 5 January 2014.

External links edit

  • St Theophan the Recluse: The Bishop of Tambov biography (Orthodox Church in America website)
  • What is Prayer? by Theophan the Recluse (Youtube playlist of 5 videos containing the complete English translation of this work.)
  • Writings of St. Theophan the Recluse at theophan.net
  • English translation of a letter of Theophan the Recluse to the husband of his sister of 12th of February 1874
  • (in Russian)

theophan, recluse, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, require, copy, editing, tone, assist, editing, december, 2023, learn, when, remove, th. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may require copy editing for tone You can assist by editing it December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Theophan the Recluse Russian Feofan Zatvornik romanized Feofan Zatvornik also known as Theophanes the Recluse or the Enlightener Theophan the Recluse of Vysha Russian svyatitel Feofan Zatvornik Vyshenskij 2 January 10 1815 January 6 1894 was a bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church and theologian recognized as a saint in 1988 SaintTheophan the RecluseBorn 1815 01 10 January 10 1815Chernavsk Oryol Governorate Russian EmpireDiedJanuary 6 1894 1894 01 06 aged 78 Vysha Monastery Russian EmpireVenerated inEastern Orthodox ChurchCanonized6 June 1988 Trinity Lavra of St Sergius by 1988 Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Pimen I of Moscow Feast29 June19 January23 January 1 He is best known today through the books and letters he wrote concerning spiritual life especially on the subjects of the Christian life and the training of youth in the faith He also played an important role in translating the Philokalia from Church Slavonic into Russian The Philokalia is a classic of Orthodox spirituality composed of the collected works of a number of Church Fathers which were edited and placed in a four volume set in the 17th and 18th centuries A persistent theme is developing an interior life of continuous prayer 3 learning to pray without ceasing as St Paul teaches in his first letter to the Thessalonians Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 In retirement 4 Death 5 The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It 6 Veneration as a saint 7 Quotes 8 Books in English translation 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editHe was born on January 10 1815 as Georgy Vasilievich Govorov Russian Georgij Vasilevich Govorov in the village of Chernavsk in the Oryol Governorate of the Russian Empire His father was a Russian Orthodox priest In 1823 he was sent to study at the Theological College in Livny The moral and spiritual climate in the school was the most favorable A capable well trained boy easily passed the course of the theological school and six years later in 1829 among the best students he was transferred to the Oryol Theological Seminary At that time Archimandrite Isidore Nikolsky was appointed rector of the seminary the philosophical sciences were taught by Evfimy Ostromyslensky the literature teacher was Hieromonk Platon Gorodetsky later Metropolitan of Kyiv and Galicia Georgy Govorov studied at the seminary successfully It was here that the young man first began to consciously work on himself Already at this time his characteristic feature was a love of seclusion The seminary bulletin noted that he is distinguished by a penchant for solitude edifying in his treatment of comrades sets an example of diligence and good morals meek and silent After graduating from the seminary in 1837 as the best of the pupils of his course he was sent to the Kyiv Theological Academy Career editDuring his studies in Kyiv events occurred that influenced the choice of Georgy Govorov s life path in 1838 his mother died and a year later his father On October 1 1840 he submitted to the academic authorities a petition for monastic tonsure on February 15 1841 26 year old Georgy Govorov received monastic tonsure from the rector of the Kyiv Theological Academy Archimandrite Jeremiah Solovyov with the name Theophanes in honor of the Theophanes the Confessor On April 6 of the same year on the day of his episcopal consecration Jeremiah ordained him to the hierodeacon and on July 1 of the same year to the hieromonk In 1841 Hieromonk Theophan was among the first to graduate from the Academy with a master s degree in theology for a course essay Review of Sublaw Religion Obozrenie podzakonnoj religii which among the best works was sent to the Most Holy Synod a permanent member of which Metropolitan Philaret Drozdov of Moscow indicated in his review This work contains so much information and considerations about the law of Moses that they serve as sufficient evidence of the knowledge of the writer giving him the right to a master s degree Immediately after graduating from the Academy Theophan was appointed rector of the Kyiv Sofia Theological College where he began to teach Latin On December 7 1842 he was appointed an inspector and teacher of psychology and logic at the Novgorod Theological Seminary On December 18 of the same year he was confirmed in the degree of Master of Divinity On October 16 1844 he was appointed teacher of the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy in the Department of Moral and Pastoral Theology Since March 22 1845 Hieromonk Theophan has been an assistant inspector of the Academy On July 3 1845 he was appointed a member of the committee to review the summaries of academic subjects taught at the seminary However at this time he was already attracted to a solitary monastic life in a letter to his spiritual father Jeremiah who tonsured and ordained him he wrote I am beginning to be burdened by my academic position to the point of unbearability I would like to go to church and sit there On August 21 1847 at his request he was appointed a member of the Russian Orthodox Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem headed by Archimandrite Porphyrius Uspensky In Jerusalem Theophan learned iconography studied Greek French Hebrew and Arabic In Palestine he became acquainted with the ancient asceticism of the Eastern monasteries with the monuments of ascetic writing of the past centuries engaged in the translation of the works of the holy fathers of the Philokalia In addition he became intimately acquainted with the non Orthodox Christian beliefs knowing both the strength and weakness of their propaganda Theophan s works did not go unnoticed on May 5 1851 he was awarded the gold pectoral cross In 1853 the Crimean War began and on May 3 1854 the mission was withdrawn to Russia The return took place through Western Europe Theophan visited many cities visited churches museums libraries educational institutions Archimandrite Porphyrius and Hieromonk Theophan had an audience with Pope Pius IX Upon his return to Russia he was appointed a teacher of canon law at the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy on April 14 1855 he was elevated to the rank of Archimandrite In September of the same year he was appointed rector of the Olonets Theological Seminary which was located in the building of the Petrozavodsk Theological College Archimandrite Theophan had to organize the construction of his own building for the seminary At this time he was writing We don t have a seminary By right of the strong we live in a building bought for a school and it is in an apartment The seminary bursa is also in the apartment which is very very inconvenient In October 1855 he was appointed a member of the Olonets Ecclesiastical Consistory At the suggestion of Archbishop Arcadius Fyodorov he was appointed censor of the sermons of the Olonets diocese At the seminary he organized an anti schismatic library Less than a year later on May 21 1856 he was appointed rector of the Russian embassy church in Constantinople Ottoman Empire as he was well acquainted with the Orthodox East Theophan was charged with collecting information about the Greco Bulgarian Schism that was brewing at that time For his labors on April 17 1857 he was awarded the Order of St Anna 2nd degree In May 1857 he was appointed rector of the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy In addition to the rector s office he was entrusted with overseeing the teaching of the Law of God in secular educational institutions of the St Petersburg district he was chairman of the committee at the Academy of Sciences for the publication of works of Byzantine historians and since 1858 he was a chairman of the committee for the translation of Holy Scripture into Russian On May 29 1859 Archimandrite Theophan was elected Bishop of Tambov and Shatsk and on June 1 in the Trinity Cathedral of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra he was consecrated bishop On July 5 he took over the diocese The Tambov diocese was one of the most extensive and populous there were only 1 172 priests 681 deacons several hundred monastics there were many sectarians and Old Believers among the population Bishop Theophan paid special attention to preaching he accompanied almost every service with a sermon Bishop Theophan and the clergy were convinced that preaching is his first direct and sacred duty and at the same time should be an internal need if only to properly and consciously treat his high ministry The Tambov male monastery of Our Lady of Kazan at the bishop s house became the center of preaching In the Tambov Diocesan Gazette Bishop Theophan published his homiletic treatise How to compose a sermon in which he pointed out the distinctive features of the sermon gave practical advice on how to compose it gave his own example the peculiarity of my sermons is that they are not composed These are written impromptu On July 22 1863 Bishop Theophan was moved to the ancient Vladimir diocese At the Diocese of Vladimir which needed Orthodox missionary work since there were many schismatics and sectarians here Theophan s fame as a preacher finally strengthened Of great importance was his Instruction for Preaching the Word of God published on November 27 1864 in the Vladimir Diocesan Gazette in the same year he sent Hieromonk Moses to Moscow to verify old printed books in Vyazniki county he opened the Epiphany Orthodox Brotherhood In 1865 a women s diocesan school was opened under his care For his archpastoral activity on April 19 1864 he was awarded the Order of St Anna 1st degree In retirement editThe petition for his retirement was granted on June 17 1866 with his appointment as rector in the Vysha Hermitage in the Tambov Governorate But already on September 19 at his request he was dismissed from the management of the monastery While living in Vysha he read and wrote a lot In his later years he suffered from rheumatism neuralgia cardiac arrhythmia and dizziness as well as progressive cataracts as a result of which he became blind in his right eye in 1888 Death editTheophan the Recluse died on January 6 1894 and lay in state for three days in his church Even after that length of time there was no sign of decay in his unembalmed body He was buried in the Kazan church of the Vysha Monastery 4 The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It editThe Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It was originally written in response to Theophan s encounter with a young woman While at a ball this upper class Moscow woman began having irrational thoughts about the meaning of life and the immortality of man After contacting Theophan the two began corresponding through letters the lady writing on her spiritual difficulties and Theophan responding with spiritual advice This correspondence had a significant impact on the woman she later became a nun 5 The Saint Herman Press the publisher of the illustrated edition of The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned to It notes that it was of great importance to Theophan that the young woman should be able to keenly hear the right tone of spiritual life 6 Veneration as a saint edit nbsp Theophan was canonized by the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church of 1988 The act of canonization declared that his deep theological understanding of the Christian teaching as well as its performance in practice and as a consequence of this the loftiness and holiness of the life of the sviatitel allow for his writings to be regarded as a development of the teaching of the Holy Fathers preserving the same Orthodox purity and Divine enlightenment His feast day is celebrated January 6 or January 10 Quotes edit He who believes in God but does not confess Him as the Father of the Son does not believe in a god that is the true God but in some personal invention 7 You ask will the heterodox be saved Why do you worry about them They have a Saviour Who desires the salvation of every human being He will take care of them You and I should not be burdened with such a concern Study yourself and your own sins I will tell you one thing however should you being Orthodox and possessing the Truth in its fullness betray Orthodoxy and enter a different faith you will lose your soul forever 8 Where there is no prayer and fasting there are the demons This quote needs a citation Books in English translation editTheophan the Recluse 1995 The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned To It St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood ISBN 9780938635369 Theofan the Recluse The Path to Salvation A Manual of Spiritual Transformation Holy Trinity Orthodox School Retrieved 1 February 2017 Turning the Heart to God Partial translation of The Path to Salvation Theophan the Recluse 1994 Kindling the divine spark teachings on how to preserve spiritual zeal St Xenia Skete Press ISBN 9780938635444 Theophan the Recluse Four Homilies on Prayer Retrieved 1 February 2017 Theophan the Recluse 2014 Psalm 118 A Commentary by Saint Theophan the Recluse St John of Kronstadt Press ISBN 978 1 928920 87 8 Theophan the Recluse 1992 Amis Robin Williams Esther eds The Heart of Salvation The Life and Teachings of Russia s Saint Theophian the Recluse Praxis Institute ISBN 978 1872292021 Theophan the Recluse 1989 Raising Them Right A Saint s Advice on Raising Children Conciliar Press ISBN 0 9622713 0 6 This book consists of excerpts from his The Path of Salvation See also edit nbsp Saints portalHermit Hesychasm Poustinia Theophanes the Confessor a Byzantine saintReferences edit Svyatitel Feofa n Zatvornik Vyshenskij episkop Tambovskij azbyka ru in Russian Retrieved 2021 05 04 Svyatitel Feofa n Zatvornik Vyshenskij episkop Tambovskij azbyka ru in Russian Retrieved 2021 05 04 A Prayer Rule by St Theophan the Recluse St Theophan the Recluse The Bishop of Tambov biography Orthodox Church in America website Spiritual Life And How to be Attuned to it Writings of St Theophan the Recluse Retrieved 20 November 2012 The Spiritual Life And How to be Attuned to it St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood 1995 ISBN 0938635360 Thoughts for Each Day of the Year according to the Daily Church Readings from the Word of God By St Theophan the Recluse Will the Heterodox Be Saved Retrieved 5 January 2014 External links editSt Theophan the Recluse The Bishop of Tambov biography Orthodox Church in America website What is Prayer by Theophan the Recluse Youtube playlist of 5 videos containing the complete English translation of this work Writings of St Theophan the Recluse at theophan net English translation of a letter of Theophan the Recluse to the husband of his sister of 12th of February 1874 in Russian The Act of Canonization of the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church Trinity Sergius Laura 6 9 June 1988 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theophan the Recluse amp oldid 1201517679, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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