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The Northern Thebaid Monastic Saints of the Russian North Compiled and Translated by Fr. Seraphim Rose and Abbot Herman Podmoshensky |
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From
the fourth century A.D.,
the desert Thebaid of Egypt was the home of thousands of monks and nuns
who made the desert a city peopled with Christians striving toward heaven
in the angelic way of life. A thousand years later, no fewer thousands of
monks and nuns, likewise seeking union with God, went to live in the
forests of northern Russia, creating what has become known as the
“Northern Thebaid.”
Just as the sultry African nature with its clear blue sky,
lush colors, its burning sun, and its incomparable moonlit nights, is
distinct from the aquarelle soft tones of Russia’s northern nature with
the blue surface of its lakes and the soft shades of its leafy forests—in
the same way the sanctity of the Saints of the Egyptian desert, elemental
and mighty, is distinct from the sanctity of Russia, which is quiet,
lofty, and as crystal-clear as the radiant and quiet evening of the
Russian spring. But both in Russia and in Egypt there is the same noetic
prayer, the same interior silence.
Illustrated with rare pictures from old Russian books and
magazines, The Northern Thebaid
chronicles the lives of a number
of holy men and women of the Russian forests, presenting the Orthodox
monastic tradition which inspired them and which is still alive today for
those who would follow in their footsteps.
This latest edition is a facsimile of the original edition,
which was hand-printed by Fr. Seraphim Rose and his monastic brothers in
the mountain forests of northern California. It includes a new preface and
a new appendix on the recently rediscovered, incorrupt relics of St.
Alexander of Svir, a sixteenth-century luminary of the Russian North.
302 pages, 193 illustrations, paperback, $17.
0–938635–37–9
