New Martyr 20th century

Nine New Hieromartyr Priests of 1937

Also known as Euthymius Goryachev, John Melnichenko, John Smolichev, Vladimir Morinsky, Victor Basov, Basil Zelensky, Theodotus Shatokhin, Peter Novoselsky, Stephen Yaroshevich

Nine priests martyred together in the Soviet persecution (1937)

Feast Day
September 2
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Nine New Hieromartyr Priests of 1937

Life

The Nine New Hieromartyr Priests of 1937 are commemorated together as a group of priests put to death during the Soviet persecution of the Russian Orthodox Church in 1937. Their shared commemoration falls on September 2, and they are numbered among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, the broad company of hierarchs, clergy, monastics, and laypeople who suffered for the faith under the Soviet regime.

The September 2 commemoration names them as the Hieromartyrs Ephemius Goryachev, John Melnichenko, John Smolichev, Vladimir Morinsky, Victor Basov, Basil Zelensky, Theodotus Shatokhin, Peter Novoselsky, and Stephen Yaroshevich, all of whom served as priests. The title hieromartyr marks them as ordained clergy who died as martyrs.

The year 1937 marked the deadliest phase of the persecution for the Russian clergy. During the Great Purge of 1937 and 1938, tens of thousands of priests were arrested, frequently on fabricated charges, and executed by firing squad; church and scholarly estimates place the number of clergy repressed in 1937 alone well into the tens of thousands, with a large proportion of them put to death. Many of those killed were shot in groups and buried anonymously, their names recovered only later from opened archives. These nine priests are remembered as one such group.

The Russian Orthodox Church established the collective commemoration of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia through glorifications that began in the 1990s and culminated in the great general canonization at the Jubilee Bishops' Council of 2000. The Synaxis names more than seventeen hundred saints, while acknowledging many others who are 'known to God' but not recorded by name. Groups of clergy martyred together, such as these nine priests, are commemorated on the dates associated with their suffering.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

The wider company to which these priests belong commemorates the Orthodox faithful who suffered during the Soviet period, from the Revolution of 1917 to 1991. Its principal feast is a movable commemoration kept on the Sunday nearest January 25 (Old Style) / February 7 (New Style), the date of the martyrdom of Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev, regarded as the first of the new hieromartyrs. The Synodal Canonization Commission has continued to add names as documentation permits, so the Synaxis remains an open commemoration.

Within this larger body, individual saints and groups are also remembered on the days of their martyrdom. The September 2 commemoration of these nine priests reflects this pattern, honoring a cohort of clergy who were executed together in 1937. Because the surviving record identifies them collectively rather than preserving a full and verified life for each, they are kept as a single commemoration.

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Notes

Among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

Sources: Synaxarion