New Martyr 20th century

New Hieromartyr Elias of Moscow

19th century - 1930s

Also known as Elias the New Martyr

A Russian priest educated at the Moscow Theological Academy, arrested by the Soviet secret police in 1932 and killed in a concentration-camp fire together with eleven other Christians.

Feast Day
February 16
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Hieromartyr Elias of Moscow

Life

Elias was a Russian Orthodox priest of Moscow who was educated at the Moscow Theological Academy and served two city parishes before the Revolution of 1917. Arrested by the Soviet secret police in 1932, he was exiled to the region of the Krasnaya Vishera River, where, according to his life, he died in a fire that broke out in the concentration camp, together with eleven other Christians.

He is numbered among the Synaxis of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, the great body of clergy and faithful who suffered for their faith under the Soviet authorities. His individual commemoration falls on February 16.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 19th century Birth and education Elias was born in a village near Moscow and studied at the Moscow Theological Academy. He married a devout woman named Eugenia.
  2. Before 1917 Priestly ministry in Moscow Ordained a priest, he served first in the small church attached to a poorhouse and afterward in the parish of Saint Nicholas in Tolmachi (Tolmachev) in Moscow, before the October Revolution of 1917.
  3. 1932 Arrest and exile The Soviet secret police arrested and imprisoned him. He was exiled to the region of the Krasnaya Vishera River, where, his life relates, he was forced to walk over melting snow, was subjected to torture, and was forbidden to serve liturgically.
  4. c. 1934 Death in the camp About two years after his imprisonment his wife Eugenia traveled to visit him in exile, bringing a Gospel book and a small vial of holy water. On her return to Moscow she learned that a fire had broken out in the concentration camp and that Elias had perished in it, together with eleven other Christians.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Martyrdom

According to his life, Elias was born in a Moscow village in the nineteenth century and studied at the Moscow Theological Academy. He married a devout woman named Eugenia and was ordained to the priesthood. He served first in the small church of a poorhouse and then in the parish of Saint Nicholas in Tolmachi in Moscow, ministering there until the upheavals that followed the October Revolution of 1917.

In 1932 he was arrested and imprisoned by the Soviet secret police and exiled to the region of the Krasnaya Vishera River. His life records that during this exile he was made to walk over melting snow, was subjected to torture, and was prohibited from serving the divine services.

About two years into his imprisonment his wife, Matushka Eugenia, made the journey to his place of exile to visit him, carrying with her a Gospel book and a small vial of holy water. When she returned to Moscow she learned that a fire had swept through the concentration camp and that Elias had died in it together with eleven other Christians. He is commemorated on February 16.

Among the New Martyrs of Russia

Elias belongs to the vast company of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, the clergy, monastics, and laypeople who suffered for their faith under the Soviet authorities after 1917. Sources describe a persecution of such scale that the number of Russia's New Martyrs is said to exceed that of all the martyrs of the first three Christian centuries; countless Orthodox were arrested, exiled, tortured, and killed for their adherence to the Church.

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia glorified the New Martyrs and Confessors collectively in 1981. Within Russia the Moscow Patriarchate, under Patriarch Alexei II, began individual glorifications in 1992 and, at the Jubilee Council of Bishops in the year 2000, glorified more than a thousand New Martyrs, with further names added over time by the Synodal Canonization Commission. The collective feast of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia is kept on the Sunday nearest January 25 (old style), February 7 (new style).

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Notes

Among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Feb 16