Hierarch 16th century

Saint Serapion Archbishop of Novgorod

d. March 16, 1516

Also known as Serapion of Novgorod

Born near Moscow, he served as a parish priest, was widowed, and took monastic vows, later becoming abbot and eventually Archbishop of Novgorod.

Feast Day
March 16
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Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Serapion, Archbishop of Novgorod

Life

Serapion was a sixteenth-century Russian hierarch who rose from parish priesthood to the See of Novgorod and Pskov. Born near Moscow in the village of Pekhorka (now Pekhra-Pokrovskoye in present-day Moscow Oblast), he married and was ordained a priest, but was widowed within a year of his marriage.

After his wife's death he took monastic vows at the Dubensky Dormition Monastery in Vladimir province, where he eventually became hegumen (abbot). He later served as hegumen of the Stromynsky Dormition Monastery and, in the mid-1490s, assumed leadership of the Trinity Monastery, the house later renowned as the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra.

Consecrated Archbishop of Novgorod and Pskov in 1506 despite his initial reluctance, Serapion held the see for only a little over three years. A jurisdictional dispute with Joseph of Volokolamsk led to his removal by a synod and a period of confinement, which he is recorded to have borne with humility and patience. Released in 1511, he spent his remaining years at the Trinity Monastery, where he reposed in 1516.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. 1493–1495 Leadership of the Trinity Monastery Serapion assumed leadership of the Trinity Monastery, the house later renowned as the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra, after earlier service as hegumen of the Dubensky and Stromynsky Dormition monasteries.
  2. January 15, 1506 Consecrated Archbishop of Novgorod and Pskov With the consent of Grand Prince Vasily III of Moscow, Serapion was consecrated and enthroned as Archbishop of Novgorod and Pskov, though he had initially refused the position.
  3. 1507 Dispute with Joseph of Volokolamsk When Joseph of Volokolamsk, who fell under Serapion's episcopal jurisdiction, transferred his monastery to princely patronage, Serapion deprived Joseph of his blessing and excommunicated him. Joseph appealed directly to Metropolitan Simon of Moscow, an action Serapion regarded as anti-canonical.
  4. July 1509 Removal and confinement A synod found Serapion at fault, removed him from the See of Novgorod, and confined him to the Andronikov Monastery in Moscow, where he is recorded to have endured harsh conditions with humility and patience.
  5. 1511 Release Serapion was released from confinement and spent his remaining years at the Trinity Monastery.
  6. March 16, 1516 Repose Serapion reposed at the Trinity Monastery. The See of Novgorod then remained vacant for seventeen years, until 1526.

Contributions & Legacy

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Early Life and Monastic Career

Serapion originated from Pekhorka, a village in the Moscow region now identified with Pekhra-Pokrovskoye, part of Balashikha in present-day Moscow Oblast. He married and was ordained a priest, but was widowed within a year of his marriage.

Following his wife's death, he was tonsured a monk at the Dubensky Dormition Monastery in Vladimir province, where he eventually became hegumen. He subsequently served as hegumen of the Stromynsky Dormition Monastery; both institutions were later liquidated in the eighteenth century. In the mid-1490s he assumed leadership of the Trinity Monastery, later renowned as the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra.

Archbishop of Novgorod

On the initiative of Grand Prince Vasily III of Moscow, Serapion was consecrated and enthroned as Archbishop of Novgorod and Pskov on January 15, 1506, despite his initial refusal of the office. His tenure lasted a little over three years.

The defining conflict of his episcopate arose in 1507, when Joseph of Volokolamsk, who fell within Serapion's episcopal jurisdiction, transferred his monastery to princely patronage. Serapion responded by depriving Joseph of his blessing and excommunicating him. Joseph then appealed directly to Simon, Metropolitan of Moscow, bypassing his archbishop — an action Serapion deemed anti-canonical. Sources record Serapion's complaint that Joseph had 'abandoned heaven and descended to earth,' language the Grand Prince interpreted as a personal affront to his divinely sanctioned authority.

Removal, Confinement, and Final Years

In July 1509 a synod found Serapion at fault, removed him from his see, and confined him to the Andronikov Monastery in Moscow, where he endured harsh conditions. The sources record that he bore this imprisonment with great humility and patience.

He was released in 1511 and spent his remaining years at the Trinity Monastery, where he reposed on March 16, 1516. After his death the See of Novgorod remained vacant for seventeen years, until 1526. He is venerated as a saint in the Russian Orthodox Church, with a feast day on March 16.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints