Venerable (Monastic) 20th century

Venerable Nikon the Confessor of Optina

1888 - 1931

Also known as Nicholas Belyaev · Nikon of Optina

The last of the elders to hold out at Optina as the monastery was closed, who continued to shepherd the faithful in secret and died of consumption in the northern exile of the Soviet camps, a confessor of Christ.

Feast Day
June 25
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Venerable Nikon the Confessor of Optina

Life

Venerable Nikon the Confessor of Optina (born Nicholas Belyaev, September 26, 1888) was a hieromonk of the Optina hermitage and the last of its elders to continue the tradition of eldership as the monastery was suppressed under Soviet rule. He is numbered among the Optina Elders and is commemorated as a confessor of the faith, having died in northern exile in 1931. His feast is kept on June 25.

Nicholas was born into a Moscow merchant family. With their mother's blessing, he and his brother John traveled to Optina on February 24, 1907 to seek entrance to the monastery, and were received into the skete on December 9 of that year. In October 1908 Nicholas was assigned as secretary to the superior of the skete, Elder Barsanuphius, an obedience that placed him in close daily contact with his spiritual father and shaped his formation as a monk.

He was tonsured into the Lesser Schema on May 24, 1915, receiving the name Nikon, and was ordained deacon on April 30, 1916 and priest on November 3, 1917. As the persecution of the Church intensified, he was arrested on September 18, 1919 simply for being a monk, and later released. After Optina was closed, he continued to serve and to receive those who came to him for counsel, until he was arrested again in 1927 and sent to a labor camp, and afterward exiled to the far north.

In exile in the Archangelsk region he contracted tuberculosis. Worn down by poverty and sickness, which he bore with patient trust in God, he reposed on June 25, 1931. The Russian Orthodox Church authorized local veneration of the Optina Elders in 1996 and glorified them for general veneration on August 7, 2000.

Timeline 9 moments Read Hide
  1. 1888 Birth Born Nicholas Belyaev, September 26, into a Moscow merchant family.
  2. 1907 Enters Optina Travels to Optina with his brother John on February 24 and is received into the skete on December 9.
  3. 1908 Secretary to Elder Barsanuphius Assigned in October as secretary to the superior of the skete, his chief monastic obedience.
  4. 1915 Tonsure Tonsured into the Lesser Schema on May 24, receiving the name Nikon.
  5. 1916-1917 Ordination Ordained deacon on April 30, 1916, and priest on November 3, 1917.
  6. 1919 First arrest Arrested on September 18 for being a monk, and later released.
  7. 1927 Second arrest Arrested again and sent to a northern labor camp.
  8. 1931 Repose in exile Dies of tuberculosis in the Archangelsk region on June 25.
  9. 2000 Glorification Glorified among the Optina Elders for general veneration on August 7.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Disciple of Elder Barsanuphius

From October 1908 Nikon served as secretary to Elder Barsanuphius, the superior of the Optina skete, and this obedience became the center of his monastic life. He was devoted to the Elder and, according to the tradition of his life, sought to follow his guidance in all things, assimilating his spiritual father's teaching over the course of several years.

Barsanuphius is said to have foreseen the coming affliction of the Church, predicting that he himself would die before the persecution arrived and that Nikon would have to endure those difficult times. The continuity of eldership thus passed, through Barsanuphius, to a disciple who would live out his own confession under the Soviet state.

Confession and Exile

After his first arrest in 1919 and subsequent release, Nikon remained near Optina even as the monastery was dissolved, continuing to serve and to shepherd the faithful. In June 1927 he was arrested again, together with other monks, and imprisoned in a northern labor camp.

He was afterward exiled to the Archangelsk region, where he was found to have tuberculosis. He died in exile on June 25, 1931, at the age of forty-two, and is venerated as a confessor for his steadfastness through imprisonment, exile, and illness.

Notes

Among the Optina Elders; modern confessor.

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