New Martyr 20th century

Hieromartyr Seraphim (Samoilovich) Archbishop of Uglich

1881 – 1937

Also known as Seraphim · Semyon Samoilovich

A Russian hierarch who had served as a teacher in Alaska, who suffered under Soviet persecution and was martyred in 1937.

Feast Day
November 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Seraphim (Samoilovich), Archbishop of Uglich

Life

Seraphim (Samoilovich) was a Russian hierarch who began his ministry as a missionary teacher in Alaska and ended it as a confessor and martyr under Soviet persecution. Born Semyon Nikolayevich Samoilovich on July 19, 1881, at Myrgorod in the Poltava governorate, he graduated from the Poltava Theological Seminary in 1902 and was sent that same year to North America to teach in the diocese then administered by the future Patriarch Tikhon. He is commemorated on November 4 (October 22 Old Style), the day of his death.

After several years in the Aleutian Islands and Alaska he returned to Russia, served in a succession of monastic and diocesan posts, and was consecrated Bishop of Uglich in 1920. Raised to the rank of archbishop by Patriarch Tikhon in 1924, he became one of the senior hierarchs entrusted with the administration of the Russian Church during the chaotic years that followed the patriarch's death, briefly serving as Deputy Patriarchal Locum Tenens in 1926–1927.

When Metropolitan Sergius issued his 1927 Declaration affirming the loyalty of the Church to the Soviet state, Seraphim refused to accept it and became a leading voice of the so-called Yaroslavl Opposition. His repeated public criticism of that policy led to a series of arrests, exiles, and imprisonments that occupied the last decade of his life. He was shot in a labor camp in 1937 and was numbered among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, his general veneration approved in August 2000.

Timeline 9 moments Read Hide
  1. 1881 Birth Born Semyon Nikolayevich Samoilovich at Myrgorod in the Poltava governorate.
  2. 1902 Seminary and Alaska Graduated from the Poltava Theological Seminary and took a teaching post in the Aleutian Islands.
  3. 1905 Monastic tonsure Tonsured a monk at Sitka by Bishop Innocent (Pustynsky) and ordained hieromonk.
  4. 1920 Consecrated Bishop of Uglich Made bishop as a vicar of the Yaroslavl Diocese.
  5. 1924 Elevated to archbishop Raised to the rank of archbishop by Patriarch Tikhon.
  6. 1926–1927 Deputy Patriarchal Locum Tenens Administered the Russian Church during Metropolitan Sergius's imprisonment.
  7. 1929 Sentenced to the camps Issued an epistle denouncing Sergius's Declaration and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment.
  8. 1937 Martyrdom Shot in a labor camp on October 22 (November 4 New Style).
  9. 2000 Glorification Numbered among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia; general veneration approved in August.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Missionary Teacher in Alaska

In 1902 Samoilovich took up a teaching post at the two-year school in Unalaska, in the Aleutian Islands, then part of the North American diocese of the Russian Church. By 1905 he was teaching at Sitka, where he was tonsured into the monastic mantiya by Bishop Innocent (Pustynsky) and, about a month later, ordained hieromonk. He went on to serve as rector of a local mission and to teach at the Sitka Theological Seminary, working as an associate of Archbishop Tikhon, the future Patriarch of Moscow.

Sources record that the harsh northern climate told upon his health, and after 1908 he returned to Russia. There he filled a sequence of offices — diocesan missionary, seminary confessor, and monastery vicar — including the post of vicar of the Uglich Protection Monastery from 1915, the see with which his name would afterward be joined.

Bishop and Deputy Locum Tenens

Seraphim was consecrated Bishop of Uglich in February 1920 as a vicar of the Yaroslavl Diocese and was elevated to archbishop by Patriarch Tikhon in 1924. After the patriarch's death the government's pressure on the Church intensified, and in 1926–1927, while Metropolitan Sergius was imprisoned, Seraphim served for a time as Deputy Patriarchal Locum Tenens. According to the tradition, when authorities pressed him to approve a slate of bishops favorable to the state, he refused and submitted his own list instead.

He was associated with the so-called Parallel Synod centered at the Danilov (St. Daniel) Monastery in Moscow, a circle of hierarchs that resisted state control of ecclesiastical affairs.

Opposition, Imprisonment, and Martyrdom

When Metropolitan Sergius issued his Declaration of 1927 pledging the Church's loyalty to the Soviet government, Seraphim refused to recognize it and joined the Yaroslavl Opposition, openly calling on Sergius to recant. In an epistle issued early in 1929 he denounced the policy, and he was sentenced to five years in a camp; sources relate that he was sent to the Solovki camp, established in the former Solovetsky monastery, where he was injured in an accident while at forced labor.

Further arrests and exiles followed across the Northern Territory, Mogilev, the Komi region, and Siberia. Arrested again in 1934 at Arkhangelsk on charges of organizing a counter-revolutionary group, he was sentenced to five years and held at the Suslov branch of Siblag. He was shot in the camp on October 22, 1937 (November 4 New Style). He was glorified among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, with general veneration approved in August 2000.

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