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Blessed St. Xenia
was a "fool-for-Christ," who, for 45 years,
wandered around the streets of St. Petersburg, Russia.
For the first 26 years of her life, Xenia had lived
quite comfortably. However, after her husband suddenly
died, the Holy Spirit led her to give away all her
possessions to the poor. She put on her dead husbands
clothes and called herself by his name, saying that
Xenia had died. Homeless, she lived in the streets
all year round for 45 years, owning only the ragged
clothes on her back. The Holy Spirit also led her
to give away her mind and her heart to God. By giving
everything away, she became rich in humility, simplicity,
self-denial, kindness, and deep and profound love
for all. By pretending to be insane, she showed
how insane the world and its values are. By denying
herself the comforts of a home, a bed, decent clothes,
food, and the appearance of being "normal,"
she helps us to examine what really is important
in life, and what really is "normal."
By her self-denial, Blessed St. Xenia daily died
to her old self and daily lived only for God. She
trusted totally that God would provide for her,
as He provides for the birds.
During
the day she wandered the streets, dressed in rags,
enduring heatwpe57444.gif (310510 bytes) and cold,
snow and rain, mocked by people. At night she went
out into the fields and prayed all night, and at
other times she spent the night at the Smolensk
Cemetery. It was at this cemetery that she helped
the workmen build the Church of the Smolensk Icon
of the Mother of God (photo below), by secretly
carrying bricks up the scaffold during the night.

One night the workmen
hid to find out who was helping them, and discovered
that it was "crazy Xenia." Whenever someone
gave her alms, she immediately gave it to the poor.
As the years passed, the Holy Spirit filled Xenia
with greater riches, and she became increasingly
blessed. After a while, some people started to notice
that "crazy Xenia" wasnt so crazy
after all, but was an instrument of divine grace,
to whom had been given deep spiritual powers: she
could see into peoples hearts and into the
past and future, and appeared to people in visions.
Anyone whom she touched was blessed. Because she
gave up living for herself, she was able to live
for others, helping those in need. She especially
helped families, children and marriages, as she
continues to do today.
After she fell asleep
in the Lord, around 1803, she continued to help
those who asked for her assistance. Throughout the
19th century, tens of thousands of people came every
year to her grave, and countless miracles occurred.
In 1902 a chapel was built over her grave in the
Smolensk Cemetery, located on the western end of
Vasiliev Island in St. Petersburg. This chapel has
now been reconstructed (photobelow), again welcoming
the pilgrims who come there every day, and the miracles
continue to occur.

For 200 years people
have turning to the Blessed one, and she has been
helping them. Her great spiritual power and her
deep love for people transcend the grave and are
manifested daily. One of the most popular of Gods
"chosen ones," her canonization in 1988
was official recognition of what the faithful had
long witnessed and experienced.

This is the actual icon of Blessed St. Xenia that
is in the chapel over her tomb. In the background
is depicted the Smolensk Orthodox Cemetery in northwestern
St. Petersburg, where she spent much time, and where
she is buried. The blue church and bell tower immediately
behind the Blessed One is the Church of the Smolensk
Icon of the Mother of God, which she helped the
workmen build, as mentioned above. To the left of
the Blessed One is a representation of the chapel
over her tomb.
Troparion
to St. Xenia, in the Fourth Tone
Having
renounced the vanity of the earthly world,/
Thou didst take up the cross of a homeless life
of wandering;/
Thou didst not fear grief, privation, nor the mockery
of men,/
And didst know the love of Christ./
Now taking sweet delight of this love in heaven,/
O Xenia, the blessed and divinely wise,//
Pray for the salvation of our souls.
The
Life of Blessed Xenia of St. Petersburg (Longer
Version)
The only record of
"vital statistics" which has been left
us concerning Blessed Xenia is the epitaph on her
gravestone: IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER, SON AND HOLY
SPIRIT. HERE RESTS THE BODY OF THE SERVANT OF GOD,
XENIA GRIGORIEVNA, WIFE OF THE IMPERIAL CHORISTER,
COLONEL ANDREI THEODOROVICH PETROV. WIDOWED AT THE
AGE OF 26, A PILGRIM FOR 45 YEARS, SHE LIVED A TOTAL
OF 71 YEARS. SHE WAS KNOWN BY THE NAME ANDREI THEODOROVICH.
MAY WHOEVER KNEW ME PRAY FOR MY SOUL THAT HIS OWN
MAY BE SAVED. AMEN.
Who wrote it, no
one knows, but this is all we know about the early
life of Blessed Xenia: only that she lived during
the reigns of the Empresses Elizabeth Petrovna and
Catherine II and that she was married to the imperial
chorister, Col. Andrei Theodorovich Petrov. From
this latter fact we may assume that she was of the
lesser nobility.
Presumably, in her
early years, she led an ordinary, though comfortable
life, performing no services that merited recording
or recognition. It would seem that she was happily
married and completely devoted to her husband who
was, perhaps, a bit worldly. He was still young
and in good health when he died suddenly one night
at a drinking party.
The unexpected death
of her beloved husband completely shattered Xenia
Grigorievna and her personal world. She was twenty-six
years old, childless and her husband to whom she
was passionately devoted had suddenly died without
the benefit of the Holy Mysteries. The distraught
widow looked around herself, at all her possessions,
at her inane little world and suddenly began to
realize the vanity and transitory nature of all
earthly joys and treasures. She came to realize
that there is true value only in heavenly treasures
and real joy in Christ.
To the utter amazement
of her friends and relatives, Xenia Grigorievna
began to give away literally all that she possessed.
Her money and personal belongings she gave to the
poor and she even gave away her house to her dear
friend Paraskeva Antonova.
Finally, her relatives
decided that she had taken complete leave of her
senses and they petitioned the trustees of her late
husbands estate to prevent Xenia from disposing
of her wealth, on the grounds that she was mentally
unbalanced due to her husbands death. The
trustees called Xenia in and, after a long and careful
examination, ruled that she was perfectly sound
of mind and had every right to dispose of her property
as she pleased.
People preoccupied
with worldly matters would naturally assume that
anyone who gave away his wealth must be insane.
They were incapable of seeing that Xenia had undergone
a complete rebirth; she was changed from a worldly
woman into a spiritual being. Having realized that
there can be no true happiness on earth and that
worldly possessions are only a hindrance to the
attaining of true joy in God,
Having, therefore,
relieved herself of all such hindrances, Xenia suddenly
vanished from St. Petersburg for eight years. It
is said that during these years she lived at some
hermitage with a sisterhood of holy ascetics, learning
about prayer and the spiritual life from an elder.
It was during this time that she was called to the
highest feat of spiritual perfection, that of being
a fool for Christs sake. To this end, she
returned to St. Petersburg, clothed herself in one
of her late husbands old uniforms and linens
and thereafter refused to respond the name of Xenia
Grigorievna, answering instead only to the name
of her late husband, Andrei Feodorovich. It was
as if she, in her deep devotion to her husband,
had hoped in some way to take upon herself the burden
of his unrepented sins and of his unfortunate demise
without the Holy Mysteries. Sorrowing for her own
sins and for his, she left her home and began her
long pilgrimage of wandering through the streets
of the poorer district of St. Petersburg known as
the Petersburg Borough (Peterburgskaya Storona).
She was most often to be found in the vicinity of
the parish of Saint Matthias where the poorest people
lived in shabby huts.
At first, the people
of the Borough thought that this strangely dressed,
scarcely shod woman was merely a simple minded beggar,
and evil people, especially the street urchins,
would often persecute and laugh at her. With complete
meekness, however, she kept before her the image
of the guiltless Great Sufferer, Christ Jesus, who,
without a murmur, heard all accusations, bore all
persecutions, suffered terrible torture and crucifixion.
Because of His example, the Blessed One strove to
bear her hardships meekly and in silence, forgiving
offenses in accordance with the last earthly prayer
of Jesus, "Father, forgive them, for they know
not what they do."
Only once did the
people of the Petersburg Borough see her in anger.
The street boys, seeing the ragged old woman, began
as usual to laugh at and torment her. The Blessed
One ordinarily bore all this without murmur. On
this occasion, however, the boys did not content
themselves with verbal abuse, but seeing that she
did not take notice of their mocking, they began
to throw mud and rocks at her. At last they exhausted
even the patience of Blessed Xenia and she flew
at them, waving her cane in the air. The residents
of the Borough were so startled at seeing the Blessed
One in such anger that they took immediate steps
to prevent any further offenses toward her. As our
Lord Jesus Christ had said, "A candle is not
bought to be hidden under a basket... but to be
placed on a candle stand."
So it was with God
pleasing Xenia. Gradually, people began to realize
that Xenia was no mere beggar but someone much more.
They began to invite her into their homes and offer
her warm clothing for the severe Petersburg winters
as well as alms. She would never accept the clothing
and took only the small copper pennies, which were
called the king on horseback because there was a
horseman (actually, St.George) struck on them.
She would distribute
these copper pennies to the poor, at times, apparently,
with some prophecy. On one such occasion Xenia met
a devout woman on the street. Handing her a five
kopeck coin, she said, "Take this five piece,
here is the king on horseback; it will be extinguished."
The woman accepted the copper five piece and went
on her way pondering the meaning of the Blessed
Ones words. No sooner had she entered the
street where she lived than she saw that her house
was on fire. Running toward her home, she arrived
just as the flames were being quenched. Then she
realized that the Blessed One had been foretelling
this with her strange words.
On one occasion Paraskeva
Antonova was sitting in the home which the Blessed
One had given her, when Xenia arrived for a visit.
Entering the house, she looked irritably at Antonova
and said, "Here you are sitting and sewing
buttons and you dont know that God has given
you a son! Go at once to the Smolensk Cemetery!"
Antonova, knowing Xenia to be truly saintly and
knowing that no idle word came from her lips, did
not even question this strange command but believed
at once that something extraordinary was about to
happen and she immediately hurried to the Smolensk
Cemetery.
On one of the streets
of Vasiliev Island near the cemetery, Antonova saw
a large crowd of people. Being curious, she approached
the crowd to see what was taking place. It seems
that a coachman had knocked down a pregnant woman
who then give birth to a child right there on the
street and died immediately afterwards. Filled with
compassion for the child, Antonova took it to her
own home. All the efforts of the St. Petersburg
police to discover the identity of the mother or
locate the father or relatives of the tiny orphan
proved in vain and so the child remained with Paraskeva
Antonova. She provided him with a good upbringing
and a sound education, loving him as her own son.
Eventually the boy became an eminent functionary
and lovingly cared for his foster mother in her
old age. He also revered, with sincere piety, the
memory of the Servant of God, Xenia who had shown
much kindness to his foster mother and who had taken
such a hand in his own fate.
Among the friends
of Blessed Xenia there was a widow, Mrs. Golubev,
and her seventeen-year- old daughter who was noted
for her beauty. Xenia like this girl very much because
of her meek, quiet character and her kind heart.
Once Xenia came to visit them and the girl began
to make coffee. "My beauty, -- said Xenia,
turning to the girl, -- here you are making coffee
and your husband is burying his wife in Okhta. Run
there quickly!"
The girl was shocked.
"My what?! I dont have a husband... and
burying his wife!". "Go!" -- Xenia
answered sternly, not liking any kind of objection.
The Golubevs, knowing well that the Blessed One
never said anything without a reason, immediately
obeyed her command and set out for Okhta. Here they
saw that a funeral procession was headed for the
cemetery and they joined in with the crowd of mourners.
A young woman, the wife of a doctor, had died in
childbirth and was being buried.
The Liturgy was celebrated,
then the funeral service, after which the Golubevs
followed as the coffin was carried to the grave.
The funeral had ended and the people began to leave;
however, they chanced upon the sobbing young widower
who, at the sight of the grave mound over the remains
of his beloved wife, lost consciousness and fell
to the ground near the Golubevs. Both mother and
daughter strove to bring him back to consciousness
and to comfort him. They became acquainted and,
eventually, the young Golubeva became the wife of
the doctor.
Gods gift of
clairvoyance does not always deliver good news.
Sometimes it is used to hint at the approaching
illness or death of someone in order that they might
prepare themselves for their fate. Such was the
case when the God pleasing ascetic arrived to other
guests in the Krapivin home at the time and they
all stood and greeted the Blessed One warmly. Xenia
conversed with them for a while and then rose to
leave, thanking the hostess for her hospitality.
As she was departing, however, she turned to Krapivina
saying: "Here is green krapiva (nettle) but
soon it will be wilted."
Whether or not Mrs.
Krapivina understood these words is not known for
certain, but other guests did not attach any special
significance to them. Much to everyones amazement,
though, Mrs. Krapivina, who was still young and
in good health, suddenly became ill and died. Only
then did the guests understand that the words, "Here
is green krapiva (nettle) but soon it will be wilted,"
foretold the death of Mrs. Krapivin. Seeing in Xenia
this gift of clairvoyance and her meek and humble
way of life, people began to realize that she was
a true fool for Christs sake. Many residents
of the Borough were sincerely happy to receive her
in their homes and it was noticed that some sort
of blessed peace and happiness always settled over
any home that received her with sincerity. Mothers
found that if the Blessed One fondled or rocked
an ill child in its cradle, the child would always
become well. So parents would hurry to Blessed Xenia
with their children whenever she approached, convinced
that if she blessed them, or even patted them on
the head, they would remain healthy.
People gradually
began to accept her strange behavior as some sort
of sign from God and often, her behavior would be
strange indeed. Two days before the Feast of the
Nativity of Christ, in 1761, for example, Blessed
Xenia ran anxiously along the cold and snow filled
streets of the Petersburg Borough, loudly crying
out: "Bake bliny (pancakes), bake bliny, soon
all of Russia will be baking bliny!" As usual,
no one could figure out the meaning of these strange
words of the Blessed One, but on the day of the
Feast, the Empress Elisabeth Petrovna reposed suddenly.
When the terrible news spread through the city,
it became clear to all that the Servant of God had
been foretelling the death of the Empress.
Occasionally, Xenia
would drop in to visit some friend or acquaintance,
converse for a while, and then suddenly fall silent,
as if listening to something. All at once, she would
leap up and leave quickly. If the hostess asked
why she was leaving and where she was going, the
Blessed One would only wave her stick in the air
and say, "I must hurry, I am needed there."
She possessed absolutely
nothing except the rags on her back and often, upon
arriving at the home of a friend, she would cheerfully
announce, "Here is all of me." For a long
time no one knew where the Blessed One spent her
nights. The residents of the Borough were not the
only ones to wonder about this, for the local police
were also curious about the matter. Upon investigating
they discovered that the elderly little woman spent
her nights in an open field, praying and making
prostrations in all four directions, and she did
this no matter what the season or weather. It was
a miracle of God that the Blessed One survived the
severe St. Petersburg winters in this way. It happened
at times that her nights would be spent in some
other task. On one occasion in 1794, toward the
end of Xenias long life, a new church was
being built in the Smolensk Cemetery. Workers began
to notice that, during the night, someone would
haul mounds of brick to the top of the building
where they were needed. The workers were amazed
by this and resolved to find out who this tireless
worker could be. By posting a watchman they were
able to discover that it was the Servant of God,
Xenia.
"It was necessary,
-- says one writer, -- for her to possess either
some super human power or to carry within herself
such a strong spiritual fire, such a deep, undoubting
faith with which the impossible becomes possible.
When one considers Gods great saints, however,
who performed such wondrous miracles by their faith,
wonders incomprehensible to the human mind, we cannot
consider the Blessed Ones ascetic feats as
unprecedented or impossible for a person in the
flesh. Xenia truly bore that faith with which all
things are possible. While still living in her body,
her soul always soared above this world, dwelling
in a living, direct communion with God."
The Blessed One was
always ready to help anyone in anyway possible.
During the day she would wander about the streets,
her face reflecting her internal spirit of meekness,
humility and kindness by its warm, friendly glow.
At night, in all seasons, she would go into a field
and enter into conversation with God Himself. Finally
the time came when Xenia was no longer to be found
in the streets of the Petersburg Borough nor in
the field; her radiant face shone no more amidst
the rude shacks of the St. Matthias parish. God
called His servant to rest from all her struggles
and took her to Himself. Xenia was one of those
candles which God lights on earth from time to time
in order to light up the path of salvation for the
faithful, as the Savior Himself had said, "Let
your light so shine before men that they may see
your good works and glorify your Father Which is
in Heaven" and "If, therefore, your entire
body is full of light, no part of it being in darkness,
then the whole of it shall be full of radiance as
when the bright shining of a candle gives off its
light."
Adapted from the
Life published by Holy Trinity Monastery.
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