Archbishop
ARSENY, the Canadian Chrysostom
As Bishop of Winnipeg and
Canada, Vladyka ARSENY undertook regular visits of parishes
across Canada. Many of his letters appear to be written
from jostling trains and wagons. Telegraph lines connected
him to parishes as there were few telephones.
His visits were a great
source of joy and inspiration, as he was fondly remembered
from earlier days, when he had been made rural dean and
administrator of the Church in Canada in 1908. He had been
sorely missed in his reposting to Russia. Following the
Revolution and his stay in Yugoslavia where he was ordained
a Bishop, his return to Canada was much heralded.
His fervent eloquence,
both in writing and speech, is long remembered among those
who had opportunity to hear him. He expected the people
in attendance to be worshipful, and if some were tempted
to visit during Liturgy in the joy of being together, the
Bishop was known to remind them that they were not "bazarniki"
and this was not a marketplace!
Bishop ARSENY returned
from Europe to a different Canada than he had left a decade
before. Several factors had altered the complexion of Orthodoxy
in Canada, and subjected it to considerable strain. The
first was the fall of the Tsarist government, whereby practical
assistance and the flow of priests for Canada were curtailed.
The second was the rise of additional jurisdictions splitting
the Orthodox into various sectors, so that the vision of
a single Orthodox Church for Canada was dimmed. In this
connection, there was also extreme animosity in various
parts of the Orthodox population, which resulted in acts
of violence and rejection displayed toward those representing
the Russo-Orthodox Church.

Sifton: Spaso-Vosnisiensky
Monastery
Based on a 1945 Report by Igumen Makarii
"The Monastery was
built in 1926 one mile from Sifton in a thicketed area--that
was the year Monk Varnava was in Winnipeg from Mt. Athos.
Bishop ARSENY made him the abbot there, and Reader Mitrofan
(Rak) joined him. After Father Varnava was Fr. Theodore
Ivasiuk, and three candidates for the priesthood: John Diachina,
Peter Bondarchuk and Leontii Kiachina. Two attained to the
priesthood and went to serve (Father John and Father Leontii).
Father Mitrofan was left there alone and to him came a monk
from Pochaev, Father Aggei. Then from Volyn in Ukraine came
Effimi Moseychuk who stayed for two years,
Many more came and went
to other parishes. The Monastery has two Altar Feasts, one
is Holy Ascension and on Holy Transfiguration, which was
when the Monastery was founded. More than 200 people come
out from 30-50 miles around. The order of celebration (when
Vladyka ARSENY was there) was: before Liturgy, the Blessing
of Water, the Liturgy, following which, Vladyka would bless
the entire well, and then all would walk around all the
monastery blessing, and go to the cemetery, where they would
have a big parastas (remembrance) for all and then who wanted,
would have a panykhyda (service for the departed) on the
individual grave. Then everyone would return to the buildings
and sit down to a joint feast, as everyone who came brought
food. Then at four, everyone would leave the table, and
go on their way, filled, satisfied and rejoicing…these
were blessed times!
At that time Vladyka ARSENY
was well and he flew like an eagle to the ends of Canada.
The people by the hundreds came to services when he was
there and were strengthened by his sermons. The monastery
had horses, cows, poultry, and there were those who looked
after the land and the livestock. Mitrophan built his own
kelia (cell) there.
In the main building lived
the nun, Platonida and a female worker. From her quarters,
the fire started and burned everything: the church with
its lovely altar, the beautiful Kyivo-Pecherska Gospel that
Fr. Mitrophan collected funds for over a period of two years,
and which weighed about thirty pounds, Absolutely everything
burned! All the vestments, books, the typicon, furniture,
curtains, everything. Siince then it has been a tough go,
a small amount of money comes from the land and the meadow
is let to a farmer for pasture. At present [1945] Fr. Ignatii
Falovsky and Igumen Makarii (previously Mitrophan) live
there."

A Golden Ring from
Tsar Nicholas
…Bullets from His Enemies in Saskatchewan
(adapted from "Archbishop
ARSENY, the Canadian Chrysostom" by Archimandrite Antonii
Tereschenko, 150 Anniversary Book)
"In the history of
the Orthodox Church in Canada, Archbishop ARSENY must be
given his rightful place.
The Holy TIKHON [Belavin]
saw the importance of placing Archimandrite Arseny as the
rector of Holy Trinity Sobor and administrator of the Canadian
eparchy. God gave him to complete the Church and to serve
with great zeal in Winnipeg and all Canada.
With his fiery sermons
and his journal, “Canadian Harvest,” he brought
many Uniates to Orthodoxy…and the "Canadian Harvest"
made its way even to the Tsar’s Palace. Tsar Nicholai
II read his articles and for this “food for the soul”
(so named by Archimandrite ARSENY) he gave to the author
a gold ring inscribed with a cross from his own study. Canada
really wanted to have Bishop ARSENY as their head, and had
it happened 33 years ago, things could have been quite different.
But as we thought, so did the enemies of Orthodoxy.
In 1910 with the departure
from Canada of the Chrysostom missionary, many, with grief
left for other sides. In 1926 after a long stay in the homeland
and abroad, Arseny returned to Canada already a bishop.
But circumstances … had changed… In the parable
of the tares, the Lord Jesus Christ tells how the Kingdom
of God is like unto a man who plants good seed on his land.
But while he slept, his enemy came and scattered tares among
the wheat and left. And the servants coming to the master,
said: 'Lord! Did you not plant good seed? From whence came
the tares?' He said to them: 'The enemy has done this.'
One could write a whole
book describing everything that Bishop ARSENY had to endure
when he came back the second time, and this would be a book
of horrors. The tares had to be dealt with on many fronts,
and sometimes it was hard to know who was who, who belonged
to another. Things had to be endured, such as the time that
those, calling themselves Christians, armed with stones….broke
the windows and the door, and shot through them, where Vladyka
ARSENY and his priests were gathered, preparing to celebrate
Holy Liturgy in the morning [near Canora, Saskatchewan]…The
civic courts punished the offenders, but they, serving their
time in the flesh, did not repent in their hearts. All of
this took place in order that the servant of God might pass
through fiery trials, and with greater zeal would serve
the Lord, and His Holy Church, remembering the promise of
the Saviour: 'blessed are you when men shall revile you
and persecute you and shall say all manner of evil against
you falsely for My sake. Rejoice and be exceedingly glad,
for great is your reward in heaven.'"
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