Archimandrite
Amvrosii (Pogodin, +2004)
A Story Told by Archbishop Nikon
(Occasional Pastoral Notes)
From the Editors: The following item is by the late Archimandrite
Amvrosii, offered on the 40th day of his repose:
The Gospel says that when the Lord approached the time of His suffering
and told His disciples of this, Apostles James and John Zebedee
asked the following of the Lord: "Grant unto us that we may
sit, one on thy right hand, and the other on thy left hand, in thy
glory." The Lord replied: "Ye know not what ye ask: can
ye drink of the cup that I drink of? and be baptized with the baptism
that I am baptized with?" They expressed their valorous readiness
for martyrdom by saying to Christ: "We can." Jesus then
said to them: Ye shall indeed drink of the cup that I drink of;
and with the baptism that I am baptized withal shall ye be baptized:
but to sit on my right hand and on my left hand is not mine to give;
but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared" (Mk
10:37-40).
For whom is it "prepared?" Vladyka Nikon (Rklitsky, +1976),
the author of a great remarkable work, the biography of Metropolitan
Anthony (Khrapovitsky, +1936), gave me an answer to this. Vladyka
often honored me with conversation, telling me that he often thought
about these Gospel words, and was bewildered by the words of the
Savior: "for whom it is prepared." And so, entering the
church once, he glanced at an icon of Christ the Pantocrator: on
His right was His Most-Pure Mother, and on His left, St John the
Baptist. Vladyka got his answer. Christ did not tell His disciples
the identity of those who were to have the honor of being directly
to the right and left of Christ in His glory; had He told them that
the Mother of God and John the Baptist had this honor, the apostles
may have thought that Christ offered this honor from familial sensibilities.
But the Mother of God was more holy that all the saints and higher
than any heavenly host, but this, maybe, was not known by the apostles
at the time. As for John the Baptist, who combined within himself
a prophet, an apostle, a martyr and an angel who prepared the way
for the Lord, then by the Lord's own words: "there hath not
risen a greater than John the Baptist" (Mt 11:11). They were
not worthy of this through their relation to the Savior, but through
their spiritual kinship. The Church replied to Vladyka Nikon's question
through her icon.
A week later, the kind Vladyka passed away. So just before his death,
he was given a revelation.
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