New Martyr 20th century

Hieromartyr Hilarion (Troitsky) Archbishop of Verey

1886 – 1929

Also known as Hilarion of Verey

A Russian theologian and bishop who defended the Church under Soviet persecution and died as a new martyr after imprisonment and exile.

Feast Day
December 15
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy New Hieromartyr Hilarion (Troitsky), Archbishop of Verey

Life

Hilarion (Troitsky), Archbishop of Verey, was a Russian theologian, professor, and bishop who became one of the foremost defenders of the Orthodox Church during the early Soviet persecution. Born Vladimir Alexeyevich Troitsky on September 13, 1886, in the village of Lipitsa in the Tula Province, he was educated at a local church school, a seminary in Tula, and the Moscow Theological Academy, from which he graduated in 1910 with a Candidate degree in theology with honors and where he remained to teach. He is commemorated as a New Martyr and Hieromartyr on December 15.

A scholar of the Church's history and dogma, he earned his Master's degree in 1913 for a thesis on the history of the dogma of the Church, and he wrote and lectured on the unity and nature of the Church, including the work 'The Unity of the Church.' He received monastic tonsure on March 28, 1913, at the Skete of the Paraclete of the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra, taking the name Hilarion, and was ordained a hieromonk and soon raised to archimandrite, serving as inspector and professor of Holy Scripture at the Moscow Academy.

At the All-Russian Church Council of 1917-1918 he was a forceful advocate for the restoration of the Moscow Patriarchate, which had lapsed since the reforms of Peter the Great in the eighteenth century, and after the election of Patriarch Tikhon he became one of his closest and most fervent supporters. Consecrated Bishop of Vereya in 1920, he was a leading opponent of the Renovationist (Living Church) schism that the Soviet authorities sought to use against the canonical Church.

Arrested repeatedly as the persecution intensified, he was sentenced in 1923 to the labor camp on the Solovki Islands, where he spent much of the remainder of his life. Worn down by years of imprisonment and exile and sentenced in 1929 to further banishment, he contracted typhus during his transport and died on December 15, 1929, at the age of forty-four. He was glorified as a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church on May 10, 1999.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. September 13, 1886 Born in Lipitsa Born Vladimir Alexeyevich Troitsky in the village of Lipitsa, Tula Province.
  2. 1910 Graduates Moscow Theological Academy Completes his studies with a Candidate degree in theology with honors and is kept on to teach.
  3. March 28, 1913 Monastic tonsure Tonsured a monk at the Skete of the Paraclete of the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra, taking the name Hilarion.
  4. 1917-1918 All-Russian Church Council Advocates the restoration of the Moscow Patriarchate, which elects Patriarch Tikhon.
  5. 1920 Consecrated Bishop of Vereya Consecrated a bishop and vicar of the Moscow Diocese; later raised to archbishop.
  6. 1923 Sentenced to Solovki Sentenced to three years in the Solovki labor camp amid the Soviet persecution.
  7. December 15, 1929 Death in prison Dies of typhus contracted during transport into exile, at the age of forty-four.
  8. May 10, 1999 Glorification Glorified as a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church; relics later translated to Sretensky Monastery.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Theologian of the Church

Troitsky's scholarly work centered on ecclesiology, the doctrine of the Church itself. His Master's thesis, an outline of the history of the Church's dogma, ran to over five hundred pages, and his writings argued for the unity of the Church as essential to Christian life and salvation. As inspector and professor of Holy Scripture at the Moscow Theological Academy, he combined academic rigor with a reputation as an eloquent preacher.

His convictions on the nature of the Church gave shape to his later resistance: when the Soviet state promoted the Renovationist movement as a rival to the canonical Patriarchate, Hilarion was among those who labored to reconcile clergy and faithful who had fallen into the schism back to the Church under Patriarch Tikhon.

Restoration of the Patriarchate and the Council of 1917

The Moscow Patriarchate had been abolished by Peter the Great and replaced with a synodal administration. At the All-Russian Church Council that opened in 1917, Hilarion delivered an address widely remembered for its call to restore the patriarchal office, and the Council duly elected Tikhon as the first Patriarch of Moscow in two centuries. Hilarion became one of his trusted supporters during the years of revolution and civil war that immediately followed.

Imprisonment, Solovki, and Martyrdom

As a bishop close to the persecuted Patriarch and an open opponent of the Renovationists, Hilarion was repeatedly arrested. Following an early period of exile to Archangelsk, he was sentenced in 1923 to three years in the labor camp on the Solovki Islands in the White Sea, where prisoners performed hard physical labor such as fishing and mending nets. After a transfer to Yaroslavl prison he was returned to Solovki, and in 1929 he was sentenced to further exile. Already exhausted, he fell ill with typhus during the journey and died in a prison hospital, in some accounts at Petrograd (Leningrad), at the age of forty-four. He was buried at the Novodevichy Monastery, and his relics were later translated to the Sretensky Monastery in Moscow.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • The Unity of the Church — A theological work on the unity and nature of the Church.
  • An Outline of the History of the Church's Dogma — His Master's thesis, an extended study of the development of the Church's teaching.
Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints