Venerable (Monastic) 20th century

Justin (Popovich) of Ćelije

1894 – 1979

Also known as Justin Popović · St Justin the New · Blagoje Popović · the New Chrysostom

A Serbian archimandrite, theologian, and professor of dogmatics, removed by the communist authorities in 1945 and confined to the women's Ćelije Monastery, where he wrote prolifically until his repose in 1979. One of the most influential Orthodox theologians of the 20th century.

Feast Day
June 1
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Justin (Popovich) of Ćelije

Life

Justin Popovich was a Serbian archimandrite, theologian, and professor of dogmatics, widely regarded as one of the most influential Orthodox theologians of the twentieth century. He was born in Vranje in southern Serbia on 25 March 1894 (Old Style), into a family that, by tradition, had produced priests for seven generations, and was baptized Blagoje, a name connected to the feast of the Annunciation. He studied at the Theological School of St Sava in Belgrade, where St Nikolai Velimirović was among his teachers and remained a formative influence on his life.

He entered the monastic order on 1 January 1916 at the Orthodox cathedral of Shkodër, taking the name Justin after St Justin the Philosopher. His studies took him to the seminary at Petrograd in Russia and to Oxford, and in 1926 he received the title of Doctor of Theology at the University of Athens with a dissertation on the problem of the person and of knowledge according to St Macarius of Egypt. He taught at the Theological Academy in Prizren and, from 1934, held the chair of dogmatics at the Faculty of Orthodox Theology of the University of Belgrade.

With the establishment of the communist state after the Second World War, Justin was removed from his professorship in 1945 and subsequently confined to the Ćelije Monastery near Valjevo, where he lived under effective house arrest and continuous surveillance until his repose. There he wrote prolifically, producing a body of dogmatic, philosophical, and hagiographical work that shaped a generation of Serbian theologians. He fell asleep in the Lord on 25 March 1979, the feast of the Annunciation, which was also the day of his birth.

He was glorified as a saint by the Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church in 2010 and is commemorated on 1 June (Old Calendar). His writings, ranging from a study of Dostoevsky to a multi-volume Dogmatics and an extensive collection of saints' lives, remain widely read across the Orthodox world.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. 1894 Born in Vranje Born in southern Serbia and baptized Blagoje.
  2. 1916 Monastic tonsure Tonsured at the cathedral of Shkodër, taking the name Justin.
  3. 1926 Doctor of Theology Completed his doctorate at the University of Athens.
  4. 1934 Professor at Belgrade Became professor of dogmatics at the University of Belgrade.
  5. 1945 Removed from the faculty Ousted from his professorship by the communist authorities.
  6. 1979 Repose Reposed at Ćelije Monastery on the feast of the Annunciation.
  7. 2010 Glorification Glorified as a saint by the Serbian Orthodox Church.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Formation and Academic Career

After completing his theological studies in Belgrade, Justin pursued further study at the Petrograd seminary in Russia and at Oxford, where an early doctoral thesis on Dostoevsky was not accepted. He completed his doctorate at the University of Athens in 1926. His scholarship was rooted in the Church Fathers, and his academic work joined patristic theology to a sustained engagement with modern philosophy and literature.

He taught at the Theological Academy in Prizren before becoming professor of dogmatics at the University of Belgrade in 1934. His three-volume Dogmatics of the Orthodox Church grew out of this teaching and is considered among his principal works.

Confinement at Ćelije and Repose

Removed from the faculty in 1945 under the new communist authorities, Justin was confined to the Ćelije Monastery near Valjevo. He served as archimandrite there and lived under restriction and surveillance for the remainder of his life, a period of roughly three decades during which he carried on an intense life of prayer, daily liturgy, and writing.

Sources describe a rigorous personal discipline, including a daily rule of reading several chapters of the New Testament and strict fasting. He reposed on the feast of the Annunciation in 1979, the same feast on which he had been born.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • The Philosophy and Religion of F. M. Dostoevsky — A study of the Russian novelist's thought.
  • Dogmatics of the Orthodox Church — His principal systematic work, in three volumes.
  • The Orthodox Church and Ecumenism — A treatment of the Orthodox Church in relation to the ecumenical movement.
  • Lives of the Saints — An extensive multi-volume collection of hagiographies.
Notes

Born in Vranje, 1894; reposed 1979 on the Annunciation. Feast Jun 1 (Old Calendar). Glorified by the Serbian Orthodox Church in 2010.

Sources: OrthodoxWiki; Wikipedia; Serbian Orthodox Church glorification (2010)