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LIFE
OF
ST.
XENIA OF ST. PETERSBURG
- (c.1719-30 - c.1803)
- Feast Day: January 24th

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
heat 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 to the right), 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 (photo to the left), 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.

- This article was written by Jane M. deVyver, M.Th., Ph.D., and
the photos are by the author.
- The icon at the top was painted/written by Fr. Theodore Jurewicz, of
Erie, Pennsylvania, and is located in St. Innocent of Irkutsk Orthodox Church in Redford,
Michigan.

If you liked
this article, you might be interested in the FIREBIRD book, RECENTLY
CANONIZED ORTHODOX SAINTS: Their Lives and Icons, from which, in large
part, this article is excerpted. We now have a vastly expanded 3rd edition.
Also see our other section, ARTICLES:
Icons & Relics, for further discussion about saints, icons and relics.
You also might be interested in the video, PILGRIMAGE TO HOLY RUSSIA, Part 1,
in which scenes of the Smolensk Cemetery and St. Xenia's chapel and tomb are shown. The
audio track that accompanies the visual portrayal is comprised of a narration that
tells of life of St. Xenia of St. Petersburg, plus beautiful, well-integrated sacred
music.

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