"In the foothills two miles from the monastery, Maria noticed a gorge…in
it, a hollowed-out place like a cave, hidden on all sides by brambles and thickly-growing
wild grapes which covered up its entrance. With tears Maria entreated them to
settle her in this cave—this hermitic refuge which she loved so much—with
the help of the Christ-loving landowner."—excerpt from Maria
of Olonets
The monastic ideal is a complete renunciation of the world, and involves an
inner struggle necessary for the soul’s ascent towards God. Those who have
been most faithful to this ideal have been the desert dwellers—hidden far
away from the seductive tumult of the world.
In the first half of the 19th century, the Russian land was rich in dense
woods and forests in which the sound of the axe was rarely heard. In these dark
forest preserves—in the mysterious silent depths of dense green thickets—not
only wild animals lived, but many desert dwellers also made their dugout dwellings
in the earth. There they performed secret ascetic labors known only to the One
to Whom they had dedicated themselves in their hidden and deliberately buried
life.
"…At the funeral service an inexplicable and miraculous heavenly
light shone from Maria’s face. The shining emanated from her face like
a ray from the sun, yet it was a cloudy day and the thin candles gave almost
no light at all. This remarkable manifestation—a reverence beheld face-to-face—was
the fulfillment of the promise of the Savior in the Gospel regarding the righteous
who will shine 'like the sun' in the Kingdom of the Heavenly Father."—excerpt
from Maria of Olonets
Maria of Olonets offers an extraordinary account of one woman’s
solitary struggle in the Russian forests. Maria’s life is a witness to
the world of the reality of Christ’s otherworldly Kingdom.
Softbound. 112 pp.