Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Guri (Demidov)

20 bytes added, 17:11, April 30, 2006
m
links
==Biography==
Born in 1894, Fr Guri was a [[monastic ]] in Harbin, China. Due to the cultural revolution, however, he moved to Australia, arriving on [[October 5]], 1960, as a refugee. On arrival, he took up residence at St John the Baptist Skete, having been vacated the previous year. Living in a small, one room tin hut surrounded by thick bush he became its first, and only, monastic inhabitant. Fr Guri was devoted to prayer and craved solitude, and found both in the 18 hectare grounds of the [[skete]], often attending daily services at the nearby [[Monastery of Our Lady of Kazan (Kentlyn, Australia)|Convent of Our Lady of Kazan]].
In his search for silence, and in imitation of the monastic hermits [[hermit]]s of the Egyptian and Judean deserts, [[Mount Athos]] and the vast forests of Russia, Father Guri cleared out a natural cleft in a nearby sandstone rock face, making a small, cramped cave in which he would spend many hours reading [[prayer]]s and using his [[prayer rope]]. This was his favourite retreat after [[Communion|communing]] at the [[Divine Liturgy]]. Only God and the holy [[Angel]]s were witnesses to his prayerful [[vigil]]s and struggles.
Father Guri was reputed to have had an extensive library on the ascetic life and hesychastic prayer (the use of the Jesus Prayer - also called the Prayer of the Heart - ’Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner’ - the foundation of Orthodox Christian ascetic prayer). He would often laboriously copy excerpts from the writings of the Holy Fathers on the ascetic and spiritual life in small school exercise books. These anthologies, the fruit of his prayerful reading and spiritual struggles, he would give away as a blessing to those whom he felt would benefit from the wisdom of the Holy Fathers.
===The Skete===
After Fr Guri's repose, the buildings at the Skete were used for a printing facility, and then abandoned. The buildings fell into disrepair, and became inhabited by wildlife. In 1999, Hmk [[Joachim (Ross)]] joined ROCOR from the Serbian [[Diocese]], and was invited to rebuild the Skete, restore coenobitic monastic life, and provide a base for missionary work amongst anglophonic Australians.
The Skete was, with help, made secure, habitable and weatherproof, with accomodation, an office, a dining room and a [[chapel ]] with monastic worship in English. Fr Joachim was able to use the old [[monastery ]] Church of All Saints in the [[Monastery of Our Lady of Kazan (Kentlyn, New South Wales)|Monastery of Our Lady of Kazan]], where there a community of Orthodox of many national backgrounds attend on Sundays and feastdays.
===The Cave===
16,951
edits

Navigation menu