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Miraculous Orthodox icon on display here this week
Saxonburg among the six stops for the 715-year-old Kursk Root Icon

By Ann Rodgers, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
www.eadiocese.org [eadiocese.org]
The Kursk Root Icon
The Rev. George Livanos was awed and humbled when he received a call asking if All Saints Greek Orthodox Church in Canonsburg would host a visit of one of the most beloved icons in all of Orthodox Christianity.

It wasn't just that the 715-year-old Kursk Root Icon is said to have wrought many miracles. He felt a connection because he had named his son for St. Seraphim of Sarov, an 18th-century monk who was healed of a deadly childhood illness after venerating this icon of the Virgin Mary.

"After my jaw hit the ground, I said yes," said a delighted Father Livanos. "This icon is traveling throughout the United States, and they want to bring it here."

Today the icon is at Nativity of the Theotokos Monastery in Saxonburg, where an all-night vigil will begin at 4:30 p.m. After an 8 a.m. Friday Liturgy, the icon will be taken to Canonsburg, where a procession will begin at 5:30 p.m. After a prayer service, a talk will be given on its history.

On Saturday the icon will be at Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in California for a 9:30 a.m. Liturgy; at St. Basil the Great in Belle Vernon for prayer at 2:30 p.m.; and at Christ the Savior in Indiana for an all-night vigil starting at 5 p.m. The final local stop is a 9 a.m. Sunday Divine Liturgy at Holy Dormition in McKeesport. A schedule is at www.eadiocese.org. [eadiocese.org.]

In Orthodox theology, icons are far more than pictures. The church teaches that they convey the word of God through imagery, much as the Bible does through writing.

"Icons are windows into Heaven," Father Livanos said. "The people who are portrayed in the icon are those who have lived amongst us who offered themselves as living sacrifices and made God the sole purpose of their existence. ... They are to remind us of what we are called to be and who we truly are."

According to tradition, in 1295 a hunter in the Kursk region of Russia found a beautiful icon of the Virgin Mary lying by a tree root. When he picked it up, a new spring began to flow. The hunter built a humble wooden chapel for the icon, and those who came to came to venerate it began to report miraculous healings. When a prince built a church for the icon in a nearby city, the icon is said to have miraculously returned to its humble chapel.

Tradition says that when Tartars tried to burn the chapel in 1383, it wouldn't ignite. When the invaders broke the icon in two, the pieces later miraculously melded in the hands of a saintly priest who had tried to protect it.

In 1597 a monastery was founded at the chapel site. During another Tartar invasion the icon was moved to the Kursk cathedral. A tradition began of carrying the icon 19 miles in procession each summer to the Kursk Root Monastery, where it would remain until Sept. 12.

The stories of its miracles continued. In 1898 anarchists planted a bomb in the Kursk cathedral. The windows were all blown out, an iron door was blasted off its hinges and a candlestick near the icon shot across the cathedral, but the icon was unscathed.

After the Bolshevik revolution, as communists closed churches and persecuted the faithful, monks smuggled the Kursk Root Icon to safety. It traveled within Russia before it was taken to what is now the Republic of Serbia. Smuggled to safety again in World War II, it brought comfort to newly freed prisoners and displaced persons in Munich. Eventually it found a home in the New York cathedral of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

When it was returned to Kursk after the collapse of the Soviet Union, "hundreds of thousands of people came to venerate the Mother of God through this icon," Father Livanos said.

While it is known as a wonder-working icon, he cautioned his congregation not to be caught up in seeking miracles.

"God heals, and healing takes place in different forms at different times for different reasons," he said. "If 50 people who have cancer come and venerate it and none of them is healed, it's not because God has been on vacation. It's for other reasons surpassing human intelligence. ... Don't come here and say, 'Darn it, I still have to go for back surgery.' There, too, is healing."

Correction/Clarification: (Published January 21, 2011) The Kursk Root Icon will be at Holy Virgin Dormition Orthodox Church in McKeesport for the Divine Liturgy at 9 a.m. Sunday. An incorrect time and date were given in a story Thursday.


Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11020/1119277-455.stm#ixzz1Bin9xcUx

Last edited by Pani Rose; 01/21/11 09:02 PM.
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I attended the services last night at All Saints in Canonsburg. It was awesome!!! I estimate over 1000 faithful (my count could be wrong but there was little standing room) came to venerate the Holy Icon. The Icon arrive ~1.5 hrs late because it took a detour to Johnstown for a bishop who was seriously ill to vererate. (I apologize for not remembering who the ill bishop is. May God grant him many years.)
All Saints is a very beautiful church. I forgot my camera so no pics this time. I will have to visit again. There are additional icons being written as evident of the scaffeling.

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I am so happy and thankful to ROCOR for allowing such an ancient and holy icon to travel so extensively throughout the world. I believe that it is the only original religious icon/image that does so. The majority of Eastern icons or Western images that travel worldwide are pilgrim icons or images that were touched to the original.

I do hope that it will come to the state of California again and not just California, PA.

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As Searcher mentions above, the Kursk Root Icon made an unscheduled stop on its way to All Saints in Canonsburg, to allow the ailing Metropolitan Nicholas to venerate it.

Kursk Root Icon in Johnstown [acrod.org]

Deacon David has additional photos of the visit on his Facebook site [facebook.com].

Continued prayers for the health and well-being of Metropolitan Nicholas who, as had previously been reported in the current Prayer thread for him, appears very frail.

Many years,

Neil


"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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The Icon will be at Holy Dormition Church in Binghamton, NY this Friday, January 28th from noon until 4 p.m. Bishop Michael of the OCA will lead a prayer service.


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