ELDER PORPHYRIOS
Testimonies and Experiences
Elder Porphyrios – Prophet of our time
Panagiotis Sotirchos
Journalist, writer
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K.I.: Mr. Sotirchos, you had the good fortune to know Elder Porphyrios. We therefore ask you to talk about his personality and his holiness.
P.S.: The whole of Greece mourned the passing away of Elder
Porphyrios, not just geographically, but universally, throughout the
whole world. It's not only my personal opinion. All his spiritual
children believed that. Elder Porphyrios is a holy person of great
spiritual height, a true saint. All those who had the opportunity to
know him well saw his sanctity in his silence, in his words and in his
actions. I don't say Elder Porphyrios is a saint because I believe it
but because I feel it. I can't help saying it. I can't put it any other
way, because he had all the characteristics of a saint.
We've already been honored by God with signs of Elder Porphyrios'
sanctity, not only while he was alive but immediately after his passing
too. I give the following testimony.
There was a very well educated man here in Athens who was a spiritual
child of Elder Porphyrios for many years. Whenever he had a problem he
would go to see the elder or simply phone him up. When Elder Porphyrios
passed away this man was absent on business and so hadn't learnt about
his death. When he returned to Athens he came across a family problem
and, as always, sought the Elder's advice. He picked up the telephone,
dialed the Elder's number and heard Elder Porphyrios himself answer the
phone.
He greeted him, sought his blessing and then went on to tell him about
his problem and to ask for some advice. Elder Porphyrios told him what
to do and what not to do. The spiritual child was pleased and said,
"I'll come and see you, Elder, as soon as I can." Elder Porphyrios then said,
"Don't telephone me again, because I have died."
K.I.: That's astonishing, Mr. Sotirchos, even to the point of
being unbelievable.
P.S.: It really does appear to be unbelievable, Mr. Ioannides,
but it's not unbelievable. It's simply a reflection of God's love. As a
well-known monk from the Holy Mountain said, if we were truly able to
know God's love for man, then, even now, we would be placed in paradise
by it.
It's God's all-encompassing presence, even through His saints so that
(please don't think it an exaggeration, because personally I completely
believe it.) as we talk, God's grace gives Elder Porphyrios the blessing
to hear what we're saying. I'm trying to avoid saying that he's standing
in this room where we're speaking.
Let me explain that. Whatever we say about Elder Porphyrios it's not
said to glorify him, because heaven has no need of the earth's glory.
Here on earth we are in a miserable state. These things happen to give
us the chance to follow their example, "to imitate a saint is to honor a
saint," as Saint John Chrysostom says. It's like the raft of salvation
that the castaway searches for in order to be saved. I believe that this
is what is needed more than anything else in our times. We must find the
hand of God in the midst of the saints, one of whom, I believe, is Elder
Porphyrios.
K.I.: Mr. Sotirchos you've known and even written about elders of
Orthodoxy. Your book Mystical Ascents is one of the most important
Orthodox books, that I have read in recent years.
K.I.: The experiences of the elders that they received with the
help of God and with the help of an elder is the correct road for every
Christian to take.
The relationship between an elder and spiritual child is both fatherly
and filial. It's part of the tradition of the Church from the very day
of her foundation. It's the principle that we ought to follow.
An elder's existence is not the result of a personal decision. You don't
say, "I want to become an elder," and it happens. It's "not enough to
want it; you must give up your whole being. That's what the elder does
in his individual struggle.
It starts with purification (catharsis), through hard asceticism. It
does not attempt to avoid matter, but primarily purifies our inner
being. Purification is not something that is achieved easily. A material
house is built brick by brick, the same is true of the process of
purification.
After the first stage, which is purification, comes the second stage,
God-given enlightenment. Elder Porphyrios was barely educated; he had
only gone to elementary school. However, the whole world did not know
what the Elder knew. Holiness is not a piece of knowledge. It is a
condition, a power, a quality of God. The saint enters the life of God
and acquires the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
At this point we must make a small deviation, in order to say that grace
is benevolent, but it is also painful for its bearer. Those who have
grace also have pain. It's enough for us to recall the suffering of St.
Paul the Apostle and St. John Chrysostom. The same was true of Elder
Porphyrios, even though he had enormous gifts he suffered from many
diseases until the moment of his death.
After that comes the reward, the prize, the third stage, theosis, which
the Elder acquires without knowing it, unknowingly. The Elder now
functions like an instrument, a tool of Divine Grace.
When he has the gift of discernment, or foresight, or healing, or
whatever other pastoral gift, it functions in a completely natural way.
It is just like doing all the other things in life, like breathing,
thinking, talking, and so on. The gifts of the Holy Spirit are imparted
in this natural way, just like a mirror reflecting the light of the sun.
K.I.: Elder Porphyrios' spiritual beam was so bright and so
strong that whatever anyone says about that holy man is not enough.
P.S. The blessed Elder was one of the greatest contemporary
figures of true spiritual holiness. His chief characteristics were his
immense humility, meekness, and prayer. This triptych truly showed us
the figure of a saint as bequeathed to us by our Orthodox tradition.
K.I. As you've quite rightly mentioned, Elder Porphyrios belongs
to the great patristic tradition of our Church. The discernment that he
had was striking. He helped everybody move one step forward. It was
always a complete offering, service and ministry to his fellows.
P.S.: Elder Porphyrios had many gifts and each one complemented the
others.
He had boundless long-suffering and spiritual mercy not only for all his
spiritual children, but for all his visitors. Thousands of people went
and visited him in his cell. The greater part of Greece's spiritual
elect respected him, visited him, and obeyed him.
He taught love by practical example. His basic sermon was love towards
God. He wanted us to love God so that we could love people, the world,
every single thing.
He was an ascetic for over seventy years. From his childhood until his
extreme old age he was a man who continually exercised and struggled for
himself and for his spiritual children. That's why God gave him so many
gifts. Amongst others, the gifts of discernment, foresight, prophecy,
and especially his wonderworking prayer. It is well-known that he healed
many people from some very serious diseases.
Many academics characteristically went to him for advice, either before
making an important decision or before an academic conference, or, in
the case of doctors, before a major operation.
K.I.: "The humble people cried unto the Lord and the wise men of
the world were admonished and their wisdom melted like wax."
P.S.: Exactly. Elder Porphyrios was a great
blessing from God upon all of us. Before we continue, however, it
would be good to make some clarifications. Discernment is the gift of
the Holy Spirit, where the soul of the believer can see through people
and things.
The gift of foresight is when man knows the events from God before they
happen. This gift is complemented by the gift of prophecy, which gives a
fuller forecast of the future. That's why many faithful instead of
calling him Father Porphyrios called him Father Prophet, an example of
the impact his spiritual work made.
K.I.: Elder Porphyrios' eyes saw what we can't see.
P.S.: Elder Porphyrios knew the details of time and space. The
extent to which he saw things, people and events that happened in the
past, that happen in the present, and that will happen in the future is
incredible. He saw all these things without actively looking for them.
You are, I imagine, aware of the fact that he saw the Turkish invasion
of Cyprus.
K.I.: Yes
P.S.: On that terrible morning, at dawn on the 20th July 1974, he
jumped up out of bed and woke up his company.
"At this very hour," he told them, "the Turks are
entering Cyprus."
K.I.: He even indicated to them the exact spots where the Turks
were landing at that hour. Let us proceed from this addition, as we have
recorded this shocking experience from others.*
*In July 1974 Elder Porphyrios
traveled by car with three of his spiritual children to Mt. Athos. On
the 20th of July 1974 he could be found in the village Metamorphosis,
Chalkhidiki, where he had stopped to visit a monastery. There he heard
the news of the Turkish invasion on the radio. He remained thoughtful
and 'saw' that this situation was part of the development of a greater
plan, as he told his companions. The radio had announced a call-up of
reserves and one of his companions was required to report to the
assembly point at Tyrnavos, all four of them took the car and headed for
home. The reservist reported for duty somewhere in Tyrnavos. The Elder
and the rest of the party spent the night in a hotel. The next day the
Elder determined that it was unnecessary for them to remain, since the
recruits name could not be found in the army directories. They went and
picked him up, finally returning to Athens. One evening, during the
journey, the Elder turned to one of his spiritual children and said that
an important Turk was highly irritated because things were not going so
well for them. He said that officers and leaders were coming and going
giving orders and directions.
We were told this at the Convent founded by the Elder, by two of his
spiritual children who spoke to us.
P.S: Yes
K.I.: We're waiting with great anticipation Mr. Sotirchos, for
you to tell us more.
P.S.: I would like to thank you for giving me the opportunity to
share some of my astounding experiences with your fellow Cypriots.
Once, the Elder set off for a monastery with three of his spiritual
children to celebrate Vespers. At first they said they would go on foot.
However, after walking some distance, Elder Porphyrios became tired, and
the monastery was still quite far away. They decided to find a vehicle
to take them the rest of the way.
At that moment, a taxi appeared in the distance. The Elder's three lay
companions told him that they would wave it down and ask the driver to
take them to the monastery.
"Don't worry," he told them, "the taxi-driver will
stop anyway. But when we get into the cab, no-one is to speak to the
driver; I'm the only one who'll speak to him."
That's exactly what happened. The taxi-driver stopped without them
waving him down, they got in and the Elder told the driver their
destination.
When the taxi set off the driver began to put down the clergy and to
blame them for a thousand and one different things. Each time that he
said something he addressed it to the three laymen sitting in the back
seat of the cab:
"It is like that, isn't it, you guys? What do you say?"
They kept their lips tightly shut and didn't say a
word, just as the Elder had told them.
When the driver saw that the others weren't answering him he turned to
Elder Porphyrios and said,
"Isn't that the way it is, pappouli?. What do you
say? The things they write in the papers are true, aren't they?"
Then Elder Porphyrios said to him,
"My son, I'll tell you a little story. I'll tell it only once to you; you won't need to hear it a second time. There once was a man from a certain place (he named it), who had an elderly neighbor with a large property. One night he killed him and buried him. Then, using falsified papers, he got hold of his elderly neighbor's property and sold it. And do you know what he bought with the money that he got from selling the property? He bought a taxi...."
The moment the taxi-driver heard the story, he was so shaken, that he pulled over to the side of the road, and shouted,
"Don't say anything pappouli. Only you and I know
about it."
"God also knows about it," Elder Porphyrios answered. "He told
me, so that I could tell you. See to it that you change your way of life
from now on."
K.I.: You mean to say, Mr. Sotirchos, that Elder Porphyrios saw,
with his gift of foresight, that the taxi-driver had committed murder.
P.S.: Exactly.
K.I.: That's more than astonishing.
P.S.: When talking or hearing about the wonders of Elder
Porphyrios' life one really does find one thing more astonishing than
the other. Elder Porphyrios was really a spiritual giant. His journey
here on earth was a journey entirely towards holiness.
K.I.: Mr. Sotirchos, could we please hear about one more event.
One never becomes tired of hearing stories about Elder Porphyrios.
P.S.: One day, a spiritual child of Elder Porphyrios phoned him
from South Africa, where he lived, to seek his advice about some problem
he had.
As they were speaking on the phone Elder Porphyrios said to him,
"What's happening there? Is it still raining or has it stopped?"
Can you imagine it, the Elder in Greece knew that it
was raining in South Africa that day.
The caller knew about Elder Porphyrios' gifts of discernment and
foresight. When he finished his own conversation he said,
"Elder, I also have a friend of mine here who
would like to speak with you, to receive your blessing." He
said it without mentioning his friend's name, he simply said, "a friend
of mine".
The friend picked up the receiver and heard the Elder say,
"Good Evening X, my child."
X was taken aback. Immediately afterwards he heard the Elder ask him,
"How are your four girls?" and then, "Pay
attention to your oldest daughter - she has problems and could be making
a big mistake."
I must make it clear at this point that Elder Porphyrios didn't know
this man and had never met him. When he heard what Elder Porphyrios said
to him he became soaked in his sweat from the shock. He had realized
that he had spoken to a true saint. This incident shows that Elder
Porphyrios didn't only care about his spiritual children but about each
human soul.
K.I.: That was the greatness of Elder Porphyrios' love; it truly
overwhelmed you from the first moment you saw him, spoke with him or
telephoned him.
P.S.: Elder Porphyrios' great and fundamental ascetic effort,
apart from his humility, vigil and fasting, was prayer. Through his
prayer he could see events in the past, in the present and in the
future. When a Professor from the Polytechnic University was going to
attend some European conference, he went to get the Elder's blessing.
There they spoke about astronomy. As the professor himself told us,
Elder Porphyrios told him what he would encounter at the conference and
what he should do.
During the conference, the professor saw that everything Elder
Porphyrios had told him beforehand came true. He was so moved that, not
only did he become a most humble spiritual child of Elder Porphyrios,
but he visited the Elder's Convent at Milesi regularly and humbled
himself by doing manual labor there.
People didn't only come to see him from within Greece, but they came
from all over the world, even from as far away as Japan. They went and
put all their problems, worries and whatever else troubled them to him,
and he helped all of them with lots of love, humbleness, gentleness and
prayer -most of all prayer.
In one of our conversations, (I was blessed enough to see him many
times), he said to me, "There are elders who can cover the whole of
Greece when they stretch their arms out in prayer." He didn't say if it
was himself or someone else that he was talking about.
K.I.: Every time I met Elder Porphyrios I felt as if our
conversation was a spiritual banquet. I was greatly impressed by the
freedom he allowed to the person who spoke with him. I saw all of
Orthodoxy's freedom embodied within his face.
P.S.: Elder Porphyrios never forced anyone to do anything and he
never suggested anything that would infringe upon another's freedom. He
didn't want us to lord it over others, he wanted us to respect others.
The holiness within him meant that he saw the world with infinite
compassion.
With the freedom, as you said, that he gave to those who spoke with him,
he helped them realize in the best possible way that they were going
along the wrong path. He always said that we should keep away from
sects.
A basic quality of his was that he accepted everybody. He welcomed
agnostics and atheists. He even welcomed gurus, without judging or
criticizing anybody for their beliefs. However, to all of them he
pointed out that the truth is found in Christ and in the Orthodox
Christian Faith.
One of the Elder's major attributes was to be accepting - to accept all
things and all people. He was, to put it more simply, an exact copy of
the way God acts towards us in order for us to become better, to be
cleansed and to advance towards salvation. That was Elder Porphyrios'
practice. He never criticized anybody but captivated
everybody. He had the grace of transforming people.
I'll tell you a typical incident involving a French woman, a professor.
She had heard about the Elder's gift of discernment and wanted to test
him.
This French lady had attended a conference in Japan on the subject of
gurus. Anyway, she went and saw the Elder without telling him that she
had taken part in the conference.
Elder Porphyrios let the conversation flow freely, as he always did. The
French lady said whatever she wanted to say and at some point in the
discussion they found themselves talking about gurus. He then said to
her,
"There was a certain gentleman sitting next to you at that conference you attended a few days ago, didn't he tell you something about the subject of the question you're asking me now?"
He also named the gentleman, who was a Christian.
The French lady felt as if she had been struck by lightning. She really
had talked about that subject with the person whom Elder Porphyrios
named. She then realized that Elder Porphyrios was a person enlightened
by God.
K.I.: His words were full of fatherly wisdom. What else can you tell
us, Mr. Sotirchos?
P.S.: He advised us to use gentle words when we said something to
someone to avoid the element of confrontation. He gave the following
example. "If you need to tell someone he is lying, don't tell him that
he's telling lies, because naturally he'll become hurt and will react.
Tell him that he is not telling the truth."
The greatest weapon for the salvation of us all is tolerance. This
compassion comes to us from God and we in turn must give it to others as
a present in return.
K.I.: He was highly inoffensive, an expression of his meekness.
P.S.: That was another of the Elder's virtues. It's also the
reason why whoever spoke with him felt that whatever we've done as
fallen beings, God's mercy would come to liberate us. It's enough to
just seek his mercy, to call upon it with prayer and with a clean
lifestyle.
In his farewell letter he writes, "I always made the effort to pray
and to read the hymns of the church, may you also do the same." He
showed us a road that we could follow and find the help and support that
is so important in these trying times in which we live.
K.I.: He knew that I wrote poetry. He knew it before I had even
met him: When some friends of my wife were telling him about our wedding
he said, "Yes, I know, she married a poet and philosopher." Take note
that no-one, not even my wife, had managed to tell him that I studied
philosophy and wrote poetry.
In one of our conversations, he told me that the saints are poets and
the Christ wants refined people next to him, like the true poets.
P.S.: This evolution, this development, not in the worldly sense,
but in the spiritual sense, is the subject of my latest book with the
title, "The Poet and the Saint."
In the hook I put forward that in life's river, we have the poet on one
bank and the saint on the other. Both of them are reaching out to meet
one another. At the point at which they meet we find the Christian
writer, the Christian poet, who gives us poetry according to God, in
Christ, feeling and expressing the world in another way, in a renewed
way. This re-birth gives him God's holiness, which passes into life and
meets man. I gained great joy from the fact, which you mentioned, that
the late Elder told you that Christ wants refined people near him,
because I've always thought that a person is refined when he manages to
throw off the passions of this world, and thus open the closed door
which prevents us from approaching Christ. We thus become more accepting
of God's mercy.
K.L May the grace of Holy Spirit help all of us to accept this blessing
from heaven, always allowing us to remember Elder Porphyrios, who bore
so much witness to life according to God.
P.S.: I personally have the conviction that he is a true saint of
our time. I would like to make one wish, -that this conviction, the
conviction of thousands of people, is for Elder
Porphyrios to become known throughout the Church and to be recognized
'officially' as a saint of our Church. We have a need of such examples.
I ask him to pray for all of us, as I believe that he lives in the land
of the living, in the tabernacles of the saints, and that he speaks
openly before God.
One more wish, that all those who have any kind of testimony from a
meeting or conversation with the Elder write it down and present it to
us, so that everything can be gathered together now while the memory of
his passing is still fresh in our minds.
K.I.: Mr. Sotirchos I would like to give you our warmest thanks
for the important things that you've told us and for all your advice
regarding the selection of material for this current edition.
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Last Update: 11-2-2009.