30.01.2024

Elder Kirill Pavlov died. The old man died. years of monastic life


Kirill Tereshin is a simple guy from Pyatigorsk, now known as “Mr. Synthol,” an “inflatable” muscleman with huge superbiceps. He increased his muscles with synthol injections. In the future, he plans to enlarge all parts of the body in this way, since now it has a rather frail appearance against the backdrop of pumped up biceps.

– TO ACHIEVE SUCH VOLUME, IT’S NOT ENOUGH TO INJECT 250 ML INTO THE BICEPS – YOU WILL ADD A MAXIMUM OF 3 CENTIMETERS. YOU HAVE TO SHUT LITERS INTO YOUR HANDS. I DID SO, MY TEMPERATURE RISE TO 40 DEGREES, I WAS LYING DYING, AND THEN EVERYTHING BECAME NORMAL,” KIRILL EXPLAINED

As Kirill Tereshin said live on his Instagram page, his parents hate him for his love of synthol and such radical transformations. At the same time, the young man is not going to stop.

Read also: Kirill Tereshin from Pyatigorsk underwent surgery - did the “bazooka arms” burst?

On December 10, on a new Instagram page, a synthol lover posted a photo with rewound biceps and the caption “arms are no longer bazookas.” Information immediately appeared on the Internet that the solution was pumped out of Kirill’s hands.

Recently, information appeared on the Internet about a simple guy from Pyatigorsk, who overnight became an Internet star - Kirill Tereshin became famous due to his biceps, which he did not develop due to long sessions in the gym - the guy administers dangerous injections of synthol, which can become him fatal...Watch the episode of Andrey Malakhov. Live broadcast - Bazooka Hands: die for fame on the Internet 12/01/2017

My idol is Romario Dos Santos Alves. I am not going to stop at my hands and want to change my appearance, as Sasha Shpak did, for example: I will have tattoos all over my body, I will have a mohawk, an earring on my left ear, one eye will be yellow and one eye will be blue. I’ll also cut my tongue - it will be like a lizard’s. There will be many more subscribers! And then there will be no need to work at all.

ON THE INTERNET HE IS CONSTANTLY ASKED TO MAKE EVEN BIGGER HANDS. I CRY EVERY DAY...THE WORST THING FOR A MOTHER IS TO LOSE A CHILD. MY SALARY: 30 THOUSAND RUBLES PER MONTH, FOR OUR REGION THIS IS A NORMAL EARNING. KIRILL CAN EARN SO MUCH PER DAY, BUT I DO NOT ACCEPT ANY MONEY OR HELP FROM HIM - THIS IS AN ABUSE OF MY BODY AND I AM NOT HAPPY WITH HIS MONEY.

Read also: The Pyatigorsk muscleman was left without arms: Kirill Tereshin lost his bazooka arms, what happened, why the synthol was removed

“I worked out in the gym, then went to serve in the army and ended up losing 10 kg of muscle mass, C-ib learned. After that, I decided to change my body with the help of synthol,” this is how the hero of today’s broadcast, Kirill Tereshin, began his story about himself, “to have hands like mine, you need to pump 6 liters of this substance into yourself.” A guy from Pyatigorsk wants to have the biggest biceps in the country, as well as money and fame.

Sintholist Kirill Tereshin consequences of injections. Fresh material as of December 11, 2017

“When people pay attention to me, I feel famous and I want it even more,” admits the hero of the “Live Broadcast” program, Kirill Tereshin, reports C-ib.ru. How will this pursuit of fame and money end: millions of money or amputation of hands? Today in Andrei Malakhov's talk show, jocks and doctors, experimenters and conservatives will meet with a guy from Pyatigorsk. You will see other heroes whose bodies have also been transformed in the most unusual way!

- a novice of Father Kirill - and called Father Vladimir and me to say goodbye to the elder. Over the past ten years we have said goodbye to him several times, since he, motionless, fell ill from a serious illness and never got up again. We said goodbye and nevertheless continued to pray to God to extend the life of this precious man at least a little more: not for him, but for us, for us! Not for him, because for us he was already a man of the Kingdom of Heaven, a saint... Near him, spiritual storms were pacified, internal contradictions were resolved, a blissful inner peace set in, in which everything became transparent and clear. As in one of the lives, a disciple who came to the elder fell into silence next to him and when asked why he did not ask the Abba about anything, he replied: “I just need to look at you!” We got the same feeling just from being near Father Kirill.

The old man lay with his eyes closed, covered with a blanket up to his chin, and only his hands, his kind, soft hands, rested above. We kissed the warm right hand of the elder, kissed him with reverence, as if he were a shrine, and with tenderness, as if he were a loved one, a father.

Our dear, friendly mother allowed us to stay in the cell: she brought two chairs, and we sat in silence at the foot of the bed. There was peace, quiet joy, and a feeling of the fullness of being. As always, around Father Kirill, all everyday troubles, worries, doubts died down, contradictory thoughts fell silent, and the very essence of life was revealed. In the language of philosophy, this is called “phenomenological reduction”: everything temporary, changeable, transitory, relative is reduced in its significance to insignificance, and only the soul standing before God and God who created it remain.

I first came to Father Kirill shortly after my baptism, when I had a confessor, the Lavra hieromonk, and I began to go to him for confession and conversations. It was he who sent me to confess my entire life to the elder, and in addition, to resolve some perplexing questions that he himself did not dare to answer. He led me to the vestibule of the cell, where Father Kirill received the suffering people, and I sat on a bench in trepidation, waiting for my turn and listening to the words of the Psalter, which the pilgrim was reading.

The fact is that my entry into the church enclosure after baptism was truly a turning point in my life: I immediately found myself in a monastic monastery with many hours of divine services, with fierce fasting, with monks, with learned theologians, with locally revered seers, faith-bearers and holy fools, with a confessor - an ascetic, with frequent confessions and a rule of prayer. And I really wanted to truly kill the “old man” within myself and resurrect for a new life. I wanted to make a sacrifice. But I had nothing: “Open the Father’s embrace to me, having lived a life of immorality, looking upon the inexhaustible riches of Thy bounties, O Savior, do not despise my heart, which is now impoverished.” The only thing I felt was mine, received as a precious gift, was writing poetry. And so I decided to abandon him in the name of a new life: to sacrifice him, just as once upon a time virgins, putting on monastic robes, brought their purity and beauty to Christ, and young men - wealth and youthful strength. However, I understood (I had already read in spiritual literature) that not a single step should be taken without a blessing, otherwise it could be an act of self-will and turn into “humiliation rather than pride.” It was for this blessing (or non-blessing) that my confessor sent me to Father Kirill, who was surprised, if not afraid, at my desire and impulse.

Finally my turn came, and I went to the elder. And so - the look of love, the field of love, the energy of love, the joy of love, the torment of love... I cried... And so it always happened later, when I saw Father Kirill - tears appeared involuntarily, they flowed and flowed inexplicably - and from repentance, and from rejoicing, and from tenderness, and from the feeling of the fullness of life, from the fact that “the Kingdom of Heaven has come near.” Whether I caught the eye of Father Kirill in the altar of the Church of the Transfiguration of the Lord in Peredelkino, whether I came to him for confession, whether I stood at his sick bed - this emotional and spiritual revolution, catharsis, always happened to me.

Then, for the first time, I confessed to him, but then suddenly he himself began asking me questions about what I didn’t even consider a sin and wondered how he saw this in me? But in response to my decision to “donate,” he suddenly became somehow agitated, even threw up, if not waved, his hands and, smiling, shook his head negatively: “No, no, you don’t have to give up on this, why? You will still write! And he baptized.

Looking ahead, I must say, he always then asked about what I was writing, he himself insisted that I write “for the glory of God, in defense of the Church,” and gave his blessing...

My husband and children and I then often, very often went to the Trinity-Sergius Lavra. This, despite the dark Brezhnev times for the Church, was, as it seems to me now, a period of its heyday. There were elders, there were old monks who went through camps and trials, there were young strong confessors who later became bishops and governors of monasteries - the current Metropolitan of Kiev Onuphry and Metropolitan Daniel of Arkhangelsk, Archbishop Dimitry of Vitebsk, Archimandrite Alexy (vicar of the Danilov Monastery) and Archimandrite Benedict (vicar of Optina Pustyn) and many, many other worthy shepherds. We continue to have the most friendly relations with some of them to this day.

To this day I pray according to the prayer book that the then young Archimandrite Benedict gave me in those years. The prayer book is worn out and worn out from frequent use, but I treasure it as a spiritual relic...

We confessed to our confessor, but in exceptional cases we also consulted with Father Kirill. He had an amazing property - he never imposed anything on a person, did not give instructions, but in a conversation he gently led to the fact that the person who came suddenly himself spoke as an option of the way out of the situation, which the elder blessed him with. Sometimes we brought suffering people to him, and he helped them.

Once they brought to him a young woman who had given birth to a child with cerebral palsy. Father Kirill listened to her and... gave her money. A lot of. She left him in some bewilderment: she must have expected that her child would immediately, through the elder’s prayers, get up and walk. Or that the elder would tell her something from the realm of the miraculous, utter a prophecy... And she was somehow embarrassed. But literally the next day the doctor said that her child needed a long course of massage. And it turned out that the cost of these sessions exactly coincides with the amount that Father Kirill gave her.

Or we also took a young woman with a sick boy of about five to him. His problem was that he did not speak. He looked with big eyes and was silent. Father Kirill received them, prayed, and soon the boy not only spoke, but also began to show some special abilities. Now he is a successful businessman, he has his own children, and it is unlikely that he remembers his childhood illness.

Father Kirill and I also had a relationship with Archbishop Demetrius (then he was a hierodeacon). The fact is that he then worked as a secretary in the Patriarchate and lived in Moscow, yearning for the Lavra, for his spiritual father Archimandrite Kirill and for the monastic brethren. And Father Kirill gave him such obedience - to come to us in his free time and catechize us.

Father Dimitri was then studying at the Theological Academy, and he began to willingly enlighten us, systematically using his notes, and at the same time preparing for exams. He came, opened his notebooks and literally gave us courses of lectures on dogmatic, moral and comparative theology, on the History of the Church, on homiletics, etc. Well, besides, we asked him many questions generated by our religious ignorance, which he either answered himself (almost always), or, in special cases, wrote them down and then asked them to Father Kirill. Every week he went to him for confession at the Lavra. Returning, he read out the answers to us, and they amazed us with their wisdom and simplicity. For some reason, I remembered one such answer, which seemed to have little to do with my life, but was very valuable in its content. The question was: should I tip? Father Kirill replied: if you feel sorry for it, give it, but if you want to show off, don’t give it.

I also remembered his answer to a certain question, it seems, about the fate of the world. Father Kirill said amazing words that our Earth has aged, like every natural organism ages, she is an old woman, and she has little strength left, we must feel sorry for her... This is an amazing tender and compassionate attitude towards our planet, towards all living things that is born and grows on it, permeated with the heavenly light to nature itself.

Father Dimitri, who had already accumulated a whole notebook of such questions and answers, once admitted to us that it would be possible to publish such a spiritually useful book in the future, and called on us to add to the number of perplexities that needed clarification from the elder. And then we formulated many questions to Father Kirill concerning a wide variety of spheres of life - from mystical to social. However, after a very short time, Father Dimitri appeared with us and, not without regret, said that the elder had forbidden him to write down and collect his answers, much less publish them. On the contrary, he advised burning these records. And the humble father Dimitri obeyed and burned it.

True, later, many years later, he regretted it and even hinted that other blessings should not be performed with such haste.

Another person who connected us with Father Kirill was monk Leonid. Poor, as he called himself. He had a strange illness: from the waist down he looked like a grandmother, but the lower half of his body was like a man’s. Because of this, terrible temptations befell him, and he went through great tribulations. Once upon a time, together with Father Kirill, they labored in the famous Glinskaya Hermitage, which at that hour (in Khrushchev’s times) was dispersed, and he wandered, homeless and helpless. Then the Lord gave him shelter and a novice - the old servant of God, nun Pelageya. But he revered Father Kirill very much since the time of the Desert, and in the last period of his life he considered him his spiritual father.

We met him at the funeral service for Elder Seraphim Tyapochkin and have seen each other often since then. One half of his body (the right) was paralyzed, and he asked me to take Father Kirill’s blessing in order to record his confessions, since he himself was very limited in movement and could not always get to the Lavra. Father Kirill blessed me, and I began to regularly visit Father Leonid (he lived in Moscow, a few stops from Elektrozavodskaya) and wrote down what he dictated to me. Of course, even now I cannot divulge what the wretched monk confessed, but I testify that he was a man of holy life. Sometimes I filled up two student notebooks, remembering the metaphor about the confession of the righteous: in a ray of light every speck of dust is visible, but in the darkness you can’t even see a heap of dirt, and then I took them to Father Kirill. Father Kirill read a prayer of permission and tore them without reading them. And Father Leonid asked me to tell the elder about my obsessive thought, which whispered that he was throwing away the notebooks without ever opening them. It seemed to me that I was living among saints who saw each other with spiritual vision.

Father Leonid was very interested in spiritual books. “Little books,” as he called them, acting like a fool. “Do you have spiritual books for the new martyrs?” - he asked everyone who visited him with requests for instructions and prayers. And then he came across a book by Hieromonk Seraphim Rose, “Signs of the Last Times,” published abroad. He really liked it, and he decided to distribute it (they also took the blessing of Father Kirill for this). Father Leonid ordered a reprint of this book in almost twenty copies and distributed them to his unenlightened acquaintances. But at some point he wanted to pray for Hieromonk Seraphim. It was only necessary to find out whether to remember his health or his repose. No one around knew whether he was alive or dead. And then Father Leonid decided to go to the Lavra himself to see Father Kirill and ask him about it.

My husband, Father Vladimir, brought him straight to the evening service, and Father Leonid entered the altar where Father Kirill was praying. I approached him with this question. And Father Kirill (according to the stories of Father Leonid) raised his eyes to the mountain, saw something there with his inner vision and sighed: “Rest, O Lord, Thy servant Hieromonk Seraphim.”

Amazingly, it later turned out that Hieromonk Seraphim died almost on the eve of this day...

I turned to Father Kirill in exceptional cases. My soul ached for my mother: she was very sick, practically dying, and I was afraid that she would die unbaptized. But Father Kirill then firmly said that she would be baptized, live many more years and become a believer. This is what happened, despite the fact that at the time it seemed impossible: she was discharged from the hospital due to the fact that they did not want to “spoil the statistics on the dead.”

Then my husband, Father Vladimir, fell ill. He was diagnosed with a malignant tumor and had to undergo surgery. It was very scary. And we asked Father Kirill’s cell attendant, Natasha (now she is nun Euphemia), to inform the elder about this. And suddenly she calls and says that she and Father Kirill will come to our house to visit Father Vladimir before the operation!

Father Kirill no longer lived in the Lavra, but in Peredelkino, he was sick, but could still walk, and so he and Natalya came to us. It was such a great consolation, such joy! And my mother, whom he had begged for many years before, was with us, safe and sound.

I have a photograph of Father Kirill sitting next to Father Vladimir on the sofa, with smiles on their faces, treats in front of them, and opposite (this is not in the photo) - my mother, nun Natalya and I, and Mikhail, a graduate of the Moscow Theological Academy. His father Kirill asked him to sing Cossack songs, which he loved very much. And we sat and talked, and listened to songs, and Father Kirill was with us, and it was as if I could clearly see this living picture. Perhaps this is one of the main treasures of life.

And a few days later, Father Vladimir underwent a difficult operation, which lasted six hours, and he woke up in intensive care, and then began to come to his senses, recover and glorify God.

I also turned to the elder on less dramatic and significant occasions. Sometimes it was creative problems. Should I undertake the translation from French of the theological book of a Catholic who converted to Orthodoxy, “St. Maximus the Confessor - Mediator between East and West”?

Is there any spiritual dishonesty in the fact that in my novel the main characters, monks, are not “hagiographic”, but are distinguished by their liveliness of mind and character, and sometimes, following the logic of the novel, I do not stop before describing their temptations and spiritual infirmities?

And another question. Due to the fact that church and even monastic publishing houses began to publish me, shouldn’t I change my name Olesya (given to me by my parents based on Kuprin’s literary work) to the baptismal name Olga, and my parental surname Nikolaeva to the surname of my husband, Vigilyanskaya? And every time Father Kirill listened to my questions with great attention and personal complicity and responded vividly: the Frenchman’s book - translated: “This will be useful to you!”; finish the novel, and write it “as God puts it in your heart”; the name - do not change, he even waved his hand, as if dismissing the troubles associated with this as unnecessary fuss: “Stay as you are!”

And every time after visiting Father Kirill, enlightenment, liberation, and joy came!

I had such a dead end situation related to everyday problems: we (my husband, three children and I) lived very closely, in the same apartment with my parents and my brother’s large family. Some kind of internecine conflicts began, it was almost impossible to work at home and there was nowhere to work except in the common kitchen at night, and this was already developing into an existential drama. And Father Kirill told me: “The Lord loves you - He gives you His sorrows! He had “no place to lay his head”! Rejoice! And I was really happy.

Prophecies were also heard from the lips of Father Kirill. Often, when he was asked a question about how to arrange his life with dignity, he gave his blessing to buy a village house with a stove, a well and a piece of land, as if pushing him to the idea that the time would come when only there it would be possible to warm up and feed himself .

Once, when my husband not only was not yet a priest, but did not even dream or think about it, he predicted his future path. It happened like this: my husband came to the Lavra and confessed to Father Kirill at the altar, kneeling near the altar. Rising from his knees, he swayed and touched the altar. Father Kirill sadly shook his head and remarked: “What are you doing? You’re not a priest yet!” These words were etched in my memory and turned out to be an omen.

I felt sorry for those who asked for the blessing of Father Kirill, received it and acted contrary... This also happened. A person close to me asked me whether to have surgery or if it will go away on its own. Father Kirill became worried and said firmly: do it. And he got scared: well, the old man - he’s not a doctor, he doesn’t understand medicine, besides, it’s winter, it’s better to wait for the warm season, he’ll have time later, and so on. But “it didn’t happen in time.”

Father Kirill really asked one beautiful girl (!) not to marry the one she wanted at that moment... She cried. The elder consoled, but was firm: no, no! She still did it her way - and the young husband turned out to be an experienced drug addict. All this turned into disaster and suffering.

And there were other cases. His mother’s son was taken into the army and sent to Afghanistan. She prayed for him day and night, shed tears, came to Father Kirill at the Lavra, and asked for holy prayers. He said that he would pray that her son would return alive, unharmed, just let him come to him after that and thank the Lord. The son actually returned home, which in itself was a miracle: all his comrades in arms were killed, and he was the only one who escaped from the inferno. His mother listened and agreed that the Lord had saved him. He was going to go to Father Kirill in the Lavra, but somehow life got in the way: troubles, bustle, earnings. I still couldn’t find the time for this.

And he worked as a taxi driver. And then one day, at my mother’s request, I needed to transport an old miraculous icon from home to the dacha. I didn’t have a car then, and so I wrapped the icon in a towel, went out into the street with it and began to hail a taxi. And then this taxi driver stops (later he himself said: “I don’t know why I took you, my working day was already over, I was going to the park”), agrees to drive through all of Moscow and through traffic jams to Peredelkino, and while we are driving , he, seeing that I have an icon under my towel, tells me this story: they say, my mother prays and knows the elders. In short, when we approach the dacha, it turns out that the elder who called him to his place after Afghanistan is Father Kirill. And I know that Father Kirill is receiving believers in Peredelkino at this very time, in the baptismal sanctuary of the Church of the Transfiguration of the Lord.

- Well, now you’ll finally get to him! – I told him. “That’s why, it turns out, you took me across the whole city to the dacha, despite the fact that, according to common sense, there was no need for you.”

And this taxi driver, having dropped me off, rushed downhill towards the temple.

But more secret things happened related to Father Kirill. There were difficult and tempting times, clouds were gathering on the spiritual horizon - and Father Kirill helped to disperse them. There were spiritual attacks, intrigues... He prayed, and everything dissipated.

Once I came to see him at the Lavra during a period of complete physical exhaustion - I overworked, fasted, fell into severe insomnia: many questions, problems, dead-end situations... Father Kirill listened to me, sighed sympathetically: “You need peace!” I left him, painfully wondering where to get him, who would give me this peace in my circumstances? I went into Trinity Church, and there the priest had just finished the akathist and was reading the Gospel.

I stopped and heard: “Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you, and learn from Me: for I am meek and lowly in heart; and you will find peace to your souls." And he somehow pulled out this word “peace”, as if he breathed it into me. “Meek and lowly in heart.”

And when I stood yesterday in Father Kirill’s cell, saying goodbye to him, and when I came to him on many days of my life, I recognized exactly this peace, this peace and this grace, testifying that the yoke of Christ is truly good, and His burden is easily. This revelation was always present near and around the elder, revealing the fruit of a humble and meek heart that exudes love and into which he accepted everyone.

And this soft hand of his, the hand of a kind man, comforting and blessing, now lying motionless on top of the blanket, now seems to only partly belong to this world. And dear Father Kirill himself, while his body remained on his bed of illness, his spirit remained somewhere where the righteous shine like lamps. And during his lifetime he illuminated us with this light, dispelling darkness and darkness.

In the blessed dormition, grant eternal peace, Lord, to the newly departed Archimandrite Kirill and create for him eternal memory!

Yesterday, February 20, Archimandrite Kirill (Pavlov) died at the age of 98. This was reported on the website "Orthodoxy and the World" with reference to the social network of nun Theodora (Lapkovskaya), an employee of the Department for External Church Relations of the Russian Orthodox Church.

***Archimandrite Kirill (in the world Ivan Dmitrievich Pavlov) was born on September 8, 1919 in the village of Makovskie Vyselki into a devout peasant family. From the age of 12 he lived with an unbelieving brother, and under the influence of his environment he left religion. After graduating from college, he worked as a technologist at a metallurgical plant. After the war, having taken monastic vows, every year Fr. During the Easter period, Kirill visited his native village and the village of Makovo, 12 km from Mikhailov, where his parents, brother and sisters are buried. In the village he helped restore the bell tower and the temple, which had not been closed throughout Soviet history.

He was drafted into the Red Army and served in the Far East. Participant of the Great Patriotic War with the rank of lieutenant, participated in the defense of Stalingrad (commanded a platoon), in battles near Lake Balaton in Hungary, ended the war in Austria. Demobilized in 1946.

During the war, Ivan Pavlov turned to faith. He recalled that while on guard duty in the destroyed Stalingrad in April 1943, he found the Gospel among the ruins of a house.

“I began to read it and felt something so dear to my soul. This was the Gospel. I found such a treasure for myself, such a consolation!.. I collected all the leaves together - the book was broken, and that Gospel remained with me all the time. Before this there was such confusion: why the war? Why are we fighting? There was a lot of incomprehensible things, because there was complete atheism in the country, lies, you won’t know the truth... I walked with the Gospel and was not afraid. Never. It was such inspiration! The Lord was simply next to me, and I was not afraid of anything” (Archimandrite Kirill).

Immediately after the army I entered the seminary: “In 1946, I was demobilized from Hungary. I arrived in Moscow and asked at the Yelokhovsky Cathedral: do we have any spiritual institution? “There is,” they say, “a theological seminary has been opened in the Novodevichy Convent.” I went there straight in military uniform. I remember that the vice-rector, Father Sergius Savinskikh, warmly welcomed me and gave me a test program.” After graduating from the Moscow Theological Seminary, he entered the Moscow Theological Academy, from which he graduated in 1954.

On August 25, 1954, he was tonsured a monk at the Trinity-Sergius Lavra. At first he was a sexton. In 1970 he became treasurer, and since 1965 - confessor of the monastic brethren. He was elevated to the rank of archimandrite.

Appointed confessor of Patriarch Alexy II, in connection with this he moved to Peredelkino (where the Patriarchal residence is located), continuing to spiritually care for the monks of the Lavra. Awarded the church orders of St. Sergius of Radonezh and St. Prince Vladimir. Author of numerous sermons and teachings. Mentor of young monks who took monastic vows at the Lavra. He wrote a lot in the epistolary genre; every year Archimandrite Kirill sent up to 5,000 letters with congratulations, instructions and edifications to bishops, priests, laity, spiritual children and even unfamiliar people.

In the mid-2000s, he suffered a stroke, which deprived the old man of the ability to move and communicate with the outside world.

PROPHECIES OF ARCHIMANDRITE KIRILL PAVLOV 1. Nun Taisia ​​(Zhitineva). “About our times, Father Kirill always said: “Pray, don’t judge anyone, and keep your ears open.” Somehow they began to talk about the second coming. I say to Father Kirill: “How scary it is to live until the coming of the Antichrist... Father, friend, confidently and answers me: “You will live to see the second coming.” Mother Maria, she is eight years older than me, also asks: “Father, will I live?” To which Father answered her: “Yes, if you don’t get sick.” This conversation was in 70s. We took it as a joke then. What a year it is now! And I’m 75 years old! So, it’s soon already?..” 2. L.P. “When I studied at a Soviet university, we taught issues of electronic technology. Even in those days, scientists and teachers who dealt with this topic told us during the training process that the development of this area would not give a person anything good. Our teacher, who stood at the origins of these developments, he said that the time will come and this science will develop. It will not bring any benefit to people, but will make them dependent on this technology. They will lose a lot from it. This is a terrible process, it will be the enslavement of people. It started with pension cards. "One man brought Father Kirill a pension card. Father Kirill said that there were no chips in it yet, but soon there would be documents that would contain them. And it would be much worse." 3. Nun Veronica. “We also talked about the future, persecution. I don’t remember how our conversation came to this, but he started talking about the “last train.” He said: “Mother, don’t be afraid of anything. Try to get on this “last train.” (Having in I mean that "last train" about which the elders wrote). Don't back down from anything. Be on that train, be on the first train! To clarify whether I understand it correctly, I ask: - Father, how do you understand about this "train" "? In a figurative or literal sense? He says: - The Holy Fathers said, in a very literal sense, understand. - Will they be taken somewhere on it? - Yes. And don’t be afraid to be in it." 4. Nun Veronica. “I often remember the words of Father Kirill about the “last train”: “If you don’t get on the first train, cling to the second. Run after the tail of the last train. Cling to it. I’m careful not to miss them.” 5. Nun Theophylact. “I cry for the Urals who remained in those parts, I sob bitterly. Father Kirill consoles: “Mother, don’t cry, the Urals will stand.” “Father, there are still Chinese there.” “And the Urals will give them a boot. The Germans did not reach the Urals, and the Chinese will get . " 6. Nun Theophylact. "Father prepared us for the coming sorrows. - Accept everything as if from the hand of God. With humility, with meekness. Never grumble. Courageously, even when you lack strength, you cannot control your will. When they forcefully put an electronic chip on you. Then a person will not be able to control his own will, stop his words and actions, and sin. Even then, “I can’t do it,” pray! And then the Lord will be able to help you, like the first Christians, the first martyrs. Father Kirill said to always have your backpack packed. - We must stand for the truth to the end, and not be afraid. Take care of your sisters. who will follow you. We must stand for Christ to the end!" 7. Nun Theophylact. "- Father, but Father Nikolai said that Russia will rise again and flourish, and that the Tsar is coming? - This is not about you. - What do I need? Will there be a prison? - You should prepare for another cross, this does not concern you. Who knows, maybe the Lord will soon take someone away, but you are not ready, for the most important thing. You still take this path, bear the cross of trials and suffering. What will the Lord give you, if martyrdom, then martyrdom! We don’t swear off scrip or prison, but we must be ready for anything. And never lose heart, what joy we have been given! We walk with Christ and will rise with Him!" 8. Nun Theophylact. "- Will we have a King? - I pester Father with my questions. He answered not straight away, with sadness: “I doubt that there will be a Tsar.” There have been so many generations without God." 9. Nun Theophylact. "I am persistent and ask: - Father, but Father Nikolai said about the dawn for Russia that the people will still have time for repentance. Father Kirill didn’t answer right away either, he paused, then said: “We’re not talking about you.” You prepare your sisters for martyrdom. There is no need to stockpile supplies. Divine, spiritual reserves must be made. When they drive you, don’t be afraid of Siberia - the gardens will bloom there... Russia will be saved. The Church will be alive until the end of time!" 10. Nun Theophylact. "For the future, Father instructed like this: - The main thing is that the Holy Spirit indwells your heart, so that you abide with Him. And the Spirit will reveal to you where to be, what kind of people will be around you, and through whom you can receive the Sacrament of Communion and confession. Such an opportunity will be very rare. Then each person will fear the other and will be saved secretly. Not everyone will know these people, i.e. Near such rare elders, from whom one can receive Communion, not everyone will know them. Those. you need to prepare your heart so that the Holy Spirit dwells there, through whom you can learn how to pray, so that unceasing prayer, despite great adversity, remains in your heart. Then only you will have salvation." 11. Lyudmila A. "It sometimes happened in life that I got involved somewhere and did not understand anything. There was no knowledge. Father, with pity, told me: - Lyudmila, read more. - I find it difficult to read theological books. It’s easier for me to ask you, and you will explain everything to me. - Study, Lyudmila. There will be times when there will be no one to ask and no one to rely on. You'll have to think for yourself." 12. Lyudmila A. "I asked Father Kirill about the new war. He replied: “They can start a war any time they want, they have everything in their hands for this. There will be famine. People, especially those with children, need to make a small supply of food. The most important thing is that they need to prepare spiritual bins now.” 13. Lyudmila A. “And about the predictions of the elders, the dispatch of the “echelons”, she asked that at least you need to jump into the last carriage. Father Kirill said that you need to keep this in mind. Don’t blink, don’t be faint-hearted, have time to get there.” 14. Alexander Zhirov. "I confessed. I asked the question that had been tormenting me about passports. Father Kirill frowned a little and was silent. Then he put his hand on my head. And then he remained silent, said nothing. I reminded him of my question: “Father, what should I do with my passport? Can I have a new one?” Father Kirill looked at me carefully, and then said: “What do you think?” I answer: “Father, my heart tells me that I shouldn’t take all these electronic passports and cards. It’s all said in the Apocalypse.” He again looked at me searchingly. He put his hand on my shoulder and said: “If you, Alexander, can do it with the old passport, then it’s better to stay.” That is, he did not strictly say: accept or not accept. He determined the decision on my free will. And rightly so. . So stronger! There will be no one to blame for any problems or disappointments. I made up my mind myself." 15. Alexander Zhirov. “I asked him many more questions. ... He suddenly took my hand, squeezed it tightly and, lifting me up, turned me towards the iconostasis. Then he led me to the Altar and said with a kind smile: “Yes, Alexander, get ready for the tests.” Father, to which ones?" He was silent for a long time, bowing his head, and then answered: “We will live to see the Antichrist.” I was very surprised at this answer, and carefully asked him: “How are we? Who are we?” I sinfully think, well, okay, I - young, and Father is old. He’s already over eighty. And will he live? So close, that means he’s our destroyer?!.. Father Kirill, as if reading my thoughts, confirmed: “We will all live to see the Antichrist.” Time passes very quickly, and we must pass tests if we want to meet the Lord with dignity. These trials will be allowed to us by God. He smiled after these words of his, crossed me and again reminded me that I must be guided in everything as my heart prompts." 16. Larisa Prikhodko. "In our house there is an icon of the Royal Martyrs... This was just on the eve of the canonization of the Royal Martyrs martyrs. We thought, maybe this means that Russia will be reborn? We asked Father about this: - Father, maybe Russia will rise up after all? Father Kirill was then very concerned and upset about the impending processes of globalization. He sadly answered: “God willing!” Although there is little hope for revival now..." 17. Georgy. "Acquaintances wanted to sell the house in Semkhoz and buy a three-room apartment in Moscow. They had three children. They came to Father Kirill, and he told them. “But what about when difficulties begin? There will be difficulties with food. Electricity, gas, heating will begin to work intermittently... Where will you be? How will you be able to live? You have very small children. There is no need to sell. You must have a house with land " ... For their edification, Father said that such a difficult time would come that they would have to wait it out. For this, it is advisable for everyone to have a house outside the city." 18. Georgy. "Thanks to Father Kirill, the whole history of Russia became clear to me. Much became clearer. Father Kirill does not forget to remind at the end of almost every sermon: “These are the last times. Be sober, watch yourselves... For you are walking dangerously.” Elder Kirill (Pavlov). “Now it is necessary for believers to set themselves up and prepare themselves for all kinds of trials and tribulations . This is where it goes. We must not panic, not become discouraged, and not despair. And if the Lord allows some trials, you need to be worthy of the Kingdom of Heaven without complaint, with joy and hope, with peace of mind." From the book Elder Archimandrite Kirill Pavlov

Kirill Sergeevich Stolyarov. Born on January 28, 1937 in Moscow - died on October 11, 2012 in Moscow. Soviet and Russian theater and film actor, screenwriter, TV presenter. Honored Artist of the Russian Federation.

Since 1991, he began working on television, where, as an author and presenter, he prepared a series of programs “Actors and Fates” about outstanding artists of Russian cinema, and also hosted the “Past” column about the best historical films, the series of programs “St. Andrew’s Flag”, dedicated to the 300th -anniversary of the Russian fleet, the “New Illusion” program.

Kirill Stolyarov was an adviser to the head of the Federal Television and Radio Service of Russia, president of the Sergei Stolyarov Cultural and Educational Foundation. The fund helps retired actors. The Foundation created an extensive program for the revival of monuments of Russian literature, within the framework of which the rarest and most valuable rare publications from the library of the royal family were restored and republished. The objective of the project was to popularize and make these invaluable publications available to bibliophiles, researchers and interested readers in the country's libraries. Many miniatures from the Front and Chronicle Life of St. Sergius, the Wonderworker of Radonezh, from an almost lost book have been restored. Audio versions of priceless books, a series of educational television programs and radio programs were also released. A program for the revival of Russian culture for schoolchildren was created, within the framework of which sets of classic Russian films of the highest artistic and cultural quality were distributed to educational institutions, replaced by illiterate foreign mass production.

Death of Kirill Stolyarov

Kirill Stolyarov died on October 11, 2012 in Moscow. He suffered from a fatal illness and in recent years he practically did not leave the house - for the last eight years the actor lived with a malignant tumor (lymphosarcoma).

The artist died in the arms of his wife and son. His son Sergei Stolyarov said: “The pain was very strong. This is not the case when they say he died quietly. He suffered. I do not understand why? Why does he need this?

He was buried at the Vagankovskoye cemetery in Moscow.

Funeral of Kirill Stolyarov

Personal life of Kirill Stolyarov:

Wife - actress.

The marriage produced a son, Sergei, and a daughter, Ekaterina.

The son played Artem Shefer in “Tomorrow there was a war”, a famous TV presenter in the 1990s, and later the editor-in-chief of the Shkolnik-TV television company.

The family lived in a 4-room apartment on Kutuzovsky Prospekt.

Filmography of Kirill Stolyarov:

1947 - Blue Roads - student in class (uncredited)
1955, 1956 - The Mystery of Two Oceans - episode (uncredited)
1956 - The heart beats again... - Pavel Petrovich Balashov, soldier with pneumonia
1957 - The Tale of First Love - Mitya Borodin
1958 - Man to Man (Man's Gift to Men) - presenter
1959 - Peers - Yurochka
1960 - Russian souvenir - episode (uncredited)
1960 - The last salvos - Jiri, Czech
1960 - They were nineteen... - Anatoly Beskov
1961 - Life at the beginning - Kolya Lebedev, Lelya’s classmate
1963 - Secretary of the regional committee - Vitaly Andreevch Ptushkov, poet
1964 - Ask your heart - Fedor Korzhavin
1965 - Long live the Republic! (Ať žije republika) - Sasha (uncredited)
1966 - No and Yes
1967 - The Mysterious Monk - Ryzhov
1968 - Our home on earth
1970 - Marine Character - Lieutenant, Marine
1970 - When the fog lifts - Genka Dyakonov
1972 - Pyotr Ryabinkin - Lieutenant Chernykh, platoon commander of the Siberian Division
1972 - ... And the dawns here are quiet - Sergei Stolyarov
1976 - Obelisk - German officer
1976 - Blue Portrait - Valentin, Tanya's father
1977 - Andrey Kolobov (film-play) - Samarin
1978 - Farewell Mazurka (White Mazurka / Biały mazur) - Pyotr Bardovsky
1980 - Just like us! - Dichenko
1980 - Corps of General Shubnikov - adjutant
1981 - Portrait of the artist’s wife - Nikolai Petrovich
1981 - Life Line - Polynov
1986 - Lynx returns - poacher
1991 - Blood for Blood - Afanasyev
1992 - Black Square - Abrikosov
1996 - To be remembered. Stanislav Khitrov (documentary)
1997 - To be remembered. Mikaela Drozdovskaya (documentary)
1997 - To be remembered. Sergey Stolyarov (documentary)
2001 - To be remembered. Victor Avdyushko (documentary)
2001 - To be remembered. Boris Andreev (documentary)
2001 - To be remembered. Oleg Zhakov (documentary)
2005 - How idols left. Sergey Stolyarov (documentary)
2006 - How idols left. Valentina Karavaeva (documentary)
2006 - How idols left. Lyubov Orlova, Grigory Alexandrov (documentary)
2007 - The last role of Georgy Yumatov (documentary)
2008 - Mikhail Pugovkin. My life... (documentary)
2009 - Man in the frame. Andrey Fayt (documentary)


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