Fool-for-Christ 19th century

Blessed Pelagia Paraskeva, and Maria of Diveyevo

19th–20th centuries (Pelagia +1884, Paraskeva +1915, Maria +1931)

Also known as Pelagia · Paraskeva · Maria

Three blessed women of Diveyevo who embraced the path of holy foolishness for Christ.

Feast Day
August 26
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy and Blessed Mothers Pelagia, Paraskeva, and Maria, Fools-for-Christ of Diveyevo

Life

Blessed Pelagia, Paraskeva, and Maria of Diveyevo were three women associated with the Seraphim-Diveyevo Convent in the Nizhny Novgorod region who pursued the ascetic path of foolishness for the sake of Christ. They are commemorated together as a Synaxis on August 26, while each is also remembered on her own feast day.

The three represent a continuous succession of holy foolishness at Diveyevo extending from the mid-19th century through 1931: Pelagia Ivanovna Serebrennikova (reposed 1884), Paraskeva (Pasha) Ivanovna (reposed 1915), and Maria Zakharovna Fedina (reposed 1931). Paraskeva acknowledged Maria as her spiritual successor before her own repose, linking the second and third in a direct mentorship.

Their lives are recorded chiefly in the synaxarion and in the hagiographic tradition of the Diveyevo community; no formal council act of glorification is named in the sources consulted.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 1884 Repose of Blessed Pelagia Ivanovna Pelagia Ivanovna Serebrennikova, the first of the three blessed fools-for-Christ of Diveyevo, reposed; her individual feast is January 30.
  2. 1915 Repose of Blessed Paraskeva (Pasha) Ivanovna Paraskeva reposed after acknowledging Maria Ivanovna as her spiritual successor; her individual feast is September 22.
  3. 1927 Closure of the Diveyevo Monastery Following the monastery's closure, Maria Zakharovna Fedina lived in various locations.
  4. August 26 / September 8, 1931 Repose of Blessed Maria Zakharovna Maria reposed at Cherevatovo during a severe storm; her remains were later translated to Diveyevo. Her feast is August 26, the shared Synaxis date.

Contributions & Legacy

5 contributions Read Hide

Blessed Pelagia Ivanovna Serebrennikova

Pelagia Ivanovna Serebrennikova was born in Arzamas to parents Ivan and Parasceva and had two brothers, Andrew and John. After her father's death, her mother remarried a strict man named Alexei. As a child Pelagia endured a severe illness that left her bedridden for a long period.

Following her recovery her behavior changed markedly. By tradition she would go out into the garden in the depth of winter, lift up her skirt in public, stand on one leg and spin about, and cry out for no apparent reason. From childhood she was nicknamed 'fool' for this conduct, until her mother came to understand that she was gifted with the grace of foolishness for the sake of Christ. She was connected to the Diveyevo Monastery and reposed in 1884. Her individual feast is kept on January 30.

Blessed Paraskeva (Pasha) Ivanovna

Paraskeva (called Pasha) Ivanovna was born Irina into a peasant family in Tambov province. She lived fifteen years with her husband without bearing children. After his death she made a pilgrimage to Kiev, where she resolved to devote her life to God.

Expelled by landowners, she lived homeless in her native village for five years before being secretly tonsured with the name Paraskeva in Kiev. She practiced the ascesis of foolishness for Christ first at Sarov and afterward at Diveyevo. Before her repose she acknowledged Maria Ivanovna as her spiritual successor, saying that 'another is already weaving.' She reposed in 1915, and her individual feast is kept on September 22.

Blessed Maria Zakharovna Fedina

Maria Zakharovna Fedina was born in the village of Goletovka, Tambov Province. Her parents, Zachariah and Pelagia Fedina, both died before she had reached the age of thirteen. From childhood she was inclined to the spiritual life: she went often to church, was quiet and kept to herself, did not play with others, was never frivolous, and gave no attention to outward appearance.

She wandered as a homeless ascetic between Sarov, Diveyevo, and Ardatov before settling permanently at the Seraphim-Diveyevo Convent. During roughly eight years in a cold, damp monastery cell she developed severe rheumatism and lost the use of her legs; she also survived a severe scalding from boiling water and a broken hand that healed improperly. When asked about her patronymic she explained, 'All of us blessed ones are Ivanovnas, from St. John the Forerunner.'

After the closure of the monastery in 1927 she lived in various places. She reposed on August 26 / September 8, 1931, in Cherevatovo during a severe storm, and her remains were later translated to the Diveyevo Monastery. Her feast is kept on August 26.

Miracles & Traditions

Historically Documented: The synaxarion and hagiographic tradition record that Maria Zakharovna possessed gifts of clairvoyance and healing — foretelling the future, exposing hidden sins, and healing ailments including eye problems and eczema through the use of lampada oil.

Traditional Accounts: The accounts of all three women emphasize the manner of their foolishness for Christ — Pelagia's unusual public conduct from childhood and Paraskeva's homeless wandering and secret tonsure — preserved within the devotional memory of the Diveyevo community.

Relics & Shrines

The remains of Maria Zakharovna Fedina were translated to the Seraphim-Diveyevo Convent after her repose. The three blessed women are venerated together at Diveyevo, where their succession of foolishness for Christ is commemorated.

Notes

Glorified among the Diveyevo saints; named group kept as one row.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints