Fool-for-Christ 17th century

Blessed Andrew of Totma the Fool-for-Christ

1638–1673

Also known as Andrew of Totma

A Russian holy fool who left the world as a young man and lived in voluntary poverty, known for spiritual endurance and hidden holiness.

Feast Day
October 10
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Life

Blessed Andrew of Totma was a seventeenth-century Russian fool-for-Christ (yurodivy), born in 1638 in the village of Ust-Totma (also given as Ust-Tolshma) in the region of Totma, on the banks of the River Sukhona. He was named after the martyr Saint Andrew Stratelates.

While still young, he left the world to pursue an ascetic and wayfaring life. Having received the blessing of Stephen, igumen of the Resurrection Monastery in Galich, he embraced the demanding vocation of foolishness for Christ, marked by voluntary poverty, extreme self-denial, and hidden holiness.

He went barefoot in both winter and summer, wore tattered clothing, and sustained himself on bread and water in quantities barely sufficient to keep him alive, supporting himself by begging. Sources record that he was granted the gift of wonderworking, and that miracles continued at his grave after his repose in 1673.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 1638 Birth Born in the village of Ust-Totma (Ust-Tolshma) in the Totma region, and named after Saint Andrew Stratelates.
  2. c. 1648 Orphaned and leaves the world Orphaned as a child (by one account around age ten), he departs for solitary places to pursue a spiritual life.
  3. mid-17th century Galich and the call to foolishness for Christ Enters the Resurrection Monastery in Galich, where the igumen Stephen blesses and encourages him toward the vocation of foolishness for Christ.
  4. after his elder's death Settles at Totma Following Stephen's death, he settles at the Church of the Resurrection of Christ in Totma, living in poverty, prayer, and begging.
  5. 1673 Repose Having foreknown the time of his death, he confesses, receives the Holy Mysteries, and peacefully reposes in the Lord. Miracles are later reported at his grave.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Vocation

According to the accounts of his life, Andrew was orphaned as a child—by one account around the age of ten. The synaxarion relates that, in the spirit of the Gospel call to leave family and possessions, he departed for solitary places; when he returned, his parents had died.

He left his home region and entered the Resurrection Monastery in Galich. There the igumen Stephen recognized his spiritual gifts and encouraged him toward the vocation of foolishness for Christ—a form of radical Christian witness involving deliberate eccentricity undertaken as spiritual discipline.

Andrew subsequently left the monastery to lead a wandering life, though he often returned to confess to his elder. After Stephen's death he settled at the Church of the Resurrection of Christ in the city of Totma, where he continued in prayer, poverty, and begging.

Miracles and Traditions

Historically Documented: Sources record that, through his ascetic labors, Blessed Andrew received the gift of wonderworking, and that many miracles were witnessed at his grave at the Church of the Resurrection of Christ in Totma after his repose.

Traditional Accounts: The synaxarion relates that a blind man named Azhibokai sought healing from Andrew, but Andrew fled from him; the man then washed his eyes with snow from the place where the saint had stood and received his sight. It is also related that the time of his death was revealed to Andrew beforehand, so that he made his confession and received the Holy Mysteries before peacefully reposing in 1673.

Relics & Shrines

Blessed Andrew was buried at the Church of the Resurrection of Christ in the city of Totma, on the banks of the River Sukhona. A bell-tower church dedicated to Saint Andrew Stratelates—the saint after whom he was named—was erected above his grave, which became a site of veneration where many miracles were reported.

Veneration

Andrew of Totma is venerated as a blessed fool-for-Christ within the Russian Orthodox tradition. His veneration appears to be of long standing; the available sources do not specify a formal synodal act of glorification or its date, treating him as a recognized blessed without naming a particular canonization event.

His feast day is celebrated on October 10.

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