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John (Pommers) of Riga

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[[Image:John_of_RigaIcon_St_John_of_Riga.jpgJPG‎|frame|right|Icon of St. John of Riga]]
Our father among the [[saint]]s, the holy [[martyr]] '''John (Pommers) of Riga''', also '''Jānis (Pommers) of Riga''' (Latvian: Svētais svētmoceklis Rīgas Jānis; Russian: Святой Священномученик Иоанн Рижский) was Archbishop of Riga and Latvia (1921-1934).
==Life==
[[Image:Rits.JPG|frame|left|October 13, 1934 front page of Latvian newspaper "Rīts" (English: "Morning"), reporting the martyrdom of St. John of Riga]]
St. John was martyred brutally in the night of [[October 12]], 1934, at the archbishop's residence at Kish Lake (Latvian: Ķīšezers) outside Riga's city center. Although his assassins were never apprehended, they have widely been assumed to be agents of the Bolshevik regime in neighboring Soviet Russia, whose persecutions of the Orthodox Church the saint had already personally suffered earlier during a turbulent period of service as Archbishop of Penza and Saransk (1918-1921). Earlier still, he served as auxiliary Bishop of Minsk Slutsk (1911-1912) and in the Diocese of Minsk, Bishop of Priazovye and Taganrog (1913-1917)in the Diocese of Ekaterinoslavl (later renamed Dnipropetrovsk), and Bishop of Staritsa (1917-1918) in the Diocese of Tver.
In 1921, the year St. John returned to Latvia, St. [[Tikhon of Moscow]], then Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, granted independence to the Latvian Orthodox Church. Therefore St. John became the first Latvian [[archbishop]]. Jurisdictional difficulties followed his martyrdom, lasting from 1936 to 1940, and the suffering of the Latvian Orthodox Church increased again during Latvia's Soviet occupation, which lasted from the Second World War until 1991. In 1992, the Latvian Orthodox Church became semi-autonomous, with a high degree of independence but lacking autocephaly. Thus, the contemporary pastoral successor to St. John of Riga bears the title [[Metropolitan]].
Despite the terrible nature of the saint's martyrdom, during which he suffered both bullet wounds and burning, St. John's body was found intact in 2003.
 
==Links to Orthodoxy in America and China==
St. [[Tikhon of Moscow]], who as Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church blessed and strengthened St. John's service in Riga and Latvia, was one of the first Orthodox bishops to do major work in North America.
In addition to those [[relics]] of St. John which remain in the keeping of the Latvian Orthodox Church, relics of the saint were also laid in the [[altar]] of the Dormition church in Beijing, China, which was consecrated on [[October 13]], 2009 and is located on the grounds of the old [[Russian Orthodox Mission in China]].
==Homilies and Writings of St. John==
*[http://www.roca.org/OA/14/14b.htm "The Inevitability of Suffering" (English translation)]
*[http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/death/pray_reposed.aspx "Pray for the Reposed!" (English translation)]
*[http://www.holy-transfiguration.org/poetry/poetry_general.html#_23 "A New Place" (English translation)]
*[http://www.holy-transfiguration.org/ru/poetry_ru/poetry_general_ru.html#_23 "Новое Место" (Russian)]
 
==Predecessors and Successors in the Episcopate==
[[Image:St_John_of_Riga_(young).JPG‎|frame|right|St. John as a young bishop]]
{{start box}}
{{succession|
before=?Mikhail (Temnorusov)|title=Bishop of MinskSlutsk<br> auxiliary(vicar of the Diocese of Minsk)|
years= 1911-1912|
after=?Mitrofan (Krasnopolsky)}}
{{succession|
before=?Fiofilakt (Klementev)|title=Bishop of Priazovyeand Taganrog<br> (vicar of the Diocese of Ekaterinoslavl)|
years= 1913-1917|
after=?Arseny (Smolenets)}}{{succession|before=Arseny (Smolenets)|title=Bishop of Staritsa<br> (vicar of the Diocese of Tver)|years= 1917-1918|after=Serafim (Aleksandrov)}}
{{succession|
before=?Vladimir (Putyata)|
title=Archbishop of Penza and Saransk|
years=1918-1921|
after=?Boris (Lentovsky)}}
{{succession|
before=?John (Smirnovs)|
title=Archbishop of Riga and All Latvia|
years=1921-1934|
after=?Augustine (Petersons)}}{{end box}}
==Sources==
Keller, Ludmilla (translated by Fr. German Ciuba), "The Life and Passion of Saint John (Pommer) Archbishop of Riga and Latvia," The St. [[John of Kronstadt]] Press, 1997; ISBN 0-912927-81-X
*[http://www.orthodox.net/russiannm/john-archbishop-and-hieromartyr-of-riga.html John Archbishop and Hieromartyr of Riga]
*[http://www.trueorthodoxy.info/los_stjohn_riga.shtml St . John of Riga]*[http://www.kra.lv/Latviski/Raksti/Sv_R-Janis.pdf "St. John of Riga and His Icon," article (in Latvian) published by the Latvian Christian Academy]*[http://www.jmp.ru/jmp/06/07-06/11.htm "Holy Martyr John (Pommers), Archbishop of Riga and Latvia," article (in Russian) and photographs published by Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate]
==External links==
*[http://www.periodika.lv/Repository/getimage.dll?path=JAZ/1936/10/12/3/Img/Pg003_80.png E-archival page of Latvian newspaper "Jaunākās Ziņas," October 12, 1936]
[[Category: Saints]]
[[Category: Bishops]]
[[Category: Saints20th-century bishops]]
[[Category: Bishops of Riga]]
[[Category: Bishops of Minsk]]
[[Category: Bishops of Priazovye]]
[[Category: Bishops of Penza and Saransk]]
[[Category:20th-century saints]]

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