Early years Stamatios Travassaros was born in 1900, in the Travassarianika settlement in
Kythira, in the
Ionian Islands region of Greece. He was the sixth child in his family, having four sisters and one brother. His family were shepherds and were
well-to-do. His childhood years were devoted austerely to traditional Orthodoxy. His mother Maria was Stamatios' first instructor and guide to the faith. She observed the
fasts of the Church strictly and handed down this practice to her children. By his own account he completed only the third grade of the public school in
Kythira, saying that he was particularly interested in the subjects of mathematics and religion. In class, the daily readings were taken from the
Psalter and the
Octoechos. However, despite his interest in learning, he was unable to finish public school due to his family's needs, thus becoming a
shepherd to tend to the flocks. In this way he spent his childhood years, in work, in prayer and with obedience. In 1922 at the difficult time of the
Asia Minor Catastrophe, Stamatios started his mandatory military service, being released from the army in 1925.
In Australia In 1926, he travelled to Australia, going first to
Sydney and then to
Melbourne. He worked as a waiter at various establishments to support his family, and lived in
lofts in order to save money. He did not spend his free time in frivolous pursuits, but rather preferred to read about the lives of the Saints and the ways which he could become closer to God. This focus, together with attending church services regularly as well as everyday prayer sustained Stamatios in his youth. He particularly enjoyed reading the
Evergetinos, the
Philokalia, and the life of Venerable John Kalibytes, the "hut-dweller" of Constantinople (
January 15), a saint who influenced him greatly. From this time onwards Stamatios increasingly devoted the direction of his life towards
monasticism. While living abroad in this distant land, he prayed to the Theotokos "Myrtidiotissa" of Kythira (
September 24) for support as his
intercessor. In 1927, he made the decision to pursue the monastic life, validating his long-held desire for monasticism. Originally he thought of becoming a monk at the Monastery of Panagia ""Myrtidiotissa" in
Kythira, however since this was an inactive monastery, he decided to go to
Mount Athos instead. He left Australia in complete secrecy, not even telling his family about his plans to go to Mount Athos.
In the Holy Land and Monastic Tonsure He reached
Port Said in Egypt on March 14, 1932, and departed on Saturday March 20 on the Italian passenger ship SS Tevere, reaching
Joppa on Sunday March 21, 1932. From there he took a train to
Jerusalem, beginning a
pilgrimage to visit all of the Holy Sites, beginning with the Monastery of Martha and Mary in Bethany, and ending at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Next he went to visit the
Patriarchate of Jerusalem. At the gates of the Patriarchate, he met a monk from
Saint Savvas Monastery who told him that the Igumen of Saint Savvas Lavra also originated from the island of
Kythira. The monk also suggested to Stamatios that he should remain there and become a monk of the
Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre as well. Stamatios later recorded in his journal that his trip from Jerusalem to Saint Savvas Lavra was momentous for him, and that he was overcome by the sanctity of his surroundings and of this monastery. This is when he decided that the purpose of his life was to remain there permanently. On April 21, 1932, he was received as a
novice-monk. After his first
all-night vigil, he returned to his cell to rest; however his
Elder Panteleimon (Tsampiras) followed him and suggested that he ought to be
praying not sleeping. In the following years, Stamatios was formed by obedience to God and by spiritual vigilance with
unceasing prayer. His exposure to the asceticism of the Sabbaite fathers, together with the austerity of the monastic life and the harshness of life in the
Judaean Desert, seasoned his character and confirmed his will to remain a monk. On April 27, 1932, he was tonsured a
rassophore monk by his Elder, Igumen Panteleimon (Tsampiras) at Saint Savvas Monastery. After his first full
confession to his Elder on April 26, 1933, he was given a
penitential canon to abstain from receiving
Holy Communion for three years, to pray his 300-knot
Prayer rope fifteen times daily, to make 200 full
prostrations, and to receive
Holy Water (of the
Great Blessing) on
Holy Thursday, on
Pascha, on the
Nativity, and on the Feast of the Holy Apostles. On March 18, 1934, he was tonsured to the
Small Schema at the
Monastery of Kastellion in the
Judaean Desert, which was the
metochion of the Saint Savvas Lavra, and he was given the name
Sophronios. At certain times when Elder Panteleimon was absent from the Kastellion, Fr. Sophronios could hear the voices of
demons calling out his name,
"Sophronios, Sophronios", or uttering
"Amen" at the end of the services, hoping to terrify the young monk. In these times he ran to the seat of his spiritual Elder, and prayed for deliverance from the demons. On March 13, 1939, he was tonsured a
Schemamonk in the Lavra of Saint Sabbas, on the Sunday of Saint
Mary of Egypt, by hieromonk Sabbas, and he was renamed
Serapheim. On December 15, 1947, following a resolution of the Holy Synod of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, he was ordained a
hierodeacon at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, by his beatitude Metropolitan Philotheos of
Eleutheropolis. On December 22, 1947, for the first time he served the
Divine Liturgy at St. Sabbas Monastery, with hieromonk Sabbas (Naipin). On February 10, 1949, following a resolution of the Holy Synod of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, he was appointed the warden and
oeconomus of the Lavra of Saint Savvas the Sanctfied, having been distinguished by his asceticism and
hesychasm. On September 19, 1949, he was ordained a
hieromonk at the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre, by his beatitude Archbishop Athenagoras of
Sebasteia, warden of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem. From that time until 1957 he continuously served at the Lavra of St. Sabbas. He was also raised to the office of
Archimandrite, receiving the
pectoral cross.
Igumen of Saint Savvas Lavra In 1957 after the death of his spiritual father Igumen Sabbas, Serapheim assumed the spiritual and administrative reins of the monastery, by the decision of the Holy Synod of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem. In 1965 the
translation of the Holy Relics of Venerable
Sabbas the Sanctified took place from the church of
Sant'Antonin, Venice, back to the
Holy Lavra of Saint Sabbas the Sanctified, preceded by consultations between
Pope Paul VI and Patriarch
Benedict I of Jerusalem. Saint Sabbas' relics had been stolen by the Crusaders of the
First Crusade, along with many other relics, and had been brought to Venice and placed in the Church of
Sant'Antonin. The delegation from the
Patriarchate of Jerusalem in 1965 included Archbishop
Vasilios of Jordan (later the Matropolitan of Caesarea), Archimandrite Theodosios, Igumen of Bethany, Archimandrite Seraphim Savvaitis, Igumen of the
Holy Lavra of Saint Sabbas the Sanctified, and Hierodeacon
Kyriakos (later the Metropolitan of Nazareth). On July 22, 1971, the erection of the Holy Sanctuary of the Shepherds' Field in
Beit Sahour began, through the resolution and the blessing of Patriarch
Benedict I of Jerusalem and the Holy Synod of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, who appointed Elder Serapheim Savvaitis for this initiative. It was completed and consecrated on July 27, 1989, with Patriarch
Diodoros I of Jerusalem presiding. He performed his duties as
abbot virtually until his death, being aided in his final years by Archimandrite Eudokimos, who eventually succeeded him as the Igumen. ==Death==