There was a widespread popular belief in Russia that a saint's remains were supposed to be
incorrupt, which was not the case with Seraphim as was officially ascertained by a commission that researched his grave in January 1903. This, however, did not deter canonisation, spearheaded by archimandrite
Seraphim Chichagov as well as popular veneration. At the end of January (O.S.) 1903, the
Most Holy Synod, having received approval from
Emperor Nicholas II, announced Seraphim's forthcoming glorification. In early July 1903, his relics were transferred from their original burial place to the church of Saints Zosimus and
Sabbatius. Nicholas II and
Tsarina Alexandra provided a new cypress coffin to receive the relics. The solemn canonisation (discovery of the relics) festivities took place in Sarov on 19 July (1 August) 1903 and were attended by the Tsar, his wife, his mother Empress
Maria Feodorovna, his sister-in-law Grand Duchess
Elizabeth Feodorovna and other senior members of the Imperial Family. On 18 July 1903, Metropolitan Anthony Vadkovsky of St. Petersburg officiated at the Last
Pannikhida (Memorial Service) in the Dormition Cathedral at Sarov, with the royal family in attendance. These would be the last prayers offered for Seraphim as a departed servant of God; from that time forward, prayers would instead be addressed to him as a saint. On 19 July, Seraphim's birthday, the late liturgy began at 8:00. At the
Little Entrance, twelve
archimandrites lifted the coffin from the middle of the church and carried it around the
holy table (altar), then placed it into a special shrine which had been constructed for it. The festivities at Sarov ended with the
consecration of the first two churches dedicated to Saint Seraphim. The first had been constructed over his
monastic cell in the wilderness of Sarov. The second church was consecrated on 22 July at the
Diveyevo convent. Following the
Bolshevik Revolution,
Soviet authorities severely persecuted religious groups. As part of their
persecution of Christians, they confiscated many relics of saints, including Seraphim. Furthermore, his biographer
Seraphim Chichagov, who came to become a
metropolitan, was arrested, sentenced to death and executed by firing squad in 1937 (and is also celebrated as a Russian Orthodox saint). In 1991, Seraphim's relics were rediscovered after being hidden in a
Soviet anti-religious museum for seventy years. This caused a sensation in post-Soviet Russia and throughout the Orthodox world. A
crucession (religious
procession) escorted the relics, on foot, all the way from Moscow to Diveyevo Convent, where they remain to this day. On 19 October 2016, some relics of Seraphim were launched into space aboard the
Soyuz MS-02. Seraphim is
remembered in the
Anglican Communion with a
commemoration on
2 January. In his book,
Crossing the Threshold of Hope,
Pope John Paul II referred to Seraphim of Sarov as a saint. On 15 September 2016, Metropolitan
Hilarion of Volokolamsk, head of the
Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate, presented to
Pope Francis a relic of Seraphim from
Patriarch Kirill of Moscow. The Pope kept the relic by his bedside and venerated it daily with a prayer for unity. "Acquire a peaceful spirit, and around you thousands will be saved. It is necessary that the Holy Spirit enter our heart. Everything good that we do, that we do for Christ, is given to us by the Holy Spirit, but prayer most of all, which is always available to us." ==Seraphim and Old Believers==