In 1957, Anatolii was sent by Archbishop Nestor to the
Monastery of the Holy Spirit in Vilnius. In 1958 he was tonsured by into monasticism, receiving the name Valentin, by archimandrite Seraphim (Smykov), who had been ordained to the priesthood by Metropolitan
Anthony (Khrapovitsky). In 1960, he was ordained a priest by Archbishop
Anthony (Romanovky) of
Stavropol and
Baku, who had Patriarch
Tikhon of Moscow among his consecrators to the episcopacy.
Hieromonk Valentine served throughout the Stavropol and Vladimir
dioceses, becoming the rector of the Orthodox Cathedral in
Makhachkala (a predominant Muslim area), where he revived
Orthodox Christianity, saving the Cathedral from closure. In 1970, he graduated from the historical faculty of
Dagestan University. He completed his theological studies at the Moscow Theological Seminary in 1973 and in 1979 he obtained a
Doctor of Theology degree from the
Moscow Theological Academy. In 1973, Archimandrite Valentine was appointed as the rector of the Church of Kazan in the city of
Suzdal. In 1977 the Communist authorities forced the community to leave the church building, which was situated on the city's trading square, and move to another, less prominent location, at the
Saint Constantine the Great Church, also in the city of
Suzdal. Since 1987
Archimandrite Valentin was persecuted by the Communist authorities and the leaders of the
Moscow Patriarchate primarily for his commentaries during a lecture tour in the
United States regarding the lack of religious freedom in the
USSR. On April 11, 1990, Archimandrite Valentin and his parish were received into the
Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, and on October 4 of the same year, he was appointed
exarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia within the territory of the
USSR. On February 10, 1991, by the decision of the
Synod of Bishops of the
Russian Church Abroad, Archimandrite Valentin was consecrated bishop of
Suzdal and
Vladimir in the church of St Job the Much-Suffering in
Brussels, Belgium. His consecrators were Archbishop Anthony (Bartoshevich) of
Geneva and Western Europe, Archbishop
Mark (Arndt) of
Berlin and
Germany, Bishop
Barnabas (Prokofiev) of
Cannes and Bishop
Gregory (Grabbe) of
Washington, all members of the episcopacy of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia. In 1992-1993 followed a conflict with the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR. In July 1993 he was retired by the Synod. In March 1994, Bishop Valentine founded the Higher Church Administration of the Russian Orthodox Church. In June 1995 the Temporary Higher Church Administration (THCA) of the Russian Church was re-established, Archbishop
Lazar (Zhurbenko) of
Tambov and
Odessa becoming its leader. At this time, by synodal decree of the THCA, Bishop Valentine was raised to the rank of
Archbishop. Two years later, in 1996, the Hierarchal
Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church was created with the official name of
Russian Orthodox Autonomous Church (ROAC). At the Synod meeting of March 15, 2001, it was decided that the primate of the
Russian Orthodox Autonomous Church should have the rank of
Metropolitan. Metropolitan Valentine Rusantsov died on January 16, 2012, in
Moscow, Russia. ==References==