Today we commemorate the Tsar-Martyr Lazar and the Battle of Kosovo, which spared Europe from destruction.
On June 28, 1389, the powerful Ottoman Empire faced off against a much smaller enemy, yet the Ottoman Empire lost its sultan and nearly its entire army in the battle that ensued. The Ottoman Turks were forced to retreat, and their advance into Europe was effectively stopped for decades. The outcome of the Battle of Kosovo was a stalemate between the Serbs and the Turks, that was finally broken by the Turks some seven decades later, in 1459. This seventy-year-long stalemate allowed European nations to prepare for the impending threat of Ottoman expansion and the end-result was victory of Christian Europe against the Turkish siege of Vienna. It is not an exaggeration to say the sacrifice of Tsar-Martyr Lazar saved Europe.
Life of the Saint
The holy, glorious and right-victorious Greatmartyr Lazar, Prince of Serbia was one of the Serbian noblemen who ruled the Serbian empire after the death of Emperor Dušan. After death of Emperor St. Uroš V, Lazar was de facto ruler of Serbia. He died for Christ’s name on June 15, 1389. His feast day is June 15/June 28.
Lazar was born in Prilepac, which is near Novo Brdo, in 1329, the son of the imperial chancellor Pribac Hrebeljanović. He was educated at Emperor Dušan’s court in Prizren. He was later granted the high title knez (“prince” in Serbian) by Dušan’s successor St. Emperor Stefan Uroš V. Despite his imperial title, Uroš was a weak and ineffectual leader, allowing local nobles to gain power and influence at the expense of the central authority. Lazar remained a loyal vassal to Stefan Uros V.
After the death of the emperor, Lazar became a central figure in Serbia. He called, together with his son-in-law Đurađ Stracimirović, a synod that elected a new patriarch, Saint Ephraem. Lazar sent a delegation to Constantinople with the monk Isaiah to implore the patriarch to heal the Serbian-Constantinople Schism of 1352. In 1375, full communion between Peć and Constantinople was re-established in the Holy Archangels Monastery on the grave of Emperor Dušan.
St. Lazar restored the monasteries of Hilandar on Mount Athos and Gornjak. He built Ravanica and Lazarica in Kruševac and was a benefactor of the Russian monastery of St. Panteleimon on Mt. Athos, as well as many other churches and monasteries.
Lazar fought against the Turkish powers on several occasions in order to protect his people. Finally, he fought the Turkish Emperor Amurad and lost on the Field of Blackbirds [Kosovo Polje] on June 15, 1389. Afterwards he was beheaded.
Lazar, having been visited by an angel of God on the night before the battle, was offered a choice between an earthly or a Heavenly kingdom – an earthly victory or defeat in the coming Battle of Kosovo. Lazar opted for the heavenly kingdom, which will last forever, saying, “Perishable is an earthly kingdom, but the Kingdom of Heaven is eternal!” (Serbian: “Земаљско је за малена царство, а Небеско увијек и довијека!”) Before he perished on the battlefield, he encouraged his soldiers,. “We die with Christ, to live forever!” Soon after his death, the Church glorified Tsar Lazar among the saints.
His body was interred in Ravanica, in his memorial church near Ćuprija, and later was translated to Sisatovac in Srem. From there, during World War II, his body was translated to Belgrade and placed in the Cathedral Church of the Holy Archangel Michael. In 1989, on the occasion of the six-hundredth anniversary of his martyrdom, St. Lazar’s relics were again translated to the Monastery of Ravanica in Ćuprija, in central Serbia. It rests there today incorrupt and extends comfort and healing to all those who turn to him with prayer.
Holy Martyr Lazar, pray to God for us!