Education and Monastic Beginnings
Vladimir Aleksandrovich Nikolsky completed his theological education at the Uglich Theological Seminary (1885), the Yaroslavl Theological Seminary (1891), and the Moscow Theological Academy (1895), where he earned a degree in theology.
He took monastic vows in 1893, receiving the name Andronik (Andronicus), and was ordained a deacon that same year.
Ecclesiastical Career
Andronicus held a succession of teaching and administrative posts in the Church. He served as assistant inspector at the Kutaisi Theological Seminary (1895–1896), inspector of the Ardoni Missionary Seminary (1896–1899), and then rector of the Ardoni Seminary (1899–1900), followed by rector of the Ufa Theological Seminary (1900–1906).
He was consecrated Bishop of Kioto (Kyoto) and vicar to Tokyo (1906–1907), during which his missionary work in the Osaka area is reported to have revitalized the local Orthodox community and significantly increased church attendance. He subsequently served as Bishop of Tikhvin (1908–1913) and Bishop of Omsk (1913–1914) before being appointed Archbishop of Perm and Kungur (1914–1918).
He held right-wing political views and served as honorary chairman of the Novgorod and Perm branches of the Union of the Russian People.
Martyrdom
Following the Bolshevik revolution, Andronicus resisted the confiscation of church property and boldly denounced the decrees issued against the Church. He was arrested on June 15–16, 1918, and executed on June 20, 1918, near Perm.
According to the accounts of his death, the authorities forced him to dig his own grave before shooting him, and he was buried alive.
Spiritual Teaching
Archbishop Andronicus authored spiritual teachings encouraging an Orthodox Christian life. One teaching holds that to live a godly life one must know the will of God and the teaching of Christ, which can be learned through the Holy Gospel.
He emphasized attendance at church on Sundays and feast days, the reading of the lives of the saints and spiritual books, and the cultivation of inner spiritual virtue alongside external church-building activity. He pointed to Saint Seraphim of Sarov as an example of spiritual attainment and exhorted believers to occupy themselves with the lives of the saints in order to learn good and not evil.
Glorification
Andronicus was glorified as a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in August 2000, taking his place among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia. His feast is commemorated on June 7/20, and he is also listed in the Orthodox liturgical calendar on June 4 (New Style).