I had never heard of Saint Nektarios until I heard a talk by Fr. Josiah Trenham who remarked after reading it that he (Fr Josiah) was not a Christian. By this, he meant that he did not measure up to St. Nektarios.
St. Nektarios had a meteoric rise from humble beginnings to become a Bishop in Alexandria. However, jealous hierarchs conspired against him, turning the Patriarch of Alexandria's favor from him. He was removed from his position and sent into exile. All this was done in violation of the canons of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Yet St. Nektarios did not complain or try to justify himself, leaving it all in the hands of God. Instead, he sailed to Greece and accepted a humble posting. Yet the spurious charges followed him, and church politics conspired against him. Yet St. Nektarios did not complain or try to justify himself, leaving it all in the hands of God. He served the people faithfully and well and was eventually made the dean of a school for priests. Yet even there he was despised and rejected by many, but his love and self-sacrifice won him the love of the students, the staff, and the ordinary people.
Eventually, he founded a women's monastery, with the approval of the local bishop and received the metropolitan's blessing. He retired after thirty years to be a spiritual father to the nuns, his spiritual children. Yet even here, at the end of his life, scurrilous charges were brought against him, and the local bishop and metropolitan withdrew their support. Charges were brought to the authorities that the monastery was his personal seraglio and that the nun's babies had been thrown into a well. Yet St. Nektarios did not complain or try to justify himself, leaving it all in the hands of God. Eventually, a medical exam revealed the truth -- that the nun's were virgins.
Fr Nektarios died of prostate cancer. Shortly after he died, the hospital staff were removing his undergarments and carelessly tossed them onto the bed occupied by a paralytic. The man immediately got up and began walking. Everyone noticed that the body of Nektarios appeared to have beads of sweat, but the body was exuding a sweet fragrance. As he lay in state, the sweet fragrance filled the church. Eventually, he was buried. Some months later his grave was opened so they could provide a proper tomb, and his body was discovered to be incorrupt and still exuding a marvelous fragrance. It is said that the scent drifted down from the church into the town. After three years his tomb was reopened and his body was still incorrupt, forcing the hierarchy to admit the sanctity of the one whom they had despised and ill-treated for so long.