Righteous 12th century

Blessed Nicetas the Hidden

12th century

Also known as Nicetas the Hidden of Constantinople

A saint of Constantinople who hid his great virtue beneath an ordinary life (12th c.)

Feast Day
September 9
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Blessed Nicetas the Hidden, the Chartularius of Constantinople

Life

Blessed Nicetas the Hidden was a layman of Constantinople who held the office of chartularius (a keeper of records or letter-writer in the imperial or ecclesiastical administration). He is surnamed "the Hidden" because, while living an ordinary life amid the activity of the capital, he is said to have pursued a secret ascetic discipline and attained a high degree of spiritual perfection unknown to those around him.

His sanctity, according to tradition, became known only through an unusual episode involving the reconciliation of a deceased priest with a deacon. The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates him on September 9.

Contributions & Legacy

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Traditional Accounts

Tradition relates that a priest and a deacon named Sozon had quarreled, and that the priest died before the two could be reconciled. Grieving over the unresolved breach, the deacon sought the counsel of an experienced elder, who gave him a letter and instructed him to deliver it at midnight to the first person he met at the church of Hagia Sophia.

The account states that Nicetas the chartularius appeared and received the letter. After reading it he wept, saying that the task was beyond his strength but that, through the prayers of the elder who had sent Sozon, he would attempt it. According to the tradition, the doors of Hagia Sophia, and afterward those of the Church of the Mother of God at Blachernae, opened of themselves, and within Sozon beheld the deceased priest among an assembly of clergy and witnessed his reconciliation. Nicetas then attributed the event to the elder's prayers and faith in God and vanished from sight, his hidden holiness having thereby been disclosed.

Sources: Synaxarion