The Monastery and Its Charities
The community Theodosius founded became renowned, and by the accounts it eventually drew as many as 700 monks. Beyond the monastic enclosure, the foundation became notable for its organized works of mercy: a guest house for receiving strangers, separate infirmaries for ailing monks and for laymen, and a shelter for the dying. The diversity of those who gathered there is reflected in the report that the divine services were celebrated in Greek, Georgian, and Armenian.
His title 'the Cenobiarch' marks his role as an organizer of the communal form of monastic life, complementing the work of his friend Saint Sabbas among the desert hermits. The two are remembered together as foundational fathers of Palestinian monasticism.