Venerable (Monastic) 14th century

Venerable Euthymius the Schemamonk of the Kiev Caves

A schemamonk of the Kiev Caves who kept silence and unceasing prayer.

Feast Day
January 20
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Euthymius the Silent, Schemamonk of the Kiev Caves

Life

Euthymius was a schemamonk of the Kiev Caves who is remembered for a life of strict silence and unceasing prayer. He kept a vow that allowed him to open his mouth only for church services and for prayer, and he sustained himself solely on raw herbs, abstaining entirely from cooked food.

He is traditionally assigned to the 14th century, though no birth date or year of death is recorded in the surviving sources. His relics repose in the Far Caves of Saint Theodosius at the Kiev Caves Lavra, where biochemical testing later indicated that he died between the ages of 30 and 40.

His epithet 'the Silent' identifies him with the hesychast tradition of inner stillness, paired with his standing in the Great Schema, the highest degree of Eastern Orthodox monastic life.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 1051 Foundation of the Kiev Caves The monk Anthony, trained on Mount Athos, settles in a cave near Kyiv and founds the monastery that becomes the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, the setting of Euthymius's later monastic life.
  2. 14th century Monastic life of Euthymius By tradition Euthymius lives as a schemamonk of the Kiev Caves in the 14th century, keeping silence and eating only raw herbs; no precise dates are recorded. Biochemical testing of his relics later indicated he died between the ages of 30 and 40.

Contributions & Legacy

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Ascetic Life

Euthymius bound himself to a vow of silence, opening his mouth only for the services of the church and for prayer. The sources pair this practice with an extreme dietary austerity: he ate only herbs, taking raw plants and never cooked food.

His title 'the Silent' aligns him with the hesychast strand of monasticism, which cultivated inner stillness and continual prayer. The Orthodox Church in America characterizes him as one who enjoys 'the food of paradise and with angels he silently praises God and prays for us.'

The Great Schema

As a schemamonk, Euthymius had attained the Great Schema, the highest degree of Eastern Orthodox monastic life. This degree is conferred by an abbot only on monks judged to have reached a high level of spiritual maturity, and it carries the vows of stability of place, chastity, obedience, and poverty.

A monk of the Great Schema wears the analavos, a vestment embroidered with the instruments of the Passion, and the polystavrion, a cord of crosses signifying that he is bound to Christ and that his energies are reserved for the Kingdom of Heaven rather than worldly activity. On Mount Athos the degree is typically granted some years after entry into the monastery, while in other traditions it is sometimes conferred near death.

The Kiev Caves and the Far Caves

Euthymius belonged to the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, the Monastery of the Caves, founded in 1051 when the monk Anthony, trained on Mount Athos and originally from Liubech, settled in a cave in a hill near Kyiv and introduced Athonite monastic practice to Kievan Rus'. The monastery received architectural patronage from Constantinople and became the spiritual center of monasticism in the region.

His relics rest in the Far Caves, also called the Caves of Saint Theodosius, a distinct complex where many ascetic monks were buried and where Theodosius himself was interred in 1074.

Commemoration

Euthymius is commemorated on January 20. His memory is also kept on a second date in August, within the collective Synaxis of the Saints of the Kiev Caves whose relics repose in the Far Caves of Venerable Theodosius, celebrated on August 28.

Relics & Shrines

Euthymius was interred in the Far Caves of Saint Theodosius at the Kiev Caves Lavra, where his relics remain. Biochemical testing of these relics indicated that he died at the age of 30 to 40 years.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 20