Venerable (Monastic) 5th century

Saints Asclepius and James of Syria

5th century

Also known as Asklepios · James the Ascetic

Two Syrian hermits who struggled in stillness near the village of Nimuza, described among the ascetics of the region by Theodoret of Cyrus.

Feast Day
February 27
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Fathers Asclepius and James, Ascetics of Syria

Life

Asclepius and James were two Syrian ascetics of the fifth century, documented by Theodoret of Cyrrhus in his Historia Religiosa (A History of the Monks of Syria), a work completed around 444 CE that records thirty ascetics and anchorites of the northern Syrian, or Cyrrhestica, monastic milieu Theodoret personally knew.

Asclepius led an ascetic life of temperance in his native village. Unhindered by constant contact with the many people around him, he drew numerous imitators and followers. James, shaped by Asclepius's example, pursued a more severe form of monasticism in solitude near the village of Nimuza.

James enclosed himself in a small dwelling and remained there until his death without departing. He never kindled a fire or lit a lamp, and communicated with visitors only through a small aperture cut at an angle in the wall so that no one could see him, preserving complete seclusion.

The pair are commemorated together in the Orthodox Church on February 27. Outside Theodoret's account they have minimal independent coverage, and the OCA Synaxarion is the principal accessible Orthodox source.

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Historical Context

The two ascetics belong to the distinctive monastic tradition of northern Syria during the fourth and early fifth centuries. Their chief historical witness is Theodoret of Cyrrhus (born c. 393 in Antioch, appointed Bishop of Cyrrhus in 423, died c. 458-460), whose Philotheos historia, or A History of the Monks of Syria, is generally dated to around 444 CE.

Theodoret's fluency in Syriac and his role as bishop of the Cyrrhestica region gave him intimate knowledge of the local ascetic communities he described. He presented his thirty subjects as religious models; the last ten among them were still living when the work was completed.

In the Historia Religiosa, Asclepius and James appear grouped with Zebinas and Polychronius as ascetics of Cyrrhestica. The figures are listed together without individual death dates, which suggests they were contemporaries.

Asceticism

Asclepius practiced temperance while remaining in ordinary contact with the people of his native village, a life of restraint sustained in the midst of society rather than apart from it. His example attracted many imitators and followers.

James, by contrast, sought an extreme seclusion. He withdrew to a small dwelling near the village of Nimuza and never kindled a fire or lit a lamp within it. He spoke with those who came to him only through a small opening cut at an angle in the wall, arranged so that no visitor could see him, and he remained in the hermitage until his death.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints