Venerable (Monastic) 6th century

John the Silent

c. 454 – 558

Also known as John the Hesychast · John the Sabbaite

Bishop of Colonia who left his see for the monastic life and became a renowned hesychast at the Lavra of St. Savva in Palestine.

Feast Day
March 30
Also Dec 3
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father John the Silent, Bishop of Colonia, Hesychast of the Lavra of St. Savva

Life

St. John the Silent, also known as John the Hesychast and John Silentiarius, was a sixth-century bishop who renounced his see to pursue the monastic life and became one of the most renowned hesychasts of the Lavra of St. Savva in Palestine. Born around 454 in Nicopolis in Armenia, he came from a prominent family that included military commanders and provincial governors.

Consecrated Bishop of Colonia in Armenia at the age of twenty-eight, he served for roughly a decade before secretly leaving his see to seek a more secluded life. He traveled to Constantinople and then to Jerusalem, eventually entering the Lavra of St. Savva, where he concealed his episcopal rank and lived as a simple novice. He spent the remainder of his long life there in silence and solitude, dying around 558 at the age of 104.

His life was recorded by Cyril of Scythopolis, his contemporary, and he is commemorated by the Orthodox Church on December 3, with an additional commemoration on March 30 in the OCA listing.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 454 Birth in Armenia Born in Nicopolis in Armenia, into a family that produced military commanders and provincial governors. By tradition his parents were named Enkratius, a military commander, and Euphemia.
  2. c. 472 Founds a monastery After the death of his parents, the synaxarion relates that as a young man he used his inheritance to build a church dedicated to the Theotokos and established a small monastic community there.
  3. c. 482 Consecrated Bishop of Colonia At about the age of twenty-eight he was consecrated bishop of Colonia in Armenia, an office he held for roughly a decade.
  4. c. 490–491 Leaves his see Following conflict with the local governor and a journey to Constantinople to seek imperial intervention, he abandoned his bishopric without returning, seeking a more secluded life.
  5. c. 491–492 Enters the Lavra of St. Savva He traveled to Jerusalem and entered the Lavra of St. Savva in Palestine, concealing his episcopal rank and serving as a simple novice engaged in manual labor.
  6. c. 494 Bishopric revealed By tradition his episcopal past, kept secret for several years, became known only to Patriarch Elias of Jerusalem in the course of discussions about ordination; the patriarch directed him to live in silence.
  7. c. 503 Years in the wilderness He withdrew to the desert near Scythopolis, where the synaxarion relates he spent more than nine years in solitude, after which he returned to live in his cell.
  8. c. 558 Repose He reposed at the Lavra of St. Savva at the age of about 104, after many decades of monastic life.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Episcopal Office and Renunciation

John was consecrated Bishop of Colonia in Armenia at about the age of twenty-eight and served for roughly ten years. By tradition his relatives also lived devout lives under his influence, and members of his family held positions in imperial service.

Sources relate that conflict with the local governor, said to have been related to him by marriage, prompted his decision to leave. He traveled to Constantinople to seek imperial intervention, and afterward, rather than return to his see, he set out for Jerusalem in pursuit of a more secluded and contemplative life.

Monastic Life at the Lavra of St. Savva

At the Lavra of St. Savva, John concealed his rank as a bishop and entered as an ordinary novice under the guidance of St. Savva, performing manual labor and serving in the monastery's guesthouses and building projects.

By tradition he kept his episcopal past hidden for several years, and his identity became known only when Patriarch Elias of Jerusalem learned of it during discussions of his ordination. The patriarch then directed him to live in silence, the discipline from which his epithet derives.

The synaxarion relates that he practiced strict fasting and attended public services chiefly on weekends, and that he withdrew for an extended period of more than nine years into the wilderness near Scythopolis, living on plants and grass before returning to his cell, where he remained for the rest of his long life.

Miracles and Traditions

Traditional Accounts: The synaxarion and the account by Cyril of Scythopolis relate a number of wonders associated with John. By tradition a lion protected him from Saracens while he dwelt in the desert. He is also said to have healed the sick and those troubled by demons and to have discerned the hidden thoughts of those who came to him.

Traditional Accounts: A frequently repeated tradition holds that a fig tree grew from seed on barren rock near his cell and in time overshadowed it. He is reported to have been guided to the Lavra of St. Savva by a vision of a bright cross or star, and St. Savva is said to have appeared to him in a vision foretelling a struggle against heresy.

Legacy and Commemoration

John the Silent stands as one of the foremost examples of the hesychast tradition of silence and inner stillness in early Palestinian monasticism. His life was recorded by his contemporary Cyril of Scythopolis, a principal source for the monastic history of sixth-century Palestine.

He is commemorated in the Eastern Orthodox Church on December 3, with an additional commemoration on March 30 noted in the OCA listing. He is also known by the names John the Hesychast and John Silentiarius.

Notes

Principal feast commonly Dec 3; commemorated Mar 30 in the OCA listing. Also commemorated Dec 3.

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