Life and Calling
The biographical record of James is almost entirely lost. The synaxarion relates only that in his youth he undertook the arduous podvig of foolishness for Christ, the form of sanctity in which a holy person conceals inward virtue beneath outward simplicity or apparent madness. Because he died young and unknown, no account of his birth, family, or place of origin survives.
His name was not learned during his life but, by tradition, revealed afterward. Accounts relate that he was called James and associated with the Apostle James, the brother of the Lord, on whose feast his commemoration came to be kept. In iconography he is depicted as a youth, bare and girded only with a piece of cloth, reflecting the ascetic poverty of his calling.
The Arrival of the Relics
The events for which James is remembered occurred during Bright (Paschal) week, traditionally dated to 1540. According to the synaxarion, a large block of ice floated up the River Msta against the current toward the village of Borovichi, and upon it stood a coffin hollowed from an oak log, without a cover, in which lay the body of a youth. One account adds that thick steam rose from the ice as from a fire, and that the wood appeared darkened as if scorched.
Disturbed by the strange burden, the villagers tried to push the ice-floe back into the river with long poles, but it returned to the shore. This was repeated three times. That night the youth appeared in a dream to several of the village elders who had seen him, reproaching them for driving away a fellow Christian whom the Lord had sent, and making known that his name was James. The relics were thereupon received with reverence.
The brief life that the database preserves frames these events in the same terms: a young man of hidden holiness whose coffin came up the river to Borovichi against the current upon a block of ice, received with reverence, his relics becoming a fountain of healing and the protection of the town.
Relics & Shrines
The relics of the holy youth were first laid in a chapel and, by tradition in 1544, transferred to the church of the Descent of the Holy Spirit at Borovichi. A spring of healing water emerged at the burial site, and a small wooden church was built there, dedicated to the Tenderness (Sweet-Kissing) Icon of the Mother of God. The relics were reported incorrupt.
In 1657, during the reign of Tsar Alexei, Patriarch Nikon sent part of the relics of Saint James to the Iversky (Iveron) Monastery on Lake Valdai, where they were enshrined; the saint is depicted in later iconography together with a view of the Valday Iversky Monastery. The annual commemoration on October 23 was established after the discovery, and a full festal service including Matins is recorded as instituted in 1572.
Veneration and Miracles
From the time of the relics' reception, James was venerated at Borovichi as a wonderworker. The synaxarion relates that the Lord granted his relics a curative power and that they unceasingly exuded grace-filled healing for all who came to him with faith, with the spring at his burial place numbered among the means of that healing.
He came to be counted among the saints of Novgorod and is commemorated on May 22 and on October 23, the latter marking the translation of his relics and coinciding with the feast of the Apostle James, the brother of the Lord; some accounts add a commemoration on the Third Sunday after Pentecost.