A monk of the Psykhaita monastery in Constantinople who contended boldly for the holy icons under the iconoclast emperor Leo the Armenian and suffered for the confession of the faith.
Feast Day
May 26
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Our Venerable Father and Confessor John of Psychaita
Life
John Psykhaitis was a monk of the monastery of Psychaita in the suburbs of Constantinople who lived through the renewed iconoclast persecution of the early ninth century. Entering the monastery as a young man, he gained a reputation for severe asceticism and, by the account of his synaxarion, was credited with the gifts of healing and of casting out demons.
He is remembered chiefly as a confessor of the holy icons during the reign of Emperor Leo V (813-820). Pressed under interrogation to sign a renunciation of icon veneration, he refused, openly denounced the emperor as a heretic, and was repeatedly sent into exile. Because he suffered for the faith without being put to death, he is venerated as a confessor rather than a martyr.
Timeline 5 moments
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c. 778BirthBy tradition John was born around the year 778, toward the end of the eighth century.
As a young manMonastic profession at PsychaitaHe entered the monastery (or lavra) of Psychaita on the Bosphorus near Constantinople and devoted himself to fasting, prayer, vigils, and austerity. The sources credit him with receiving from God the grace to heal the sick and to expel demons.
813-820Confession under Leo VDuring the renewed iconoclasm under Emperor Leo V, John defended the veneration of icons. Brought in for interrogation and ordered to sign a document repudiating icon veneration, he refused and denounced his persecutors, calling the emperor a heretic.
After his interrogationRepeated exileHe was arrested and exiled on several occasions for his stand. The synaxarion relates that he returned from each banishment more energetic than before, strengthening his fellow defenders of the icons.
c. 825ReposeHe reposed around the year 825, having endured exile and imprisonment for the confession of the faith.
Contributions & Legacy
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Confessor of the Holy Icons
The period of John's monastic life coincided with the second wave of Byzantine iconoclasm, reopened under Leo V the Armenian, when those who venerated the holy icons were again subjected to persecution. According to the synaxarion, John was a vigorous defender of the icons and is said to have converted many from the iconoclast party through his witness.
When he was led away for interrogation and ordered to subscribe to a renunciation of icon veneration, he refused outright and rebuked his accusers, naming the emperor a heretic. For this he was banished repeatedly. The tradition emphasizes the moral force of his bearing, recounting that his very appearance unsettled his opponents and encouraged those who shared his confession, so that he was widely honored.