Life and Ministry
According to the synaxarion, Philotheus lived in the tenth century in the village of Mravin, also known as Myrmix, in Bithynia, a region of Asia Minor. He was a priest who was married and had children, which distinguished him from the celibate monastic clergy more commonly celebrated in Orthodox hagiography.
He devoted himself to prayer and fasting alongside his pastoral duties, and he was especially known for works of charity, continually feeding the hungry and assisting those in need. The tradition presents his sanctity as expressed through this sustained care for the poor rather than through withdrawal from the world.
Veneration as Wonderworker
Because of his holy life, the tradition holds that Philotheus received from God the gift of working miracles, and he is named in the liturgical calendar with the title Wonderworker.
He died in peace. After his death, myrrh is said to have flowed from his relics, a phenomenon understood in Orthodox tradition as a sign of divine blessing and of the saint's continued intercession.
Sources and Commemoration
Saint Philotheus is commemorated on September 15 in the Eastern Orthodox calendar, where he is listed among the saints of the tenth century and associated with Asia Minor. His commemoration is recorded in synaxarion references for that date.
No dedicated biographical article exists for him in major online reference works such as Wikipedia or OrthodoxWiki, and no dedicated post appears in the Mystagogy Resource Center archive, reflecting his relative obscurity in the secondary Orthodox hagiographic literature available online.