Our Venerable Father Luke the New Stylite of Chalcedon
Life
Luke the New Stylite was a tenth-century Byzantine ascetic who, after a career as a soldier, withdrew to monastic life and became a pillar-dweller (stylite) near Chalcedon, across the Bosphorus from Constantinople. He is commemorated on December 11 and is distinct from Luke the Evangelist.
According to his synaxarion, Luke served as a soldier under the emperors of his day and survived a war against the Bulgarians in which many men were killed. Attributing his survival to divine providence, he abandoned military life, became a monk, and was ordained a presbyter before taking up the rigorous discipline of the stylites. He is remembered for forty-five years spent atop a pillar at Chalcedon, where he was credited with a gift of wonderworking.
Timeline 5 moments
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10th centuryMilitary serviceLuke served as a soldier in the Byzantine army. Sources place his service in the reign of Constantine Porphyrogennetos (and, in one account, also that of Romanos Lekapenos), during a period of warfare with Bulgaria.
10th centurySurvival in battle and conversion to monastic lifeHe fought against the Bulgarians in a battle in which a large number of men fell, but was himself spared. Crediting his deliverance to the providence of God, he left the army, became a monk, and was later ordained a presbyter.
10th centuryFirst pillar and the move to Mount OlympusTaking up the ascetic life of a stylite, he placed chains upon himself and stood on a pillar for three years. He then traveled to Mount Olympus, and afterward to Constantinople.
10th centuryForty-five years on the pillar at ChalcedonHe finally settled at Chalcedon, where he ascended a pillar on which he is said to have remained for forty-five years, manifesting a gift of wonderworking.
c. 970-980ReposeHe reposed in about the year 980, according to the OCA synaxarion; other accounts give his death around 970, and his dates are recorded with some uncertainty.
Contributions & Legacy
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Origins
The anchor record places Luke's origin in the region of Constantinople in the tenth century. One synaxarion tradition adds further detail, stating that he was born around 919 in the Eastern theme, the son of parents named Christopher and Kalee, though these particulars are not uniformly attested and his dates are reported with uncertainty across sources.
Ascetic Discipline
Luke is remembered for an especially severe asceticism. Beyond the chains he bound upon himself before mounting his first pillar, the synaxarion tradition relates that he kept a sparse diet of bread and raw cabbage and fasted six days of the week. The same tradition recounts that at Mount Olympus he placed a stone in his mouth, like a bridle, to keep himself from speaking.
The stylite vocation that Luke embraced was an established form of Eastern Christian monasticism in which an ascetic lived atop a pillar, exposed to the elements, as a discipline of prayer and self-denial.