Writings and Spiritual Theology
Theophan's output during his years of reclusion at Vysha was immense. He wrote extensively on the stages and practice of the interior Christian life, producing major works including The Spiritual Life and How to Be Attuned to It (a compilation of his correspondence with a spiritually seeking laywoman), The Path to Salvation, and Unseen Warfare (an adaptation of the Italian spiritual classic Combattimento Spirituale by Lorenzo Scupoli). His approach was characteristically practical: he sought to translate the hesychast and ascetic tradition into language and guidance accessible to ordinary laypeople, not only monks.
Central to his teaching was the distinction between the external, formal observance of religious practice and the genuine transformation of the inner person — what he called the 'turning of attention toward the heart.' He emphasized that the goal of Christian life was not the accumulation of outward piety but the unceasing prayer and awareness of God's presence described in the Philokalia.
The Dobrotolyubie
Theophan's most enduring scholarly achievement was his Russian rendering of the Philokalia, a collection of patristic texts on prayer and the spiritual life compiled by Nikodemos of the Holy Mountain and Makarios of Corinth in 1782 and translated into Church Slavonic by Paisius Velichkovsky. Rather than producing a literal translation, Theophan created an expanded and partially reorganized adaptation, adding texts not in the original Greek compilation and rendering the whole in a more accessible literary Russian. The resulting Dobrotolyubie appeared in five volumes between 1877 and 1889.
The Dobrotolyubie made the hesychast tradition — and especially the teaching on the Prayer of the Heart (the Jesus Prayer) — available to a broad Russian-reading public at a moment when lay religious seeking was intensifying in Russia. Its influence was profound and has continued beyond Russia into the wider Orthodox world through subsequent translations.
Reclusion and Spiritual Direction
Although Theophan progressively restricted physical access to his cell — entering a stricter reclusion from 1872 onward — he maintained an extraordinary correspondence with spiritual seekers across Russia. Hundreds of letters survive, addressed to laypeople, clergy, and monastics seeking guidance on prayer, vocation, and the spiritual life. These letters, many of which were published during his lifetime and after, constituted a form of spiritual direction at a distance and brought his teaching to a wide audience.
His reclusion at Vysha coincided with a period of growing interest in spirituality and asceticism in late Imperial Russia, partly catalyzed by the publication of the anonymous narrative The Way of a Pilgrim (whose traditions of the Jesus Prayer connect directly to the Dobrotolyubie). Theophan became one of the most consulted spiritual figures of the era without ever leaving his hermitage.
Legacy and Veneration
Theophan was glorified in 1988 as part of the Russian Church's large-scale canonization of saints during the millennium celebrations, alongside figures like Paisius Velichkovsky and Ambrose of Optina. His feast days in the Russian tradition include January 10 (the day of his birth, also observed as his feast in the OCA calendar) and January 6 (the day of his death/repose), as well as January 19 and 23 in some typika.
The Vysha Monastery, returned to the Russian Church after Soviet-era closure, has become a pilgrimage site centered on his memory. His works remain in continuous use in Orthodox theological education and lay spiritual reading, and his translation of the Philokalia into Russian continues to be a primary text for instruction in the Prayer of the Heart.