Venerable (Monastic) 13th century

Venerable Nikephoros of Mount Athos

Also known as Nikephoros the Hesychast · Nicephorus of Athos

An Italian who embraced Orthodoxy and the monastic life on Mount Athos, where he taught the watchfulness and prayer of the heart and guided disciples in the hesychast tradition.

Feast Day
May 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Nikephoros of Mount Athos

Life

Nikephoros of Mount Athos, also known as Nikephoros the Hesychast, the Monk, or the Solitary, was a 13th-century Athonite monk and spiritual teacher. Of Italian (Latin, Western) origin, he came to the Byzantine Empire, embraced the Eastern Orthodox faith, and entered monastic life on Mount Athos.

He is remembered above all as a teacher of nepsis, the watchfulness or inner vigilance at the heart of the hesychast tradition, and as an early proponent of a disciplined method of prayer that joins attention, breathing, and the descent of the mind into the heart. His short treatise on watchfulness and the guarding of the heart was later included in the Philokalia, and his teaching is regarded as a precursor to the hesychast spirituality articulated in the following century by St Gregory Palamas.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Origin and Conversion

By the testimony of St Gregory Palamas, who is the principal early source for his life, Nikephoros was originally a Roman Catholic from the Latin West who travelled to the Byzantine Empire and there converted to the Eastern Orthodox faith. The synaxarion remembers him simply as an Italian, or man of Rome, who embraced Orthodoxy.

After his conversion he settled on Mount Athos and took up the monastic and ascetic life, joining the community of Athonite fathers among whom the practices of inner prayer were cultivated.

Teaching on Watchfulness and Prayer of the Heart

Nikephoros's writings center on nepsis, the watchfulness or vigilance by which the mind is kept attentive and recollected. He described a method of prayer in which the practitioner attaches the prayer to the rhythm of the breath and gathers the attention inward so as to concentrate the mind within the heart.

Concretely, he advised monks to bend the head toward the chest, to control the rhythm of the breath while joining it to the words of prayer, and to fix the gaze during prayer upon the middle of the body, drawing the intellect down into the heart. This is regarded as the earliest written attestation of such psychosomatic technique in hesychast prayer, though, as later commentators including Kallistos Ware observed, the underlying practice may well be far more ancient.

Defense of Orthodoxy and Legacy

Like Theoleptos of Philadelphia, Nikephoros opposed the union between the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches agreed at the Second Council of Lyons in 1274. Because of this resistance he was imprisoned, and he afterward wrote an account of his ordeal.

Through his teaching and his disciples he stands as an important transmitter of the bodily method of inner prayer that became characteristic of the Athonite tradition. That tradition was defended and theologically articulated in the next generation by St Gregory Palamas, who preserved the memory of Nikephoros's origins and witness.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • On Watchfulness and the Guarding of the Heart — A short ascetical treatise on nepsis and the prayer of the heart, describing the inner method of attention and breathing; later included in the Philokalia.
Notes

Distinct from St Nikephoros of Chios (May 1).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints