Venerable (Monastic) 14th century

Venerable Gregory of Sinai

c. 1265 - 1346

Also known as Gregory the Sinaite

A monk of Sinai, Athos, and the Balkans who, in an age when the inner prayer was nearly forgotten, kindled it anew, teaching the watchfulness of the heart and the prayer of Jesus to a host of disciples across the Orthodox lands.

Feast Day
August 8
Also Apr 6
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Gregory of Sinai

Life

Gregory of Sinai was a Byzantine monk of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries who became one of the foremost teachers of hesychasm, the tradition of inner stillness and unceasing prayer of the heart. Born in western Asia Minor around 1265, he carried the contemplative discipline he had learned at Mount Sinai and on Crete to Mount Athos, and finally to the Balkans, where his disciples carried it into the wider Slavic world.

Through his own ascetic practice, his teaching of the Jesus Prayer, and the writings later gathered into the Philokalia, Gregory became a principal figure in the fourteenth-century revival of hesychast spirituality. The monastic community he founded at Paroria in Bulgaria became, for a time, a center of contemplative life second only to Mount Athos.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 1265 Birth in Asia Minor Gregory was born around 1265 in the region of Clazomenia near Smyrna in western Asia Minor, into a Greek Christian family.
  2. c. 1290 Captivity and ransom As a young man he was captured by Turkish raiders and carried off; following his ransom he made his way to Cyprus, where he received monastic tonsure as a rasophore monk.
  3. Early career Monk of Sinai He entered Saint Catherine's Monastery at Mount Sinai, from which he takes his name, assuming the great schema and fulfilling obediences as cook, baker, and copyist. He later traveled to Crete, where he learned the practice of the Jesus Prayer and hesychasm from a monk named Arsenios.
  4. 1310 - c. 1335 Years on Mount Athos Gregory settled on Mount Athos, living at the Skete of Magoula near the Monastery of Philotheou. There he was instrumental in the emergence of hesychasm on the Holy Mountain in the early fourteenth century, contributing alongside his contemporary Gregory Palamas to Athos becoming a center of the contemplative tradition.
  5. c. 1335 Refuge in Bulgaria and the founding of Paroria Turkish raids forced Gregory and his disciples to leave Athos for the Bulgarian Empire, where Emperor Ivan Alexander granted them protection. Gregory founded a monastery in the wilderness of Paroria in the Strandzha Mountains of southeastern Bulgaria.
  6. 27 November 1346 Repose at Paroria Gregory died at Paroria, near present-day Zabernovo in southeastern Bulgaria. The Church commemorates him on August 8, on November 27 (the date of his repose), and on other days including April 6.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Teaching and Hesychasm

Gregory is remembered as a leading exponent of hesychasm, the practice of inner watchfulness and unceasing invocation of the name of Jesus. Having received the discipline at Sinai and refined it on Crete under the monk Arsenios, he taught the prayer of the heart to a wide circle of disciples and helped establish it as a major current of Byzantine spiritual life.

Together with his contemporary Gregory Palamas, he is credited with helping make Mount Athos a center of the hesychast revival. His emphasis on stillness, attentiveness, and the continual prayer of Jesus shaped the contemplative traditions that spread from Athos and Paroria across the Orthodox world.

Disciples and Legacy

Gregory's influence extended well beyond his own lifetime through his disciples, who carried hesychast spirituality into the Hellenic and Slavic worlds. Among them were Patriarch Kallistos I of Constantinople, Nicodemus of Tismana, and Theodosius of Tarnovo, who founded the Kilifarevo monastery near the Bulgarian capital.

The monastery at Paroria became, by the fourteenth century, second only to Mount Athos as a center for the practice and dissemination of hesychasm, drawing clerics from Bulgaria, Byzantium, and Serbia. After persistent raids the community was eventually abandoned, and today only ruins of the site remain.

Writings

Five of Gregory's works were later included in the Philokalia, the anthology of texts on prayer and the ascetic life. They treat the commandments and doctrines, the signs of grace, stillness, and the practice of prayer, and stand among the foundational texts of the hesychast tradition. He is also credited with the composition of hymns, including canons to the Holy Trinity and the Holy Cross.

Notes

A chief teacher of hesychast prayer.

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