Origins and conversion
The tradition recorded in his life places Macarius's birth in Rome at the close of the fifteenth century, into a wealthy household that gave him an excellent education and raised him in piety. He is portrayed as a man who, rather than seeking honors or worldly position, turned his attention to the study of Scripture and the Church Fathers.
His life situates this period during the turmoil of the Protestant Reformation in the West. Troubled by the disputes within the Western Church, he is said to have concluded that the Orthodox Church preserved the faith he sought, and to have departed Rome secretly, journeying without funds and in poor clothing until he reached the region of Novgorod in northern Russia.
Monastic life and the Lezna hermitage
On arriving in Russia, Macarius was received into the Orthodox Church and tonsured as a monk by Saint Alexander of Svir at the Holy Trinity monastery on the River Svir. Longing for a more solitary life, he withdrew to an island on the River Lezna, described as about forty-five miles from Novgorod, where he pursued a regime of strict asceticism and prayer, subsisting on berries, roots, and herbs.
His life relates that signs reported by tradition — a pillar of fire seen at night and fragrant smoke — drew visitors to the place despite his desire for seclusion. A community of disciples gathered, and in 1540 a wooden church dedicated to the Dormition of the Most Holy Theotokos was built. Macarius was ordained priest and appointed igumen of the monastery by Bishop Macarius of Novgorod.
Repose and the later monastery
Macarius reposed on August 15, 1550, and was buried outside the Dormition church he had founded; his relics were venerated by pilgrims in the centuries that followed.
The monastery he established passed through a difficult history: it was burned in 1615, closed in 1764, briefly restored in the 1890s under the hieromonk Arsenius, and destroyed during the Soviet period in 1932.
Commemoration
Macarius is commemorated on August 15, the date of his repose, and on January 19, his nameday — the feast of Saint Macarius the Great of Egypt, after whom he was named at his tonsure.