Venerable (Monastic) 5th century

Gerasimus of the Jordan

early 5th century - 475

Also known as Gerasimus of Jordan · Gerasim

A fifth-century ascetic from Lycia in Asia Minor who, after training in the Egyptian desert, settled by the Jordan River and founded a monastic community. He is famous for the story of taming a lion by removing a thorn from its paw.

Feast Day
March 4
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Gerasimus of the Jordan

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Life

Gerasimus of the Jordan was a fifth-century ascetic from Lycia in Asia Minor who, after a period in the Egyptian desert, settled in the wilderness near the Jordan River in Palestine and founded a monastery there. He is remembered for the strict communal rule he established and for the widely-told account of a lion he tamed by drawing a thorn from its paw.

Born into a wealthy family, he renounced his inheritance, received monastic tonsure, and trained among the hermits of the Thebaid in Egypt before returning briefly to Lycia. Around the middle of the fifth century he came to Palestine, where his reputation for virtue drew a community of about seventy monks to settle around him east of Jericho.

He is commemorated on March 4 in the Eastern Orthodox Church. His icons traditionally show him with the lion that, by the account of his life, served the community and died at his grave.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. early 5th c. Birth in Lycia Gerasimus was born in Lycia, in southern Asia Minor, to a wealthy family. Distinguished for piety from his youth, he renounced his worldly affairs to become a monk.
  2. before c. 450 The Egyptian desert After receiving monastic tonsure, he withdrew into the desert of the Thebaid in Egypt to train among its hermits, later returning for a time to his native Lycia.
  3. c. 450 Settlement at the Jordan Around the middle of the fifth century he came to Palestine and settled in the wilderness near the Jordan River, where he founded a monastery as men gathered to him on account of his reputation for virtue.
  4. 451 Council of Chalcedon He is reputed to have attended the Fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon, held in 451.
  5. 475 Repose Saint Gerasimus reposed in 475 and was buried by his brethren in his monastery.

Contributions & Legacy

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The monastery and its rule

The community Gerasimus founded lay in the desert east of Jericho, near the Jordan River; by one account the site stood roughly 25 miles from Jerusalem and close to the river itself. He organized it as a combined house in which novices lived together in a common building while the more experienced monks lived apart in a cluster of small cells. By the accounts of his life the brethren numbered about seventy.

The rule he established was severe. For five days of the week each monk kept silence and solitude in his cell, occupying himself with handicrafts such as weaving mats or baskets from palm leaves, together with prayer. On those days the monks ate no cooked food and kindled no fire, taking only dry bread, dates, roots, and water. On Saturday and Sunday all gathered at the monastery for the Divine Liturgy and a common meal.

The monks lived in deep poverty, each possessing only an old garment, a reed mat to sleep on, and a small vessel for water; they left their cells unlocked so that any of the brethren might freely enter. Gerasimus himself was noted for extreme asceticism: during Great Lent he was said to eat nothing at all until the day of Pascha, when he received the Holy Mysteries. His disciple Cyriacus, commemorated on September 29, had been sent to him by Euthymius the Great.

Chalcedon and the controversy over the natures of Christ

By the accounts of his life, Gerasimus was for a time drawn toward the teaching of Eutyches and Dioscorus, which acknowledged only the divine nature in Christ and not His human nature. Through the influence of Euthymius the Great he is said to have returned to the faith confessed at the Council of Chalcedon. His life further relates that when Euthymius died, Gerasimus beheld angels carrying his soul up to heaven.

The lion

The account most associated with Gerasimus tells that, while walking in the desert by the Jordan, he came upon a lion in distress from a thorn or splinter lodged in its paw. He removed the thorn and cleaned the wound, and the beast became his devoted companion, following him to the monastery, where it was set to guard the community's donkey on its trips to fetch water.

By the account, the lion once fell asleep and the donkey was taken by a passing Arabian merchant's caravan; the monks supposed the lion had devoured the animal. Later the same merchant passed again by the Jordan on his way to sell wheat in Jerusalem, still leading the donkey; the lion recognized it and brought it back, and so was vindicated. From this the elder is said to have given the lion the name Jordanes. After Gerasimus reposed, the life relates, the lion died at his grave and was buried nearby. For this reason the lion is depicted with him on his icons.

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