Venerable (Monastic) 5th century

Venerable Serapion the Sindonite

Also known as Serapion of Egypt

A wandering ascetic of Egypt, recounted in the Lausiac History, who owned nothing but the single linen cloth (sindon) that he wore and gave even that away to the cold and the poor; it is told that he sold himself into slavery to win his masters to Christ, then gave the price away.

Feast Day
May 14
Also Mar 21
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Serapion the Sindonite

Life

Serapion the Sindonite was a wandering ascetic of Egypt whose life is preserved in the Lausiac History of Palladius of Helenopolis. He is surnamed "the Sindonite" because, apart from a single garment of coarse linen called a sindon, he wore no clothing; this one cloth was, by tradition, his only possession. Rather than settling in a fixed monastic community, he practised an itinerant asceticism, living, as the accounts put it, "like the birds of the air," without shelter and often fasting for days at a time.

The synaxarion relates that Serapion gave away even the sindon he wore: encountering a beggar shivering in the cold, he stripped off his one garment and was himself left naked. According to the tradition recorded by Palladius, he had earlier been given a cloak, a tunic, and a Gospel book, and he gave each of these away to the poor in turn; asked who had stripped him, he is said to have pointed to the Gospel and answered that it was this which had stripped him, and he afterward sold the book itself to relieve a debtor.

His most distinctive deed in the tradition is that he sold himself into slavery in order to win his masters to Christ. He is said to have sold himself to a Greek actor for twenty pieces of money, living on bread and water in that service until he had converted the man and his whole household to Christianity; when the actor afterward offered him recompense, Serapion departed without taking any of it. The tradition recounts a similar service of two years to a Manichaean, whose household he likewise brought to the faith.

The anchor sources place Serapion in Egypt and commemorate him on May 14 and March 21. He is to be distinguished from Saint Serapion, Bishop of Thmuis, a separate fourth-century Egyptian figure with whom he is sometimes confused.

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Asceticism and Voluntary Poverty

The governing theme of Serapion's life is an extreme detachment from possessions. His single linen sindon gave him his surname and stood as the emblem of a poverty so complete that even that one cloth was given away. He owned no shelter and depended on extended fasting, the accounts noting that he would go several days without food.

A frequently retold episode illustrates his indifference to money: when a philosopher tested him by handing him a gold coin, Serapion is said to have bought a single loaf of bread with it and given no further thought to the coin's value. By tradition he was well educated and was reputed to know the whole of Scripture by heart, knowledge that served his missionary encounters.

Selling Himself to Convert His Masters

The tradition presents Serapion's self-enslavement not as servitude for its own sake but as a deliberate missionary strategy. By placing himself within a household as a slave, he could live alongside an unbeliever and, by his conduct and instruction, bring the family to baptism. Having accomplished this, he would take nothing in return and move on.

The accounts associate these episodes with travels beyond Egypt. Palladius's tradition has Serapion journeying through several lands, including, in some versions, Greece and Rome, where he is said to have gone to seek out the most perfect examples of virtue. Some accounts report that he died at about the age of sixty.

Notes

Distinct from St Serapion, Bishop of Thmuis (Mar 21, OS-0860), with whom he is sometimes conflated.

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