Righteous Old Testament

Righteous Lot

Old Testament era (c. 2000 B.C., by tradition)

Also known as Lot, nephew of Abraham

Nephew of Abraham who lived in Sodom and was rescued before its destruction, remembered as righteous amid a corrupt city.

Feast Day
October 9
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Commemorated as

The Righteous Forefather Lot

Life

Lot was the nephew of the patriarch Abraham and a figure of the Old Testament who is venerated in the Orthodox Church as a righteous forefather. According to Genesis, he was the son of Haran, grandson of Terah, and born in Ur of the Chaldees (in present-day Iraq). He accompanied Abraham on his migration from Ur toward Canaan and, during a famine, traveled with him into Egypt.

Lot is remembered above all as a righteous man who dwelt in the corrupt city of Sodom yet was rescued from its destruction. The New Testament (2 Peter 2:7-8) calls him righteous and describes him as vexed in his soul day by day by the lawless conduct of those around him. The Orthodox Church regards Lot as the progenitor of the Moabites and the Ammonites.

He is commemorated on October 9 together with the Righteous Forefather Abraham.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 2000 B.C. (by tradition) Birth in Ur of the Chaldees Lot was born to Haran in Ur of the Chaldees (present-day Iraq); his grandfather was Terah and his uncle was Abraham.
  2. Old Testament era Migration with Abraham He accompanied Abraham from Ur toward Canaan and, during a famine, also traveled with him into Egypt.
  3. Old Testament era Separation and settlement in Sodom As the flocks of both households multiplied, conflict arose between Abraham's and Lot's herdsmen. Abraham offered Lot first choice of land; Lot chose the well-watered Jordan plains and settled in Sodom (Genesis 13), while Abraham remained at Hebron.
  4. Old Testament era Capture and rescue During a war, the forces of Chedorlaomer captured Lot. Abraham pursued the four kings with a trained force of 318 men as far as Hobah and rescued Lot together with his possessions.
  5. Old Testament era Hospitality to the two angels Two angels came to the gate of Sodom where Lot was sitting. He invited them into his house and gave them supper with unleavened bread. That night the townspeople, young and old, surrounded the house demanding the guests, intending violence; Lot refused them, and the angels struck the crowd with blindness and disclosed their mission to destroy the city.
  6. Old Testament era Flight from Sodom The angels compelled Lot, his wife, and his two daughters to flee, commanding them not to look back; his sons-in-law thought he was joking. Lot requested refuge in the nearby town of Zoar, and an angel agreed. After he reached Zoar, the LORD rained fire and brimstone on Sodom and Gomorrah, and Lot's wife looked back and became a pillar of salt.
  7. Old Testament era Refuge in the cave Fearing to remain in Zoar, Lot fled to a cave in the hills with his daughters. Fearing they would have no descendants, his daughters intoxicated him on successive nights and conceived Moab, ancestor of the Moabites, and Ben-Ammi, ancestor of the Ammonites.

Contributions & Legacy

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Family and Kinship

Lot was the son of Haran and grandson of Terah, making him the nephew of the patriarch Abraham (Abram). He is described as the progenitor of two peoples: through his sons Moab and Ben-Ammi he became the ancestor of the Moabites and the Ammonites respectively.

Veneration and Legacy

The Orthodox Church venerates Lot as a holy forefather, a progenitor among the patriarchs. His feast day is October 9, shared with the Righteous Forefather Abraham. The OCA listing notes that Abraham and his nephew Lot lived around 2000 B.C., describing Lot as a righteous man living in the midst of a corrupt city.

No separate act of glorification exists for Lot; as an Old Testament forefather he has been venerated since antiquity rather than formally glorified as a modern saint.

The New Testament gives Lot lasting prominence: 2 Peter 2:7-8 explicitly calls him righteous and notes that his righteous soul was vexed from day to day by the lawless deeds of the Sodomites. Jesus referred to the 'days of Lot' as a parallel to a future judgment and gave the warning, 'Remember Lot's wife.' The Church fathers Ambrose and John Chrysostom wrote sympathetically about Lot's actions.

Relics & Shrines

The alleged tomb of Lot is located at Bani Na'im, a Palestinian town near Hebron.

The Monastery of Saint Lot stands near the Dead Sea in Jordan, on a steep slope overlooking the southeastern shore and the modern town of Safi (ancient Zoar). Byzantine Christians identified a natural cave at the site as the refuge where Lot and his daughters sheltered after the destruction of Sodom (Genesis 19:24-25), and a nearby rock formation is venerated as Lot's wife turned to a pillar of salt.

Archaeological work reveals Bronze Age occupation followed by Nabataean pottery from the first centuries BC/AD, with the bulk of findings dating to the early Byzantine period (c. 5th-7th centuries). Two mosaic inscriptions record construction in April 606 AD and renovation in May 691 AD. The monastery featured an 18-by-17-meter basilical church, a water reservoir, and a hostel complex. Communal tombs housed monks and pilgrims, at least one of African origin (corroborated by Coptic coins and pottery). Greek mosaic inscriptions named church officials including Bishop Iakovos, Abbot Sozomenos, and the presbyters Christoforos and Zenos, alongside named pilgrims. The site remained in use through the early Abbasid period (late 8th-9th centuries), indicating continued Christian and Muslim veneration. The Monastery of Saint Lot was added to UNESCO's World Heritage Tentative List on June 18, 2001, in the Cultural category.

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