Venerable (Monastic) 18th century

Venerable Paisios Velichkovsky

December 21, 1722 – November 15, 1794

Also known as Paisius Velichkovsky

A great monastic elder who revived patristic spiritual life through hesychast teaching and translations, deeply shaping Slavic and Romanian Orthodoxy.

Feast Day
November 15
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Paisios Velichkovsky, Archimandrite of Neam't

Life

Venerable Paisios Velichkovsky was an eighteenth-century monastic elder, translator, and teacher of hesychast prayer whose work reshaped the spiritual life of Slavic and Romanian Orthodoxy. Born Peter (Pyotr) Velichkovsky on December 21, 1722, in Poltava, in the Cossack Hetmanate (now Ukraine), he was the eleventh of twelve children of a cathedral priest named John (Ivan), who died young, and a mother, Irene, who raised the children in piety.

After studying at the Kiev Theological Academy, which he entered in 1735, he was drawn to monastic life and was tonsured a rassophore monk, taking the name Platon. Seeking living teachers of the Prayer of the Heart, he traveled to Romanian monastic communities and then, in 1746, to Mount Athos, where he lived in solitude and was later tonsured to the lesser schema as Paisius and ordained to the priesthood.

Over the following decades he led growing monastic communities at Dragomirna, Secu, and finally Neam't in Moldavia, gathering as many as a thousand monks and teaching unceasing prayer under the Typikon of Mount Athos. His enduring legacy was the recovery and translation of the patristic spiritual tradition, crowned by his Church Slavonic translation of the Philokalia, printed in 1793, which carried hesychast teaching across the Orthodox world. He reposed on November 15, 1794.

Timeline 13 moments Read Hide
  1. December 21, 1722 Birth in Poltava Born Peter Velichkovsky in Poltava in the Cossack Hetmanate, the eleventh of twelve children of John, a cathedral priest, and his wife Irene.
  2. 1735 Enters the Kiev Theological Academy Begins his studies at the Kiev Theological Academy, before turning toward the monastic life.
  3. 1741 Tonsured as the monk Platon Becomes a rassophore monk under the name Platon. By tradition he was later introduced to hesychastic practice at the Kiev Pechersk Lavra and in Romanian sketes under the elder Basil of Poiana Marului.
  4. 1746 Arrival on Mount Athos At about twenty-four years of age he travels to Mount Athos, living in solitary prayer and extreme poverty in a cell called Kaparis near the Pantokrator Monastery.
  5. 1750 Tonsured to the lesser schema as Paisius Saint Basil of Poiana Marului tonsures him to the lesser schema, giving him the name Paisius. Disciples gradually gather around him.
  6. 1754 Ordination to the priesthood Ordained a priest and entrusted with the Skete of the Prophet Elias on Athos, where he copies and translates Greek patristic texts into Slavonic.
  7. 1763 Move to Dragomirna Monastery After seventeen years on Athos, he relocates to Dragomirna Monastery near Sochava in Moldavia with sixty-four disciples; the community grows to about 350 monks.
  8. 1775 Relocation to Secu Monastery Following the Austrian annexation of Bucovina, and amid war and plague, the community moves to Secu Monastery.
  9. August 14, 1779 Settles at Neam't Monastery Moves to Neam't Monastery, where he spends his final fifteen years. There he gathers about a thousand monks, teaches the unceasing Prayer of the Heart, and introduces the Typikon of Mount Athos.
  10. 1790 Raised to Archimandrite Archbishop Ambrose elevates him to the rank of Archimandrite during the Divine Liturgy.
  11. 1793 The Slavonic Philokalia printed His Church Slavonic translation of selected Philokalia texts, the Dobrotolublye, is published in Moscow.
  12. November 15, 1794 Repose at Neam't He falls asleep in the Lord at nearly seventy-two years of age; his funeral draws multitudes of clergy, monks, nobles, and laypeople.
  13. 1982 Canonization Glorified by a Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church under Patriarch Pimen I, with his feast fixed on November 15.

Contributions & Legacy

6 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Search for Spiritual Guidance

Peter Velichkovsky was born in Poltava on December 21, 1722, into the family of a cathedral priest. His father John died while he was young, and his mother Irene brought up the children in piety. He entered the Kiev Theological Academy in 1735, but academic study did not satisfy his longing for the monastic and contemplative life.

Around the age of seventeen he began seeking out monastic communities, and he was tonsured a rassophore monk with the name Platon. According to the accounts of his life, he was first introduced to hesychastic prayer at the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, and then traveled to Romanian sketes such as Trastieni and Kyrkoul, encountering the elder Basil of Poiana Marului, who taught him the Prayer of the Heart.

Mount Athos

In 1746, at about twenty-four, he made his way to Mount Athos, arriving near the feast of Saint Athanasios at the Great Lavra. He settled in solitude in a cell called Kaparis near the Pantokrator Monastery, living in extreme poverty and prayer.

In 1750 Saint Basil of Poiana Marului tonsured him to the lesser schema with the name Paisius. As disciples accumulated over the following years, the community asked for his ordination, and in 1754 he was ordained a priest and given charge of the Skete of the Prophet Elias. He remained on Athos for seventeen years, devoting himself to copying Greek patristic books and translating them into Slavonic — labor that would bear fruit in his later translation work.

Monastic Communities in Moldavia

In 1763 Paisius moved from Athos to Dragomirna Monastery near Sochava in Moldavia, bringing sixty-four disciples; the community grew to about 350 monks. After Bucovina was annexed by Austria, and amid the disruptions of war and plague, the brotherhood relocated to Secu Monastery in 1775.

On August 14, 1779, the community settled at Neam't Monastery, where Paisius spent the last fifteen years of his life. There he gathered roughly a thousand monks, instructed them in the unceasing Prayer of the Heart, and introduced the Typikon of Mount Athos. In 1790 Archbishop Ambrose raised him to the rank of Archimandrite during the Divine Liturgy.

Translation of the Philokalia

Paisius's central scholarly achievement was a Church Slavonic translation of selected texts of the Philokalia, titled Dobrotolublye, published in Moscow in 1793. It was the first Philokalia translation to be read widely by the public rather than remaining confined to monasteries.

He was at first reluctant to publish for a lay readership, concerned that laypeople would lack the supervision of the startsy and the support of liturgical life that the texts presuppose; the Metropolitan of Saint Petersburg eventually persuaded him to proceed. His edition presented selected portions rather than the complete collection, serving as a curated introduction to the hesychast spiritual teaching. The translation later gained still wider currency through its association with The Way of a Pilgrim.

Legacy

The spiritual revival that Paisius set in motion shaped the Orthodox world of the nineteenth century. His disciples carried the tradition of eldership (starchestvo) and the Slavonic Philokalia outward, and his influence is associated with the startsy of the Optina Monastery and with Saint Seraphim of Sarov.

His influence reached even to North America: Saint Herman of Alaska possessed a Slavonic Philokalia printed in 1794, a witness to how far the renewal he fostered traveled.

Relics & Shrines

The relics of Saint Paisios were uncovered at Neam't Monastery in 1846, 1853, 1861, and 1872, and on each occasion were found to be incorrupt.

He was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1982 under Patriarch Pimen I, and his feast is kept on November 15.

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