Hierarch Byzantine

Saints Alexander John, and Paul the New, Patriarchs of Constantinople

4th-8th centuries

Also known as Alexander · John IV the Faster · Paul the New

Three Patriarchs of Constantinople commemorated together: Alexander (325-340), John IV the Faster (6th c.), and Paul the New (8th c., during iconoclasm).

Feast Day
August 30
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Life

Saints Alexander, John, and Paul the New are three Patriarchs of Constantinople who are commemorated together by the Orthodox Church on August 30. Though they led the see in different centuries, the liturgical tradition joins them in a single feast, celebrating their shared defense of the faith and care for the Church of Constantinople.

Their lives span the formative centuries of the Byzantine Church: Alexander in the 4th century at the time of the Arian controversy, John IV the Faster in the 6th century, and Paul the New in the 8th century during the iconoclast struggle. The kontakion for the feast describes the three hierarchs as having taken up the yoke of Christ's Cross and become partakers of His glory, interceding together before God.

Contributions & Legacy

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Saint Alexander

Saint Alexander led the church of the imperial city in the 4th century. According to the historian Gelasius of Cyzicus, his aged and infirm predecessor Metrophanes sent Alexander in his place to the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea in 325 and designated him as his successor. Alexander served as bishop of the city through the period in which it was refounded as Constantinople, and the OCA's account dates his tenure as patriarch to roughly 325-340.

Alexander is best remembered for his firm stand against Arius. At the Council of Nicaea he supported the Trinitarian confession against the Arian teaching. When the Emperor Constantine afterward commanded that Arius be received back into communion, Alexander refused, persuaded that Arius's repentance was not sincere, and would not yield despite threats. The tradition relates that he shut himself up in fervent prayer that God would take him from this world rather than force him to restore Arius; Arius died before he could be received into the Church. Sources differ on the precise dates of Alexander's birth and death, placing his birth somewhere in the third century and his repose in the late 330s; he is said to have reached a very advanced age.

Saint John the Faster

Saint John IV, known as 'the Faster' (Nesteutes) for his rigorous ascetic life and fasting, served as Patriarch of Constantinople in the 6th century. According to the OCA, his patriarchate fell in the years 582-595. Before his elevation he had served the church in lesser orders and was noted for his ascetical discipline and his charity to the poor.

He is remembered in the Orthodox tradition as the compiler of a penitential Nomokanon, a rule governing penances. The instructions he gave for the guidance of priests came down in several distinct versions that nonetheless share a common foundation, and they shaped later penitential practice in the Church.

Saint Paul the New

Saint Paul, called 'the New,' was a Patriarch of Constantinople in the 8th century, during the iconoclast controversy. Born in Cyprus, he came to the patriarchal throne in the period of the persecution of those who venerated the holy icons; the OCA places his tenure in the years 780-784 and notes that he had served under the iconoclast emperor Leo IV.

The tradition remembers Paul as virtuous and pious but timid: seeing the suffering that the Orthodox endured for the sake of the holy icons, he at first concealed his own Orthodox conviction. He afterward withdrew from his office and entered a monastery, and it was his retirement that opened the way for his successor and for the calling of the council that would restore the veneration of icons.

Notes

Group commemoration spanning the 4th-8th centuries.

Sources: GOARCH calendar; OCA / J. Sanidopoulos cross-check