Venerable (Monastic) 5th century

Venerable John Cassian the Roman

c. 360 – c. 435

Also known as John Cassian · Cassian the Roman · Ioannes Kassianos

Born in Lesser Scythia, he embraced monastic life in Bethlehem and Egypt, learning from the desert fathers, then settled in Gaul where he founded monasteries at Marseilles. His Institutes and Conferences transmitted the wisdom of the Egyptian fathers to the West, including the teaching on the eight passions. He reposed about the year 435.

Feast Day
February 29
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father John Cassian the Roman

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Life

John Cassian, known in the Orthodox calendar as John Cassian the Roman, was a fifth-century monk and writer whose works carried the ascetic experience of the Egyptian desert into the Latin West. Born around 360 in Lesser Scythia, in the region of Dacia Pontica on the western shore of the Black Sea, he received a classical education from pious Christian parents and was instructed in the Scriptures and the spiritual life. He became fluent in both Latin and Greek, a formation that later enabled him to mediate between the Eastern monastic tradition and the Western Church.

As a young man he set out with his close friend and companion Saint Germanus to embrace the monastic life. After a period in a monastery in the diocese of Tomis, the two traveled to the Holy Land and settled at a monastery near Bethlehem, then journeyed into Egypt, where they spent years among the desert fathers of the Thebaid and Scetis, gathering the teaching that Cassian would later record. Following a sojourn in Constantinople under Saint John Chrysostom and a mission to Rome, he settled in Gaul, founding monasteries at Marseilles and composing the Institutes and the Conferences. He reposed about the year 435.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 360 Birth in Lesser Scythia Born in the region of Dacia Pontica on the western Black Sea coast to pious Christian parents who gave him a classical education.
  2. c. 380 Enters monastic life Joins a monastery in the diocese of Tomis, then travels with Germanus to a monastery near Bethlehem and on into the Egyptian desert.
  3. c. 399–404 Constantinople and ordination Ordained deacon by Saint John Chrysostom and serves as his disciple for about five years.
  4. 404 Mission to Rome After Chrysostom's exile, travels with Germanus to Rome to plead his cause before Pope Innocent I.
  5. c. 415 Foundations at Marseilles Settles in Gaul and establishes cenobitic monasteries for men and women on the Eastern model.
  6. c. 417–419 Writes the Institutes Composes the Institutes of Cenobitic Life at the request of Bishop Castor of Apt, including the teaching on the eight passions.
  7. c. 435 Repose at Marseilles Dies at Marseilles; his relics are kept at the Monastery of Saint Victor.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Monastic Formation in the East

Around the year 380 John entered a monastery in the diocese of Tomis, where Germanus, described as his friend and relative, was already laboring as an ascetic. Drawn to venerate the Holy Places, the two monks traveled to Jerusalem and took up residence at a monastery near Bethlehem, not far from the site of the Lord's Nativity. From there they went into Egypt, the heartland of early monasticism, and spent years among the ascetics of the Thebaid and the desert of Scetis, visiting the monastic settlements of the region and drawing on the spiritual experience of many fathers.

This long immersion in the Egyptian desert became the wellspring of Cassian's later writing. The conversations he and Germanus held with the desert elders furnished the material for his Conferences, in which the teaching of the fathers on prayer, discernment, and the inner life was set down in dialogue form.

Constantinople, Rome, and the Move to Gaul

Around the close of the fourth century the disputes surrounding the controversy over the nature of God in prayer, stirred up under Theophilus of Alexandria, drove many monks from Egypt. Cassian and Germanus came to Constantinople, where Saint John Chrysostom ordained Cassian a deacon and received him as a disciple. They remained with Chrysostom for some five years.

When Chrysostom was sent into exile in 404, Cassian and Germanus traveled to Rome to plead his cause before Pope Innocent I. Cassian received ordination to the priesthood, according to tradition either at Rome or later in Gaul. By about 415 he had settled at Massilia (Marseilles) in southern Gaul, where he established cenobitic monasteries for men and for women on the model of Eastern monasticism. One of these foundations is identified with the Abbey of Saint Victor.

Writings and Influence

At the request of Bishop Castor of Apt in southern Gaul, Cassian composed the Institutes of Cenobitic Life in twelve books, written in the years around 417 to 419. The work describes the customs of the Palestinian and Egyptian monks and treats the eight principal vices, or passions, and the means of overcoming them: gluttony, lust, greed, wrath, sadness, listlessness, vainglory, and pride. This scheme of eight passions became one of his most influential contributions to ascetic theology.

His Conferences of the Desert Fathers, twenty-four dialogues, set out the deeper spiritual teaching he had received in Egypt. He also wrote On the Incarnation of the Lord, a work directed against the teaching of Nestorius. Through these writings Cassian transmitted the discipline of Eastern monasticism to the West; his works deeply shaped Saint Benedict of Nursia, who drew on his principles in the Rule and commended the Conferences to monks. Cassian's emphasis on the cooperation of the human will with divine grace later drew the charge of Semipelagianism, a characterization that modern scholarship continues to debate.

Relics and Commemoration

John Cassian reposed at Marseilles about the year 435. His relics rest at the Monastery of Saint Victor in Marseilles. In the Orthodox Church he is commemorated on February 29; because that date falls only in leap years, his commemoration is transferred to February 28 in non-leap years. In the Western calendar his feast is kept on July 23.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • The Institutes of Cenobitic Life — Twelve books describing the customs of Palestinian and Egyptian monasticism and treating the eight principal passions and their remedies.
  • The Conferences of the Desert Fathers — Twenty-four dialogues recording the spiritual teaching of the Egyptian elders on prayer, discernment, and the inner life.
  • On the Incarnation of the Lord — A doctrinal work written against the teaching of Nestorius.
Notes

Leap-day saint: commemorated Feb 29; in non-leap years his commemoration is transferred to Feb 28.

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