Venerable (Monastic) 4th century

Malchus of Syria

4th century – c. 390

Also known as Malchus of Chalcis · Venerable Malchus

A Syrian who fled an arranged marriage to become a monk near Chalcis; carried off into captivity and forced into servitude, he preserved his chastity and eventually returned to the monastic life.

Feast Day
March 26
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Malchus of Syria, the Captive Monk

Life

Malchus of Syria was a fourth-century ascetic, the only child of a farming family near Nisibis, who chose monastic life in the desert of Chalcis over the marriage his parents intended for him. After several years as a monk, he learned of his father's death and left the monastery without his abbot's permission to travel home and claim his inheritance — a departure from obedience that, in the account preserved of his life, set in motion the trials that followed.

Traveling homeward with a group of pilgrims, Malchus was captured by Saracen raiders and sold into slavery. His master compelled him to take as wife another captive whose own husband had been sold to a different owner. Malchus refused to consummate the union and proposed to take his own life rather than break his monastic vow; the woman then proposed that they live chastely 'as brother and sister,' an arrangement he accepted while they concealed it from their master.

The pair eventually escaped captivity, were freed at a Roman fort, and returned to monastic life — Malchus to a men's monastery and his companion to a women's monastery, both at Maronia. He spent his remaining years recounting his trials as instruction for other monks on the value of monastic obedience. His story survives solely through Jerome's biography, written after Jerome interviewed Malchus and his companion in person while both were still alive.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. 4th century Birth near Nisibis Malchus is born the only child of a farming family residing near Nisibis. His exact birth year is unknown.
  2. 4th century Enters monastic life at Chalcis Rather than accept the marriage his parents desire, Malchus chooses monasticism and begins monastic life in the desert of Chalcis, where he serves for several years.
  3. 4th century Departure and captivity On hearing of his father's death, Malchus leaves the monastery without his abbot's permission to claim his inheritance. Traveling with pilgrims, the group is overtaken by Saracens and he is sold into slavery.
  4. 4th century Forced marriage and chaste vow His master forces him to marry a fellow captive whose husband had been sold elsewhere. Malchus refuses to consummate the union and threatens suicide; the two agree to live chastely as brother and sister, hiding the arrangement from their master.
  5. 4th century Escape and freedom The pair flee captivity by crossing downriver on inflated goatskins. Pursued and cornered in a cave, their pursuers are killed by a lioness denning there; using the dead pursuers' camels, they reach a Roman fort under the commander Sabinianus, who frees them.
  6. 4th century Return to monastic life at Maronia His companion enters a women's monastery in Maronia; Malchus joins a men's monastery in Maronia under Bishop Evagrius, where he uses his experiences to teach other monks about monastic obedience.
  7. c. 391–392 Jerome records his life Jerome writes the 'Life of Malchus the Captive Monk' after interviewing both Malchus and his companion at Malchus's home in Maronia while they were still living.
  8. c. 390 Repose Malchus dies around the year 390.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Captivity and the Preservation of Chastity

When his Saracen master compelled Malchus to marry a fellow slave, he was confronted with a coerced union that threatened the chastity central to his monastic vocation. According to the account, Malchus refused to consummate the marriage and declared he would take his own life rather than break his vow.

His captive wife, whose own husband had been sold to another master, proposed instead that the two live together 'as brother and sister.' Malchus accepted, and the pair maintained a chaste companionship while concealing the true nature of their relationship from their master. The episode became the moral center of his later teaching.

Escape from Slavery

Malchus and his companion fled their captivity by crossing downriver on inflated goatskins. When their flight was discovered and they were pursued, they took refuge in a cave that, as the account relates, was being used as a den by a lioness.

The lioness attacked and killed their pursuers and then departed with her cub, allowing the pair to escape. Riding the camels left by the dead pursuers, they reached a Roman fort commanded by Sabinianus, described as 'Dux Mesopotamiae,' who granted them their freedom.

Sources and Legacy

The sole historical source for Malchus's life is Jerome's biography, titled 'Life of Malchus the Captive Monk,' written around 391–392. Jerome compiled the account from a personal interview with Malchus and his companion, conducted at Malchus's home in Maronia while both were still alive.

After their return, Malchus entered a men's monastery in Maronia under Bishop Evagrius, where he drew on his own trials to instruct other monks in the value of monastic obedience. His companion entered a women's monastery in the same place. He is commemorated on March 26 by the Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic Churches, and is listed in the Roman Martyrology under October 21.

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