A monk near Tyre in Phoenicia, given to fasting and prayer, who was granted the gift of seeing things afar off and discerning the hearts of those who came to him.
Feast Day
June 8
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Zosimus of Phoenicia was a sixth-century monk who lived in the region of Tyre, in the Roman province of Phoenicia within Syria. According to the synaxarion accounts, he was born in the village of Synda near Tyre and devoted himself to the monastic life in a nearby monastery, where he was noted for fasting, prayer, and ascetic labor.
He is remembered chiefly for the gift of spiritual perception attributed to him: tradition holds that he could discern events happening at a distance. The most frequently recounted episodes of his life are his weeping foresight of the earthquake that struck Antioch and an account in which a lion that had killed his pack animal was made to carry its load. He is commemorated by the Orthodox Church on June 8 and is described as having reposed peacefully in the sixth century.
Timeline 4 moments
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6th centuryBirth at Synda near TyreAccording to the synaxarion, Zosimus was born in the Syrian village of Synda, in the vicinity of the city of Tyre in Phoenicia.
6th centuryMonastic lifeHe embraced the monastic life in a monastery near his home region, where the accounts describe him laboring in fasting, prayer, and other ascetic virtues.
526Foresight of the Antioch earthquakeThe accounts relate that, by his gift of seeing distant events, he perceived the earthquake that destroyed Antioch in the year 526; weeping, he prostrated himself and prayed that the city not be completely destroyed.
6th centuryReposeZosimus is said to have entered peacefully into rest in the sixth century.
Contributions & Legacy
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Gift of Spiritual Perception
The sources consistently attribute to Zosimus a gift of clairvoyance, that is, the ability to perceive events occurring far away. The synaxarion frames this as a charism granted by God in the course of his ascetic life rather than as a natural faculty.
The episode most associated with this gift is his perception of the earthquake that struck Antioch in 526. The accounts describe him weeping bitterly and praying that the city be spared from complete destruction. One account also relates that he reassured a visitor named Arkesilaos that the holy Bishop John the Chozebite had healed his wife's injured eye, an example of his knowledge of distant matters.
Traditional Accounts
A widely repeated story concerns a lion that, on a road as Zosimus traveled toward Caesarea, attacked and killed his pack animal. According to the accounts, rather than being harmed, the lion was addressed by the monk and made to carry the burden in the dead animal's place.
The synaxarion relates that the beast became gentle, took up the load, and carried it to the gates of Caesarea, after which Zosimus released it. Such accounts of wild animals submitting to ascetics are a recurring motif in monastic literature and are transmitted as part of the saint's traditional life.