Venerable (Monastic) Unknown

Saint Theodosius the New Healer of Peloponnese

9th–10th century

Also known as Theodosius the New

A saint of the Peloponnese venerated as a healer; no details of his life are preserved on the page.

Feast Day
August 7
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Theodosius the New, Wonderworker and Healer of the Peloponnese

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Theodosius the New is a monastic saint of the Peloponnese, venerated in the Greek tradition as a wonderworker and healer. By tradition he came from Athens, took up the monastic life under an elder, and afterward withdrew as a hermit to the region of Argos in the Peloponnese, where his asceticism and gift of healing drew a local following. He is commemorated on August 7.

The fullest accounts of his life are local and traditional rather than documentary, and the sources differ on his dates: he is variously placed in the ninth and tenth centuries, with his repose given as 862 by one reckoning and as late as 922 by a local Argolid tradition. The Orthodox Church in America lists him among the saints of August 7 but preserves no biographical narrative, and the saint's own database row records him as an honest stub flagged for further review.

His memory is bound up with a monastery and church associated with him in the Argolid. According to the tradition surrounding the foundation, he was directed in a vision by Saint John the Baptist to build a church, which is said still to stand. After his death his tomb came to be regarded as a source of healings, and his veneration as a healer is the feature most consistently attached to his name.

Contributions & Legacy

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Monastic life and ministry

The traditional life relates that Theodosius was an Athenian by origin who, on taking up the monastic life, divided his property among the poor and first settled near Athens; finding his solitude broken by the stream of those who sought his guidance, he withdrew to the greater quiet of the Argos region. There he is said to have come into conflict with the local bishop of Argos, an opposition that tradition recounts in vivid terms, including an episode in which live coals were placed in his censer or miter without burning him. By one account the bishop who came to investigate the accusations against him was Saint Peter of Argos, who, won over by the sign and by Theodosius's evident virtue, ordained him first deacon and then priest.

He is remembered for working many miracles during his life and for foreseeing his own peaceful death. A monastery bearing his name was established in the Argolid near Panariti; a local account dates its foundation to 880. After a period of desertion the house was revived in the early sixteenth century, and in 1942 it was given over to nuns and became a convent.

Veneration as a healer

Theodosius is invoked above all as a healer, and his tomb is described in the tradition as a source of cures. A story preserved in the local veneration tells of Turks who mocked his relics and were met by a supernatural visitation, after which they returned what they had taken to his church and sought forgiveness. The persistence of this reputation for healing, more than any detailed record of his deeds, is what carried his memory forward.

Notes

Honest stub; OCA gives no detail. Flagged for review.

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