Veneration and Relics
Formal veneration of Macarius was established at the end of the seventeenth century or the beginning of the eighteenth. His relics were uncovered in 1816. Annual liturgical commemoration was resumed on January 22, 1888, following a petition from local residents, and in 1889 a church dedicated to him was built at his tomb.
Among the accounts associated with him, tradition relates that he once encountered a lost Polish soldier in the forest and, after praying to the Lord, thrust his staff into the ground, from which a spring of water gushed forth to revive the dying man. Later healings were reported at the monastery fountain.