Venerable (Monastic) 6th century

Venerable David of Gareja

6th century

Also known as დავით გარეჯელი · Davit Garejeli · David Garejeli

One of the Thirteen Assyrian Fathers and founder of the David Gareja monastic complex in the Kakheti wilderness, having first lived as a hermit near Tbilisi.

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

Our Venerable Father David of Gareja

Life

Saint David of Gareja (Davit Garejeli) was a sixth-century anchorite and monastic founder counted among the Thirteen Assyrian (Syrian) Fathers, the company of monks who came to the Kingdom of Iberia (Georgia) to strengthen Christianity and to plant the ascetic life there. A disciple of Saint John of Zedazeni, he is remembered above all as the founder of the David Gareja lavra in the semi-desert of Kakheti, a foundation that grew into one of the most important centers of Georgian monasticism.

After first living as a hermit on the mountain above Tbilisi, David withdrew with his disciple Lucian into the Gareja wilderness, where he established a community of caves. Georgian hagiography honors him among the most venerated saints of the Georgian Church and links his name permanently to the landscape of eastern Georgia. He is commemorated on May 7 and, in Georgian usage, on the first Thursday after the Ascension.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 6th century Coming to Georgia David comes to the Kingdom of Iberia as one of the Thirteen Assyrian Fathers, a disciple of Saint John of Zedazeni.
  2. 6th century Hermit above Tbilisi He lives as a hermit on the mountain above Tbilisi with his disciple Lucian before withdrawing into the wilderness.
  3. 6th century Foundation of the Gareja lavra David settles in the Gareja semi-desert of Kakheti and, with his disciples Dodo and Lucian, founds the David Gareja lavra.
  4. Second half of the 6th century Repose David dies and is buried at the David Gareja lavra.
  5. 9th century Tomb made a place of public worship On the initiative of Hilarion the Iberian, David's tomb is made a place of public veneration.

Contributions & Legacy

5 contributions Read Hide

The Thirteen Assyrian Fathers

David belonged to the Thirteen Assyrian Fathers, a group of monks who arrived in Georgia during the sixth century, traditionally said to have come from Mesopotamia. Georgian church historians credit them with founding several monasteries and hermitages and with initiating the monastic movement in Georgia after the country's conversion to Christianity. Modern scholarship is divided as to whether the fathers were Assyrians, Assyrian-educated Georgians, missionaries, or refugees.

David was a disciple of Saint John of Zedazeni, who is traditionally reckoned the leader of the company. After their arrival the fathers dispersed across the land, each associated with a monastery or hermitage; David is named first among them in the traditional list and is identified with the Gareja foundation.

Hermit Above Tbilisi

According to the Georgian tradition, David first settled on the mountain above Tbilisi together with his spiritual son Lucian, spending his days in prayer and, by tradition, blessing the city from the height. Once a week, the account relates, David and Lucian would go down into the city to preach.

The synaxarion relates that David's growing influence provoked opposition from fire-worshippers, who, it is said, used an expectant woman to accuse him of fathering her child. By tradition the saint touched his staff to her womb and bade the unborn child name its true father, and the child did so from within the womb. The crowd then turned on the woman and stoned her, an outcome that, the account says, deeply grieved David and contributed to his withdrawal into the wilderness.

The Gareja Wilderness and Lavra

David and Lucian withdrew to a cave in the Gareja semi-desert of Kakheti, where, by tradition, they lived on herbs and the bark of trees. The synaxarion relates that the Lord sent them deer which Lucian milked, and that when David made the sign of the Cross over the milk it was turned into cheese. As others were drawn to join them, the wilderness filled with monks and a monastic community took shape.

This foundation became the David Gareja lavra, established with his disciples Dodo and Lucian, and it grew into a major center of Georgian monastic life. David died in the second half of the sixth century and was buried at the lavra. In the ninth century his tomb was made a place of public worship on the initiative of Hilarion the Iberian.

The Pilgrimage and the Stone of Grace

Tradition records that David led a pilgrimage toward the Holy Land but, on reaching the hills surrounding Jerusalem, judged himself unworthy to enter the city; he climbed one of the hills, knelt at what the Georgian account calls the Ridge or Place of Grace, and did not pass through the gates. He took three stones from the Holy Land to carry back to Iberia. By the tradition, an angel revealed to the patriarch of Jerusalem that David had borne away the grace of the holy city in the stones, and envoys overtook him near Nablus and recovered two of them.

David returned to Georgia with the one remaining stone, which came to be venerated as a miracle-working stone associated with healing. Since the 1990s this stone has been kept at the Holy Trinity (Sameba) Cathedral in Tbilisi.

Relics & Shrines

David was buried in the David Gareja lavra he founded, and his tomb became a place of public veneration from the ninth century. Georgian tradition associates his relics with miracles of healing, including the giving of sight to the blind. The stone he is said to have brought from the Holy Land is preserved at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Tbilisi.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Further Reading

Further Reading
  • The Thirteen Assyrian Fathers
  • Lives of the Georgian Saints
Notes

6th century. Among the Thirteen Assyrian (Syrian) Fathers who came to Georgia in the 6th century; commemorated together on May 7. See the group row OS-1128. Also commemorated on the Thursday after Ascension in Georgian usage.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org); OrthodoxWiki