Venerable Paul of
ThebesKontakion
in Tone 2
Come, O faithful!
Let us sing hymns of praise
To Paul, the divine star radiant with shining virtues.
Let us cry out with him:
You are the joy of all the saints, O Christ our God!
Saint Paul
of Thebes was born in Egypt around 227 in the Thebaid of Egypt. Left
orphaned, he suffered many things from a greedy relative over his
inheritance. During the persecution against Christians under the emperor
Decius
(249-251), St. Paul learned of his brother-in-law's insidious plan to
deliver him into the hands of the persecutors, and so he fled the city and
fled into the wilderness.
Settling into a
mountain cave, St. Paul dwelt there for ninety-one years, praying
incessantly to God both day and night. He sustained himself on dates and
bread, which a raven brought him, and he clothed himself with palm leaves.
St. Anthony
the Great, who also lived as an ascetic in the Thebaid desert, had a
revelation from God concerning St. Paul. St. Anthony thought that there was
no other desert dweller such as he. Then God said to him, "Anthony, there is
a servant of God more excellent than you, and you should go and see him."
Anthony went into
the desert and came to St. Paul's cave. Falling to the ground before the
entrance to the cave, he asked to be admitted. The Elders introduced
themselves, and then embraced one another. They conversed through the night,
and St. Anthony revealed how he had been led there by God. St. Paul
disclosed to St. Anthony that for sixty years a bird had brought him half a
loaf of bread each day. Now the Lord had sent a double portion in honor of
St. Paul's visit. The next morning, St. Paul spoke to Anthony of his
approaching death, and instructed him to bury him. He also asked St. Anthony
to return to his monastery and bring back the cloak he had received from St.
Athanasios. He did not really need a garment, but wished to depart from his
body while St. Anthony was absent.
As he was
returning with the cloak, St. Anthony beheld the soul of St. Paul surrounded
by angels, prophets, and apostles, shining like the sun and ascending to
God. He entered the cave and found Abba Paul on his knees with his arms
outstretched. St. Anthony mourned for him, and wrapped him in the cloak. He
wondered how he would bury the body, for he had not remembered to bring a
shovel. Two lions came running from the wilderness and dug a grave with
their claws.
St. Anthony buried
the holy Elder, and took his garment of palm leaves, then he returned to his
own monastery. St. Anthony kept this garb as a precious inheritance, and
wore it only twice a year, on Pascha and Pentecost.
St. Paul of Thebes
died in the year 341, when he was 113 years old. He did not establish a
single monastery, but soon after his end there were many imitators of his
life, and they filled the desert with monasteries. St. Paul of Thebes
is honored as the first desert-dweller and hermit.
In the twelfth
century St. Paul's relics were transferred to Constantinople and placed in
the Peribleptos monastery of the Mother of God, on orders of the emperor
Manuel (1143-1180). Later, they were taken to Venice, and finally to
Hungary, at Ofa. Part of his head is in Rome.
St. Paul of
Thebes, whose Life was written by St. Jerome, is not to be confused with St.
Paul the Simple