Hierarch 5th century

Paulinus the Merciful of Nola

c. 354 – 431

Also known as Paulinus, Bishop of Nola

A wealthy nobleman and poet of Bordeaux who gave away his riches to the poor, even offering himself in place of a widow's captive son, and became the beloved bishop of Nola.

Feast Day
January 23
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Paulinus the Merciful, Bishop of Nola

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Financial Need

Life

Paulinus the Merciful was a wealthy Roman senator and poet of Aquitanian stock who, after his conversion to Christ, gave away his vast inheritance to the poor and eventually became bishop of Nola in Campania. Born at Bordeaux into a distinguished family, he received a classical education and rose through the offices of the late Roman state, serving as a senator and as governor of Campania. The Orthodox Church commemorates him on January 23 with the title "the Merciful," a name earned by a lifetime of almsgiving that culminated, by tradition, in his offering his own person to redeem a captive.

By the accounts of his life, Paulinus and his wife were converted and baptized while still young, after which he disposed of his property and distributed the proceeds among the needy. Seeking seclusion, he withdrew first to Spain, where he was ordained a priest, and afterward settled at Nola in Italy, the resting place of the martyr Felix, to whom he was deeply devoted. There he built churches and charitable houses and was eventually chosen bishop of the city, an office he is said to have held for some twenty years until his death.

Alongside his episcopal labors, Paulinus was known as a Christian poet whose verses and letters survive; the tradition counts some thirty-two or thirty-three poems and roughly fifty letters of moral and religious instruction. His relics are reported to rest in the Church of the Apostle Bartholomew in Rome. He died, by the common account, at the age of seventy-eight in the year 431.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 354 Born at Bordeaux Born into an aristocratic family of Aquitania and educated by the poet Ausonius.
  2. c. 393–395 Ordained priest After giving away his wealth, he was ordained a priest at Barcelona in Spain.
  3. c. 409 Bishop of Nola Chosen bishop of Nola in Campania, where he was devoted to the martyr Felix.
  4. 431 Repose Died at about the age of seventy-eight.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

From Senator to Bishop

Paulinus was born at Bordeaux about the year 354 into the aristocracy of Aquitania, and his early education was guided by the poet Ausonius. He attained high civil rank, becoming a Roman senator and serving as governor of the province of Campania. According to the Western tradition, his conversion was shaped by his Christian wife Therasia, by Bishop Delphinus of Bordeaux and the presbyter Amandus, and by Saint Martin of Tours, who was said to have healed him of an ailment of the eye.

The death of his only child shortly after birth, together with his deepening faith, led Paulinus and Therasia to withdraw from public life. He was baptized, gave away the larger part of his possessions, and was ordained a priest at Barcelona around the year 393 to 395. He then moved to Nola in Campania, settling at the shrine of the martyr Felix, whose cult he promoted and in whose honor he composed an annual poem. About the year 409 he was chosen bishop of Nola.

The Ransom of the Widow's Son

The episode that earned Paulinus the title "the Merciful" is related in the synaxarion. When the Vandals invaded Italy and carried many people off into captivity, Paulinus used the funds of the church to ransom as many captives as he could. When his resources were exhausted and he could not redeem the son of a certain poor widow who was enslaved in the household of the Vandal prince, he offered himself in the young man's place.

Dressed as a slave, Paulinus served the prince as a gardener. By tradition, his true identity was made known to the ruler, called King Riga, through a dream. The king not only granted Paulinus his own freedom but released all the other captives from Campania as well, so that the bishop returned home together with them.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • Poems (Carmina) — Some thirty-two or thirty-three surviving poems, including the annual birthday-poems composed in honor of the martyr Felix of Nola.
  • Letters — Roughly fifty letters of moral and religious instruction, documenting his correspondence and friendships across the Church of his day.
Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Jan 23