Venerable (Monastic) 16th century

Venerable Therapon Abbot of Monza

died 1597

Also known as Therapon of Monza

An ascetic connected with Kostroma and the river Monza, of hidden origin, who labored in holiness and was venerated locally as a wonderworker.

Feast Day
May 27
Also Dec 12
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Therapon, Abbot of Monza

Life

Therapon of Monza was a sixteenth-century Russian ascetic remembered as the founder-patron of a small monastery on the River Monza in the Galich land, within the present-day Kostroma region. According to tradition his early life is obscure, and he is reckoned among the Synaxis of the Saints of Kostroma. He is venerated as a Venerable (monastic) wonderworker and is commemorated on May 27 and December 12 (his Kostroma synaxis listing also records December 1).

His recorded life centers on a steady monastic discipline of solitary prayer in the forest and the nightly copying of spiritually useful books, together with a reputation for prophecy and miracles that arose even before his repose in 1597. After his death the monastery on the Monza came to bear his name.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 16th century Ascetic beginnings in Moscow By tradition Therapon began his ascetic labors in Moscow before seeking a more settled monastic life.
  2. 16th century Tonsure at Kostroma He moved to the monastery of the Exaltation of the Cross at Kostroma, where he received monastic tonsure.
  3. 16th century Settlement on the River Monza He transferred to the monastery founded by the monks Adrian and Paphnutius near the River Monza, about 25 versts from Galich, where he labored until the end of his life.
  4. 1597 Repose Therapon reposed in 1597; the synaxarion relates that he had foretold the famine that struck in 1601.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Monastic Life and Labors

The sources describe a disciplined eremitic routine within a cenobitic community. Each day, with the blessing of the igumen, Therapon withdrew into a forest thicket to pray, and by night he read and transcribed copies of spiritually useful books, joining manuscript work to a life of wilderness solitude, prayer, fasting, and vigil.

Tradition records that he held Blessed Basil of Moscow, the fool-for-Christ, in deep regard, calling him his friend although the two are said never to have met in person. The OCA notes that his early life is unknown and that he may himself have been a fool-for-Christ.

Veneration and Legacy

By tradition Therapon was glorified with the gift of wonderworking during his own lifetime, and the synaxarion relates that he foretold the famine of 1601. After his repose the monastery on the River Monza took his name and preserved his memory.

He is numbered among the Synaxis of the Saints of Kostroma, a commemoration of the saints of the Kostroma diocese established in 1981 and kept on January 23, the feast of Saint Gennadius of Kostroma.

Notes

OCA says his early life is unknown; possibly a fool-for-Christ. Distinct from the other Therapons of this day. Also commemorated Dec 12.

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