Hierarch 3rd century

Saint Narcissus Bishop of Jerusalem

c. 99 – c. 216

Also known as Narcissus of Jerusalem

An aged bishop of Jerusalem of holy life who, slandered by the wicked, withdrew into the desert until his accusers were overtaken by judgment, and then returned to his flock and was glorified with the gift of wonders.

Feast Day
August 7
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Narcissus, Bishop of Jerusalem

Life

Narcissus was bishop of Jerusalem—then the Roman colony of Aelia Capitolina—in the late second and early third centuries. Eusebius of Caesarea, in his Ecclesiastical History, lists him as the thirtieth bishop of the city and is the principal source for his life. By tradition he came to the episcopate already an old man, around the age of eighty, and governed his flock into extreme old age. He is remembered both for his holiness of life and for the gift of wonders, and the synaxarion relates that he was slandered by enemies, withdrew for a time into solitude, and afterward returned to his church.

Around Pascha in the closing years of the second century, Narcissus together with Theophilus, bishop of Caesarea in Palestine, presided over a council of Palestinian bishops gathered at Caesarea. The council ruled on the dating of Pascha, decreeing that the feast be kept always on a Sunday and not reckoned with the Jewish Passover. This places Narcissus among the Eastern hierarchs who shaped the early observance of the paschal feast in the Holy Land.

He is commemorated in the Orthodox Church on August 7. The Western Church keeps his memory on October 29.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 185 Bishop of Jerusalem Narcissus became bishop of Jerusalem (Aelia Capitolina), the thirtieth to hold the see, at about the age of eighty.
  2. c. 195 Council of Caesarea With Theophilus of Caesarea he presided over a council of Palestinian bishops that decreed Pascha be kept always on a Sunday.
  3. early 3rd c. Repose Narcissus reposed in extreme old age, having appointed Alexander as his coadjutor bishop.

Contributions & Legacy

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Slander and Withdrawal

According to the tradition recorded by Eusebius, Narcissus was the object of grave accusations brought against him by men of evil life. To lend their charges weight, the accusers bound themselves with oaths, calling down calamities upon themselves should they be found liars. The accusations could not be substantiated, and the tradition relates that the false witnesses were afterward overtaken by judgment, each suffering the very evils he had invoked.

Rather than contend further, Narcissus withdrew from the city and lived for several years in solitude in the desert. His disappearance was so sudden that many supposed he had died, and during his absence the see was administered by others. In time he returned to Jerusalem, to the joy of his people, and resumed the governance of his flock.

The Miracle of Water and Oil

The wonder for which Narcissus is best remembered occurred on the eve of Pascha, when the deacons found that no oil had been provided for the lamps of the church. By tradition Narcissus directed that water be drawn and brought to him; he blessed it, and when it was poured into the lamps it burned as though it were oil. The account is among the miracles attributed to him in the synaxarion as evidence of the gift of wonders he received.

Old Age and Repose

Narcissus reached an extreme age—the tradition reports him to have been well over a hundred years old. Because the burden of his years made the full administration of the church difficult, Alexander, who had himself confessed the faith in chains, was joined to him as coadjutor bishop and continued the see after him. Narcissus reposed in great old age in the early third century.

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