Venerable (Monastic) 10th century

Venerable John of Rila

876 – 946

Also known as Ivan of Rila · John, Abbot of Rila

The great ascetic of Bulgaria who withdrew to the Rila wilderness and became the spiritual father of Rila monasticism and patron of the Bulgarian people.

Feast Day
August 18
Also Oct 19
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father John of Rila, Wonderworker

Life

John of Rila is the most revered ascetic of the Bulgarian Church and is honored as the heavenly protector of the Bulgarian people. By the received tradition he was born in 876 in the village of Skrino in the district of Sredets (the region of present-day Sofia), and was orphaned at a young age. Reduced to poverty, he hired himself out as a cowherd before withdrawing entirely from human society to pursue a life of solitude and prayer.

After a period as a hermit on a barren hill, where he subsisted on wild plants, John retreated deeper into the wilderness of the Rila mountains. The synaxarion relates that he passed twelve years in a desolate cave, fasting, praying, and weeping incessantly, and that he afterward dwelt for seven years on a rocky crag, sheltering in a hollow tree and sustaining himself on grass and on beans that grew near him. His reputation for holiness drew disciples to the mountain in his own lifetime, and a monastic community gradually formed around him, with a church built at his former cave. This was the origin of the Rila Monastery, which became the foremost monastery of Bulgaria and a center of its spiritual and literary life.

John was the first Bulgarian hermit to be venerated as a saint within his own time. Five years before his repose he composed a 'Testament to his Disciples,' counted among the finest works of Old Bulgarian literature, in which he set out his spiritual instruction for the community he left behind. He reposed on August 18, 946, at the age of seventy.

His relics became one of the great treasures of medieval Bulgaria and were translated repeatedly over the centuries — carried to Sredets (Sofia), removed for a time to Hungary, brought to the capital at Trnovo, and at last returned to the Rila Monastery in 1469, where they remain. He is commemorated principally on August 18, his repose, with a further commemoration on October 19 marking the translation of his relics.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 876 Birth at Skrino Born in the village of Skrino in the Sredets district of Bulgaria.
  2. c. 946 Testament to his Disciples Composed his spiritual testament some five years before his repose.
  3. August 18, 946 Repose Reposed in the Rila wilderness at the age of seventy.
  4. 1238 Relics translated to Trnovo His relics were brought to the medieval Bulgarian capital of Trnovo.
  5. 1469 Relics returned to Rila His relics were solemnly returned to the Rila Monastery, where they remain.

Contributions & Legacy

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Ascetic Life in the Rila Wilderness

The accounts of John's solitary years emphasize an extreme and sustained asceticism. By tradition he first lived in a brushwood hut on a high, barren hill, eating only what the land afforded, and later took refuge in a cave after being attacked by robbers. For a time his young nephew Luke joined him in the wilderness, but the boy was taken away by his father, leaving John once more alone.

After twelve years in the cave he moved still deeper into the Rila mountains, settling in the hollow of a tree on a high and nearly inaccessible cliff, where he is said to have remained for seven years. Only when disciples sought him out did his hidden life give way to the founding of a community, and even then the tradition presents him as reluctant to exchange his solitude for the duties of an abbot.

Relics and Veneration

The translations of John's relics trace the political and religious history of the Bulgarian lands. The tradition holds that, some decades after his death, he appeared to his disciples and directed that his relics be carried to Sredets (Sofia). In later centuries they were removed to Hungary and afterward returned, and they were brought to Trnovo, the medieval Bulgarian capital, in 1238. In 1469 they were solemnly returned to the Rila Monastery, where they continue to be venerated.

John of Rila is regarded as the patron and heavenly protector of the Bulgarian people, and the monastery that bears his name remains a principal spiritual center of Bulgaria.

Notes

Principal repose Aug 18; also commemorated Jul 1 and Oct 19 (translations of relics). Oct 19 = translation of his relics to Trnovo (1238).

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