Monastic Life and Spiritual Fatherhood
Irodion's formation took place at Cernica Monastery, one of the principal centers of Romanian monastic renewal in the nineteenth century. Sources relate that he entered Cernica as a young man and was tonsured there in 1846, taking the name Irodion in place of his baptismal name John, and was ordained to the diaconate and then the priesthood. At Cernica he came under the guidance of Saint Calinic, then abbot, who became his spiritual mentor.
His subsequent life was tied to the Lainici Skete in Oltenia, where he served as the monastic superior. According to the accounts, when Calinic was made Bishop of Ramnic, Irodion accompanied him and took up leadership of Lainici; sources describe him serving as abbot across the second half of the nineteenth century, with several intervals of resignation and reappointment, and credit his administration with the growth of the community. The relationship between the two men is said to have come full circle: the synaxarion tradition relates that Bishop Calinic, his former abbot, later chose the younger Irodion as his own spiritual father and called him the 'Morning Star of Lainici.'
Local monastic tradition remembers Irodion for a rigorous ascetic discipline and for gifts of spiritual discernment, including the reading of thoughts and prophecy. These accounts, transmitted within the monastery, belong to the traditional remembrance of the saint rather than to documentary record.