Venerable (Monastic) 5th century

Venerable Thalelaeus the Hermit of Syria

5th century (reposed c. 460)

Also known as Thalelaios · Thalelaeus the Unmercenary

A Syrian ascetic who enclosed himself in a small hut and wept continually for his sins. Numbered among the unmercenary physicians, he healed the sick and converted many pagans, reposing about the year 460.

Feast Day
February 27
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Thalelaeus the Hermit of Syria

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Venerable Thalelaeus was a fifth-century hermit who labored in Syria, remembered for an extreme life of enclosure and for the gift of weeping that earned him the epithet 'the Weeper.' A native of Cilicia in Asia Minor, he became a monk and was ordained presbyter before withdrawing to a solitary and reputedly haunted site near the city of Gabala.

His life is preserved in the writings of Bishop Theodoret of Cyrrhus, who knew him personally. By the account of the synaxarion he received the gift of wonderworking, converted many of the surrounding pagan population, and reposed at an advanced age around the year 460. He is commemorated on February 27.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. Early life Cilician origins and monastic profession Born in Cilicia in Asia Minor, Thalelaeus entered a monastery associated with Saint Sabbas the Sanctified, where he was ordained presbyter.
  2. Mid-life Withdrawal to Syria He moved to Syria, settling near the city of Gabala at a ruined pagan temple surrounded by graves, a place reputed to be haunted by unclean spirits that frightened travellers.
  3. c. 460 Repose Saint Thalelaeus reposed at an advanced age around the year 460.

Contributions & Legacy

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Ascetic Life

At his hermitage Thalelaeus first lived in a tent, where, according to the synaxarion, demons assailed him with frightful apparitions and noises; by the power of God he overcame them and was troubled no more.

He then intensified his struggle, constructing a tiny cell described as roughly three feet high and two feet wide, so cramped that he could not sit upright, and he remained in it for about ten years. Later tradition, drawing on Baring-Gould, describes an even more severe device built of two wheels joined by wood into a kind of barrel, so low that his chin rested on his knees. He was known for weeping almost without intermission, the source of his epithet.

Mission and Wonders

By the account of the synaxarion, the Lord granted Thalelaeus the gift of wonderworking, and his miracles helped to draw the surrounding pagan population toward the faith. With the help of those he had converted, he destroyed the ruined pagan temple and built in its place a church in which daily services were held.

Sources

Thalelaeus is among the ascetics described in the Religious History of Bishop Theodoret of Cyrrhus, who visited him and recorded that he found him reading the Gospel. Theodoret reports that he saw the hermit himself, which makes the account an eyewitness testimony rather than a later legend.

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