Venerable (Monastic) 9th century

Venerable Niketas the Confessor

died 824

Also known as Nicetas the Confessor · Niketas of Medikion · Nicetas of Medikion

A 9th-century abbot of the Medikion monastery in Bithynia who suffered persecution and exile as a confessor for the veneration of the holy icons during the second iconoclast period. He reposed in 824.

Feast Day
April 3
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Niketas the Confessor, Abbot of Medikion

Life

Niketas the Confessor was a 9th-century abbot of the Medikion monastery in Bithynia, in northwest Asia Minor, who became one of the leading monastic defenders of the veneration of the holy icons during the second period of Byzantine iconoclasm. He died in 824.

Born in Bithynian Caesarea to a devout family, he lost his mother eight days after his birth and was raised by his grandmother while his father, Philaretos, entered monastic life. After studying under the hermit Stephen (Stephanos), he joined the Medikion monastery and was ordained presbyter around 790, eventually being elected its abbot.

Under the emperor Leo V the Armenian (813–820) he stood firm in the Orthodox confession of the icons, was imprisoned and exiled, and after Leo's death chose a life of austere seclusion near Constantinople rather than returning to Medikion. He is commemorated on April 3 as a confessor and wonderworker.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 790 Ordained presbyter at Medikion After about seven years of monastic life at the Medikion monastery under Abbot Nikephoros, Niketas was ordained to the priesthood.
  2. before 813 Elected abbot of Medikion When Nikephoros fell ill he entrusted the monastery to Niketas, and after Nikephoros's death the brethren elected Niketas their abbot; under him the community grew to about one hundred monks.
  3. 815 Council deposes Patriarch Nikephoros Under Leo V the Armenian, a heretical council deposed the Patriarch Nikephoros and installed the layman Theodotus; the emperor summoned monastic superiors to accept iconoclast doctrine.
  4. 815–820 Imprisonment and confession Refusing to abandon the veneration of the icons, Niketas was imprisoned. After briefly acquiescing under pressure he repented and publicly denounced iconoclasm, enduring roughly six years of imprisonment and exile.
  5. 820 Released after Leo's death Upon the death of Leo the Armenian, Niketas was freed; rather than return to Medikion he retired to an austere monastic life near Constantinople.
  6. 824 Repose Niketas reposed at Constantinople; his relics were transported back to the Medikion monastery for burial.

Contributions & Legacy

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Early Life and Monastic Formation

Niketas was born in Bithynian Caesarea, in northwest Asia Minor, to a devout family. His mother died eight days after his birth, and his father, Philaretos, embraced the monastic life. The boy was raised by his grandmother, who nurtured him in a Christian spirit, and from childhood he was devoted to church attendance.

He studied under the hermit Stephen (Stephanos), and with his blessing entered the Medikion (Mydicia) monastery under its abbot, Saint Nikephoros. After seven years of monastic life he was ordained to the priesthood around 790. When Nikephoros fell ill he entrusted the administration of the monastery to Niketas, and upon Nikephoros's death the brethren unanimously elected Niketas as their abbot.

Abbacy at Medikion

As abbot, Niketas approached leadership with humility, attending to the welfare and spiritual enlightenment of the monastery and leading by his own example. His piety and spiritual influence drew many who sought salvation, and the monastic community grew to roughly one hundred monks.

Sources relate that he was granted the gift of wonderworking, attributing to his intercessory prayer the healing of a deaf-mute child, the deliverance of two demon-possessed women, the restoration of one afflicted person's mental faculties, and the cure of numerous other ailments.

The Iconoclast Controversy and Confession

During the reign of Leo V the Armenian (813–820), iconoclasm resurged violently. A heretical council in 815 deposed the Patriarch Nikephoros and replaced him with the layman Theodotus, and the emperor summoned the monastic superiors to accept iconoclast doctrine. Niketas stood firmly for the Orthodox confession of the icons, and his faithfulness encouraged other abbots to resist; he was consequently imprisoned. He was imprisoned twice in the course of his opposition to the heresy.

According to the sources, the authorities sought to manipulate the prisoners, offering them freedom and the veneration of icons if they would receive communion from the heretical patriarch. After prolonged inner struggle and the pleas of fellow prisoners, Niketas temporarily acquiesced; but on witnessing the persecution's continuation he repented of this act and, on returning to Constantinople, publicly denounced the iconoclast heresy despite imperial threats. He endured roughly six years of imprisonment and exile until Leo the Armenian's death in 820. Among the miraculous intercessions attributed to him during this period are the release of two captives by a Phrygian ruler and the safe deliverance of three shipwrecked men cast ashore.

Final Years and Repose

After Leo's death Niketas was released, but he chose not to return to Medikion, instead retiring to an austere monastic life in a place near Constantinople. He reposed in 824 at Constantinople.

His remains were transported back to the Medikion monastery and honorably buried there, where his relics became a source of healing for those who came to venerate him.

Legacy and Commemoration

Joseph the Hymnographer composed the Canon for Saint Niketas, and his Life was written by Theosterictus, said to have been his disciple. A church dedicated to him was built on the Greek island of Lefkas (Lefkada) in the 18th century.

The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates him on April 3 as a confessor and wonderworker.

Notes

Defender of the holy icons during the iconoclast controversy.

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