Venerable (Monastic) 18th century

Saint Basil of Poiana Marului

1692 - 1767

Also known as Basil of Poiana Marului

A monastic elder of Poiana Marului in Romania, a teacher of the prayer of the heart and spiritual guide in the hesychast renewal associated with St Paisius Velichkovsky.

Feast Day
April 25
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Basil, Elder of Poiana Marului

Life

Basil of Poiana Marului was a monastic elder and teacher of the prayer of the heart who shaped the hesychast renewal of Romanian and wider Orthodox monasticism in the eighteenth century. Born around 1692, he gathered disciples first at the Dalhautsi skete and then at Poiana Marului, where he became a renowned spiritual father and the guide of the sketes of the Buzau Mountains. He is commemorated on April 25.

He is best remembered as the elder who tonsured the future Saint Paisius Velichkovsky on Mount Athos in 1750 and as the author of introductions to the writings of the Philokalic fathers on watchfulness and the Jesus Prayer. Through his disciples his influence spread far beyond Romania.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. 1692 Birth Basil was born around 1692, by tradition near Poltava, and in his youth was drawn to the monastic life that was then being renewed in the lands of Wallachia and Moldavia.
  2. c. 1705-1706 Monastic tonsure He received the monastic tonsure at the Dalhautsi-Focsani skete and was later ordained to the priesthood.
  3. 1715 Igumen of Dalhautsi Basil became igumen of the Dalhautsi skete, leading its community for about two decades and gaining a reputation as a spiritual father skilled in the teaching of contemplative prayer.
  4. 1730-1733 Renewal of Poiana Marului Between 1730 and 1733 Basil renovated the skete of Poiana Marului near Ramnicu-Sarat and moved there with twelve disciples, making it a school of hesychasm and serving as spiritual guide of all the sketes of the Buzau Mountains.
  5. 1750 Tonsure of Paisius Velichkovsky On Mount Athos in 1750 Basil tonsured the young monk who would become Saint Paisius Velichkovsky, the future leader of the Neamt community and a central figure in the hesychast revival.
  6. 1767 Repose Basil reposed on April 25, 1767, and was buried at Poiana Marului, leaving behind many disciples.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Teacher of the prayer of the heart

Basil's lasting importance lies in his teaching on inner, noetic prayer. He instructed his disciples in obedience, humility, and the practice of the Jesus Prayer, and ordered the life of his sketes around daily reading of Scripture and the Fathers, watchfulness of the mind, fasting, and frequent communion. The sources relate that he had learned the discipline of inner prayer well before the printed Philokalia made such texts widely available.

He held that the writings of the Fathers were the key to a right reading of Scripture, calling the Scriptures themselves a saving medicine and warning that they must be approached through the mind of the Church. To this end he composed introductions to the works of Philokalic teachers such as Gregory of Sinai and Nilus of Sora on spiritual struggle and the prayer of the heart.

Influence and legacy

As spiritual father of the Buzau sketes Basil stood at the head of a wider movement of monastic renewal in eighteenth-century Romania. His most famous disciple, Saint Paisius Velichkovsky, carried this hesychast tradition into Moldavia and, through Paisius's own labors and translations, into the Slavic Orthodox world, so that Basil is counted among the forerunners of the broad Philokalic revival.

He is venerated as a saint by the Orthodox Church and is commemorated on April 25, the day of his repose at Poiana Marului.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • Introductions to the Philokalic Fathers — Forewords and instructions composed for the writings of teachers such as Gregory of Sinai and Nilus of Sora on watchfulness and the prayer of the heart.
Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints