Hierarch 7th century

Saint Pausicacus Bishop of Synnada

died c. 606

Also known as Pausikakos of Synnada

A bishop of Synnada in Phrygia, raised in piety and ascetic struggle, who was given the gift of healing the sick and casting out demons.

Feast Day
May 13
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints Pausicacus, Bishop of Synnada

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Saint Pausicacus was a bishop of Synnada in Phrygia, in Asia Minor, who lived in the latter part of the sixth century and died early in the seventh. According to the synaxarion, he was a native of Apamea in Syria, raised in the Christian faith by pious parents, and from his youth he embraced an ascetic life of prayer, vigil, and fasting. He is remembered as a wonderworker to whom the Lord gave the gift of healing sicknesses of both soul and body, and the tradition also numbers among his gifts the casting out of demons.

Patriarch Cyriacus of Constantinople, whose tenure the sources place in the years 591 to 606, consecrated Pausicacus as Bishop of Synnada. As a pastor he is described as exacting in his care for his flock, tolerating neither heretics nor those of dissolute life among them, and teaching the virtuous life in discourse remembered as powerful and lively. He died peacefully, by tradition in the year 606, and the Orthodox Church commemorates him on May 13.

Two miracles in particular attach to his episcopate. Having come to Constantinople on the affairs of his Church, he is said to have healed the emperor Mauricius of an illness. On his return journey, when his companions were suffering from thirst, he prayed to God for water, and a spring of pure water is related to have sprung up from the ground.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. late 6th c. Ascetic life at Apamea Raised in piety in the Syrian city of Apamea, he took up an ascetic life of prayer, vigil, and fasting from his youth.
  2. 591–606 Consecrated Bishop of Synnada Patriarch Cyriacus of Constantinople (591–606) consecrated him bishop of Synnada in Phrygia.
  3. c. 606 Peaceful repose He died peacefully, by tradition in the year 606; he is commemorated on May 13.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Asceticism and Episcopate

The sources trace Pausicacus's holiness to an ascetic discipline begun in youth at Apamea and continued through his life, marked by prayer, vigil, and fasting. The gift of healing the sicknesses of soul and body is presented as the fruit of this struggle, and it was the renown of these gifts that, in the tradition, brought him to the notice of the Church in the capital.

Consecrated to the see of Synnada by Patriarch Cyriacus, Pausicacus governed his flock with strictness. The synaxarion stresses that he would have neither heretics nor people of dissolute life within his congregation, and that he taught his people the virtuous life in preaching remembered for its force and vigor.

Miracles

On a journey to Constantinople undertaken for the business of his Church, Pausicacus is said to have healed the emperor Mauricius of sickness. Returning toward Synnada, and finding his companions tormented by thirst, he asked the Lord for water; the tradition relates that at his prayer a spring of pure water burst from the ground.

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