Venerable (Monastic) Unknown

Venerable Joasaph son of King Abenner

Also known as Joasaph

A prince of the Barlaam-and-Joasaph tradition who renounced royal life for Christian asceticism.

Feast Day
August 26
Also Nov 19
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Joasaph, Prince of India

Life

Joasaph (also rendered Ioasaph or Josaphat) is the prince at the center of the medieval hagiographic romance of Barlaam and Joasaph. By tradition he was the son and heir of King Abenner of India, who, having been told by astrologers that his son would one day become a Christian, confined the boy within a palace and tried to shield him from any knowledge of suffering or of Christ. Despite this isolation, Joasaph was visited by the hermit-monk Barlaam, who taught him the Christian faith, baptized him, and led him to renounce his royal inheritance for a life of asceticism. He is commemorated together with Barlaam, principally on November 19, and also on August 26 in Greek usage.

The narrative relates that at Joasaph's birth fifty-five astrologers offered predictions, and that the wisest among them foretold that the child would not succeed his father but would enter a better and greater kingdom, and would become a Christian. To forestall this, Abenner is said to have built an enormous palace and kept his son within it, allowing only a few chosen instructors near him, who were charged to keep from the prince all mention of death, old age, sickness, and poverty, and above all any mention of Christ. According to the tradition, the hieromonk Barlaam reached the prince by disguising himself as a merchant and, through an extended parable about a precious gem, gradually unfolded the Christian teaching. Barlaam baptized Joasaph in a garden pool, celebrated the Bloodless Sacrifice, and gave him Communion of the Holy Mysteries.

By the account preserved in the Slavic synaxarion, Joasaph eventually brought his own father to Christ; after his baptism Abenner is said to have lived a further four years in deep repentance before his death. Other versions of the legend instead relate that Abenner converted, surrendered his throne to his son, and withdrew to the desert as a hermit. The tradition recounts that Joasaph in turn entrusted the kingdom to his friend Barachias and departed into the desert to live in asceticism for the sake of Christ. According to one telling he renounced the throne at the age of twenty-five and lived a further thirty-five years in the wilderness, where he was reunited with his teacher Barlaam.

The story of Barlaam and Joasaph circulated widely across the medieval Christian world, in Georgian, Greek, Latin, and many vernacular versions, and the two figures were entered into both Eastern and Western calendars. Modern scholarship has shown that the romance is a Christianized adaptation of the life of the Buddha: it descends from a Sanskrit Mahayana Buddhist text of roughly the second to fourth century, transmitted through Manichaean and Arabic intermediaries before being reworked in a Christian frame. The very name Joasaph is traced to the Sanskrit bodhisattva. For this reason the historical existence of Joasaph as a person is not affirmed by historians, and he is best understood as a traditional hagiographic figure venerated within the Orthodox calendar.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. by tradition Birth and confinement Joasaph is born to King Abenner of India, who, warned by astrologers that his son will become a Christian, confines him within a palace.
  2. by tradition Baptism by Barlaam The monk Barlaam reaches the prince in the guise of a merchant, instructs him in the faith, and baptizes him.
  3. by tradition Renunciation of the throne Joasaph entrusts the kingdom to his friend Barachias and departs into the desert; one account gives his age as twenty-five.
  4. by tradition Reunion with Barlaam After many years of ascetic life in the wilderness, Joasaph is reunited with his teacher Barlaam.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Renunciation and Ascetic Life

The defining act of the tradition is Joasaph's renunciation of an inherited throne for the monastic life. Having received baptism in secret, he is said to have persevered in his faith against his father's opposition, and ultimately to have laid aside his royal station entirely. The synaxarion relates that he committed the governance of the kingdom to his friend Barachias and went out alone into the desert.

There, by tradition, he gave himself to ascetic labor for many years and was at length reunited with Barlaam, the elder who had first instructed him. One telling gives his age at renunciation as twenty-five and his subsequent desert sojourn as thirty-five years. The pairing of teacher and royal disciple, both withdrawing from the world to end their days in the wilderness, gives the tradition its enduring shape.

Origins of the Legend

The romance of Barlaam and Joasaph is one of the most widely diffused narratives of the medieval world, surviving in Georgian, Greek, Latin, and numerous later vernacular forms. The earliest Christianized adaptation is the Georgian Balavariani of the tenth century; a Greek version associated with Euthymius of Athos, who died at Constantinople in 1028, carried the story into the Byzantine world, and a Latin translation of 1048 spread it through Western Europe.

From the mid-nineteenth century scholars recognized that the tale is ultimately a retelling of the life of Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha, descending through Sanskrit, Manichaean, and Arabic stages before its Christian recasting. The name Joasaph itself derives from the Sanskrit bodhisattva by way of a Middle Persian form. The figure is therefore venerated as a saint within the tradition while being understood by historians as legendary in origin.

Notes

Traditional hagiographic figure; OCA gives no details. Nov 19 = his principal commemoration with Barlaam the monk.

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