A Reputation for Mercy
Philaret's name means 'lover of virtue,' and the tradition surrounding him emphasizes that his gifts brought good to their recipients. The Synaxarion relates that whoever received something from him found that the gift would multiply and that the person would prosper.
The narratives record concrete acts of charity rather than general piety: during a famine he borrowed wheat and gave six bushels to a poor man, eventually handing over the very donkey needed to carry the load. Even after Arab forces reduced his holdings to a handful of animals and his house, he is said to have shared what remained.