The Lion and the Sign of Forgiveness
The episode of the lion is the defining feature of Pardus's life as it is handed down. It belongs to a recognizable pattern in the monastic literature of the Judean and Palestinian deserts, in which a beast that might be expected to kill instead spares or even serves a holy ascetic. In Pardus's case the motif is turned toward the theme of penance: the saint actively seeks death at the lion's claws as a self-imposed punishment, and the lion's unwillingness to harm him is read as a verdict of mercy rather than a marvel of taming.
The synaxarion preserves two successive attempts — provoking the lion within its den, and then exposing himself defenseless along its path to water — each of which the animal declines. Only after both does Pardus accept that his guilt has been remitted and cease seeking his own death.