Venerable (Monastic) 12th century

Venerable Peter of Damascus

12th century (writings dated c. 1156–1157)

Also known as Peter the Damascene · Petros Damaskinos · بطرس الدمشقي

An ascetic writer whose spiritual treatises are preserved in the Philokalia. His dates are uncertain, with sources placing him in the eighth or twelfth century.

Feast Day
October 9
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Peter of Damascus, the Monk

Life

Peter of Damascus is an ascetic writer of the Byzantine period whose spiritual treatises are preserved in the Philokalia. Almost nothing of his external biography survives, no hagiographical account of his life having come down, and what is known of him is reconstructed chiefly from his own writings.

Most scholars place him in the twelfth century, dating his works to approximately 1156–1157 on the basis of manuscript evidence, though his identity has long been confused with an earlier figure of the same name, and his dates remain uncertain. He was a monk who lived in poverty without possessions, and his teaching that spiritual knowledge lies within everyone's reach has given his work a lasting influence well beyond monastic readers.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Life and Monastic Standing

Little is recorded of Peter's life beyond what can be inferred from his writings, since no early account of him survives. He repeatedly identifies himself as a monk, using phrases such as "us monks," and describes living in a cell with no possessions and under the direction of a spiritual father. The available evidence points to a semi-eremitic manner of life.

His specific location and monastic affiliation are not securely known, and the epithet "of Damascus" does not necessarily indicate his birthplace. By tradition he is associated with Syria. He appears to have been a man of modest means, a circumstance that has made the breadth and clarity of his writing all the more remarkable to later readers.

Question of Dating and Identity

Peter's history is complicated by confusion with a separate, earlier Peter of Damascus, an eighth-century bishop and martyr. Saint Nicodemus the Hagiorite, who compiled the Philokalia, attributed the writings of the twelfth-century monk to this earlier martyr in the third volume of the collection, and the two figures came to be associated with a single feast day.

Modern scholarship generally distinguishes the ascetic author of the Philokalia, dated to the twelfth century, from the eighth-century martyr. The dating nonetheless remains uncertain, and sources have variously placed the writer in the eighth or twelfth century.

Writings

Peter's reputation rests on two works preserved in the Philokalia. The first, A Treasury of Divine Knowledge, comprises thirty-three chapters treating the ascetic disciplines, the virtues, the stages of contemplation, humility, and prayer; within it he sets out exhaustive lists, enumerating 228 virtues and 298 passions. The second, the Twenty-Four Discourses, is arranged to correspond to the letters of the Greek alphabet and addresses a range of spiritual themes.

His writing draws heavily on the Church Fathers, among them Athanasius, Basil, John Chrysostom, and Isaac the Syrian, and emphasizes the balance of ascetic effort with divine grace. A characteristic theme is that salvation and spiritual knowledge are not reserved for monastics but are within the reach of laypeople as well. According to the Greek Index Project, 107 known manuscripts contain writings attributed to him, and within the Philokalia his work occupies more space than that of any author except Saint Maximus the Confessor.

Scholars have differed over the originality of his contribution: Jean Gouillard regarded him as a faithful transmitter of patristic teaching, while Greg Peters has argued that he made innovative contributions to spiritual theology.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Notable Works

  • A Treasury of Divine Knowledge — Book One of his Philokalia writings; thirty-three chapters on the disciplines, virtues, stages of contemplation, humility, and prayer, including lists of 228 virtues and 298 passions.
  • Twenty-Four Discourses — Book Two; spiritual discourses arranged to correspond to the twenty-four letters of the Greek alphabet.
Notes

Dating uncertain (8th or 12th c.). Author of the 'Treasury of Divine Knowledge' included in the Philokalia.

Sources: OrthodoxWiki; the Philokalia