Hierarch 6th century

John the Faster Patriarch of Constantinople

died 595

Also known as John IV the Faster · John Nesteutes

Patriarch of Constantinople renowned for his strict fasting and humility; a penitential canon bearing his name long guided confessors

Feast Day
September 2
Also Aug 30
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints John the Faster, Patriarch of Constantinople

Life

John the Faster (John IV, called Nesteutes, 'the Faster') was Patriarch of Constantinople from 582 until his death on September 2, 595. Born at Constantinople to a family of artisans, he worked as an engraver or goldsmith before entering the service of the Church, and he is remembered above all for the extreme rigor of his fasting and the depth of his personal humility.

Under Patriarch John III Scholasticus he served as a deacon at the Great Church of Hagia Sophia and then as sakellarios, the patriarchal official responsible for the oversight of monasteries. After the death of Patriarch Eutychius in 582 he was raised to the patriarchal throne; the tradition relates that he accepted the office only with great reluctance, and the sources note that he had a wide reputation for asceticism and for charity to the poor while possessing little formal learning.

His name remained attached to a penitential discipline used in the Eastern Church: a rule, or nomokanon, guiding priests in the hearing of confession. The penitential ascribed to him addressed both sins of act and sins of intention and, in the synaxarion tradition, tempered the older canonical penances, weighing the severity of fasting, prostrations, and almsgiving in the direction of mercy. This canon long guided confessors in the Byzantine world.

The Orthodox Church commemorates him on September 2, with a further commemoration on August 30. By tradition he is honored as a model of fasting and of monastic humility, and the Western sources record that at his death he left no possessions but a cloak, a blanket, and a praying-stool.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. 582 Raised to the patriarchal throne Became Patriarch of Constantinople after the death of Eutychius.
  2. c. 588 Synod and the patriarchal title The title 'Ecumenical Patriarch' appears in synodal acts, drawing objections from Rome.
  3. 595 Repose Reposed on September 2 after some thirteen years as patriarch.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Ascetic Life

John's epithet 'the Faster' reflects an austerity that the synaxarion describes in vivid terms. By tradition his daily food during his years as patriarch was reduced to a little lettuce, melon, grapes, or figs, and he is said to have limited his sleep by a simple device, a needle set in a candle that fell into a vessel below and woke him as the wax burned down.

Alongside this severity the sources emphasize his almsgiving and his care for the poor and the sick. The tradition relates that he gave from a purse that was mysteriously replenished, that he healed the blind and those troubled by demons through prayer, and that by his intercession a plague was stayed.

The Patriarchal Title

John's patriarchate is associated in the historical record with the rise of the title 'Ecumenical Patriarch' for the see of Constantinople, which appears in the acts of a synod held around 588 and drew protests from the contemporary popes, Pelagius II and Gregory the Great, who regarded so universal a style as a claim to undue authority.

The Orthodox tradition remembers John himself, by contrast, as a man who out of humility resisted the title's grander implications, in keeping with the self-effacing manner of life for which he was venerated.

Notes

Out of humility he resisted the title 'Ecumenical Patriarch' Also commemorated Aug 30.

Sources: Synaxarion