Our Father among the Saints Ioasaph, Bishop of Belgorod and Wonderworker
Come to them for
Healing
Life
Ioasaph of Belgorod (secular name Ioakim Andreyevich Gorlenko; 1705–1754) was an eighteenth-century Russian Orthodox bishop renowned for his ascetic life, pastoral zeal, and generous almsgiving. Born into the Cossack nobility of the Hetmanate, he received his formation at the Kiev Theological Academy before embracing monastic life, eventually rising to serve as Bishop of Belgorod and Oboyan from 1748 until his death in 1754.
He died at the age of forty-nine, but his body was found incorrupt. Veneration of him grew steadily, and he was formally glorified by the Russian Orthodox Church on 4 September 1911 — a canonisation attended by more than 200,000 faithful. His relics, seized during the Soviet period and held for decades in a Leningrad museum, were returned to Belgorod in 1991. He is commemorated on 4 September (glorification) and 10 December (repose).
Timeline 7 moments
ReadHide
8 September 1705BirthBorn Ioakim Andreyevich Gorlenko in Priluki in the Pryluky Regiment of the Cossack Hetmanate. His father was Colonel Andrei Dmitrievich Gorlenko; his maternal grandfather was Danylo Apostol, Hetman of the Cossack Hetmanate (1727–1734).
c. 1720sFormation at KievGorlenko attended the Kiev Theological Academy. In 1725 he was tonsured a monk at Mezhyhirya Monastery under the name Hilarion, taking full monastic vows in 1727 as Ioasaph. He was ordained deacon in 1728.
1728–1744Academic and monastic serviceHe taught at the Kiev Theological Academy from 1728. In 1737 he was appointed archimandrite of Mhar Monastery, and in 1744 was transferred to serve as archimandrite of the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius near Moscow.
2 June 1748Consecrated Bishop of BelgorodIoasaph was consecrated Bishop of Belgorod and Oboyan, a large diocese in southern Russia. He administered it with notable strictness of personal life, pastoral care for clergy and laity, and generous charity toward the poor.
10 December 1754ReposeIoasaph died in the Grayvoron district, aged forty-nine. His body was found incorrupt, and healings were reported at his tomb.
4 September 1911GlorificationThe Russian Orthodox Church formally canonised Ioasaph of Belgorod; the event was attended by more than 200,000 pilgrims. His feast of glorification is observed on 4 September, while 10 December commemorates his repose.
1917–1991Relics seized and returnedDuring the 1917 October Revolution the saint's relics were seized. They were eventually discovered in a Leningrad museum in the late 1980s and returned to Belgorod on 16 September 1991.
Contributions & Legacy
2 contributions
ReadHide
Episcopal Ministry
As Bishop of Belgorod, Ioasaph was known for combining pastoral strictness with personal humility and charity. He was especially attentive to the welfare of the poor, giving alms widely, and he held his clergy to high standards of life and conduct. His diocese, which covered a broad swath of southern Russia, benefited from his energetic oversight during the six years of his episcopate.
Relics and Veneration
Following his repose in 1754, Ioasaph's body was preserved incorrupt — a sign taken as evidence of holiness. Healings attributed to his intercession fuelled growing local and then wider veneration. The formal glorification in 1911 was one of the major canonisation events of the pre-Revolutionary Russian Church.
After the Bolshevik seizure of power his relics were removed from the cathedral and eventually placed in storage in a Leningrad museum. Their rediscovery in the late Soviet era and solemn return to Belgorod in 1991 marked a significant moment in the post-Soviet renewal of Orthodox life in Russia. The saint is venerated throughout the Orthodox world; churches dedicated to him exist in Illinois and in Shanghai.
His companions & kin
Maternal grandfather; Hetman of the Cossack Hetmanate 1727–1734