James the Faster was a Syrian ascetic of the sixth century who lived near the Phoenician city of Porphyrion. According to the synaxarion, he spent fifteen years enclosed in a cave devoting himself to monastic labors, and he received the gift of wonderworking, healing the gravely ill through his prayers. His reputation for holiness drew many of the local inhabitants to the Christian faith.
His life is recorded chiefly as an account of a grievous fall and a profound repentance. The tradition relates that James healed a young woman of demonic possession but afterward fell into sin with her, and that, in order to conceal his sin, he killed her and threw her body into a river. Stricken with remorse, he withdrew into seclusion and gave himself to penance for ten years.
The synaxarion relates that the Lord heard the prayers of the penitent monk and restored to him the gift of wonderworking that he had lost; in one account his prayers brought rain during a drought, taken as a sign of divine forgiveness. James remained in his cave until his death and was buried there. The Church commemorates him on March 4, and his life is presented as an illustration of how even great ascetics may fall by God's permission and yet be restored through sincere and contrite repentance.