Our Venerable Father Pimen the Faster, Ascetic of the Kiev Far Caves
Life
Pimen the Faster was a monk of the Kiev Caves monastery, remembered chiefly for the severity of his fasting and the strictness of his interior discipline. He labored in the Far Caves and served as igumen (abbot) of the community during the years 1132 to 1141.
His asceticism became proverbial: sources record that he ate only in the most necessary quantity, and that his outward abstinence was matched by an inward restraint from any action, thought, or feeling displeasing to God. He reposed in 1141 and is numbered among the saints of the Far Caves.
Timeline 2 moments
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1132Becomes igumenPimen was made igumen (abbot) of the Kiev Caves monastery, an office he held until his death.
1141ReposeAfter roughly a decade leading the community, Pimen reposed, ending his tenure as abbot.
Contributions & Legacy
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Ascetic Discipline
Pimen's epithet, 'the Faster,' reflects the rigor of his abstinence. Accounts state that he restricted himself to the most necessary quantity of food, and that this bodily fasting was the outward sign of an interior watchfulness, guarding against any action, thought, or feeling displeasing to God.
Tradition holds that despite so severe a regimen he retained the strength for the demanding manual labor of the monastery, joining physical work with vigils of nocturnal prayer.
Relics & Shrines
Pimen is venerated among the saints whose relics rest in the Far Caves of the Kiev Caves Lavra, and he is commemorated collectively with them in the Synaxis of the Saints of the Far Caves.
Identity
Several saints named Pimen are associated with the Kiev Caves, and care is needed to distinguish them. Pimen the Faster of the Far Caves is distinct from Pimen the Much-Ailing of the Near Caves and from the Pimen of the Near Caves remembered together with the Hieromartyr Kuksha.