Venerable (Monastic) 12th century

Venerable Barlaam of Khutyn

died 1192

Also known as Barlaam of Novgorod · Barlaam of Khutin

A man of Novgorod who forsook wealth for the monastic life and founded the monastery of Khutyn on the Volkhov, a great wonderworker of the Russian north.

Feast Day
June 24
Also Nov 6, Feb 10
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Barlaam, Abbot of Khutyn, Wonderworker of Novgorod

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Healing

Life

Barlaam of Khutyn was a twelfth-century monk of Novgorod who renounced an inherited fortune for the ascetic life and founded the monastery of the Savior's Transfiguration at Khutyn on the Volkhov River. He is venerated as one of the principal wonderworkers of the Russian north, and his principal feast falls on November 6, the day of his repose, with additional commemorations on June 24 and February 10.

According to his life, he was born into a noble Novgorod family and spent his childhood in the city; his secular name is recorded as Aleksa. In his youth he was tonsured a monk at the Lisich Monastery near Novgorod, and he later distributed his inheritance to the poor before withdrawing to a solitary life. He settled on a secluded hill above the Volkhov in a place called Khutyn, roughly ten versts from Novgorod, where he led an austere existence of unceasing prayer, strict fasting, and manual labor — cutting timber, chopping firewood, and tilling the soil.

As disciples gathered around him, a church was built in honor of the Transfiguration of the Lord and a monastery established, which became known as the Khutyn Monastery of the Savior's Transfiguration. The tradition relates that he received support from Yaroslav, prince of Novgorod. Before his death he is said to have named the hieromonk Anthony, a friend from Constantinople, to succeed him as abbot. He fell asleep in the Lord on November 6, 1192.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 12th c. Birth in Novgorod Born into a noble Novgorod family; given the secular name Aleksa.
  2. 1190 Prophecy of a saving frost By tradition foretold an out-of-season frost that killed worms threatening the grain, averting famine.
  3. Nov 6, 1192 Repose Fell asleep in the Lord at the Khutyn monastery he had founded.
  4. 1452 Relics enshrined His relics were enshrined in the fifteenth century, his grave already a pilgrimage site.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Monastery and Ascetic Life

The synaxarion presents Barlaam's life at Khutyn as one of strenuous physical labor joined to prayer. He is described as supporting himself by cutting timber in the forest, chopping firewood, and tilling the soil, in keeping with the apostolic admonition that one unwilling to work should not eat. As his reputation for holiness spread, inhabitants of Novgorod came to share his struggles, and the gathering community required a church and monastic buildings.

The monastery he founded was dedicated to the Transfiguration of the Lord. Wikipedia notes that he first built a wooden chapel on the site before the larger foundation took shape. The tradition records that he was succeeded by a monk named Antony (Anthony), whom he nominated before his death.

Miracles and Clairvoyance

His life credits him with the gifts of miracle-working and clairvoyance. Among the episodes related in the tradition are his discernment of fishermen who had concealed part of their catch, and his intervention at executions, in which he is said to have obtained the release of one condemned man — who afterward became a monk — while permitting another's death, explaining that God wills the salvation of all but allows suffering for a greater purpose. He is also said to have restored to life a gravely ill child who had died while being brought to him.

The tradition further relates that in 1190 he prophesied an out-of-season frost that would destroy worms threatening the grain harvest, so that an anticipated famine was averted and an unusually abundant crop followed. Later accounts add that after his death he appeared to a sexton named Tarasi, warning of disasters threatening Novgorod.

Veneration and Relics

Barlaam's grave at Khutyn became a place of pilgrimage. The Serbian monk Pachomius is credited with recording his life, and his relics were enshrined in the fifteenth century; the year 1452 is given in some accounts. The Church commemorates him three times during the year — on November 6, the day of his repose; on the first Friday of the Apostles' Fast; and on the third Sunday after Pentecost, with the Synaxis of the Novgorod Saints — and he is also commemorated during the Proskomedia.

Notes

Principal feast Nov 6; also commemorated Jun 24 and Feb 10.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints