Fool-for-Christ 16th century

Blessed Basil of Moscow the Fool-for-Christ

c. 1468 – 1552/1557

Also known as Basil the Blessed · Wonderworker of Moscow

A holy fool of Moscow who went naked through every winter, foresaw things hidden and to come, and feared not to rebuke even Tsar Ivan the Terrible to his face; the great cathedral of the Protection on Red Square bears his name.

Feast Day
August 2
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Commemorated as

The Holy and Blessed Basil of Moscow, the Wonderworker and Fool-for-Christ

Life

Basil of Moscow, called the Blessed, was a sixteenth-century holy fool venerated in the Russian Orthodox Church as a wonderworker. By tradition he was born in December 1468 in the village of Elokhovo near Moscow to a serf family, his father named Jacob and his mother Anna; one account holds that he was born on the portico of the Elokhovo church.

Apprenticed in youth as a shoemaker, he is said to have shown unusual insight while still a tradesman. At about the age of sixteen he took up the ascetic exploit of foolishness for Christ, abandoning ordinary life to live in radical poverty on the streets of Moscow.

He became renowned for prophecy and for boldly rebuking the powerful, including Tsar Ivan the Terrible. The great cathedral on Red Square in Moscow, formally the cathedral of the Protection, came to bear his name.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. December 1468 Birth near Moscow By tradition Basil was born in the village of Elokhovo near Moscow to Jacob and Anna, a family of serf status. One account relates that he was born on the portico of the Elokhovo church, associated with the Vladimir Icon.
  2. c. 1484 Takes up foolishness for Christ Apprenticed as a shoemaker, Basil is said to have predicted a merchant's death while still a tradesman. At about sixteen he adopted the difficult exploit of foolishness for Christ, taking up a life of radical poverty in Moscow.
  3. 1547 Prophecy of the Moscow fire Tradition holds that Basil foretold the great fire of Moscow of 1547, and that through prayer he extinguished a fire at Novgorod.
  4. 1554 Cathedral built on Red Square The cathedral known as St. Basil's, the cathedral of the Protection on Red Square, was built beginning in 1554 to commemorate Tsar Ivan's conquest of Kazan; a chapel within it was dedicated to Basil and the church came to bear his name.
  5. 2 August 1552 or 1557 Repose in Moscow Basil died on 2 August, the year given variously as 1552 or 1557, aged in his eighties. Metropolitan Macarius officiated his funeral with numerous clergy, and by tradition Tsar Ivan himself acted as a pallbearer.
  6. 2 August 1588 Glorification Basil was formally glorified as a saint by the Russian Orthodox Church; orthodox tradition attributes the act to Patriarch Job at a council on 2 August 1588.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life as a Fool-for-Christ

Having taken up foolishness for Christ, Basil went barefoot and, by tradition, naked through the streets of Moscow in every season, enduring the extremes of the Russian winter. He wore chains as part of his ascetic discipline.

He gave to the poor and is said to have helped those who were ashamed to ask for alms, quietly assisting hungry people too embarrassed to beg. His seemingly senseless acts were understood to carry hidden meaning: he is reported to have disrupted merchants' goods to expose fraud, such as spoiled bread and poorly prepared kvas. When angry merchants beat him, tradition relates that he bore the beatings with joy.

Prophecy and Rebuke of Ivan the Terrible

Basil was reputed to possess the gift of prophecy and foreknowledge of events. He famously rebuked Tsar Ivan the Terrible, by one account for inattention during a church service, and confronted the tsar over his conduct.

His willingness to admonish the feared ruler to his face became central to his reputation, and the tsar is said to have held him in such regard that he took part in his burial.

Relics & Shrines

Basil was buried in Moscow following his death; by tradition his grave lay at the site that became the cathedral of the Protection on Red Square, the church commissioned by Ivan the Terrible after the conquest of Kazan and thereafter popularly known as St. Basil's Cathedral.

His chains are reported to be preserved at the Moscow Theological Academy.

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