Hierarch 7th century

Saint John the Merciful Patriarch of Alexandria

c. 552 – c. 620

Also known as John the Almsgiver

A widower who became Patriarch of Alexandria and was famed for radical almsgiving and tireless care for the poor.

Feast Day
November 12
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints John the Merciful, Patriarch of Alexandria

Life

John the Merciful, also called John the Almsgiver, was Patriarch of Alexandria in the early seventh century and is remembered above all for the scale and persistence of his charity. He was born around 552 at Amathus on the island of Cyprus into a noble family; his father, Epiphanius, was a dignitary of the island. At the wish of his parents John married and had children, but after the death of his wife and children he turned to the religious life, devoting himself to fasting and prayer.

When the patriarchal throne of Alexandria fell vacant following the death of Patriarch Theodore, the Emperor Heraclius and the clergy pressed John to accept it, and he was elected to the see while still a layman. As patriarch he made the relief of the poor his chief concern: his stewards drew up registers of those in need, whom he called his "lords and masters," and he devoted the revenues of his see to their support. According to his Life, more than seven thousand poor of Alexandria were sustained daily from the church treasury.

John governed the Alexandrian church during the turbulence of the Persian wars. He opposed heresy and worked to strengthen the Chalcedonian (Orthodox) faith in the city, the sources relating that the number of churches increased greatly during his tenure. When the Persians overran Egypt he was forced to flee Alexandria, returning to his native Cyprus, where he reposed sometime between 616 and 620. He is commemorated on November 12, and his life was recorded by his contemporary Leontius, bishop of Neapolis in Cyprus.

Timeline 3 moments Read Hide
  1. c. 552 Born on Cyprus Born at Amathus on Cyprus to the dignitary Epiphanius.
  2. early 7th c. Patriarch of Alexandria Elected to the patriarchal throne of Alexandria at the urging of Emperor Heraclius and the clergy.
  3. c. 616–620 Repose on Cyprus Fled Alexandria during the Persian invasion of Egypt and reposed on his native Cyprus.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Almsgiving and Care for the Poor

The almsgiving for which John is named was systematic as well as generous. The synaxarion relates that he had the poor of Alexandria enumerated — over seven thousand persons — and provided for them daily from the resources of the church. He set aside fixed times for charity, sitting in the open to receive petitioners twice a week, and visited the sick regularly.

Many anecdotes attach to his generosity. Of a beggar who returned again and again for alms, John is said to have remarked, "Perhaps he is Christ putting me to the test." He twice gave money to a merchant ruined by shipwreck and, a third time, gave him a ship belonging to the Patriarchate laden with grain. The tradition also recounts that when he was given a costly embroidered coverlet he sold it and gave the proceeds to the poor, and could not rest until he had done so.

Patriarchate and the Persian Wars

John's years as patriarch coincided with the Persian invasion of the Eastern Roman provinces. After the Persian sack of Jerusalem, his charity reached beyond Egypt: he sent supplies to the suffering people of Palestine, received refugees at Alexandria, and ransomed captives. He also defended the Chalcedonian faith of the city, the sources noting that he was assisted in this by the learned travellers Sophronius, later Patriarch of Jerusalem, and John Moschus.

By tradition John kept an unfinished coffin in his chamber as a reminder of death, leaving instructions that it be completed only when his end drew near. When the Persians at length occupied Alexandria, he withdrew to Cyprus, the island of his birth, and died there.

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