Hierarch 14th century

Saint James the Wonderworker Bishop of Rostov

died 1392

Also known as James of Rostov

A monk who became Bishop of Rostov in 1385, remembered for pastoral care, miracles, and humility amid local trials.

Feast Day
November 27
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Commemorated as

Our Father among the Saints James the Wonderworker, Bishop of Rostov

Life

Saint James the Wonderworker was Bishop of Rostov in the late fourteenth century and the founder of the monastery on Lake Nero that came to bear his name. By tradition he received monastic tonsure at the Kopyrsk monastery on the River Ukhtoma, some eighty kilometers from Rostov, where he later served as igumen. In 1385 he was raised to the see of Rostov, at a time when Pimen was Metropolitan and Demetrius of the Don was Great Prince.

His episcopate is chiefly remembered for an act of mercy that cost him his throne. When a woman had been condemned to death, the bishop intervened on her behalf, following the example of Christ by inviting whoever considered himself without sin to be the first to cast a stone at her, and he sent her away to repentance instead of to execution. The prince and the nobles of Rostov, displeased at his judgment, drove him out of the city.

According to the tradition preserved in the synaxarion, the expelled bishop spread his episcopal mantiya upon the waters of Lake Nero, signed himself with the Cross, and was carried across the lake upon it as though upon a boat. He came ashore about a verst and a half from the city, where he built himself a cell and a small church in honor of the Conception of the Most Holy Theotokos by Righteous Anna. This became the beginning of the Conception–Saint James monastery. Saint James died there on November 27, 1392, the day on which he is principally commemorated; he is also numbered among the Synaxis of the Saints of Rostov, kept on May 23.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 1385 Consecrated Bishop of Rostov Raised to the see of Rostov under Metropolitan Pimen and Great Prince Demetrius of the Don.
  2. 1392 Repose Died on November 27 at the monastery he had founded on Lake Nero.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

The Defense of the Condemned Woman

The defining episode of the saint's tenure as bishop, as the synaxarion relates it, was his defense of a woman who had been sentenced to die. Rather than allow the sentence to be carried out, Saint James appealed to the Gospel scene of the woman taken in adultery, calling upon any of her accusers who held himself to be sinless to cast the first stone (John 8:7), and then dismissed her to a life of repentance. The prince and the Rostov nobility, resentful of the bishop's leniency, responded by expelling him from the city.

The Crossing of Lake Nero and the Monastery

The miracle for which Saint James is named Wonderworker is bound to his expulsion. By tradition, on leaving Rostov he laid his bishop's mantiya on Lake Nero and, having made the Sign of the Cross, sailed upon it across the water by the grace of God. Coming ashore roughly a verst and a half from the city, he settled there, raising a cell and a church dedicated to the Conception of the Most Holy Theotokos by Righteous Anna. The community that grew at the site became the Conception–Saint James monastery on the shore of Lake Nero, where the saint reposed and was buried.

Some later accounts attached to the saint a story of his combating an iconoclast named Markian, but earlier hagiographers excluded this episode, regarding it as drawn from the traditions of other saints rather than from the authentic life of James of Rostov.

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