Venerable (Monastic) 4th century

Venerable Thais of Egypt

4th century

Also known as Thais the Penitent · Taisia the Penitent

A famous courtesan of Egypt converted by St Paphnutius: enclosed in a women's monastery, she gave herself to three years of strict repentance and was granted forgiveness shortly before her repose.

Feast Day
October 8
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Mother Thais of Egypt, the Penitent

Life

Saint Thais of Egypt was a fourth-century penitent of Roman Egypt, remembered as a woman who turned from a notorious and dissolute life to severe ascetic repentance after her conversion by the ascetic Saint Paphnutius. Her story is preserved in the tradition of the desert fathers and is commemorated in the Orthodox Church on October 8.

By the accounts that survive, Thais had been raised apart from Christian piety and became famed in Egypt for her beauty, drawing many into ruin. Once converted, she gave herself wholly to penance: she burned the wealth she had gained, was enclosed in a small cell for three years, and was granted assurance of forgiveness shortly before her repose. The vita is told as an account of repentance, and the Church keeps her memory as a witness to the mercy extended to the penitent.

She is to be distinguished from Blessed Thais (Taisia) of Egypt, a different saint commemorated on May 10.

Timeline 4 moments Read Hide
  1. 4th century Life in Egypt Thais lives in Roman Egypt, becoming widely known for her beauty and leading a dissolute life.
  2. 4th century Conversion by Saint Paphnutius The ascetic Saint Paphnutius comes to her in worldly attire and moves her to repentance; she burns her accumulated wealth in the city square.
  3. 4th century Three years of enclosure Paphnutius shuts her in a small cell, where for three years she lives in seclusion and unceasing prayer.
  4. 4th century Forgiveness and repose Granted assurance of God's mercy for her tears, she is released, falls ill, and after a short time reposes in the Lord; Saint Paul the Simple beholds her place in Paradise.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Life and Conversion

Thais lived in fourth-century Egypt, in the world of Roman Alexandria and the Egyptian desert. According to the tradition, she had been raised by her mother far from Christian piety and led a dissolute life, becoming widely known for her beauty and leading many astray.

The account of her notoriety spread throughout Egypt and reached Saint Paphnutius, a strict ascetic who had brought many to repentance. By the synaxarion's relation, Paphnutius put on worldly attire and came to Thais with money, as though to seek her favors. When he asked for a more hidden place, she answered that if he feared God, there was no place where he could hide from Him. Seeing that she already knew of God and of the judgment awaiting the wicked, the elder asked why, knowing this, she led a sinful life and drew others to ruin, and he set before her the eternal punishment such a life would bring.

Repentance and Enclosure

Moved to repentance, Thais gathered together all the riches she had acquired through her former life and burned them in the city square. The liturgical service for her feast frames this act in her own confession of intent: that she consigned her gold, silver, and fine linen to the fire so as to be delivered from the everlasting fire.

Paphnutius then enclosed her in a small cell, where for three years she remained in seclusion. The tradition relates that the cell was sealed, with only a narrow opening through which she received bread and water, and that her continual prayer was simply, 'My Creator, have mercy on me.' When Paphnutius later came and asked how she fared, she told him that all her sins were constantly before her eyes and that she wept whenever she remembered them; he answered that it was for those tears that the Lord had granted her mercy.

Repose

By the account, Thais was released from her enclosure not long before the end of her life. She fell ill and, after three days, fell asleep in the Lord. The wider tradition relates that she lived only a brief period of about fifteen days after coming out of her seclusion.

The synaxarion adds that Saint Paul the Simple saw in a vision the place that had been prepared in Paradise for the penitent Thais, a sign understood as confirmation that her repentance had been accepted.

Sources and Tradition

Thais belongs to the tradition of the desert fathers, and her story is preserved among the collected lives known as the Vitae Patrum, the 'Lives of the Fathers,' which circulated in both Greek and Latin; a Latin version is associated with Dionysius Exiguus, and a later verse account with Marbod of Rennes. As a saint of the undivided pre-Chalcedonian Church, she is venerated in both the Eastern and Western calendars, in each case on October 8.

The Orthodox tradition consistently names Saint Paphnutius as the elder who converted her, while some accounts within the broader hagiographic tradition name a different desert father. The differing details across recensions concern the surrounding narrative rather than the substance of her repentance.

Notes

Distinct from Blessed Thais (Taisia) of Egypt commemorated May 10 (OS-1142).

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Oct 8