Orthodox Church commemorates Saint Onuphrius the Great

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St. Onuphrius the Great. Photo: WordPress St. Onuphrius the Great. Photo: WordPress

At the age of ten, the son of a Persian king secretly withdrew into the depths of the Thebaid Desert for a sixty-year feat of hermitic life.

On June 25, 2026, the Church celebrates the feast day of St. Onuphrius the Great, one of the most austere Egyptian desert fathers of the 4th century.

St. Onuphrius is renowned as one of the strictest ascetics in the history of the Church. According to Church Tradition, he was born into the family of a Persian king but was entrusted as an infant to the Thebaid Monastery of Erete for upbringing. It was in this monastery that the future saint spent his childhood years, learning the monastic way of life.

At the age of ten, inspired by the elders’ accounts of the lofty spiritual life of the desert ascetics, Onuphrius resolved to imitate their подвиг. He secretly left the monastery at night and, guided by an angel, journeyed deep into the Thebaid Desert. There he met an experienced hermit elder who became his spiritual mentor and instructed him for several years in the struggle against temptations. When the elder became convinced that Onuphrius had grown strong in spirit, he left him alone in a place designated for his ascetic labors.

In the harsh wilderness, the saint lived for sixty years, enduring the scorching heat of the day, the cold of the night, and many other hardships. Yet the Lord did not abandon His servant: beside his cave grew a date palm with twelve branches that bore fruit in turn throughout the year, and a spring of pure water appeared nearby. Every week, an angel of the Lord brought the saint bread and administered to him Holy Communion. The ascetic's only clothing was his own long hair and beard, which completely covered his body.

Shortly before the saint's repose, he was encountered by the monk Paphnutius, at whose request Onuphrius recounted the story of his life. Paphnutius witnessed the death of the great elder around the year 400 and buried his body. After the saint's repose, the cave collapsed, the palm tree withered, and the spring dried up — thus God made clear to Paphnutius that he was to return to the world and tell other Christians of the feats of the Thebaid hermits.

On the eve of the feast, the Primate of the UOC, His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry, traditionally officiated at a solemn divine service in honor of his heavenly patron.

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