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Sabbas the Sanctified

Saint Sabbas the Sanctified
SabbastheSanctified.jpg
Medieval icon of Saint Sabbas the Sanctified
Venerable Father; Abbot
Born 439 AD
Caesarea Mazaca, Cappadocia
Died December 5, 532
Jerusalem, Palaestina Prima
Venerated in Eastern Orthodox Church
Eastern Catholic Churches
Roman Catholic Church
Major shrine Saint Sabbas Monastery, Kidron Valley
Feast December 5
Attributes Clothed as a monk, often holding a paterissa (abbot's staff)

Saint Sabbas the Sanctified (439–532), a Cappadocian-Syrian monk, priest and saint, lived mainly in Palaestina Prima. He was the founder of several monasteries, most notably the one known as Mar Saba. The Saint's name is derived from Aramaic סַבָּא (sabba') meaning "old man".

St Sabbas was born, "Mutalaska", this word means nothing in Greek. But in Aramaic there is meaning: "Mata la zkha" (Village of Victory), near Caesarea of Cappadocia, in the son of John, a military commander, and Sophia.

Journeying to Alexandria on military matters, his parents left their five-year-old son in the care of an uncle. When the boy reached eight years of age, he entered the nearby monastery of Bishop Flavian of Antioch. The gifted child quickly learned to read and became an expert on the Holy Scriptures. In vain did his parents urge Sabbas to return to the world and enter into marriage.

When he was seventeen years old he received monastic tonsure. After spending ten years at the monastery of Bishop Flavian, he went to Jerusalem, and from there to the monastery of Saint Euthymius the Great. But Euthymius sent Sabbas to Abba Theoctistus, the head of a nearby monastery with a strict cenobitic rule. Sabbas lived in obedience at this monastery until the age of thirty.

After the death of the Elder Theoctistus, his successor blessed Sabbas to seclude himself in a cave. On Saturdays, however, he left his hermitage and came to the monastery, where he participated in divine services and ate with the brethren. After a certain time Sabbas received permission not to leave his hermitage at all, and he lived in isolation in the cave for five years.

Euthymius attentively directed the life of the young monk, and seeing his spiritual maturity, he began to take him to the wilderness with him. They set out each January 14 and remained there until Palm Sunday. Euthymius called Sabbas a child-elder, and encouraged him to grow in the monastic virtues.


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