August: Day 27:
Venerable Poemen the Great
(On Non-Condemnation)
By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko
Venerable Poemen the Great
(On Non-Condemnation)
By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko
I. The Venerable Poemen, an Egyptian by birth, whose memory is celebrated today, was born about the year 340 A.D. While still young, he took a vow of silence and renunciation of the world and began to struggle in a desert skete near Diocles. His brothers also struggled with him: the elder, Anubius, and the younger, unknown by name.
Thus, Venerable Poemen strictly kept his vow of renunciation of the world, that he even refused to meet with his mother when she came one day to visit her children in the skete, and only at the insistent persuasion of the brethren, Poemen, approaching the door behind which his mother stood, said to her: "If you graciously endure this temporary separation from us, then in the life to come you shall see us; thus we hope for God's benevolence!" And comforted by this promise, the mother left the skete, no longer striving to see her children and not distracting them from the feat of the life they had chosen.