By Fr. George Dorbarakis
Saint James followed the ascetic life from a young age and purified his heart through fasting and other forms of hardship. For this reason, the Church elected him as a bishop. As a bishop, he endured many persecutions, because he fought against the error of the iconoclasts. Enduring persecutions and struggling with hunger and thirst in exile, he committed his spirit to God.
The Holy Hymnographer Ignatius stands in awe before the ascetic of the Lord, Saint James. For although he was a bishop of the Church with a strong militant spirit against the heresy of iconoclasm — which denied the incarnation of God in the person of Jesus Christ — and indeed gave up his spirit as a result of the sufferings of the persecutions he endured from the iconoclasts, nevertheless the center of gravity of his life lay in his ascetic conduct. His asceticism, as a fulfillment of the commandments of the Lord — that is, living himself as one crucified with regard to his passions — was his constant priority, whether at the beginning of his life, in its development, or even in his episcopal ministry. “An Ascetic Bishop” would be the title that characterizes his life.
“Taking up the Cross upon your shoulders, venerable father, you followed precisely the Crucified Lord, and living in monastic solitude with all wisdom, you diminished your passions through self-control” (Ode 1).








