The Mission in Lebanon
According to the account preserved by Theodoret, Abraham entered a populous but pagan village in the area of Mount Lebanon disguised as a merchant, accompanied by companions who carried sacks as if to buy nuts, and rented a house. After some days he began quietly to keep the church services; when the villagers heard the chanting of psalms they reacted with hostility and, by the tradition, attacked the company, but ceased when they saw that the men preferred to pray rather than to renounce their faith.
The decisive turn came when tax collectors arrived to demand payment the village could not meet. Abraham guaranteed the sum — by tradition one hundred gold pieces — and secured a loan in the nearby city of Emesa to satisfy the debt, sparing the villagers imprisonment. Moved by this kindness, the inhabitants asked him to become their patron. He agreed on condition that they build a church, and once it was raised he served them as priest for about three years, instructing them in the faith before appointing a successor and returning for a time to the ascetic life.