John of the Ancient Caves was a monastic ascetic of eighth-century Palestine who lived at the Lavra of Saint Chariton, one of the oldest of the Palestinian monasteries. From the cave dwellings of this ancient community he took the name by which he is remembered, and he is venerated among its venerable fathers. The Orthodox Church commemorates him on April 19.
According to the synaxarion, John left the world in his youth and went to venerate the holy places of Jerusalem before settling at the Lavra. The monastery, situated in the Judaean desert not far from Bethlehem, was known as the 'Old' or 'Ancient' Lavra because it numbered among the earliest of the desert communities. There John gave himself to a rigorous ascetic life of fasting, vigil, and prayer.
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8th centuryPilgrimage and entry into monastic lifeIn his youth John left the world, venerated the holy places of Jerusalem, and settled at the Lavra of Saint Chariton near Bethlehem.
8th centuryAscetic labors and ordinationAt the Old Lavra he labored in fasting, vigil, and prayer, was ordained to the priesthood, and was glorified by his ascetic life.
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Life and Asceticism
The accounts of John's life are brief, as befits a desert ascetic remembered chiefly for his hidden labors rather than for public deeds. In his early years he is said to have left the world and devoted himself to visiting the holy sites, seeking the instruction and advice of holy men, before settling at the Lavra of Saint Chariton. There, within the cave dwellings of the community, he undertook a strict ascetic discipline of fasting, prayer, and vigil, by tradition constantly meditating on death and teaching himself humility.
The synaxarion relates that John was ordained to the priesthood and was glorified by his ascetic life. He lived and died in the eighth century, and is reckoned among the venerable fathers of the Old Lavra.
The Lavra of the Ancient Caves
The community with which John is associated was the Lavra of Saint Chariton, also called the Old Lavra, situated in the Judaean desert near Bethlehem. A lavra was a form of monastic settlement in which monks lived as solitaries in separate cells or caves while gathering for common worship. This monastery was reckoned one of the oldest of the Palestinian monasteries, which is why it was called the 'Old' or 'Ancient' cave — and from it John takes the epithet 'of the Ancient Caves.'