Venerable (Monastic) Byzantine

Saint Paul the Physician of Corinth

Byzantine era (by tradition, around the seventh century)

Also known as Paul the Physician

A physician who became a monk and, falsely slandered, was vindicated by a miracle; he healed the sick and labored in humility and prayer.

Feast Day
June 28
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Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Paul the Physician of Corinth

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Saint Paul the Physician of Corinth was a monastic of the Byzantine period who is remembered above all for the patience with which he bore a false accusation and for the gift of healing he afterward received. A native of Corinth in Greece, he took monastic tonsure in his youth and became, by the testimony of his vita, an experienced ascetic.

He is best known through the account of a woman who falsely accused him of fathering her newborn child. Rather than protest his innocence, Paul accepted the slander in humility; according to the synaxarion, the infant itself miraculously named its true father, vindicating the monk. After this, he is said to have received from God the gift of healing the sick, from which he is called "the Physician." He is commemorated on June 28.

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Life

By tradition Saint Paul came from the city of Corinth, where, according to the account preserved by John Sanidopoulos, he was raised by Christian parents. While still young he entered the monastic life, taking tonsure at one of the monasteries, and there he labored much and grew into an experienced ascetic.

His vita relates that he contended with the temptation of the flesh, and that through prayer and the sign of the Cross he drove this struggle from himself. This spiritual conflict forms the background to the trial for which he is chiefly remembered.

The Slander and the Miracle

The central episode of Saint Paul's life is the false accusation brought against him. A woman came to the monastery with a newborn infant and claimed that the monk Paul was the child's father. Rather than deny the charge, the elder endured the slander in humility, and the synaxarion relates that he received the child as though it were truly his own.

According to the account, the townspeople reproached him for breaking his monastic vows, and by one telling led him through Corinth in ridicule. Paul prayed and then asked the infant who its father was. The newborn, stretching out its hand, pointed not to the monk but to a blacksmith, declaring that the blacksmith and not Paul was its father. Seeing this miracle, the people were ashamed and asked the saint's forgiveness.

Gift of Healing

After his vindication, the tradition holds that Saint Paul received from God the gift of healing the sick, and from this he came to be called "the Physician." By his vita, when he laid his hand upon the sick they were made whole. He reposed in peace at the age of seventy.

Notes

Dating uncertain.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints