Hieromartyr 10th century

Hieromartyr Lampados of Irenopolis

Also known as Lampadius

A hierarch of Irenopolis in Isauria, remembered for his wisdom, patience, and pastoral virtue.

Feast Day
July 5
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Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Lampados of Irenopolis

Life

Lampados of Irenopolis is a hierarch of the Byzantine East venerated as a hieromartyr, associated with Irenopolis in Isauria, a region of southern Asia Minor. The surviving synaxarion accounts place him in the tenth century and dwell chiefly on his character, presenting him as a churchman who was conspicuous for his Christian virtue while still living in the world.

Tradition remembers him above all for his wisdom and goodness, and for a temperament marked by patience, forbearance, gentleness, and restraint of speech. The records that have come down are brief and largely characterological, so that his pastoral reputation, rather than a detailed narrative of his episcopate, forms the substance of his commemoration. He is commemorated on July 5.

Contributions & Legacy

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Life and Reputation

The synaxarion locates Lampados at Irenopolis in Isauria and assigns him to the tenth century. According to the account, even before withdrawing from worldly affairs he was distinguished by the Christian virtues, and the brief life that survives is organized around these qualities rather than around dated events.

He is praised in particular for his wisdom and his exceeding goodness, and for controlling his tongue, together with his patience, his forbearance, and his gentleness. The available texts do not preserve a birth date, a precise date of repose, or a detailed account of the circumstances under which he is honored as a hieromartyr; later compilers note the gentleness and pastoral virtue for which he was remembered while leaving the fuller narrative untransmitted.

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