Venerable (Monastic) 16th century

Venerable Nectarius of Bitolya and Mount Athos

died 1500

Also known as Nectarius of Bitel

Raised in a monastic setting after his family fled danger, he became a monk on Mount Athos and lived under experienced elders.

Feast Day
December 5
Also Dec 15
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Nectarius of Bitolya and Mount Athos

Life

Nectarius of Bitolya, also called Nectarius of Bitel, was a sixteenth-century Bulgarian monk of Mount Athos. According to the synaxarion he was named Nicholas in the world and was born in the small town of Bitel, also given as Butili, in Bulgaria. He is commemorated on December 5 and December 15, both dates referring to the same monk.

The tradition relates that before a Turkish invasion his mother received a vision in which the Most Holy Virgin appeared and told her to flee into hiding with her husband and children. His father afterward withdrew to a monastery dedicated to the Holy Unmercenaries Cosmas and Damian, near Bitel, where he became a monk under the name Pachomius. Nicholas was raised in this monastic setting.

On reaching adolescence Nicholas travelled to Mount Athos, where the elder Philotheus, a clairvoyant ascetic, received him and tonsured him into the monastic schema with the name Nectarius. He carried out his monastic obedience under experienced spiritual guides, named in the sources as Saint Philotheus and the elder Dionysius. The synaxarion records that he bore patiently the envy of one of the novices and distributed to the poor whatever money he earned from his handicraft.

The synaxarion compares his endurance to that of Job, noting that he suffered exceptional bodily afflictions. He reposed on December 5, in the year 1500. According to the tradition his relics were uncovered four years after his death and were found to exude a fragrance.

Timeline 2 moments Read Hide
  1. 1500 Repose Nectarius reposed on December 5, 1500, after a life of monastic asceticism on Mount Athos.
  2. c. 1504 Uncovering of relics By tradition his relics were uncovered four years after his death and were found to exude a fragrance.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Life on Mount Athos

Nectarius's monastic formation took place under the guidance of the elder Philotheus, who lived an ascetic life in the cell of Iagari near Karyes and who, the synaxarion relates, was granted the gift of clairvoyance because of the purity of his life. The sources also name an elder Dionysius among Nectarius's spiritual guides.

The account of his life emphasizes humility and charity rather than office or learning. He is said to have endured the spite of a fellow novice without complaint and to have given away the proceeds of his handiwork to the poor, marks of the ascetic ideal the synaxarion holds up in him.

Repose and relics

Nectarius reposed on December 5, 1500. By tradition his relics were uncovered four years later and were reported to give off a wondrous fragrance, a sign by which the Church recognized his sanctity. The double commemoration on December 5 and December 15 in the synaxarion refers to the same monk.

Notes

Also commemorated Dec 15. Dec 15 = the same monk (Nectarius of Bitel).

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