Righteous 20th century

Nicholas Planas

1851–1932

Also known as Nikolaos Planas · Nicholas the Parish Priest of Athens

A parish priest of humble origins from Naxos who served the small churches of Athens for over fifty years, celebrating the divine services almost daily with great simplicity and love for the poor. He reposed in Athens in 1932.

Feast Day
March 2
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable and God-bearing Father Nicholas Planas, the Parish Priest of Athens

Life

Nicholas Planas (1851–1932) was a Greek parish priest who served the small and impoverished churches of Athens for roughly half a century. Born on the island of Naxos, he was ordained after the early death of his wife and devoted the remainder of his life to celebrating the divine services almost daily, becoming widely remembered for his simplicity, his unbroken liturgical routine, and his charity toward the poor.

His ministry attracted a circle of devout followers, including the prominent Greek writers Alexandros Papadiamantis and Alexandros Moraitidis, who chanted at his services. He was glorified as a saint by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in 1992, and his feast is kept on March 2.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 1851 Birth on Naxos Born on the island of Naxos to Captain John and Augustina.
  2. July 28, 1879 Ordained deacon Ordained a deacon at the Church of the Transfiguration in Plaka, Athens.
  3. March 2, 1884 Ordained priest Ordained a priest at the Church of the Holy Prophet Elisha in Athens.
  4. March 2, 1932 Repose in Athens Reposed in Athens at the age of eighty-four after a lifetime of near-daily liturgical service.
  5. 1992 Glorification Glorified by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, with March 2 appointed as his feast day.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Life and Ministry

Nicholas Planas was born on Naxos in 1851 to a captain named John and his wife Augustina. He married Eleni Provelegiou, who came from Kythira, and they had one son, John. His wife died while he was still young, before his ordination to the priesthood, and he lived thereafter in celibacy.

He was ordained a deacon on July 28, 1879, at the Church of the Transfiguration in Plaka, and a priest on March 2, 1884, at the Church of the Holy Prophet Elisha. His pastoral work centered on very small and poor congregations: the Church of Saint Panteleimon in Neo Kosmo, which numbered only about thirteen families, and the Church of Saint John the Hunter, which had only about eight, while the Church of the Prophet Elisha was the principal place where he celebrated the Liturgy.

For roughly fifty consecutive years he celebrated the divine services almost daily, frequently from around eight in the morning until two in the afternoon, irrespective of weather or unrest. He commemorated great numbers of people by name from prayer-request slips during the services. Accounts of his life emphasize his poverty: he kept no money for himself, distributing what he received to widows, orphans, and the poor, and was repeatedly left without any funds of his own.

Disciples and Influence

Among those drawn to his services were the celebrated Greek writers Alexandros Papadiamantis and Alexandros Moraitidis, who are described as his spiritual disciples and who regularly chanted near him at the Church of the Prophet Elisha. Their association helped preserve and spread the memory of his manner of life.

Glorification

Nicholas Planas reposed in Athens on March 2, 1932. He was buried in the courtyard of the church of Saint John, and his relics were later placed in a silver reliquary in the new church building. The Church of Greece, with the support of Metropolitan Nikodemos of Patras—who had personally met him and received his blessing—requested that the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople recognize his holiness. The Ecumenical Patriarchate glorified him by synodical decree in 1992, appointing March 2 as his feast day; when that date falls within Great Lent, his commemoration is observed on the first Sunday following March 2.

Relics & Shrines

After his initial burial in the churchyard of Saint John, his relics were translated into a silver reliquary and are now kept in the new Church of Saint John the Hunter in Athens.

Notes

Born 1851 on Naxos; widowed early and father of one son; reposed in Athens in 1932. Glorified by the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 1992.

Sources: John Sanidopoulos (Mystagogy); Ecumenical Patriarchate glorification (1992)