John the Dwarf

Saint John the Dwarf (Greek: Ιωάννης Κολοβός; Arabic: ابو يحنّس القصير (Abū) Yuḥannis al-Qaṣīr c. 339 – c. 405), also called Saint John Colobus, Saint John Kolobos or Abba John the Dwarf,[2] was an Egyptian Desert Father of the early Christian church.

Saint John the Dwarf
Mosaic in Hosios Loukas
Bornc. 339
Thebes, Egypt[1]
Diedc. 405
Mount Colzim, Egypt
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Churches, Oriental Orthodox Churches, Coptic Church
FeastPaopi 20 (Coptic Christianity) (i.e. October 17 Julian Calendar)
November 9 (Eastern Orthodox Church)
AttributesShort Monk watering a stick

Life

John the Dwarf was born in the town of Thebes in Egypt[3] to poor Christian parents. At the age of eighteen, he and an elder brother, moved to the desert of Scetes[4] where he became a disciple of Saint Pambo and a good friend of Saint Pishoy. He lived a life of austerity and taught several other monks his way of life, among them was Arsenius the Great.

After the departure of Saint Pambo, John was ordained a priest by Pope Theophilus and became abbot of the monastery he founded around the Tree of Obedience. When the Mazices invaded Scetes in 395, John fled the Nitrian Desert and went to live on Mount Colzim, near the present city of Suez, where he died.

In 515, the relics of Saint John the Dwarf were moved to the Nitrian Desert. His feast is celebrated on October 17 in the Roman Catholic Church, on 20 Paopi at the Coptic Orthodox Church and on November 9 in the Eastern Orthodox Church. The Monastery of Saint John the Dwarf in Scetes is now deserted.

John lived on only flatbread and vegetables his entire life and could eat one meal a day.[5]

Legend

John the Dwarf is best known for his obedience. The most famous story about his obedience is that one day Saint Pambo gave Abba John a piece of dry wood and ordered him to plant and water it. John obeyed and went on watering it twice a day even though the water was about 12 miles from where they lived. After three years, the piece of wood sprouted and grew into a fruitful tree. Pambo took some of this tree's fruits and went around to all the elder monks, saying "take, eat from the fruit of obedience". Postumian, who was in Egypt in 402, assured that he was shown this tree which grew in the yard of the monastery and which he saw covered with shoots and green leaves.

Ababius was a monk of Scetes and is a saint of the Coptic Church. He is the subject of a long biography attributed in manuscript form to John the Dwarf. The manuscript has yet to be translated into English.

gollark: ~~we do not speak of RPNCalc v1~~
gollark: Yep!
gollark: <@!341618941317349376> I *have* done work experience, you know. It was very boring.
gollark: I also want to do something about the requirement to add `run` somehow.
gollark: I'm going to rewrite the whole thing in PureScript first. Got to waste time *somehow*.

References

  1. "القديس يوأنس القصير | الأنبا يحنس القصير | أنبا يوحنا القصير | St-Takla.org". st-takla.org.
  2. Ward, Benedicta (1975). The Sayings of the Desert Fathers: The Alphabetical Collection. Cistercian Publications. ISBN 978-0879079598.
  3. "القديس يوأنس القصير | الأنبا يحنس القصير | أنبا يوحنا القصير | St-Takla.org". st-takla.org. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  4. "Saint John the Dwarf, Anchoret of Scete. September 15. Rev. Alban Butler. 1866. Volume IX: September. The Lives of the Saints". www.bartleby.com.
  5. Stefaniw, Blossom. (2019). Christian Reading: Language, Ethics, and the Order of Things. University of California Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0520300613

Sources

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