The Monk Arsenios of Ikaltoi
Commemorated on February 6
The Monk Arsenios
of Ikaltoi was descended from the Gruzian/Georgian princely line of the
Vachnadze. He was born in Kakhetia (Eastern Gruzia), – according to certain
sources, in the village of Ikaltoi. Raised by pious parents, the Monk Arsenios
distinguished himself from childhood by his love for church services and
prayer. He received religious education at the Constantinople academy, where he
studied not only the theological, but also the natural sciences.
At the completion of
academy he accepted monasticism and bore obedience in one of the Gruzian
monasteries of the Black Hill (near Antioch) under the guidance of Saint Ephrem
Mtsira (+ 1101, Comm. 18 January). Here the Monk Arsenios zealously occupied
himself with theological and translating activity, investigating in particular
the causes of the breaking away of the non-Chalcedonian Churches from
Orthodoxy.
To Saint Arsenios
belongs the translation into the Gruzinian language of the "Great
Nomocanon" of Saint Photios, Patriarch of Constantinople (857-867,
887-886), the "Golden Nectar" of Saint John Damascene, and also the
compiled collection of translated works in the "Dogmatikon" with
commentaries, directed against various heretical teachings. After the death of
his teacher, the Monk Arsenios returned to Constantinople and continued his
teaching activities.
Defending the purity
of Orthodoxy, the Monk Arsenios while still during his lifetime gained fame for
his instructive encyclopedia (theology, philosophy, philology, logic, physics,
anatomy, poetics). Upon the invitation of the Gruzian emperor David III the
Restorer (1089-1125), he returned to Gruzia in the year 1114 and for a certain
while taught at the Gerat academy (Western Gruzia). Then the Monk Arsenios
headed the founding, under his active participation, of the Ikaltoi academy
(where he was born in Kakhetia, in the village of Ikaltoi, at the monastery of
the Saviour Image-not-Wrought-by-Hand, during the years 1114-1120). At this
academy, by tradition, he taught the great Gruzian poet Shota Rustaveli.
The Monk Arsenios was
one of the initiators and an active participant of a Church Council in the
Armenian city of Ano; under his influence part of the Armenian Monophysite
bishops inclined towards an acceptance of Orthodoxy. Over the course of many
years the Monk Arsenios was priest for the holy emperor David III the Restorer
and by his good counsels contributed immensely to the enlightenment of the
Gruzian Church. His astute intelligence and spiritual wisdom, the purity and
righteousness of his life, are esteemed holy by the Gruzian Orthodox Church.
The memory of the Monk Arsenios of Ikaltoi is celebrated on 6 February, the day
of his blessed death.
© 1996-2001 by translator Fr. S. Janos.