St. Macarius Kalogeras, hierodeacon of Patmos (1737)
Commemorated on January 17
He was born to a prosperous family on the island of Patmos. As
soon as he was old enough to leave home, he attended the Patriarchal School in
Constantinople, where he distinguished himself. He became a monk, then a deacon,
but always refused to be ordained to the priesthood, though the Metropolitan of
Nikomedia wished Makarios to be his successor. Instead, he returned to Patmos in
1713 and entered the Monastery of St John the Theologian, where he remained
until his death.
Though he lived in great asceticism and constant prayer, Saint Makarios was
moved by a concern for the salvation and education of the Orthodox people, who
often lived in great ignorance, even of their own faith, under Ottoman rule. He
established a school in a building adjacent to the monastery, and offered
courses free of charge to any who could come. Modeling the curriculum on that of
the Patriarchal School, he served more as a spiritual father than a worldly
professor. The school grew steadily, partly due to generous contributions from a
few wealthy Greek families and trade guilds in Constantinople. But students,
many of them very poor, still had to pay for their own needs, and Saint Makarios
used his own funds to aid the poorest of them. In addition, he secretly
distributed any money that came to him personally to the poor on Patmos. The
school at Patmos became famous throughout the Greek Church, and its head became
a spiritual father not only to his students but througout the Greek nation.
Bishops often asked him to write homilies; about sixty of these were published
in book form as The Trumpet of the Gospel, which
is still widely read today by the faithful. Having greatly edified thousands
while laboring tirelessly for the salvation of his soul, Saint Makarios reposed
in peace in 1737.