99 Fathers of Crete
Commemorated on October 7
Saint John the Hermit and thirty-five companions lived in
Egypt, but took ship as a group for Cyprus in order to practice ascesis in
exile. At Cyprus they met a party of thirty-nine others who also sought to live
the ascetic life more fully, and the two groups joined. "In order that these
ascetics, too, might taste of the graces of voluntary exile" (Synaxarion),
they traveled to Attalia in Pamphylia. There, twenty-four more monks joined
them, so that their company now numbered ninety-nine. (This number was ordained
by God, so that Christ Himself, their Head, would complete their number at one
hundred.) After some time they took ship again for Crete, where they lived in
two caves in a remote, deserted area, living only on the plants that grew wild
there.
Saint John sought his brothers' blessing to live as a hermit. On the day of
his departure they prayed that they all might repose on the day of John's death,
and enter together into the Kingdom of God. John's asceticism was so severe that
after awhile he could no longer walk, but crawled from his cave to gather the
small quantities of food he allowed himself. A shepherd, seeing him from a
distance, thought that he was some animal, and shot him with an arrow. Finding
the dying John, the shepherd was stricken with horror and grief, and threw
himself at the hermit's feet, begging forgiveness. The saint only lived long
enough to give the young man his pardon and blessing before surrendering his
soul to God. The prayer of his ninety-eight brethren was mysteriously granted:
between the third and seventh hour of that day, they all, one after another,
fell asleep in peace.