St. Philotheus (Kokkinos) of Mt. Athos, patriarch of Constantinople (1379)
Commemorated on October 11
He was born in Thessalonika around 1300; his mother was a
convert from Judaism. He entered monastic life, first at Mt Sinai, then at the
Great Lavra on Mt Athos. The so-called "Hesychast controversy" was then raging,
And St Philotheos became one of the firmest and most effective supporters of St
Gregory Palamas (November 14) in his defense of Orthodoxy against
western-inspired attacks on the doctrines of uncreated Grace and the possibility
of true union with God. It was St Philotheos who drafted the
Hagiorite Tome, the manifesto of the monks of Mt
Athos setting forth how the Saints partake of the Divine and uncreated Light
which the Apostles beheld at Christ's Transfiguration. In 1351, he took part in
the "Hesychast Council" in Constantinople, and wrote its Acts. In 1354 he was
made Patriarch of Constantinople; he stepped down after one year, but was
recalled to the Patriarchal throne in 1364. He continued to be a zealous
champion of undiluted Orthodoxy, writing treatises setting forth the theology of
the Uncreated Energies of God and refuting the scholastic philosophy that was
then infecting the Western church. Despite (or because of?) his uncompromising
Orthodoxy, he always sought a true, rather than political, reconciliation with
the West, and even worked to convene an Ecumenical Council to resolve the
differences between the churches. This holy Patriarch was deposed in 1376 when
the Emperor Andronicus IV came to the throne; he died in exile in 1379.
St Philotheos composed the Church's services to St Gregory Palamas. He is not
listed in the Synaxaria, but is venerated as a Saint in
the Greek church.