|
St. Isaac the Syriac
11 October
One of the most important figures in the history of
the Eastern Christian Church is St. Isaac of
Nineveh, (also known as St. Isaac the Syriac), who
came from this area. He became known for his written
work greatly admired and read, even more than the
work of other holy fathers. He is one of the biggest
and deepest teachers of the orthodox spiritual life.
Therefore, his written work was spread all over the
orthodox world and translated into many
languages.
It is very awkward that he has been mentioned in the
Slavic Synaksarion (a book of the lives of the
saints) and he has not appeared in the Greek
Synaksarion for an unknown reason, although his
impact in the orthodox spiritual heritage is
indelible. The original version of the Greek
Synaksarion has most probably been lost and the
Slavic translation survived. Therefore, we have
basic information about his life from the
translation. He lived in the second half of the 7th
century and is one of the greatest spiritual writers
of the Eastern Christian Church. St. Isaac was born
in (Bet Qatraye) a wider area than the modern State
of Qatar, in the Persian or Arabic Gulf. He became a
monk at an early age with his brother whose name is
not known. They went to the monastery of St. Martyr
Mathew. Later, he left his brother who became
Superior of the monastery and went deeper in the
desert rejecting every thing material. By doing so,
he grew up spiritually to the stage of having
visions. He became an angel in a body and spiritual
teacher there. From his writings we understand that
all his words are a result of his experience.
Qatar’s ecclesiastical history in the pre-Islamic
and early Islamic period was an important part of
the Eastern Christianity. Its church gave a number
of prominent clerks. Generations of monks lived on
the merits of the Eastern Christian monks. St. Isaac
was eventually taken by the Patriarch George I (who
visited Bet Qatraye in 676) to be consecrated bishop
of Nineveh (Mosul) in the country between the two
rivers. St. Isaac resigned from the position of a
bishop after five months. According to one source
there were two men in his diocese, a debtor and a
creditor. The creditor requested from St. Isaac to
solve their problem. When St. Isaac suggested a
solution based on the Bible and asked creditor to be
patient with his brother. However, the creditor
replied: Put aside the Bible, I want my money! St.
Isaac said to himself: If my people reject the Bible
as a basis for problem solution and
misunderstandings, what is my mission here? So, he
went to the Catholicos Patriarch George I and sought
to be released from the Episcopal sea of Nineveh.
|


 |