Simeon the Holy Fool
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Simeon the Holy Fool (Abba Simeon, Saint Simeon Salos or Saint Simeon Salus) was a Christian monk, hermit and saint of the VI-th century A.D. He is considered to be a patron saint of all holy fools and also puppeteers.[1][2]
[edit] Biography
Simeon was Syrian by origin and reportedly born in Edessa, where he lived unmarried with his old mother.[3] With his fellow ascetic friend John from Edessa, Simeon at the age of 30 years[3] took the monastic vows in monastery of Abba Gerasimus in Syria. After that Simeon and John spent about 29 years in desert near the Dead sea practicing ascetism and spiritual exercises.[4] Later Simeon was urged by inspiration of God, as some sources say[3], to move to Emesa for social and charity services. Reportedly the saint asked the Lord to permit him to serve people in such a way that they should not acknowledge him. There, through simulating madness and upseting conventional rules, he was able to bring many citizens to repentance, save many souls from sin and convert them to Christianity.
Simeon entered the gate of Emesa (after spending many years in desert) dragging a dead dog. Schoolchildren saw him and shouted (κράζειν) "Hey, a crazy abba...". The next day, a Sunday, he entered the church, extinguished the lights and throwed nuts at women. On the way out of the church, Simeon overturned (έστρεψεν) the tables of the pastry chefs (πλακουντάριοι).[5] Such playing fool was subject to insults, abuse and beatings, which Simeon endured with patience. In spite of his seemingly strange behaviour, Simeon the Holy Fool healed many possessed people by his prayer, fed the hungry, preached the Gospel, and helped needy citizens of the town. Many of Simeon’s saintly deeds were done secretly.[1]
His ministry also included trying to save a man whose eyes suffered from leucoma. Jesus had previously used saliva & clay to cure a man of blindness, and when the man with eyes disease approached Simeon, he annointed the man's eyes with mustard, burning him & aggrevating the condition to the extent that he reportedly went blind. Later the eyes were healed by the advise of Simeon, who used such way to explain the man's sins and bring him to correction.
Symeon played all sorts of roles foolish and indecent, but language is not sufficient to paint a picture of his doings. For sometimes he pretended to have a limp, sometimes he jumped around, sometimes he dragged himself along on his buttocks, sometimes he stuck out his foot for someone running and tripped him. Other times when there was a new moon, he looked at the sky and fell down and thrashed about.
The life of Simeon the Holy Fool was described by Leontios of Neapolis, who symbolically compared his life to that of Jesus, whom the saint tried to imitate in his own way.[5] According to Leontios:
While the saint was there (in Emesa), he cried out against many because of the Holy Spirit and reproached thieves and fornicators. Some he faulted, crying that they had not taken communion often, and others he reproached for perjury, so that through his inventiveness he nearly put an end to sinning in the whole city.
The only person in Emesa, with whom Simeon did not play a fool, was deacon of the church in Emesa John. One time Simeon saved John from execution when he was falsely convicted. Shortly before his death Simeon, by the illustration of Leontios of Neapolis told to John:
I beg you, never disregard a single soul, especially when it happens to be a monk or a beggar. For Your Charity knows that His place is among the beggars, especially among the blind, people made as pure as the sun through their patience and distress. . . . [S]how love of your neighbor through almsgiving. For this virtue, above all, will help us on (the Day of Judgment).
The saint died about 570 A.D. and was burried by the city poor in a place, where the homeless and strangers was buried. While the body of Saint Simeon were carried, several people heard a wondrous church singing[3].
Only after his death the secret of his imitative foolishness came to light. Some inhabitants remembered his acts of kindness and reportedly strange and powerful miracles.
The feast day of Saint Simeon is marked by Christians on July 1 and on July 21 in the Byzantine calendar .[7]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b King of Peace Episcopal Church
- ^ Puppeteers UK
- ^ a b c d Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church, Billings
- ^ Symeon the Holy Fool: Leontius's Life and the Late Antique City
- ^ a b University of California Press eScholarship Editions
- ^ a b c University of California Press eScholarship Editions, Symeon the Holy Fool, Symeon in Emesa, Jesus in Jerusalem
- ^ Studium Biblicum Franciscanum - Jerusalem

