What Would the Saints Say?

The Fathers

Eleven voices spanning twenty centuries. Bishops, monks, poets, exiles—each one shaped the Church through fire, ink, and prayer.

JC

St. John Chrysostom

Archbishop of Constantinople

347–407 AD · Antioch / Constantinople · Shared

John was born in Antioch around 347 AD to a Christian mother who raised him alone after his father died. He studied rhetoric under Libanius, the greatest pagan orator of the age, then turned his back on a legal career to become a monk in the mountains. Six years of extreme asceticism wrecked his health and drove him back to Antioch, where he was ordained and became the most popular preacher in the city.

wealth poverty charity marriage liturgy repentance

Feast Day: November 13

BT

St. Basil the Great

Archbishop of Caesarea

330–379 AD · Caesarea, Cappadocia · Shared

Basil came from a remarkable family: his grandmother, both parents, his sister Macrina, and his brother Gregory of Nyssa are all saints. Educated in Athens alongside Gregory the Theologian and Emperor Julian, he chose the ascetic life over a brilliant academic career.

wealth poverty monasticism creation community trinity

Feast Day: January 1 (Coptic) / January 2 (Byzantine)

AT

St. Athanasius the Apostolic

Pope of Alexandria (20th)

296–373 AD · Alexandria, Egypt · Coptic Orthodox

Born in Alexandria around 296 AD, Athanasius grew up during the last great Roman persecution. As a young deacon, he accompanied his bishop Alexander to the Council of Nicaea in 325, where he argued against Arius so effectively that the Council proclaimed Christ "consubstantial with the Father."

incarnation trinity heresy persecution courage

Feast Day: Pashons 7 (Coptic) / May 2

GT

St. Gregory the Theologian

Archbishop of Constantinople

329–390 AD · Nazianzus / Constantinople · Shared

Gregory and Basil were best friends from their student days in Athens. Unlike Basil the organizer, Gregory was a contemplative and poet who wanted a quiet life. Basil consecrated him bishop of a tiny backwater town (against Gregory's wishes) as a political chess move — Gregory never forgave him entirely, though he loved him deeply.

trinity theology friendship suffering humility

Feast Day: January 25 (Coptic) / January 25 (Byzantine)

A

St. Augustine

Bishop of Hippo

354–430 AD · Hippo Regius, North Africa · Western

Augustine spent his youth chasing pleasure, fathered a son out of wedlock at 17, and spent nine years as a Manichaean before converting to Christianity at 31 in a Milan garden, prompted by a child's voice saying "Take up and read." His mother Monica had prayed for his conversion for decades.

repentance grace sin truth love free will

Feast Day: August 28

CT

St. Cyril the Great

Pope of Alexandria (24th)

376–444 AD · Alexandria, Egypt · Coptic Orthodox

Cyril succeeded his uncle Theophilus as Pope of Alexandria in 412 and immediately became the most powerful churchman in the East. When Nestorius, Archbishop of Constantinople, began teaching that Mary should be called "Christotokos" (Mother of Christ) rather than "Theotokos" (Mother of God), Cyril recognized the Christological implications and went to war.

incarnation christology heresy scripture Theotokos

Feast Day: Epep 3 (Coptic) / June 27

ET

St. Ephrem the Syrian

Deacon of Edessa

306–373 AD · Nisibis / Edessa, Syria · Shared

Ephrem was born in Nisibis (modern Turkey-Syria border) and spent most of his life there before fleeing to Edessa when Nisibis fell to Persia in 363. He was a deacon — and stubbornly refused the priesthood — who taught in Edessa's famous school and composed hundreds of hymns.

prayer humility repentance creation fasting

Feast Day: Abib 15 (Coptic) / June 9

DF

The Desert Fathers

Abbas of the Egyptian Desert

3rd–5th century · Egyptian Desert (Scetis, Nitria, Kellia) · Coptic Orthodox

The Desert Fathers and Mothers were Egyptian Christians who withdrew into the desert beginning in the 3rd century, following St. Antony the Great (251–356). The movement centered on three Egyptian sites: Scetis (Wadi El Natrun), Nitria, and Kellia.

humility silence prayer temptation simplicity patience

Feast Day: Various (Antony: January 30)

IO

St. Ignatius of Antioch

Bishop of Antioch

c. 35–108 AD · Antioch, Syria · Shared

Ignatius was the third bishop of Antioch (after Peter and Evodius) and one of the Apostolic Fathers — the generation that learned directly from the Apostles. Tradition says he was a disciple of the Apostle John.

martyrdom church unity eucharist incarnation

Feast Day: Hathor 20 (Coptic) / October 17

CO

St. Clement of Alexandria

Head of the Catechetical School

c. 150–215 AD · Alexandria, Egypt · Coptic Orthodox

Clement was likely born in Athens and traveled widely before settling in Alexandria, where he studied under Pantaenus at the famous Catechetical School. He eventually succeeded Pantaenus as head of the school around 190 AD.

wisdom faith and reason wealth education culture

Feast Day: December 4

SI

Pope Shenouda III

Pope of Alexandria (117th)

1923–2012 · Cairo / Wadi El Natrun, Egypt · Coptic Orthodox

Born Nazeer Gayed in 1923, he was a journalist, teacher, and Sunday School leader before becoming a monk (taking the name Antonios El-Syriani) and eventually Pope of Alexandria in 1971. He inherited a church that had been declining for centuries and transformed it into a global communion.

faith repentance love church unity youth

Feast Day: March 17