ST. EPHREM, DEACON AND DOCTOR
St. Ephrem,
called "the Harp of the Holy Spirit," is the great classic Doctor of the Syrian
church. As deacon at Edessa,
he vigorously combated the heresies of his time, and to do so more effectively
wrote poems and hymns about the mysteries of Christ, the Blessed Virgin and the
saints. He had a great devotion to Our Lady. He was a commentator on Scripture
and a preacher as well as a poet, and has left a considerable number of works,
which were translated into other Eastern languages as well as into Greek and
Latin.
Ephrem was of Syrian descent and son of a citizen of Nisibis. While yet a young
man be betook himself to the holy bishop James, by whom he was baptized, and he
soon made such progress in holiness and learning as to be appointed master in
the school of Nisibis in Mesopotamia.
After the death of the bishop James, Nisibis was captured by the Persians, and Ephrem went to Edessa, where he
settled first among the monks in the mountains. Later, to avoid the company of
those who flocked to him, he adopted the eremitical life. He was made deacon of
the church of Edessa, but refused the priesthood out of humility.
He was rich in
all virtues and strove to acquire piety and religion by the following of true
wisdom. He placed all his hope in God, despised all human and transitory things,
and was ever filled with the earnest desire of those which are divine and
eternal. He was led by
the Spirit of God to Caesarea in Cappadocia, where he saw Basil, the mouthpiece
of the Church, and they obtained benefit from their mutual intercourse.
In order
to refute the many errors which troubled the Church at that time, and to expound
the mysteries of Jesus Christ, he wrote many books in the Syrian tongue, almost
all of which have been translated into Greek. St. Jerome bears witness that he
attained such fame that his writings were read publicly in the churches after
the reading from the Holy Scriptures.

On account of
his works, so full of the light of heavenly doctrine, he was greatly honored
even during his lifetime as a Doctor of the Church. He composed a poem in praise
of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the saints for which he was called by the Syrians
"the Harp of the Holy Ghost." He was noted for his great and tender devotion
towards the immaculate Virgin.
He died, rich in merits, at Edessa in
Mesopotamia, on the fourteenth of the Kalends of July, 373 in the reign of Valens.
In 1920,
Pope Benedict XV, at the instance of many Cardinals of the holy Roman Church,
patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, abbots and religious communities, declared him
by a decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites to be a Doctor of the Universal
Church.
Patron:
Spiritual directors; spiritual leaders.