Background
Saint Zosimas was born in the second half of the fifth century, during the reign of Emperor Theodosius the Younger.
Saint Zosimas was born in the second half of the fifth century, during the reign of Emperor Theodosius the Younger.
He became a monk in a monastery in Palestine at a very young age, gaining a reputation as a great elder and ascetic. At the age of fifty-three, now a hieromonk, he moved to a very strict monastery located in the wilderness close to the Jordan River, where he spent the remainder of his life. He is best known for his encounter with Saint Mary of Egypt (commemorated on April 1).
While wandering in the desert he met Saint Mary, who told him her life story and asked him to meet her the next year on Holy Thursday on the banks of the Jordan, in order to bring her Holy Communion.
He did so, and the third year came to her again in the desert, but he found that she had died and he buried her. Street Zosimas is reputed to have lived to be almost one hundred years of age.
All that we know of Zosimas" life comes from the Vita of Saint Mary of Egypt, recorded by Saint Sophronius, who was the Patriarch of Jerusalem from 634 to 638. Sophronius based his work on oral tradition he had heard from monks in the Land of Israel.
This Vita is traditionally read as a part of the Matins of the Great Canon of Saint Andrew of Crete, on the fifth Thursday of Great Lent.
In the Western church this story was taken and used in the late medieval legend of Mary Magdalene, with Zosimas renamed as Maximin, as recounted in the Golden Legend and elsewhere. The fresco illustrated, by Giotto and his workshop in Assisi, shows this version.