THE LIFE OF ABBA GERASIMOS
About a mile from the holy River of Jordan, there is a place known as the Lavra of the holy Abba Gerasimos. When we were there, the residents told us that Saint Gerasimos was walking one day by the banks of the holy Jordan when he met a lion, roaring mightily with pain in its paw. The point of a reed was deeply embedded in it, causing inflammation and suppuration.
When the lion saw the elder, it came to him and showed him the wounded foot, whimpering and begging for healing. When the elder saw the lion in such distress, he sat down and took the paw to lance it. The point was removed, along with much pus. He cleansed the wound well, bound it up, and dismissed the beast. However, the healed lion would not leave the elder. It followed him like a noble disciple wherever he went. The elder was amazed at the gentle disposition of the beast and, from then on, began feeding it, throwing it bread and boiled vegetables.
Now, the lavra had a donkey used to fetch water for the needs of the elders, as they drank the water of the holy Jordan, which is about a mile from the lavra. The fathers used to hand the donkey over to the lion, to pasture it on the banks of the Jordan. One day, while the donkey was being pastured by the lion, it wandered some distance from its keeper. Some camel-drivers on their way from Arabia found the donkey and took it away to their country.
Having lost the donkey, the lion returned to the lavra and approached Abba Gerasimos, very downcast and dismayed. The abba thought that the lion had devoured the donkey. He said to it, "Where is the donkey?" The beast stood silent, hanging its head, much like a man. The elder said to it, "Have you eaten it? Blessed be God! From henceforth you are going to perform whatever duties the donkey performed."
From that time on, at the elder’s command, the lion used to carry the saddle-pack containing four earthenware vessels and bring water. One day, an officer came to ask the elder for his prayers, and he saw the lion bringing water. When he heard the explanation, he had pity on the beast. He took out three pieces of gold and gave them to the elders so that they could purchase a donkey to ensure their water supply and relieve the lion of this menial service.
Some time after the release of the lion, the camel-driver who had taken the donkey came back to the Holy City to sell grain, and he had the donkey with him. Having crossed the holy Jordan, he chanced to find himself face to face with the lion. When he saw the beast, he left his camels and took to his heels. Recognizing the donkey, the lion ran to it, seized its leading rein in its mouth (as it had been accustomed to do), and led away not only the donkey but also the three camels. It brought them to the elder, rejoicing and roaring at having found the donkey it had lost.
The elder had thought that the lion had eaten the donkey, but now he realized that the lion had been falsely accused. He named the beast Jordanes, and it lived with the elder in the lavra, never leaving his side for five years. When Abba Gerasimos departed to the Lord and was buried by the Fathers, by the providence of God, the lion could nowhere be found in the lavra.
A little later, the lion came and searched for the elder. The elder’s disciple, Abba Sabbatios (the Cilician), saw it and said to it, "Jordanes, our elder has left us orphans, for he has departed to the Lord; but come here, eat something." The lion, however, would not eat but continually turned its eyes this way and that, hoping to see its elder. It roared mightily, unable to tolerate this bereavement.
When Abba Sabbatios and the rest of the fathers saw it, they stroked its mane and said to it, "The elder has gone away to the Lord and left us," yet even by saying this, they did not succeed in silencing its cries and lamentations. The more they tried to mollify and comfort it with their words, the more it roared. The louder were its cries, by which it expressed its grief; for it showed through its voice, countenance, and eyes the sorrow it felt at not being able to see the elder.
Then Abba Sabbatios said to it, "Since you do not believe us, come with me and I will show you where our elder lies." He took the lion and led it to where they had buried the elder. The spot was about half a mile from the church. Abba Sabbatios stood above the grave of Abba Gerasimos and said to the lion, "See, this is where our elder is," and he knelt down.
When the lion saw how he prostrated himself, it began beating its head against the ground and roaring, then it promptly died there, on top of the elder’s grave. This did not take place because the lion had a rational soul, but because it is the will of God to glorify those who glorify Him—and to show how the beasts were in subjection to Adam before he disobeyed the commandment and fell from the comfort of Paradise.