Early Life and Monastic Calling
Born Evangelos Bairaktaris on February 7, 1906, in the village of Agios Ioannis in the Evia province of Greece, he was the fourth of five children of Leonidas and Eleni Bairaktaris. He received only two years of formal schooling and began working at the age of eight, first on the family farm and afterward in coal mines and as a grocer's assistant in Halkhida and Piraeus.
He was inspired toward the monastic life by reading about Saint John the Hut-Dweller. At about fourteen he traveled to Mount Athos, where he was tonsured a monk with the name Nikitas at the skete of Kafsokalyvia, in the Cell of St. George, under his spiritual fathers Fr. Panteleimon and Fr. Ioannikios.
Priesthood and Ministry in Athens
After recovering from an illness of pleurisy, he was ordained deacon and then priest at the age of twenty-one, taking the name Porphyrios. In 1923 he was appointed a father confessor, and in 1938 he was raised to the dignity of Archimandrite by Metropolitan Panteleimon of Karystia.
For about thirty-three years, from roughly 1940 to 1973, he served as chaplain at the Polyclinic Hospital in Athens. During this period he also served the Church of Saint Gerasimos and assisted in the renewal of the Church of Saint Nicholas in Kallisia. From 1955 he pursued the founding of a convent; the Holy Convent of the Transfiguration of the Saviour was recognized by Presidential decree in 1981, with construction begun in 1980 and the foundations laid in February 1990.
Final Years and Repose
In 1984 he returned to Mount Athos and resumed monastic life in his original cell at Kafsokalyvia. His final years were marked by considerable physical suffering, including a fractured leg, kidney troubles, a hernia, a heart attack, and blindness that resulted from a failed eye operation in 1987.
He reposed on December 2, 1991, at 4:31 AM at Mount Athos, aged eighty-five, surrounded by the monks of the Kafsokalyvia skete. His death was publicly announced on December 3, 1991.
Spiritual Gifts and Teaching
Accounts record that St. Porphyrios possessed remarkable gifts of discernment and clairvoyance, being able to perceive past and future events with precision; one account relates that he could describe the mineral deposits beneath the earth better than a geologist. He is credited with healing the possessed and the sick.
Unlike some of his contemporaries, he deliberately avoided discussing end-times prophecies, characteristically responding, 'I don't like to prophesy.' He held that such prophecies caused unnecessary anxiety rather than spiritual growth and that individuals should focus on loving Christ rather than fearing apocalyptic events, emphasizing that 'the Church works synodically.' His teaching is captured in his saying: 'Love Christ and put nothing before His Love. He is joy, He is life, He is light.'
Veneration and Legacy
St. Porphyrios was canonized by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople on November 27, 2013, with his feast set on December 2. The Russian Orthodox Church added his name to their calendar on December 2, 2014, and the Romanian Orthodox Church added him to their calendar in 2017. He is venerated as a Wonderworker, with the title 'Porphyrios (Bairaktaris) the Kafsokalyvite.'
His principal published work, 'Wounded by Love: The Life and the Wisdom of Saint Porphyrios,' an anthology of his letters and writings, was published by Denise Harvey in Limni in 2005, with multiple further compilations appearing after his canonization. Chapels dedicated to him have been established in Komotini, Greece (2019); at the Rebra-Parva monastery in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Romania (2019); and in Lanark County, Ontario, Canada (2021).