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Elder Ephraim of Arizona

Secular name Ioannis Moraitis
Not yet glorified — held in the living memory of the faithful. Elder Ephraim is remembered with love and gratitude, but is not (or not yet) formally glorified by the Church. No feast, liturgical veneration, or intercession is implied here; what follows is an historical profile, subject to clergy and source review.

Overview

Elder Ephraim of Arizona (secular name Ioannis Moraitis) was a Greek Athonite hieromonk who, after thirty years of monastic life on Mount Athos — including eighteen years as abbot of the Monastery of Philotheou — established a network of Orthodox monasteries in the United States and Canada in the closing decades of the twentieth century. He was born on June 24 in Volos, Greece; sources differ as to the year, giving either 1927 or 1928 (and accordingly his age at repose as 92 or 91).

Raised in a poor and devout family — his mother was later tonsured a nun — he arrived on Mount Athos on September 26, 1947, and placed himself under the guidance of St Joseph the Hesychast, a renewer of contemplative prayer on the Holy Mountain. He was tonsured a monk in 1948, receiving the name Ephraim, and lived under St Joseph's direction for some twelve years until the elder's repose on August 15, 1959.

On October 1, 1973, Elder Ephraim became abbot of the Monastery of Philotheou, which he repopulated; brotherhoods sent out from it also revived the Athonite monasteries of Konstamonitou, Xeropotamou, and Karakallou. He first travelled to North America in 1979 and, over the following years, relocated there permanently, settling in 1995 at St Anthony's Monastery in the Arizona desert, where he reposed on December 7, 2019.

Elder Ephraim and North America

Elder Ephraim's first journey to North America, in 1979, was occasioned by a need for medical care in Canada. Visiting Orthodox communities in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver, he was sought out by clergy and laity for confession and spiritual counsel. By that time Orthodox Christianity had been present on the continent for nearly two centuries and was rich in parishes and institutions, yet traditional Athonite-style monastic communities — ordered around the Jesus Prayer, lengthy services, and eldership — were few.

In response to repeated requests from the faithful, Elder Ephraim returned with growing frequency and eventually relocated to the United States. His stated aim was to transplant the monastic life of the Holy Mountain to American soil: communities of monks and nuns living the cenobitic and hesychast tradition he had received from St Joseph. The monasteries he founded became centres of confession, spiritual direction, and pilgrimage, and contributed to a wider renewal of interest in Orthodox monasticism among clergy, converts, and laypeople across the continent.

Spiritual Lineage

Elder Ephraim was the direct disciple and spiritual son of St Joseph the Hesychast (1897–1959), under whose guidance he lived on Mount Athos for some twelve years. From St Joseph he received the hesychast tradition — the disciplined practice of the Jesus Prayer, watchfulness (nepsis), and obedience to a spiritual father — which he in turn transmitted to his own monastic children. Through Elder Ephraim, much of this twentieth-century Athonite spirituality became accessible to Orthodox Christians in the English-speaking world.

St Joseph the Hesychast Renewer of Athonite hesychasm (†1959)
Elder Ephraim of Arizona Abbot of Philotheou; founder in North America
North American Monastic Revival A network of monasteries across the continent

St Joseph the Hesychast was glorified by the Ecumenical Patriarchate in 2020; see his profile in the database.

Founder of Monastic Communities

Before Elder Ephraim's arrival, organized Orthodox monasticism in North America was limited; most communities were small or short-lived, and there was no broad network of houses living the fully traditional Athonite typikon. Beginning with the women's Monastery of the Nativity of the Theotokos in Pennsylvania (1989), and continuing through St Anthony's in Arizona (1995) and many houses thereafter, he and his disciples established monasteries the length and breadth of the continent. By St Anthony's Monastery's own count, seventeen communities were founded through his work — ten for women and seven for men, fifteen in the United States and two in Canada; some later sources give eighteen or nineteen. These communities have continued their monastic life since his repose.

  1. 1979

    First visits to North America

    Travelling to Canada for medical care, Elder Ephraim visited Orthodox communities in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver, where the faithful sought his counsel and confession. source ↗

  2. 1989

    Nativity of the Theotokos Monastery established (Pennsylvania)

    His first monastic foundation in the Americas — a women's monastery at Saxonburg, Pennsylvania. source ↗

  3. 1995

    St Anthony's Monastery established (Arizona)

    He settled with a small brotherhood in the Sonoran Desert at Florence, Arizona, which became his residence and the best-known of the monasteries. source ↗

  4. 1990s–2000s

    A network of monasteries founded across North America

    By the count of St Anthony's Monastery, seventeen monastic communities were established through his work — ten for women and seven for men, fifteen in the United States and two in Canada. source ↗

  5. 2019

    Repose in the Lord

    Elder Ephraim reposed on December 7, 2019, at St Anthony's Monastery, Florence, Arizona. source ↗

Monasteries Associated with Elder Ephraim

NameLocationFoundedNotes
Nativity of the Theotokos Monastery Saxonburg, Pennsylvania 1989 Women's — His first foundation in the Americas.
Life-Giving Spring Monastery (Zoodochos Peghe) Dunlap, California 1993 Women's
St John the Forerunner Monastery Goldendale, Washington 1995 Women's
St Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery Florence, Arizona 1995 Men's — Elder Ephraim's own residence from 1995 until his repose.
Holy Archangels Monastery Kendalia, Texas 1996 Men's
Panagia Vlahernon Monastery Williston, Florida 1998 Men's — Founding year given as 1998 (OrthodoxWiki); the monastery's own site dates its operation to 1999.
Holy Trinity Monastery Smiths Creek, Michigan 1998–99 Men's — Sources give 1998 (Wikipedia) or 1999.
St Nektarios Monastery Roscoe, New York 1999 Men's
St Kosmas Aitolos Monastery Bolton, Ontario, Canada 1993 Women's
Panagia Parigoritissa Monastery Brownsburg-Chatham, Quebec, Canada 1993 Women's
St John Chrysostomos Monastery Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin 1993 Women's
Holy Protection of the Theotokos Monastery White Haven, Pennsylvania 1993 Women's
Annunciation of the Theotokos Monastery Reddick, Florida 1998 Women's
Panagia Prousiotissa Monastery Troy, North Carolina 1998 Women's
Panagia Pammakaristos Monastery Lawsonville, North Carolina 1998 Men's
Holy Transfiguration Monastery Harvard, Illinois 1998
St Paraskevi Monastery Washington, Texas 2004 Women's

These represent the principal houses of a larger work; St Anthony's Monastery lists seventeen affiliated communities. Founding years marked with a range or note are given variously by different sources, and several are drawn from a single source — treat them as approximate.

Pilgrimage and Legacy

St Anthony's Monastery, set in the Sonoran Desert near Florence, Arizona, became a destination of pilgrimage drawing visitors from across North America and beyond. During Elder Ephraim's lifetime, the faithful travelled to seek his confession and counsel; since his repose, pilgrims continue to visit his monasteries and his grave. The communities he founded function as centres of prayer, the sacrament of confession, spiritual direction, and the daily round of monastic services, and they remain points of contact between parish life and the monastic tradition.

Selected Teachings

The following are drawn from his published works. Widely-circulated sayings that could not be tied to a specific source have been omitted.

Prayer

“If you truly desire to expel every anti-Christian thought and to purify your nous, you will achieve this only through prayer, for nothing is able to regulate our thoughts as well as prayer.”

Counsels from the Holy Mountain

“When guided by prayer, the moral powers within us become stronger than all our temptations and conquer them.”

Counsels from the Holy Mountain

The Jesus Prayer

“The more humility you mix with your unceasing prayer, the more intensely you will feel Jesus, and your heart will feel like another burning bush.”

Counsels from the Holy Mountain

“Let us compel ourselves, children, in the prayer of our sweetest Jesus, so that He may grant us His mercy, so that we may be united with His grace.”

Counsels from the Holy Mountain

Repentance

“Even one tear of repentance is equivalent to a spiritual bath.”

The Art of Salvation

“The tears of a repentant soul purify the heart, purify the mind, purify the body, purify life, purify speech, and purify a person's every action.”

The Art of Salvation

Spiritual Warfare

“God does not want those whom He will save, who seek His mercy, to be ignoramuses, unmanly, cowardly, or spiritually untested.”

Counsels from the Holy Mountain

Works by Elder Ephraim

TitleTypePublisherYearDescription
Counsels from the Holy Mountain Letters & homilies St Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery (SAGOM Press), Florence, AZ 1999 A large compilation of his letters and homilies on the path to sanctification, addressed to clergy, monastics, and laypeople.
The Art of Salvation Homilies (33) St Nektarios Monastery, Roscoe, NY not stated Thirty-three homilies — twenty-three to laypeople and ten to the monks of Philotheou — outlining the means that lead to salvation.
A Call from the Holy Mountain Teachings New Sarov Press, Blanco, TX 1991 An early, short collection of his teachings on Orthodox monasticism and the spiritual life; long out of print.
My Elder Joseph the Hesychast Memoir St Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery (Greek original 2008) Eng. c. 2013 Elder Ephraim's firsthand account of the life, struggles, and counsels of his own elder, St Joseph the Hesychast.

Note: the title The Path to Salvation, sometimes attributed to Elder Ephraim, is in fact the work of St Theophan the Recluse and is not listed here.

Books About Elder Ephraim

TitleAuthorTypeDetailSignificance
Sent By God: The Life of Geronda Ephraim St Anthony's Monastery (compiled) Biography (multi-volume) St Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery, announced c. 2022 A multi-volume life drawing largely on his own words and on the testimony of his spiritual children; the principal book-length work about him. (Confirm current availability with the monastery.)

Historical Significance

Elder Ephraim's work is most often discussed in connection with the revival of Orthodox monasticism in late-twentieth-century North America. By establishing a network of houses living the Athonite tradition, he made the hesychast spirituality of the Holy Mountain — its emphasis on the Jesus Prayer, confession, and eldership — directly accessible to an English-speaking Orthodox population that had previously encountered it mainly through books. His monasteries drew clergy, monastics, converts, and laypeople, and influenced parish spiritual life well beyond their walls.

His ministry was not without controversy, and assessments of his influence vary; what is not disputed is that the communities he founded have endured, and that the practices and texts associated with them have shaped a generation of Orthodox Christians on the continent.

Orthodoxy in America: The Story Into Which Elder Ephraim Entered

Elder Ephraim's work did not occur in isolation. It formed part of the continuing growth of Orthodox Christianity in North America — a story that began with missionaries from Russia and was carried forward by generations of immigrants, bishops, and saints.

  1. 1794

    The Valaam mission arrives in Alaska

    Ten monks from Valaam and neighbouring monasteries, having departed Russia in 1793, arrived at Kodiak on September 24, 1794 — the beginning of organized Orthodox mission in North America. source ↗

  2. to 1837

    St Herman among the native Alaskans

    St Herman settled on Spruce Island, which he named “New Valaam,” living as a hermit and protector of the Alutiiq people until his repose on December 13, 1837. source ↗

  3. 1824–1867

    St Innocent's missionary expansion

    Arriving at Unalaska in 1824, St Innocent (Veniaminov) devised a Cyrillic Aleut alphabet, translated the Gospel of Matthew and other texts, and built schools across Alaska before being elevated Metropolitan of Moscow. source ↗

  4. 1898–1907

    St Tikhon's North American episcopacy

    As bishop (from 1898) and then archbishop, the future Patriarch St Tikhon organized the diocese, renamed it “Aleutians and North America,” built up parishes and St Tikhon's Monastery, and envisioned a self-governing American Orthodox Church before returning to Russia in 1907. source ↗

  5. 1904

    St Raphael of Brooklyn — first bishop consecrated in America

    Consecrated in New York City in 1904 — the first Orthodox episcopal consecration on American soil — St Raphael gathered the scattered Arabic-speaking faithful and founded some thirty parishes before his repose in 1915. source ↗

  6. 1900s–1930s

    Growth through immigration; the seminaries

    Orthodoxy spread through Greek, Russian, Serbian, Romanian, and Syrian/Lebanese immigration, with parishes multiplying in the great cities and the founding of Holy Cross (1937) and St Vladimir's (1938) seminaries. source ↗

  7. 1979

    Elder Ephraim begins visiting North America

    Into this maturing but still young Church — rich in parishes yet with few traditional Athonite-style monastic communities — Elder Ephraim came in 1979, and over the next decades planted a monastic network across the continent. source ↗

    Elder Ephraim of Arizona

Elder Ephraim's labours continue the missionary work begun by St Herman, St Innocent, St Raphael, St Tikhon, and the other witnesses who helped plant Orthodoxy in this land.

Related Witnesses

Gallery Suggestions

Recommended imagery for a future illustrated edition of this profile (none reproduced here pending licensing and review):

Sources

  1. St Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery — Elder Ephraim (official biography)
  2. St Anthony's Greek Orthodox Monastery — Affiliated Monasteries
  3. OrthodoxWiki — Ephraim (Moraitis) of Philotheou
  4. Wikipedia — Ephraim of Arizona
  5. Mystagogy (John Sanidopoulos) — repose of Elder Ephraim
  6. Nativity of the Theotokos Monastery — History
  7. OCA — Mission to Alaska (the Valaam mission, 1794)
  8. OCA — St Herman of Alaska
  9. OrthodoxWiki — Innocent of Alaska
  10. OCA — St Tikhon (Bellavin), past primate
  11. OrthodoxWiki — Raphael of Brooklyn

Additional citations appear inline beside the timelines, tables, and bibliographies above. This profile is a historical account compiled from the sources listed and remains subject to clergy and source review.