Born in
Damascus c. 650, to Christian parents, Andrew was mute until the age of seven. According to his
hagiographers, he was miraculously cured after receiving
Holy Communion. He began his
ecclesiastical career at fourteen in the
Lavra of Saint
Sabbas the Sanctified, near
Jerusalem, where he quickly gained the notice of his superiors. Theodore, the
locum tenens of the
Patriarchate of Jerusalem (745–770) made him his
Archdeacon, and sent him to the imperial capital of
Constantinople as his official representative at the
Sixth Ecumenical Council (680–681), which had been called by Emperor
Constantine IV to counter the
heresy of
Monothelitism. Shortly after the Council, he was summoned back to Constantinople from Jerusalem and appointed Archdeacon at the "Great Church" of
Hagia Sophia. Eventually, Andrew was appointed to the
metropolitan see of
Gortyna, in
Crete. Although he had been an opponent of Monothelitism, he nevertheless attended the
conciliabulum of 712, in which the decrees of the
Ecumenical Council were abolished. In the following year, he repented and returned to
orthodoxy and thereafter occupied himself with preaching, composing hymns, etc. As a preacher, his discourses are known for their dignified and harmonious phraseology, for which he is considered to be one of the foremost ecclesiastical orators of the Byzantine Era. Church historians have no consensus as to the date of his death. What is known is that he died on the island of
Lesbos, while returning to Crete from Constantinople, where he had been on church business. His
relics were later
translated to Constantinople. In 1349, the pious Russian pilgrim
Stephen of Novgorod saw his relics at the Monastery of Saint Andrew of Crete in Constantinople. At modern
Skala Eresou on
Lesbos (ancient Eresos) is a large, Early Christian basilical church in honour of Saint Andrew. The
feast day of Saint Andrew of Crete is
July 4 on the
Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar (for those churches which follow the
Julian Calendar, July 4 falls on July 17 of the
Gregorian Calendar). ==Hymnography==