Nilus of Sora
| Nilus of Sora | |
|---|---|
| An old Russian icon of St Nil Sorsky | |
| Venerable | |
| Born | 1433 Moscow | 
| Died | 7 May 1508 | 
| Venerated in | Eastern Orthodoxy | 
| Canonized | 1903 by Russian Orthodox Church | 
| Major shrine | St. Nilus of Sora Hermitage | 
| Feast | May 7 | 
| Controversy | nestyazhateli | 
| Influenced | Vassian Patrikeyev, Maximus the Greek Theology career | 
| Notable work | The Rule (Ustav) The Tradition (Predanie) | 
| Theological work | |
| Tradition or movement | Hesychasm | 
| Main interests | Ascetcism, Monasticism Mysticism, Theosis | 
| Notable ideas | nestyazhateli | 
Nilus of Sora (also Nil Sorsky or Nil Sorski; Russian: Нил Сорский; secular name: Nikolai Maikov; Russian: Николай Майков; c. 1433 – 7 May 1508) was a Russian Orthodox monk, spiritual writer, theologian, and the founder of the Sora Hermitage. He is best known as the founder of a tendency in the Russian Orthodox Church known as the non-possessors (nestyazhateli) which opposed ecclesiastic landownership. The Russian Orthodox Church venerates Nilus as a saint, marking his feast day on the anniversary of his repose on 7 May.