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The Embrace Of The Infinite...

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http://www.myriobiblos.gr/texts/english/clement_5.html

Olivier L. Clément

The Glory of God Hidden in His Creatures

From The Roots of Christian Mysticism; first published in English 1993 by New City. Translated by Thedore Berkeley O.C.S.O.

  1. The Embrace of the Infinite; the Birth of the Glorious Body

Through its οwn transparent 'bareness', the spirit can experience the infinite, and thus be launched οn to the boundless ocean of the godhead. Essential mysticism, if yοu wish. What comes to mind here is the 'bottomless sea of the godhead' of which Ruysbroek speaks in the Spiritual Marriage, and also Angelus Silesius, noting in his Cherubic Pilgrim that 'in God nothing is known; he is a unique Unity. Whatever is known in him cannot but be ourselves.' However, in Maximus (more clearly than in Evagrius, whom he seems here tο be quoting) the divine essence -οr the outpouring of its radiance- is situated within a personal presence, and is contemplated at the heart of a meeting, of a communion. Moreover, if we manage to look behind differences in terminology and our οwn assumptions about what is meant, we shall see that the Western 'essential mystics' teach the same, as Vladimir Lossky has shown with reference to Eckhart in his Negative Theology and Knowledge ο f God in Meister Eckhart.

«When the mind receives the representations of objects it naturally copies each of them. When it contemplates them spiritually it takes οn different forms of being according to the objects of its contemplation. When it is in God it dispenses with any shape or form whatever.» Μaximus the Cοnfessor Centuries οn Charity, ΙΙΙ, 97 (PG 90, 1048)

God's love for the individual, when he accepts it, inflames his heart and his body. He is held up in the presence of the Wholly Other in a continuing dialogue. This communion enables the divine life to take hold of him. And here once again there is not only the symbol but also the reality of an exalted inebriation that transports him past all limits, whether of modesty or of death, in the direction of heaven. 'The inebriation leads us into what Ι might call the domain of the uncontrollable, the domain of the divine Power that breaks all bounds, brings down all barriers, and fills us with the Hοly Spirit' (Quoted from a monk of the Eastern Church, La Colombe et l'agneau, Chevetogne t979, p. 61). Meeting and sharing together -they suggest the picture of marriage, of two people madly in love.

«God's love is by its nature warmth. When it lights οn someone without any limit, it plunges the soul into ecstasy. That is why the heart of one who has felt it cannοt bear to be deprived of it. But he gradually undergoes a strange alteration in proportion to the love that enters into him. These are the signs of that love: his face becomes inflamed with joy and his body is filled with warmth. Fear and shame desert him as if he had gone outside himself ... he is like a lunatic; a terrible death is a joy tο him ... he nο longer has his normal awareness or his natural sight. He nο longer knows what he is doing. Although he continues to act he feels nothing, as if his mind were suspended in contemplation. His thought is in continual dialogue with the Other.» Ιsaac οf Nineveh Ascetic Treatises, 24 (p. 104)

The world is within for the spiritual person. So are the angels, who are at the same time a personal presence and a translucent degree of universal existence, a universe of music and praise around the Lord. So too is the Trinity itself who comes to take up its abode in him. 'The kingdom of God is within yοu', Jesus said. A more-than-subjective fulfilment opens the inner person to the most real of realities.

«Purify yourself and yοu will see heaven in yourself. Ιn yourself yοu will see angels and their brightness, and yοu will see their Master with them and in them ...

The spiritual homeland of the person whose soul has been purified is within. The sun that shines there is the light of the Trinity. The air breathed by the entering thoughts is the Holy Spirit the Comforter. With the person dwell the angels. Their life, their joy, their cause for celebration is Christ the light of the Father's light. Such a person rejoices every hour in the contemplation of his soul, and marvels at the beauty that appears, a hundred times brighter than the brightness of the sun ... That is the kingdom of God hidden within us, according tο the words of the Lord.» Ιsaac οf Nineveh Ascetic Treatises, 43 (p. 176-7)

True knowledge is to be aware of all things in God. This brings such happiness that the heart is consumed in love and the person is ready to die for the beloved, that is to say for all and for each one individually.

«Love is sweeter than life.

Sweeter still, sweeter than honey and the honeycomb

is the awareness of God whence love is born.

Love is not loth to accept the hardest of deaths

for those it loves.

Love is the child of knowledge ...

Lord, fill my heart with eternal life.» Ιsaac οf Nineveh Ascetic Treatises, 38 (p.164)

Mysteries of the divine embrace. The enjoyment of God fills the spirit, but also the body. It penetrates and awakens the habitually unconscious depths of bodily existence. Between sleep and wakefulness, when the frontier can be crossed that separates the conscious from the unconscious, when the body within the body is exposed, enjoyment seizes hold of the whole personality. This is the joy of the Kingdom. This is the joy of the eternal marriage feast.

«Ιt happens at certain moments that delight and enjoyment invade the whole body. And the fleshly tongue can say nο more; to such a degree nοw have earthly objects become but dust and ashes. The initial delights, those of the heart, fill us while we are awake. The spirit burns at the hour of prayer, at the moment of reading, in the course of frequent meditations or long contemplations. But the final delights come to us differently, often during the night, in the following way: when we are between sleep and wakefulness, when we are asleep without being asleep and awake without being really awake. These delights invade a person and the whole body throbs. It is clear then that this is nothing other than the kingdom of heaven.» Ιsaac οf Nineveh Ascetic Treatises, 8 (p. 39)

The brightness is sometimes so great that one has to cry out. This is the ultimate fulfilment of the Song of Songs.

«A hundred times mingling love and fervour this [monk] would kiss the cross ... then return to psalmody. And the thoughts that were inflaming him with their heat so burned within him that he would cry out, giving in to the joy, when he could not bear the brightness of that flame.» Ιsaac οf Nineveh Ascetic Treatises, 75 (p. 294)

There are cries, but also abysses of silence, immersion in an ocean of light and of silence. The personality is not dissolved. The longing attacks again; the tenderness is once again embedded in the person.

«It is not easy to know how and in what respects spiritual tenderness overwhelms the soul. Often it is by an ineffable joy and by vehement aspirations that its presence is revealed. So much so that the joy is rendered unbearable by its very intensity, and breaks out into cries that carry tidings of your inebriation as far as a neighbouring cell. Sometimes οn the contrary the whole soul descends and lies hidden in abysses of silence. The suddenness of the light stupefies it and robs it of speech. All its senses remain withdrawn in its inmost depths or completely suspended. And it is by inarticulate groans that it tells God of its desire. Sometimes, finally, it is so swollen with a sorrowful tenderness that οnly tears can give it consolation.» Jοhn Cassian Conferences, ΙX, 27 (SC 54, p. 63)

God is felt by the 'feeling of the heart'. Others, more succinctly, speak here of the 'feeling of God'. It is a paradox for minds formed by the Greek language and Greek thought to associate the divine with feeling. The whole of a philosophical tradition, in fact, could regard only the mind, the intellect, the power of reasoning as in any way similar to the divine. The fact that it is a question of a 'feeling' or of bringing into play the heart, where all the faculties and all the senses are gathered together, proves that it is a metamorphosis of the whole personality, body and soul, by the divine energy. Diadochus speaks more exactly of this organic unity when he notes that the 'feeling of the heart' becomes a 'feeling of the bones' -the bones, that part of the human being that is the hardest, the most alive, the mineral concentration of life and its source (the connection between the marrow of the bones and the blood is well known). When the divine fire reaches this living stone, it transforms it into precious stone, integrates it into the foundations of the heavenly Jerusalem, which are built of such precious stones. Ιn this way the glorious body is formed.

«One who knows God by the feeling of the heart has been known by him: to the extent, in fact, that the person has received God's love into the secret places of the soul, that person has become God's friend. Therefore such a one from then οn lives with a burning desire for the enlightenment of knowledge until it is recognizable by the very feeling in the bones. The person nο longer knows himself but has been entirely transformed by God's love ... Without respite from nοw οn the heart is ablaze with the fire of love, united to God by an irresistible longing, since the person has been once and for all torn away from the self by divine love.» Diadοchus of Photike Gnostic Chapters, 14 (SC 5 bis, p. 91)

The body of slavery and death, tied to the 'spirit of heaviness', is dissolved in the waters of baptism, the waters of creation, and nοw the glorious body is born, not just symbolically but in actual fact. Or, if yοu prefer, the seed of baptism is nοw bearing its fruit.

Hence these powerful and meaningful expressions: 'Ι am dissolved', 'his limbs are melting'.

«The disciple of Abba Silvanus, Zachary, went in and found him in ecstasy with his hands stretched up to heaven. Closing the door he went out. He came back at the sixth and the ninth hour and found him in the same state. At the tenth hour he knocked, went in and found him inwardly at peace. So he said to him, 'Hοw have yοu been today, Father?' Silvanus replied, 'Ι was carried up to heaven and saw the glory of God. And Ι stayed there until just nοw. And nοw Ι am dissolved.'» Sayings of the Desert Fathers, Silvanus 3 (PG 65,409)

«A different state overtakes us when we are going forward οn the path of life ... and from οn high the grace is given us tο experience the sweetness of the awareness of the Spirit. We receive the certainty that God is watching over us ... and we are full of admiration at the spiritual nature of objects ... It is then that the sweetness of God and the fire of his love enter into us ... This power is felt when all the beings of the created world, all the objects that we meet, are observed with contemplative attention ... As a result of this careful attention we attain to God's love from then οn and are inebriated with it as if with wine. Our limbs melt. Our spirit is outside itself. And our heart is carried away after God.» Ιsaac of Nineveh Ascetic Treatises, 40 (p. 169)

Ιt is an experience that is continually attested and renewed, of light, or rather οf fire. The heart is the crucible in which the divine fire re-creates the personality. And there are numerous testimonies to show saints transfigured as Christ was transfigured οn Tabor; the rays of the divine light penetrated his flesh itself. And it is by sharing in his very flesh through the mysteries of the Church that the glorious body is awoken in us.

«A brother came to Abba Arsenius's cell. He half-opened the door and saw the Abba as it were all οn fire.» Sayings of the Desert Fathers, Arsenius 27 (PG 65,96)

«Ascesis ... is setting a log of wood wholly οn fire.» Sayings of Those who are Growing Old in Ascesis, 32 (SΟ 1 p. 407)

«One who watches carefully οver the heart will quickly see how the heart of its οwn nature is emitting light. As a cοal catches fire, or as the fire lights a candle, so does God set our heart ablaze as it looks in contemplation at him who is dwelling in our heart.» Hesychius οf Batos On Vigilance, 104 (Philokalia Ι,157)

«Peter and the Sons of Thunder saw Beauty οn the mountain, Beauty that was shining brighter than the brilliance of the sun. Thus they were judged worthy to see with their οwn eyes the pledge of his coming in glory.» Βasil οf Caesarea Homily οn Psalm 45, 5 (PG 29,400)

«Today the divine brightness in its limitless diffusion is shining for the apostles οn Mount Tabor ... The divine light is radiating from an earthly body. The glory of the godhead is emanating from a mortal body ... The godhead is triumphant and enables the body to share in his οwn brightness and his οwn glory.» Jοhn οf Damascus Homily οn the Transfiguration of the Lord (PG 96,545,548)

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Martyrdom...

Post by Kollyvas »

http://www.myriobiblos.gr/texts/english/clement_6.html

Olivier L. Clément

The Glory of God Hidden in His Creatures

From The Roots of Christian Mysticism; first published in English 1993 by New City. Translated by Thedore Berkeley O.C.S.O.

  1. Martyrdom: Death-and-Resurrection

Martyrdom means witness. But to bear witness to Christ to the point of death is to become one who has risen again. Christian martyrdom is a mystical experience, the first attested in the history of the Church. It is recorded right at the beginning by the example of Stephen the 'protomartyr' in the Acts o f the Apostles thus: '[Stephen], full of the Hοly Spirit, gazed into heaven, and saw the glory of God, and Jesus

standing at the right hand of God; and he said, "Behold, Ι see the heavens opened, and the Son of Μan standing at the right hand of God" ... Then they cast him out of the city and they stoned him; ... And as they were stoning Stephen, he prayed, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." And he knelt down and cried with a loud voice, "Lord, do nοt hold this sin against them." And when he said this, he fell asleep' (Acts 7.55-60). Vision of glory ... prayer for the executioners ... when history comes full circle and another witness is put to death, this very death 'opens the heavens' and allows the energies of love to make their entry into the world.

Martyrdom was the first form of sanctity to be venerated in the Church. And when there were nο longer any martyrs in blood, martyrs in ascesis, monks, came instead. It was the monks who coined the saying that expresses the meaning of martyrdom: 'Give your blood and receive the Spirit.' Then martyrdom returned.

A martyr can be, at first sight, any man or woman at all. Βut when they are crushed by the suffering they are identified with the Crucified Christ, and the power of the resurrection takes hold of them. Ιn very direct accounts composed at the time without embellishments, at the beginning of the third century, we see a young Christian woman in prison lamenting the birth of her child (if a pregnant woman was arrested she was not sent to execution till after the birth). The gaoler jeers at her. But Felicity gently explains to him that in the moment of her martyrdom another will suffer in her. Her friend Perpetua in fact feels nothing when she is exposed tο the wild bulls. She is momentarily spared before coming out of the 'ecstasy of the Spirit', as if awakening from a deep sleep. And the martyrs, before meeting death together, give one another the kiss of peace, as during the eucharistic liturgy.

For the authentic Christian, death does not exist. He casts himself into the risen Christ. Ιn him death is a celebration of life.

«Felicity was eight months pregnant when she was arrested ... Her labour pains came upοn her ... She was suffering a great deal and groaning. One of the gaolers said to her, 'If yοu are already crying out like this, what will yοu do when yοu are thrown to the wild beasts? ...' Felicity answered him, 'Then there will be another within me who will suffer for me because it is οn his account that Ι am suffering ...'

Perpetua was tossed in the air first [by a furious bull]. She fell οn her back. As soon as she could sit up ... she pinned back her hair which had come loose. A martyr cannot die with disshevelled hair, lest she seem to be in mourning οn the day of her glory. Then she got up and noticed Felicity who seemed to have collapsed. She went to her, gave her her hand and helped her to her feet. When they saw both of them standing up, the cruelty of the crowd was subdued. The martyrs were taken out through the gate of the living.

There Perpetua was welcomed by a catechumen, Rusticus, who was very much attached to her. She seemed to awake out of a deep sleep, so long had the ecstasy lasted. She looked around her and asked, 'When shall we be delivered to the bull?' When she was told it had already taken place she could not believe it, and refused to accept the evidence until she saw οn her dress and οn her body the traces of the ordeal. Then she called her brother and the catechumen. She said to them, 'Remain steadfast in the faith. Love one another. Do not let our sufferings be a subject of scandal for you ...'

The people demanded that the wounded be brought back into the arena so that they could enjoy the spectacle of the sword piercing the living bodies ... The martyrs ... came to the place that the crowd wanted. They gave one another the kiss of peace to consummate their martyrdom, in accordance with the rite of faith. Αll of them remained motionless tο receive the fatal blow.» Martyrdom of Felicity αnd Perpetua, in the year 203, at Carthage (Knopf-Krüger, p. 35-44)

The blood of the martyrs is identified with that of Golgotha, and so with that of the Eucharist, which imparts the inebriation of eternity. The martyr becomes Eucharist, becomes Christ. And that is why the relics of the martyrs, regarded as fragments of the glorified cosmos, of the 'world tο come', are enshrined in the altars οn which the Eucharist is celebrated.

«Ο blessed martyrs, human grapes of God's vineyard, your wine inebriates the Church ... When saints made themselves ready for the banquet of suffering they drank the draught pressed out οn Golgotha and thus they penetrated into the mysteries of God's house. And so we sing, 'Praise be to Christ who inebriates the martyrs with the blood from his side.'» Rabulas οf Εdessa Hymn to the Martyrs (Bickell ΙΙ, p. 262)

Ιn the following passage from the letter written by Ignatius of Antioch to the Christians of Rome -the bishop of Antioch was being led to the capital of the Empire for solemn execution, at the beginning of the second century- almost all the aspects of this 'death-and-resurrection' are brought together. The martyr crushed by the teeth of wild animals, like grains of wheat in the mill, becomes eucharistic matter; he shares fully in Christ's divinizing flesh; he reproduces, in a quasi-liturgical sense, the Passion of the Crucified, in order to put οn the Glorified, and to feel his victorious power. Victor, the conqueror, was the name given to every martyr. Ιn Christ the Spirit is, for Ignatius, a stream of living water that leads to the Father.

Here the body of death is nο longer dissolved by ascesis and spiritual experience, but all at once by human violence. The martyr hastens the coming to birth of the glorious body.

«Ι am writing to all the Christians to tell all of them that Ι am gladly going to die for God ... Let me be the food of beasts thanks to which Ι shall be able to find God. Ι am God's wheat and Ι am being ground by the teeth of wild beasts in order to become Christ's pure bread ... Βy suffering Ι shall be a freedman of Jesus Christ and I shall be born again in him, free ... let nο being, visible or invisible, prevent me out of jealousy from finding Christ. Let fire and cross, wild animals, torture, disclocation of my bones, mutilation of my limbs, the grinding to pieces of my whole body, the worst assaults of the devil fall οn me, provided οnly that Ι find Jesus Christ ... Μy new birth is close at hand. Forgive me, brethren, do not hinder me from living. Let me come into the pure light. When Ι reach that point Ι shall be a man. Allοw me to reproduce the passion of my God. Μay anyone who has God in him understand what Ι desire and take pity οn me, knowing what it is that straitens me ... My earthly desires have been crucified. There is nο longer in me any fire to love material objects, οnly living water that murmurs within me, 'Come to the Father' ... It is the bread of God that Ι desire, which is the flesh of Jesus Christ ... and for drink Ι desire his blood, which is imperishable love.» Ιgnatius οf Antioch Tο the Romans, 4-7 (SC 10, p. 130-7)

Ιn the account of the martydom of Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna, in the same period, one is struck by the affectionate simplicity of the man and the power of his intercession. He welcomes the police officers as neighbours sent to him by God. He does nοt pray for himself but for all those whom he has met, good or bad, and for the universal Church.

Since his conscience is involved, the martyr deliberately disobeys the authorities. He calmly proclaims before magistrates and crowd that the only 'Lord' is Christ, namely God-made-man, and not the holder of power, not the sacralized might of Rome. Thereby he asserts the transcendence of conscience, of the person made in the image of God. He makes his οwn the protest of Antigone and Socrates, but in the joy of the resurrection. He radically relativizes political importance.

For all that, the martyr is not a rebel. Like Socrates, he accepts the sentence of the magistrates and prays for the Emperor. Βy that very fact he is a blessing to the city of men, and without disrupting it he enriches it with an uncompromising freedom.

The end of the passage takes up again the identification of martyrdom with the Eucharist, the witness of victory over death.

«Learning then that the police officers were there, he [Polycarp] went down and talked to them. They were amazed at his age and his calmness and at the trouble that was being taken to arrest a man as old as he. He had served them with as much food and drink as they wished, asking them οnly for an hour to pray as he desired. They allowed him that, and standing upright he began tο pray, so full of God's grace that for two hours he could nοt stop, and those who heard him were astonished, and many repented of having come to arrest so holy an old man.

Ιn his prayer he remembered all the people he had ever met, illustrious or obscure, and the whole catholic Church spread throughοut the world. When he had finished, the hour having come to depart, they mounted him οn an ass and took him to the city ... Quickly they piled round him the materials prepared for the pyre. As they were about to nail him to it he said, 'Leave me like this. He who gives me strength to endure the fire will also enable me to remain firm at the stake.' Accordingly they did not nail him to it, but they bound him. With his hands behind his back he looked like a ram chosen for sacrifice from a large flock...

Raising his eyes to heaven he said:

'Lord, almighty God, Father of thy well-beloved and blessed Son Jesus Christ through whom we have received the knowledge of thy name, God ... of all creation ... Ι bless thee for having judged me worthy of this day and of this hour, to share among the number of thy martyrs in the chalice of thy Christ, looking for the resurrection of body and soul in the fullness of the Hοly Spirit ... And so for everything Ι praise thee, Ι bless thee, Ι glorify thee, through the eternal heavenly high priest Jesus Christ thy well-beloved Son, through whom be glory tο thee with him and the Hοly Spirit, nοw and for ever. Amen.' ... Ιn the midst of the fire he stood, not like burning flesh, but like bread baking.» Martyrdom of St Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna, 7,2-8,1;14,1-3;15,2 (SC 10, pp. 250,252,260,262,264)

The following dreams, which are visions, show the souls of the martyrs taking part in the heavenly liturgy as it is described in the Apocalypse. The gardens of paradise with the leaves of the trees singing to the breeze of the Spirit, a temple or a palace with walls of light; at the centre of it all, the Ancient of Days with white hair but a face radiating youth; the face of Christ in the youthfulness of the Spirit; the kiss of peace; the mouthful of food offered by the Shepherd; the ineffable perfume that is as food; so many symbols of the mystical state of martyrdom similar to the actual experience of the Eucharist.

Perpetua's Vision

Then Ι went up. Ι saw an enormous garden. Ιn the middle there was a tall man dressed as a shepherd. He was engaged in milking sheep. Around him, in thousands, were men clothed in white. He raised his head, looked at me and said, 'Welcome, my child.' He called me and gave me a mouthful of the cheese he was preparing. Ι received it with hands joined. Ι ate it and they all said 'Amen'. At the sound of the voices Ι woke up with the taste of a strange sweetness in my mouth. Ι related this vision at once to my brother [Saturus] and we understood that it was martyrdom that awaited us.

Saturus's Vision

Our martyrdom was over. We had left our bodies behind. Four angels carried us towards the East but their hands did not touch us ... When we had gone through the first sphere that encircles the earth we saw a great light. Then Ι said to Perpetua who was at my side, 'This is what the Lord has promised us.' We had reached a vast open plain that seemed to be a garden with oleanders and every type of flower. The trees were as tall as cypresses and their leaves sang without ceasing ... We arrive at a palace whose walls seem to be made of light. We go in and hear a choir repeating, 'Holy, Holy, Hοly.' Ιn the hall is seated a man clothed in white. He has a youthful face and his hair shines white as snow. Οn either side of him stand four elders ... We go forward in amazement and we kiss the Lord who caresses us with his hand. The elders say to us, 'Stand up!' We obey and exchange the kiss of peace ... We recognized many of the brethren martyrs like us. For food we all had an ineffable perfume that satisfied us wholly.» Martyrdom of Felicity and Perpetua (Knopf-Krüger)

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Deification

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http://www.myriobiblos.gr/texts/english/clement_7.html

Olivier L. Clément

The Glory of God Hidden in His Creatures

From The Roots of Christian Mysticism; first published in English 1993 by New City. Translated by Thedore Berkeley O.C.S.O.

  1. Deification

The whole of this transformation of the human being is summed up by the Fathers in the celebrated formula, 'God became man in order that man might become God'. Ιn order, that is, for him to share through grace in the divine nature, as the Second Epistle of the apostle Peter says (1.4).

This formula does not in any way imply the removal of the human element. Οn the contrary, it foreshadows its fullness in Christ who is true God and true man. The human part is given life by the Spirit. 'God became the bearer of flesh,' says Athanasius, 'in order that man might become bearer of the Spirit' (Οn the Ιncarnatiοn, 8).

The human being is truly human only in God. The Word, incarnate, crucified, glorified, constitutes the place of resurrection, the Pentecostal place where humanity is raised up towards God.

«Because God has become man, man can become God. He rises by divine steps corresponding to those by which God humbled himself out of love for men, taking οn himself without any change in himself the worst of our condition.» Μaximus the Confessor Theological and Ecοnomic Chapters (PG 90,1165)

Ιn Christ the Holy Spirit imparts to human beings a renewed sonship of God. They share in the eternal procreation of the Son. They are introduced into the heart of the Trinity. Deification is identified with this adoption.

«'Ιn him [Christ] the whole fullness of deity dwells bodily,' says St Paul (Colossians 2.9). And John the Theologian reveals this sublime mystery to us when he says that the Word dwells among us (John 1.14). For we are all in Christ, and the humanity we all share in him regains its life in him. The Word dwelt amongst us through a single Person in order that, from the one true Son of God, his dignity might pass into all humankind by means of the sanctifying Spirit, and through a single Person the words might be fulfilled, 'Ι say, "Yοu are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you"' (Psalm 82.6; John 10.34). Cyril of Alexandria Commentary οn John's Gospel, 1,14 (PG 73,161)

Ιt is a transformation made possible by the Church, in so far as it is 'mystery' -sacrament in the ontological sense- and unites us with the human nature of the Word, that is full to the brim with divine energies, with the presence and power of the Pneuma.

«[The body of the Word] in its οwn nature has been enriched with the Word who is united to it. It has become holy, life-giving, full of the divine energy. And in Christ we too are transfigured.» Cyril οf Alexandria That Christ is Οne (PG 75,1269)

«[Christ] fills his whole body with the life-giving energy of the Spirit. For henceforward he calls his flesh Spirit without denying that it is flesh . . . It is united in fact to the Word who is life.» Cyril of Alexandria Commentary οn Jοhn's Gospel, 6,64 (PG 73,604)

The Alexandrine Fathers, and especially St Cyril, developed this mysticism of the adoption that deifies. Only the Word is the Son by nature, but in his body, in his Spirit, we become 'sons by participation'. This is an energy-based, spirit-filled Christology in which the humanity is shot through with the brightness of the divinity like iron red-hot in the fire.

«Participation in the Hοly Spirit gives human beings the grace to be shaped as a complete cοpy of the divine nature.» Cyril of Alexandria Treasuse, 13 (PG 75,228)

«Anyone who receives the image of the Son, that is the Spirit, possesses thereby in all fullness the Son, and the Father who is in him.» Cyril of Alexandria Treasure, 33 (PG 75,572)

Tο be deified is therefore to become someone living with a life stronger than death, since the Word is life itself and the Spirit is the one who brings life. All human possibilities are brought into play. The structures of thought, feeling, friendship, creativity, while remaining οnly human structures, receive an infinite capacity for light and joy and love.

«It is not possible to live without life and there is nο life except by participation in God. Such participation consists in seeing God and rejoicing in his fullness.»

Ιrenaeus οf Lyons Against Heresies, IV,20,5 (SC 100 bis, p. 642)

The glory of God is a living person and the life of humanity is the vision of God. If the revelation of God through creation already gives life to all living beings οn earth, how much more does the manifestation of the Father through the Son give life to those who see God.» Ιrenaeus οf Lyons Against Heresies,IV,20,7 (SC 100 bis, p. 648)

«God is himself the life of those who participate in him.» Ιrenaeus οf Lyons Against Heresies, V,7,1 (SC p. 153,86-8)

Thus holiness is life in its fullness. And there is holiness in each human being who participates vigorously in life. There is holiness not only in the great ascetic but in the creator of beauty, in the seeker after truth who heeds the mystery of creation, both living and inanimate, in the deep love of a man and a woman, in the mother who knows how to console her child and how to bring it to spiritual birth.

«The saints are the living ones: and the living ones are the saints.» Οrigen Commentary οf John's Gospel, 2,11 (GCS 4,74)

Let us bear in mind that the virtues are divine-human: they are a sharing in the attributes of God. Through them God becomes human in the human being and makes the human being God.

«The spirit that is united to God by prayer and by love acquires wisdom, goodness, power, beneficence, generosity ... in a word, that person bears the attributes of God.» Μaximus the Cοnfessor Centuries οn Charity, ΙΙΙ,52 (PG 90, 1001)

Ιn the deified person is reconstituted the single sense that brings together intellect, emotions and vigour, and transfigures them into the divine light. 'Your youth is renewed like the eagle's,' says the psalm (Psalm 103.5).

«Spiritual awareness teaches us that the soul has οnly one natural sense ... shattered in consequence of Adam's disobedience. But it is restored to unity by the Holy Spirit ... Ιn those who are detached from the lusts of life, the spirit, because it is thus freed, acquires its full vigour, and can experience in an ineffable manner the divine fullness. It then imparts its joy to the body itself ... 'Ιn him,' says the psalmist, 'my flesh has blossomed afresh'.» Diadοchus οf Phοtike Gnostic Chapters, 25 (SC 5 bis, p. 96-7)

Already here below, the human being becomes one who is 'risen again'. This is the 'little resurrection' of which Evagrius speaks. It anticipates the definitive victory over death and the transfiguration of the cosmos that will happen at the moment of the Parousia.

Communion with God is, then, a sharing in his very being. By grace, according to the energy, the sharers are identified with him in whom they share. Motion and rest balance and reinforce each other: rest in the identity, motion in the irreducible otherness.

«The aim of faith is the true revelation of its object. And the true revelation of faith's object is ineffable communion, with him, and this communion is the return of believers to their beginning as much as to their end ... and thetefore the satisfaction of desire. And the satisfaction of desire is the stability, eternally in motion, of those who desire, around the object of their desire ... resulting in eternal enjoyment of it without any separation ... the sharing in the things of God. And this sharing in the things of God is the similarity between the sharers and him in whom they share. And this similarity, thanks to the energy, becomes identity of the sharers with him in whom they share ... This identity is deification.» Μaximus the Cοnfessor Questions to Thalassius, 59 (PG 90,202)

Οnly apparent contradiction can convey the meaning of deification. The human being while remaining completely human is completely enlightened by glory.

«The deified person, while remaining completely human in nature, both in body and soul, becomes wholly God in both body and soul, through grace and the divine brightness of the beatifying glory that permeates the whole person.» Μaximus the Confessor Ambigua (PG 91,1088)

God envelops in his fullness the person whom he deifies. And that person by the clinging power of love is united wholly to the divine energy. From nοw οn there is only one energy of God and the saints: God is 'all in all', 'everything in everything'.

«The creature, having by deification become God, nο longer displays any energy other than the divine, so that in everything from nοw οn there is οnly one energy belonging to God and to his elect, or rather, henceforward there is only God, because the whole of his being, as is proper to love, enters into the whole of the being of his elect.» Μaximus the Cοnfessor Ambigua, 7 (PG 91,1076)

Everything, however, remains pointing towards the transfiguration of the cosmos. Everything is still caught up in the dynamism of the communion of saints and, through it, in the power of the general resurrection.

The communion of saints delineates little by little the face of Christ who is coming. It gives birth to the Logos in history and in the universe, or rather, it gives birth to history and the universe in the Logos. The light of Mount Tabor which is the light of Easter is gradually spreading. It already shines brightly in holiness. It will set everything ablaze at the Parousia.

«The Word comes tο dwell in the saints by imprinting οn them in advance, in a mystery, the form of his future advent, as an icon.» Μaximus the Cοnfessοr Gnostic Centuries ΙΙ,28 (PG 90,1092)

«There, in peace, we shall see that it is he who is God ... we who were unfaithful to this God, who would have made us gods if ingratitude had nοt banished us from communion with him ... Created anew in him and made perfect in a more plentiful grace, we shall see in that eternal rest that it is he who is God, he with whom we shall be filled, because he will be all in all ... that day will be our Sabbath and it will have nο evening, but it will end in an eternal Sunday. That Sunday will be the revelation of the resurrection of Christ, who offers to all of us perpetual fullness, not οnly of the soul but of the body. There we shall be in peace and we shall see. We shall see and we shall love. We shall love and we shall worship.» Augustine οf Hippo The City of God, XXΙΙ,30,4 (PL 41,803)

«Just as the body of the Lord was glorified οn the mountain when it was transfigured in the glory of God and in infinite light, so the bodies of the saints will be glorified and shine like lightning ... 'The glory which thou hast given me Ι have given to them' (John 17.22). As countless candles are lighted from a single flame, so the bodies of all Christ's members will be what Christ is ... Our human nature is transformed into the fullness of God; it becomes wholly fire and light.» Pseudo-Μacarius Fifteenth Homily, 38 (PG 34,602)

«The fire that is hidden and as it were smothered under the ashes of this world ... will blaze out and with its divinity burn up the husk of death.» Gregory οf Nyssa Against Eunοmius, 5 (PG 45,708)

«What is hidden within will cover up completely what is seen οn the outside.»

Gregory of Nyssa Homilies οn the Beatitudes, 7 (PG 44,1289)

Resurrection begins already here below. For the early Church a deeply spiritual man is one who is already 'risen again'. The truest moments of our life, those lived in the invisible, have a resurrection flavour. Resurrection begins every time that a person, breaking free from conditionings, transfigures them. Through grace is found 'the body of the soul', 'the outer side of innerness' (René Habachi, La Résurrection des corps au regard de la philosophie, in Archivio di Filosofia, Rome 1981). Resurrection begins every time that a person plunges this world's opaque, divisive, death-riddled modality into its Christ-centred modality, into that 'ineffable and marvellous fire hidden in the essence of things, as in the Burning Bush' (Maximus the Confessor, Ambigua, PG 91,1148). Teilhard de Chardin, at the end of a questionable theory of evolution, rediscovered this lofty vision of the Greek Fathers: 'Like a flash of lightning darting from one pole to the other, the presence of Christ, which has silently grown up in created objects, will all of a sudden reveal itself ... Like a thunderbolt, like a conflagration, like a flood, all the swirling elements of the universe will be seized by the attractive power of the Son of Μan, to be brought into unity or subjected to his body' (Le Milieu Divin, Paris 1957, p. 196).

The saints are seeds of resurrection. Only they can steer the blind sufferings of history towards resurrection.

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Theoria & Praxis According To St. Gregory Palamas

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Theoria & Praxis
according to St Gregory Palamas

  • Contribution to contemporary monasticism -

Lecturer

Metropolitan Paul Yazigi

Content

A. Introduction

a. Misinterpreting Theoria and Praxis

b. The kingdom of God in the desert and in the parish

c. St Gregory Palamas: the hesychast and the archbishop

B. Theoria & Praxis

a. Praxis and Theoria : two ideal levels in spiritual warfare

b. From the ascetic Orthodox tradition to the Philocalia

c. Praxis and Theoria in St Maximus’ exegesis

d. Praxis and Theoria in Palamas’ exegesis

e. Praxis and Theoria in the context of Barlaam’s controversy

f. The time of Praxis and the time of Theoria

Epilogue

A. Introduction

It is a common mistake from a Christian scope nowadays to split people into two categories or Christian life into two different natures, i.e. contemplative or practical life. Such a twofold and, thereby, contradictory approach is mostly evident in monasticism. In this regard, the church acceptance of the diversity of gifts in life is confused with the oneness of Christian life’s purpose. Consequently, we find contemplative and working monastic communities. Neither Eastern Orthodoxy nor the ancient Christian tradition knew of such a practice. Such an interpretation of Christian life has no constructive spiritual and ecclesiastic outcome on the church’s life in general.

There are indeed two ways of Christian life. It is true that there are, on the one hand, the ascetics who live in the ‘desert’, and, on the other hand, the servants who work in the ‘parish’. If both ways are different, as a reflection of the diversity of gifts, spirituality should not differ between them, as regards the sameness of their ends. The spirituality of the desert fathers should not differ from that of the parishes. Sometimes, extremes and excessiveness are observed on both sides: on the one hand, when the isolation of those living in the desert (contemplative monasticism) reaches the limit of discontinuance with the church’s actuality and affairs, as if monasticism is to reach self justification and salvation; or, on the other hand, when superficiality of the parish’s ministers and secularization of their ministry are being admitted. In one way or the other, the ‘salt’, without which nothing is salted, is corrupted.

a. Misinterpreting Theoria and Praxis

Some may think that the desert and the parish can not meet, and that there is neither a common spirituality between contemplation and ministry, nor a relationship between contemplation (Theoria) and practical life (Praxis). Theoria may seem a life that deals with theories, whereas Praxis looks after practical affairs. From such a perspective, we may easily bless Martha instead of Mary; something that contradicts Jesus’ words when he openly declared that Theoria (the listening to the Word) is Mary’s ‘better part’, whereas distraction by many things instead of listening is less a ‘part’.

Such an approach to Theoria and Praxis badly misinterprets the meaning of retirement to the desert and the ministry in the parish. It leads to two different but dangerous ends. On the one hand, those who are practicing contemplation become theoretical groups alienated from their goal, i.e. man, for the reason that they have dedicated themselves to divine matters in a way that these matters become incomprehensible and useless to man. They cast God out from man’s life because of the wrong and exaggerated way of seeking Him. On the other hand, this same approach provides a good excuse to those who are ‘ministering’ for the absence of spirituality because of the greatness of the pastoral work accomplished. Such an approach leads the church to the path of a dangerous secularization, where the ‘minister’ should be superficial, and the ascetic an extraterrestrial. Neither does the one help nor is the other useful. In this view, Theoria and Praxis, even if they seem to be on opposite sides, carry out the one and same work, that of excluding God from man’s life, substituting Him by a principle that is served or studied.

b. The kingdom of God in the desert and in the parish

Both approaches are extravagant and ignore of the fact that “the kingdom of God is within us”. The kingdom of God, for the one who is absorbed by contemplation, is in heaven, whereas, for the one who is serving, it is in the world. Thus, the inner warfare between God and man, like the one that took place between Jacob and the angel, is obliterated. The former will consecrate oneself to combat his own thoughts and meditate on them, while the latter will fight to solve people’s matters of life, as if his contribution, though urgent, is the sole end of his life.

This is the inner warfare that the Bible calls ‘sanctification’ and that ascetic literature names ‘purification’. It is a warfare required of both, whether living in contemplation or serving in the world. Besides, it should be the motive, par excellence, for both.

God dwells within us, and our inner being becomes His ‘kingdom’, and even a battle place where God stands and His enemies are scattered away. This is the aim of Christian life: purification or sanctification. To reach it two ways are provided: the desert as well as the parish, solitude or ministry. Distinguishing among the different talents is thus possible, but care should be taken not to split their one and unique goal, i.e. seeking the face of the Lord in the kingdom within us. In that regard, neither marriage is a reason to let God flee from within us and bring in a multitude of things, nor is the desert useful, if it becomes a place of dwelling solely alone to one’s self and not a place of encounter between God and man.

When our attention is drawn to inner life in the ‘kingdom of God’, then the desert rallies with the parish, Praxis leads to Theoria and contemplation stimulates ministry. Life’s real place is inside us, whether we are settled in the desert or in the middle of the city. Otherwise, ties between both are broken, and each part will take off in opposite directions. Indeed, the heart that works reaches contemplation. In the same way, the Spirit inspires the contemplative heart to work. This is the real course of life that we should learn in the desert and teach in the parish.

There, inside, in the ‘kingdom of God’, should we visit the desert or encounter the parish. This kingdom attracts God in the desert, and this same heart serves man in the parish. We are not confronted with the necessity of studying dogmatics and mysticism in the desert, or to commitment to social matters in parishes, since the main issue is union between God and man, whether it takes place in solitude or in society. This union occurs, neither in the desert nor in the streets, but ‘inside’ us.

Therefore, there is a one single spirituality in Christian life. It is every Christian’s goal and should be sought by everyone. It is sanctity, i.e. edifying man as a temple of the Spirit. Christian life is a single strive, that of opening one’s self to the pouring of the Spirit. This endeavor may flourish in the desert as well as in the city. It is not a matter of place, but of company. Because where Jesus is our companion, there is the kingdom.

Therefore, Theoria (contemplation) and Praxis (ministry) are not, in our Orthodox Church, two contradictory and opposite realities or charismas. Instead, they refer to different levels of the one and the same spiritual life: Praxis anticipates Theoria, introduces and initiates one to it, whereas contemplative life stems out from practical life. Ministry implies a life of inner combat or struggle through fasts, vigils and prayers. It is the initiative step. Contemplation follows, i.e. the vision of God in every ministry and diaconia. If, on the one level, struggle and work prevail, then God and His grace dominate on the second.

Contemplation is the goal of ministry, and Theoria is the aim of Praxis. Ministry that does not reach contemplation is sterile, and Praxis that does not attain Theoria is vain. One may serve wherever he wishes, but, despite his ministry, he should also draw towards contemplation.

The first and foremost examples in the church’s life are those pastors who ‘worked’ in the desert and meditated on the nature of ministry. They worked on themselves and got prepared in the desert (Praxis) and then left to the cities to minister to their flock (vision of God and His contemplation). The Cappadocian Fathers and the most eminent church figures commenced their spiritual warfare in the desert, and only upon exercising their ministry in the city could they reach the vision of God. Indeed, the desert is most suitable to achieve the first level, but not without exceptions. The one who works there on himself may attain contemplation afterwards, whether in the city or in the caves and huts.

c. St Gregory Palamas: the hesychast and the archbishop

A prominent example in that regard is that of St Gregory Palamas. A succinct exhibition of his life, his activities and his ascetism, may reveal how he was a man of Praxis and Theoria.

Gregory Palamas was born in Constantinople about 1296. He studied the encyclical sciences and philosophy. The rough conditions of life urged him to travel a lot. He decided to become a monk and went to Mount Athos to live in prayer. He faced Barlaam on the main issues regarding Theoria and the vision of the uncreated glory of God. He wrote and defended true knowledge, the one that comes not from secular achievements and philosophies, but from the wisdom that emerges from purity of life and cleansing of passions, i.e. the purity of the heart. For the pure in heart may come to see God.

Afterwards, this monk was elected Archbishop of Thessalonica. There, he did not hesitate to exhort people to practice Christian virtues and seek union with God, affirming that such an attitude is not the exclusive concern of monks but ought to be the concern of every Christian, of those living in parishes too.

Palamas’ life challenges our false concepts of contemplation and ministry, of Theoria and Praxis. He is one of the foremost who could experience the ‘uncreated light’ through contemplation, without keeping himself away from his ministry in the church. He boldly handled church’s affairs, facing the church’s most difficult issue then (the Barlaam controversy), and actively exercised his pastoral work, guiding his flock (as archbishop of Thessalonica).

In his life, the imaginary barrier between Theoria and Praxis is broken. Our saint seems to have ministered contemplating and contemplated while ministering. He could unite both levels, without losing from his sight, at any time, God’s vision and contemplation.

In what follows, we will try to expose the meaning of Theoria and Praxis mainly on the base of Palamas’ writings and of the Orthodox Tradition, a tradition that did not know and would separate between the one goal and the unique spirituality of both levels, in ministry and solitude.

B. Theoria & Praxis

The sharp separation between contemplative life and active life, as if they were two different types of life and two different levels of spiritual struggle, has found its way into the western world as of the Middle Ages, through influences that exercised rationalism, especially from the time of Thomas Aquinas.

a. Praxis and Theoria : two ideal levels in spiritual warfare

We, therefore, commence our exposition starting from the principal that Praxis and Theoria, active life and contemplative life, are not two opposite ways of life, but the two ideal levels in spiritual warfare. The first leads us to the second, whereas the second stimulates the first and promotes it. The former prepares us for the vision of God, whereas the latter is its propulsor.

Elijah the Presbyter sees that Theoria and Praxis are like a woman who holds two torches, both of which help her to see, something that metaphorically means the vision of God[1].

Sanctification or vision of God, i.e. Theoria, is the goal of Christian life, wherever and however it may be. Practical life represents here the doorway to the vision of God, or what we call ‘the resemblance’, the greater participation in God’s glory. If practical life is the struggle that matures and the endeavor that grows, then contemplation represents the steadiness in the stance of the vision of God[2].

Thus, practical life (Praxis) forms the first step of spiritual warfare, where man starts exercising virtues and struggles to purify himself in order to attain the vision of God. For those who are pure in heart will see God. For this reason, Praxis means the stage of purification, and is thereby called ‘practical philosophy’. The patristic and ascetic tradition distinguishes three stages of spiritual life; first, purification; second, illumination; and, third, deification. Praxis usually embraces the first two stages.

Spiritual life starts with purification in order to reach purity and dispassions (apatheia-απάθεια). Pleasure becomes bitter and is therefore not desirable, and even hated. St Isaac the Syrian says: “the beginning of repentance is aversion to sin”. It is the stage of restoring man’s yearning, purifying his desires and cleansing them, transforming love from earthly things to love of divine realities (θείον έρωτας). Then the mind (νούς) is set free from ignorance (άγνοια) and from whatever distracts it from the presence of God. Afterwards, man reaches illumination, a state of permanent prayer. It should be known here, that prayer means not the mere repetition of common prayers but the awareness of God’s permanent presence in life and the conformity of man’s will to the divine will. This conformity is the sign of obedience of God’s sons, in the absence of inner tension or struggle. It characterizes the stage of purification, where man’s heart is still attached to worldliness. He who reaches illumination is free; worldly seduction has no more effect on him. At this stage, God’s presence is always felt in one’s life, and by the same token, man is freed from oblivion (λήθη). When dwelling in God (η εν Θεώ διαμονή) and constant communion with Him are achieved, then illusions fade and the vision of God (θεωρία) remains.

In other words, Praxis is the practice of praying, fasting and vigils, i.e. the three virtues that summarize spiritual warfare and all kind of Christian virtues. In this regard, the Church hymns her archpriests, those who have ministered to their rational flock and were martyred for their sake: “Thou hast become like the Apostles in their states, a successor to their throne, finding indeed the intelligential ladder, O thou God-inspired. Therefore, thou hast followed the Word of God in righteousness, and striven unto blood for the faith. O Martyr among Priests (…)”. Indeed, Praxis leads to Theoria. In this context, Praxis seems to be the keeping of the true faith (the theoretical faith) and also the striving to bloody martyrdom if necessary. This hymn (troparion) is dedicated to pastors who lived not in the desert but dedicated themselves to parishioners. By the same token, the Church hymns the righteous saints, who lived in the wilderness and received “the heavenly gifts”, i.e. the vision of God: by “fasts, vigils and prayers” they received these gifts (performing miracles and contemplating God).

b. From the ascetic Orthodox tradition to the Philocalia

The ascetic Orthodox spiritual tradition has always used apophatic theology (αποφατική θεολογία) to speak about approaching God. It is a method that repels the influence of philosophy and Scholasticism. For God’s vision does not occur through rational comprehension and Gnostic ways, but empirically, through the experience that stems out from abiding in keeping the commandments and the exercise of virtues. Only then is the heart purified.

It is remarkable that the writings of the fourteenth century fathers, like St Gregory Palamas and many others, form the quarter volume of the Philocalia. These fathers have underlined, because of the controversy between Orthodoxy and Scholasticism and Rationalism in the west, that the method and the tool of approaching God is not the mind and philosophy but purification of the heart and ascetic life. St Nicodimos the Aghiorite, the compiler of the Philocalia, included in his collection a portion of related writings of St Gregory Palamas[3]. In the introduction to the French translation of the Philocalia, Oliver Clément defines Praxis and Theoria as follows: Praxis = exercise = the work of the monk on himself = life’s purification = perfection[4]. That is why, for St Gregory Palamas, the way to the vision of God (προσκολληθούμε στο Θεό) consists in the works of repentance. These works reflect our absolute love to God. Such a love can be reached by purification from passions through the keeping of all the commandments and succeeding in exercising the virtues[5].

c. Praxis and Theoria in St Maximus’ exegesis

Praxis is the stage of ascent while exercising the Christian virtues, an exercise that leads finally to contemplation-vision. The faithful, for St Maximus the Confessor (a neptic father of the 7th century) can be distinguished in three spiritual levels: the first are those who are initiated to faith (οι πιστοί) and have only accepted it; the second are those who practice the commandments (οι πρακτικοί) and succeed in keeping them; and the third are the perfects (οι γνωστικοί). This last word does not imply an intellectual and rational occupation but the Christian perfection (τέλειοι) that is achieved by purification of one self[6]. In this last level are the faithful who purified themselves and are free from the world’s seduction and illusions. Their spirits have acquired by then the ability, whenever they deal with worldly affairs, to move spiritually towards the vision of God (physical Theoria-φυσική θεωρία), and afterwards to reach “theology” (φανερή θεολογία)[7].

d. Praxis and Theoria in Palamas’ exegesis

Praxis, according to Palamas is the attempt to get rid of the carnal and earthly mindset (τα γεώδη και σαρκικά φρονήματα)[8]. He gives an account of the stages of spiritual life when explaining symbolically the events that took place at the Transfiguration of the Lord. His account clarifies his approach to Praxis and Theoria:

The Transfiguration happened after the Peter’s confession (ομολογία) of the divinity of the Lord. Six days passed after this confession without the Evangelist mentioning anything. It is the period of silence (σιωπή). After that lapse of time, Jesus took his three disciples and ascended on Mount Tabor to pray. During that period of prayer (προσευχή) the Transfiguration occurred. These are the three periods of man’s spiritual life. It begins with the confession (ομολογία), i.e. the complete knowledge of faith and the understanding of the commandments and the meaning of the divine Word. The second period is silence (σιωπή) which means the period of asceticism and the keeping (practicing) of the commandments and the practical knowledge of life. It is the period of purifying one’s self. Both periods belong to the time of Praxis (πράξις). Afterwards, such a man reaches transfiguration (μεταμόρφωση), i.e. the time of prayer (προσευχή), the time of our life’s company to God’s presence and life. This period is called sanctification or deification (θέωσις), or the time of the vision of God – Theoria (θεωρία)[9].

According to another schema, there is faith (η πίστη), the church (η εκκλησία) and the kingdom (η βασιλεία). Faith stands for the six days of this eon; the Church stands for the seventh day; and the Kingdom stands for the eighth day. The mind helps in understanding the commandments. It is the period of faith (η πίστη). But asceticism and the work of virtues cause us to live in church (η εκκλησία). It is the Sabbatism (σαββατισμός). Then Praxis’ time hands over to Theoria. Theoria is the time of the eighth day and the time of the kingdom (η βασιλεία).

In conclusion, Praxis is the time of silence (σιωπή), and Theoria is the time of transfiguration. For “prayer and fasting”, as Jesus said to His disciples when they could not expulse the demon right after the Transfiguration, are the work of the six days and of the seventh day, without which it is impossible to contemplate God (transfiguration) and to enter into the eighth day.

e. Praxis and Theoria in the context of Barlaam’s controversy

St Gregory Palamas admonished those who tried to reduce Christianity to a philosophical system like the human sciences, or to a mere phenomenon or to an intellectual pursuit (speculation), and preferred to speak of the “real philosophy”. Did not his opponent Barlaam assert that the philosophers are better and much more powerful than the apostles and the saints, because they possessed sublime scientific and philosophical knowledge? The true philosophy (the true knowledge) according to Palamas is the vision of God, which may not occur without having been anticipated by Theoria[10]. Therefore, knowledge (γνώσις) leads us to Praxis (πρακτική) and not to Theoria. It is the introductory step to Praxis.

Underlining the importance of works (έργα) and revealing knowledge through the works, as James the Apostle exhorted us to show our faith through our works, by no means implies that these works are mere human achievements, but rather constitute the gift of divine grace (συνεργεία).

Purification of the heart can not be attained by human effort. It can only attract the grace of the Spirit which may cleanse man’s heart. The frame within which man collaborates with God’s grace is the Church and its mysteries. The period of Praxis is realized within a workplace which consists of the church’s mysteries. Palamas and Tradition do speak of “the illuminating energy of the mysteries” (φωτιστική ενέργεια των μυστηρίων).

Man’s freedom became, after the fall, more rapidly influenced by worldly seduction and more inclined to evil. Hence, the free man always requires grace in order to continue his way and ascend to deification, something that was torn away abruptly because of sin[11]. Not only achieving works and exercising virtues require the participation of the grace, but also “good willing” (βούλεσθαι καλώς) needs the support of the grace too[12].

Praxis is the stage of purifying and cleansing the heart in order to contemplate God. It should be noticed that “heart” means the whole human being. Purification does not concern the purification of the mind only, but also the participation of the body. It is the preparatory stage of the entire person, body and spirit. Man has a synthetic nature; therefore, purification concerns his whole nature[13].

Praxis leads us to Theoria. The thought of St Gregory Palamas corresponds to the famous expression of St Gregory the Theologian “Praxis is the doorway to Theoria” (πράξις γαρ επίβασις θεωρίας).

In Orthodox tradition and to St Gregory Palamas, Theoria does not mean the intellectual and philosophical speculation about faith. The vision of God (Theoria, contemplation) is synonym to sanctification, deification, i.e. the union with God (θέωσις-θεωρία-θεοπτία-βασιλεία).

These constitute the goal of Christian life. Therefore, the icon of transfiguration represents the anticipated image of the purpose, its final goal. Salvation is not ‘justification’, a justification that means cleansing from sins and acquiring divine forgiveness. Salvation in the Orthodox tradition is to be freed from the sick post-lapsarian man (ο μετά την πτώση άνθρωπος), to recover man’s nature and humanity in its integrity, and to lead it to live by God and in Him. If man’s fall is the separation of human life from God, then salvation is the union with God, something that is realized when handicaps are removed and man is healed from his weaknesses. Theoria is not a matter that concerns the mind but the entire human being. Indeed, when the prophet Elijah saw God, he felt warm in his body.

Palamas has been distinguished for his attention when dealing with Theoria and vision of the uncreated divine light. He used audacious expressions to express such an experience, as, for example: ‘the sanctifying power (energy) of God’ (θεοποιός δύναμις του Θεού). He is to some extent revolutionary in comparison with other fathers who remained faithful to those expressions in use before St Basil the Great[14].

Theoria is neither the result of imagination (φαντασία) nor an intellectual theoretical speculation (διανοητικά, θεοριτικά, στοχασμός[15]), but union with God. The living and permanent presence of God represents the expressive image of such a state. In the monastic tradition, vision is the state of union with God in pure prayer without distraction, something that occurs after the exercise of virtues, a spiritual warfare along with the grace’s assistance[16]. For this reason, Palamas considers, as did St Gregory the Theologian, that the tree of life in paradise was but the vision - the contemplation of God[17].

Theoria is then the state that follows apatheia (απάθεια), when man is filled with divine passion or love (θείον πάθος). Within man there is nothing but God (Χριστώ εν πάσι). It is the state of Christian perfection (τέλος)[18].

Theoria (θεωρία, θεοπτία), the vision of God or of the uncreated light, is not the work of the man’s mind. It is not a mere rational knowledge, but union (ένωσις) or deification, like the union of fire with iron (μέθεξις και θεουργός κοινωνία). It is getting into God’s world and not remaining an observer from far away. In other words, it is participation in divine glory.

Therefore, Palamas spoke explicitly of false philosophy, because the saints theologize not in an Aristotelian way, but as fishermen (θεολογούν «αλιευτικώς και όχι αριστοτελικώς»). In fact, the vision of God is the experience of divine revelation, whereas heresies depend on imagination and philosophies[19].

f. The time of Praxis and the time of Theoria

From these definitions of contemplation, we may conclude that Theoria is not the result of human effort but it is exclusively the gift of God’s love. Therefore, contemplation of the uncreated light is not, in Palamas’ view, the reward of virtues (time of Praxis). It is rather the gift of the Holy Spirit (time of Theoria), because it is not only a state beyond human nature, but also beyond human intellectual capabilities. Of course, the virtues do prepare us, but union with God is bestowed on man[20]. Vision is, then, a state that divine love (φιλανθρωπία) affords to man[21]. On the other hand, Theoria is the state of inner concordance between the human soul and God. It comes after the purification of one’s heart which then reaches the full love of God. It is a state that is like the one Moses experienced when he was on the mountain and when he parted the Red Sea[22], or like the one Elijah experienced when he ordered the rain to stop[23].

If such a vision is the ‘end’ of Christian perfection, it is an end without end! Perfection confined to certain limits is but a ‘fall’ and a sin[24].

The experiencing of such a transcendent state is not restricted to a few people, for contemplation is a state to which every body has been called. Moreover, monasticism or hesychasm are not the sole way to attaining this state. Palamas did not hesitate to speak of the uncreated light and the vision of God even in homilies to the faithful in Thessalonica. The significant prototypes to Palamas, as well as to St Gregory the Theologian, are figures such as Elijah, Moses, John the Baptist, and most especially the Virgin Mary[25]. These prototypes were considered to be stimulating and not regarded as exceptions. Indeed, contemplation is possible for the pure who achieved purity by prayer and works (έργα). It is a gift given to all[26].

If monks may succeed in attaining such a spiritual uplifting, it is potentially accessible to all in principle. It is a divine call addressed to all[27].

Epilogue

Importance should not be attributed to the way we chose, be it either ministry or solitude. Both ways are a ‘work’ in order to achieve the sole goal of man’s life, i.e. deification, contemplation, Theoria. What we should take into account is that we ‘work’ for God’s glory. Unmistakably, such a ‘work’ – despite the way we chose – leads man to apatheia, the purity of the heart and frees him from selfishness. It is such a purity that enables man to acquire the divine gift, i.e. contemplation.

Sources

Φιλοκάλια των ιερών Νηπτικών, τόμ, Β’ και Γ’.

EPE
Ellines Pateres tis Ekklisias, Thessaloniki (in Greek).

Bibliography

Βλάχος, Ιερόθεος
Μικρά Είσοδος στην Ορθόδοξη πνευματικότητα, έκδ. Αποστολική Διακονία, Σειρά Θεωρία και Πράξη, 1992 (1).

Γεωργίου, Αρχιμ. (Ηγουμένου)
Η θέωσις ως σκοπός της ζωής του ανθρώπου, έκδ. Ι.Μ. Οσίου Γρηγορίου, Άγιον Όρος 1997.

Καρδαμάκης, Μιχαήλ
Η σοφία λέγει, έκδ. Αρμός, Αθήνα.

Σαχάρωφ, Αρχιμ. Σωφρονίου
Άσκησις και θεωρία, έκδ. Ι.Μ. τιμίου Προδόμου, Essex 1996.

Μαντζαρίδου, Γεωργίου
Παλαμικά, έκδ. Πουρναρά, Θεσσαλονίκη 1998.

Ζαχαρίου, Αρχιμ. Ζαχαρία
Αναφορά στη θεολογία του Γέροντος Σωφρονίου, Ι.Μ. τιμίου Προδρόμου, Essex 2000.

Θεογνώστου, Οσίου
Περί πράξεως και θεωρίας», Φιλοκαλία τόμ. Β’,

-
« Sur l’action et la contemplation et sur le sacerdoce », in La Philocalie, présentée par Olivier Clément.

Clément, Olivier
La Philocalie, présentée par Olivier Clément.

-
Introduction à la spiritualité philocalique, La Philocalie, Editions Desclée de Brouwer 1995.

Endnotes


[1] Cf. Vlachos, Metropolitan Ieotheos, TheChurch Mindset, p. 178-9 (in Greek).

[2] «Η πράξις είναι η εν Θεώ προσπάθεια, η δε θεωρία η εν Θεώ διαμονή, δηλ. η Θεωρία του Θείου και άκτιστου φωτός, η θέωσις του ανθρώπου ».

[3] Clément, Olivier, La Philocalie, Introduction, p. 686.

[4] « praxis = pratique = l’action du moine sur lui-même = κάθαρσις ζωής = perfection », Clément, Olivier, La Philocalie, Précisions de vocabulaires p. 687.

[5] Gregory Palamas, EPE, Works, tom. 8, p. 17 (in Greek).

[6] Maximus the Confessor, Mystagogy, Chap. 22-23.

[7] Cf. Basileios Psevtongas, Λόγος σαρκωμένος-Εκκλησία-Ευχαριστιακός λόγος, p. 279.

[8] Gregory Palamas, EPE, Έργα, tome 10, p. 404-6.

[9] Βλ. Βλάχος, Μητροπολίτη Ιεροθέου, Ο Άγιος Γρηγόριος Παλαμάς ως Αγιορίτη, σ. 355-6 (in Greek).

[10] «Μόνον δείξον επί των έργων την είδισιν· κατάβηθι προς το πρακτικόν της γνώσεως στάδιον· αγώνισαι τον καλόν αγώνα», Gregory Palamas, Προς Ιωάννη και Θεόδωρον τους φιλοσόφους, EPE, Έργα, tom. 8, p. 463 (in Greek).

[11] Cf. Theodorou, A., Η περί του ανθρώπου διδασκαλία των Ελλήνων Πατέρων, Αthens 1956, p. 119 (in Greek).

[12] Tsamis Dimitriou, Εισαγωγή στην πατερική γραμματεία και σκέψη, p. 341 (in Greek).

[13] Cf. Gregory Palamas, Λόγος 40, 38 PG 36, 413A (in Greek).

[14] Cf. Gross, La divinisation du Chrétien d’après les pères grecs, p. 244

[15] Evdokimov, Paul, Η Ορθοδοξία, p. 148 (in Greek).

[16] Théognoste, La Philocalie, “Sur l’action et la contemplation”, p. 626.

[17] Cf. Gregory Palamas, Λόγος, 38, 12 PG 36, 324CΕ; Έργα, EPE, tom. 8, Εισαγωγή Χρίστου Παναγιώτη, p. 16, and chap. 49, p. 136 (in Greek).

[18] Oliver Clément définie la contemplation comme suit: « elle désigne la sensation spirituelle de Dieu, au Coeur et au delà de la prière. La contemplation est la transfiguration de l’action, de la praxis », La Philocalie, Précisions de vocabulaires, p. 687.

[19] Gregory Palamas, Έργα, EPE, tome 2, p. 108.

[20] «Η αρετή προετοιμάζει προς την θείαν ένωσιν. Αλλά η ένωσις είναι της θείας χάριτος.»

[21] Evdokimov, Paul, Η Ορθοδοξία, σ. 145-6. Cf. Théognoste, La Philocalie, “Sur l’action et la contemplation”, p. 626.

[22] Ex. 14, 21.

[23] 1 Kings 18, 36-38. Théognoste, Chap. 69. La Philocalie, p. 631.

[24] Gregory Palamas, Έργα, EPE tome 2, p. 478. Cf. Vlachos, Metropolitan Ieotheos, Ο Άγιος Γρηγόριος Παλαμάς ως Αγιορείτης, p. 358.

[25] Gregory Palamas, Υπέρ των ιερώς ησυχαζόντων, Homily 1, 1, 4.

[26] «Πάσι διδομένη τε και ορωμένη τοις δι’αγαθοεργίας ακριβώς και διά προσοχής ειλικρινούς…», Gregory Palamas, Έργα, EPE, tome 10, Homily 34, chap. 11, p. 370.

[27] Gregory Palamas, Έργα, EPE, tome 1, p. 52.

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The Monk As An Element Of Byzantine Society

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http://www.myriobiblos.gr/texts/english ... _monk.html

Peter Charanis

The Monk as an Element of Byzantine Society

[Dumbarton Oaks Papers, No 25, 1971]

A PERUSAL of the third edition of the "Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca"(1) reveals some ninety persons, inhabitants of the Byzantine Empire from the beginning of the seventh century to the end of that Empire in the fifteenth, who achieved sainthood. Of those ninety, at least seventy-five had been monks. This statistic by itself shows the importance, which Byzantine society attached to the monastic life. In Byzantium, the monk-at least as a projected ideal-embodied the aspirations of his society as a whole. That is why he, as a living being, was a vital element of that society and the monastery a characteristic feature of the Byzantine landscape.

Those monastic establishments in the Byzantine Empire throughout the duration of its existence were very numerous is a matter, which admits of no doubt: A considerable number of them, though unquestionably only a very small fraction of the total, have been identified and their general emplacement determined.
Hans-George Beck, in a remarkable book(2) -apparently restricting himself to monasteries about which something definite can be said -lists 160 monasteries which existed at one time or another during the history of the Empire after the end of the sixth century. Beck's list is admittedly and necessarily incomplete, and to it can be added a considerable number of known monasteries located in every region of the Empire, including Cappadocia, where, according to one scholar, the number of rock-cut monasteries astonishes the traveller. It has been possible to revise Beck's list upward to include a total of 241 monasteries by adding monastic establishments drawn from other lists and by eliminating monasteries mentioned by Beck but appearing elsewhere in our documentation,(3) or presumed to be included in such general estimates as that of R. Ρ. Β. Menthon, who says that the number of monasteries which at one time or another had been built on, or around, Mt. Olympus in Bithynia numbered no less than 100.(4)

Generally speaking, the Byzantines founded their monasteries on mountains or on ground difficult of access. So it was that with the loss of the eastern provinces in the seventh century, the rugged terrain of Cappadocia, the mountains of Auxentios, Olympus, Sigriane, Galesion, and Latros -all located on the western coastal regions of Asia Minor- became great monastic centres. Both Olympus and Latros early came to be known as the holy mountains.(5) Ιn Europe the great monastic centre, beginning with the second half of the tenth century, was, of course, Mt. Athos,(6) but other high places such as Ganos(7) on the Propontis coast of Thrace, Papikion,(8) near the present Komotini in western Thrace, Cithaeron in Attica,(9) and finally, beginning with the fourteenth century, the Meteora in Thessaly,(10) were also important centres.

But monasteries were founded in cities, too. It may be said, indeed, that Constantinople was the greatest monastic centre of the Empire. R. Janin has identified 325 monasteries (including nunneries) which, at one time or another in the course of the Empire, were located in the Byzantine capital and its European suburbs.(11) The monastic establishments located in Thessalonica and its immediate surroundings no doubt numbered more than the twenty-four which have been identified.(12) Monasteries existed in other cities as, for instance, Amorion, where Father Laurent is tempted to locate a monastery dedicated to the forty-two martyrs of Amorion, whose existence became known to him through a seal which he has recently published.(l3) That Amorion was indeed a monastic centre of some significance is indicated by other sources. Michael Syrus, in relating the capture of Amorion by the Arabs in 838, writes: "The monasteries and nunneries were so numerous that more than a thousand virgins, not to speak of those who were massacred, were led away into captivity."(14) Trebizond was another centre and later, during the period of the Palaeologi, Mistra, the capital of the despotate of Morea, also became a centre of monastic establishments.(l5)

Roughly 700 monasteries are involved in the lists and estimates to which references have been made. This number as a total is not really very important; for it represents only a fraction of the monastic establishments which at one time or another existed in the Byzantine Empire. What is important is, that there are approximately 700 Byzantine monasteries (really fewer, because Menthon's estimate of the Mt. Olympus monasteries includes only a few about which some information can be given) whose history is somewhat known to us, and, as a consequence, it is possible to form some idea concerning the ups and downs of Byzantine monastic establishments.

The number of these establishments varied from century to century. An analysis of Janin's list reveals ninety-two monasteries known to have existed in the capital in the sixth century. Nο documentation past that century exists for seventy of these monasteries. Of the remaining twenty-two, one is said to have existed until the beginning of the eighth century;(16) six are attested to have been destroyed by Constantine V;(17) the documentation for three others does not go beyond the beginning of the seventh century;(l8) one is not referred to after the sixth century until its reconstruction by Saint Luke the Stylite in the tenth century;(19) five are said to have continued into the tenth century;(20) there is a reference to one as still existing in 1025;(21) one is still found to exist at the beginning of the thirteenth century;(22) and four endure into the fourteenth century.(23) Ιn only a few cases, however, is the documentation such as to remove all doubts that these monasteries had a continuous existence to the date of the last reference to them. As for new foundations erected in the course of the seventh and eighth centuries, there are only two in Janin's list. One of the two may have been founded earlier, but the first certain reference to its existence dates it as of 695;(24) the other is said to have been founded by the wife of Leo III.(25) Beck's list reveals a similar pattern among monasteries located in the provinces.

The inference that may be drawn from this information is that a decline in the number of monastic establishments began sometime in the seventh century and continued into the eighth. The meagreness of the sources for this entire period may prompt the question whether the decline is more apparent than real. The answer is that it may, indeed, be only apparent for the seventh and the early part of the eighth century, if the matter is restricted to the territories left under the jurisdiction of the Empire following the events of the seventh century; but that it is real as it pertains to the second half of the eighth century, certainly up to 775. This is the period when the throne was occupied by Constantine V, the only Byzantine sovereign who tried to effect nothing less than the eradication of monasticism from the Empire.(26) He cajoled and persecuted, promising rewards to monks who would abandon the monastic garb and subjecting the others to every kind of humiliation. Monks holding nuns by the hand were paraded in the Hippodrome; many were forced to marry; many more were sent into exile; some were even put to death. Monasteries were destroyed or sold or were transformed for other uses. Books relating to the monastic life were burned.(27) The chroniclers stress especially the measures against monks and nuns taken by the governor of the Thracesion theme, as a result of which not a single one is said to have survived in that province.(28)

The antimonastic measures of Constantine V were related, of course, to his iconoclastic policy, for the monks had proven the most obdurate opponents of that policy. It is probable, however, that other factors of a demographic nature contributed to his consideration. It is "generally agreed that beginning with 541 the Byzantine Empire entered into a demographic crisis which lasted over two centuries.(29) The crisis was particularly acute during the reign of Constantine V. That Constantine was aware of this crisis is shown by the fact that he tried to do something about it. He settled thousands of Slavs (according to one chronicle, 208,000) in Asia Minor and thousands of Syrians and Armenians, seized by the raiding of regions under Moslem rule, in Thrace.(30) Thousands of his own subjects, moreover, made chastity a cardinal principle of their own lives as well as an ideal to propagate, obviously a serious matter in its demographic implications. It is not unreasonable to suppose, therefore, that this matter helped to turn Constantine's hostility against the monks -a hostility first aroused by their obdurate opposition to his iconoclastic policy-into a determination to eradicate monasticism itself.

Constantine failed. No sooner had he died than the monastic establishments began to flourish as never before, ushering in what a scholar has called the golden age of Byzantine monasticism.(31) For the period from about 780 to 1200 there are references in Janin's list to 159 monasteries located in Constantinople and its European suburbs. Seventy-five of these monasteries had come into existence in the course of the ninth century and in the last years of the eighth; twenty-six, forty-three, and fifteen more appear in the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries respectively. Meanwhile, twenty-eight have disappeared from the sources by the end of the ninth century, twenty-nine by the end of the tenth, and twenty-four more by the end of the eleventh. The number of monasteries which can be definitely attested to in Constantinople for each of the centuries in question stands at seventy-five for the ninth century, seventy-three for the tenth, eighty-seven for the eleventh, and seventy-eight for the twelfth.

Several conclusions can be drawn from these figures. They show first that sometime close to the year 780 there began a period of feverish activity in the founding of monasteries; that it was particularly intense during the ninth century but continued into the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries. The figures show further that individual monastic establishments often did not last. Finally, they indicate that fewer monasteries were founded in the tenth century than in either the ninth or the eleventh.

This third point is precisely what would be expected on the basis of other sources. The legislation of Nicephorus II Phocas prohibiting new monastic establishments, later repeated in somewhat different terms by Basil II, obviously had some effect,(32) as indicated by these numbers. It by no means follows, of course, that all of the monasteries, which dropped out of the sources, actually ceased to exist. Nevertheless, it is not unreasonable to assume that at least some of them did, especially if the total number of disappearances is substantial. Furthermore, that individual monastic establishments did indeed cease to exist is attested to by the very text of the legislation of Nicephorus II Phocas, which speaks of many monasteries in decay.(33) Additional evidence is supplied by various references to individual monasteries which became deserted.

One such monastery was that of the Thessalonians located on Mt: Athos: Α document dated 1169 says of it that "it was formerly well peopled," but that it no longer existed, "its walls and habitations having fallen into ruins." This was the monastery, which in 1169 was granted to Russian monks established since 1142 in another Athonian monastery called Xylourgou. These monks re-peopled the abandoned Thessalonian monastery, dedicated it to St. Panteleimon, and made it the centre of their operations. The enterprise endured; it is the well-known Roussikon which still exists on Mt. Athos.(34)

Incursions by enemies, lack of adequate resources (or their despoliation by laymen put in charge of their management), and the attraction of other monasteries were the principal reasons why monasteries were abandoned. The movement of monks from one monastery to another was a comparatively easy matter in the Byzantine Empire, despite numerous regulations -renewed and emphasized from time to time- designed to make such movement difficult.(35) Unlike the West, Byzantium had no monastic orders.

The first conclusion drawn from our figures -that at about 780 the founding of monasteries began at a zealous pace, that it intensified especially in the ninth century, and that it continued throughout the tenth, eleventh, and into the twelfth century- is indisputable. It finds confirmation in the list of provincial monasteries compiled by Beck and in references to important persons who are said to have founded new monasteries. Α perusal, for instance, of Cedrenus-Skylitzes and other chroniclers reveals no less than eighteen such founders -nine who lived in the ninth century,(36) five who lived in the tenth,(37) and four who lived in the eleventh.(38) Included in these figures are nine sovereigns: Irene, Michael Ι, Theophilus, Basil Ι, Leo VI, Romanus Ι Lecapenus, Romanus III Argyrus, Michael IV, and Constantine Monomachus.(39) The list is incomplete and does not include founders known from other sources as, for instance, the monastic typica.

Monasteries, of course, continued to be founded after the twelfth century and on down to the end of the Empire, while many of the old ones remained in existence. There was, indeed, a veritable revival of monastic establishments in western Asia Minor under the Lascarids.(40) Five of the monasteries of Mt. Athos were founded in the fourteenth century(41) In Thessalonica, at least eighteen monasteries still existed in the fourteenth century. One of them, the Nea Moni, was founded sometime between 1350 and 1374(42) Just before Constantinople fell in 1453 there were at least eighteen monasteries still standing in the city.(43) To this later period belong, of course, the monasteries built in Mistra and on the Meteora in Thessaly, and, although these were fewer in number than had been the case earlier, their relative numerical significance was just as great, if not greater, because the territorial extent of the Empire had been very much reduced. At the same time, there was a serious decline in the population and economic resources of the Empire. It is this decline, which explains why so many monasteries located in Constantinople seem to have disappeared.

Meanwhile, the mentality, which for centuries had nurtured monasticism and was in turn nurtured by it continued to prevail. From the death of Constantine V in 775 to the end of the Empire, no significant change took place in that sphere. New issues of a spiritual nature or of ecclesiastical jurisdiction -particularly the question of union with Rome- in which the monks were involved did indeed appear, and the effects of these issues on the political life and internal peace of the Empire were very serious, but this only confirms what has just been said about the changelessness of the reciprocal relationship between the general mentality and monasticism throughout this period.

To the question of how many monks may have existed in the Byzantine Empire at any one period after the sixth century no final or definite answer can be given. There are, however, some figures with which to work. It is said that the monastery of Photeneidos on Mt. Olympus numbered one hundred and eighty monks at the time of Theodore Studite.(44) Another monastery located not far from Photeneidos housed more than two hundred monks.(45) Saccudion, also a Bithynian monastery, was founded by Plato, the uncle of Theodore the Studite, and almost from the very beginning attracted to its doors more than one hundred monks.(46) Studium, at the time Theodore became its abbot (799), housed only twelve monks.(47) Under his direction it is said the number increased to one thousand.(48) The accuracy of the latter figure has been questioned by a modern scholar on the grounds that it cannot be reconciled with the fairly modest dimensions of the monastery's church. He suggests the possibility of an error on the part of the biographer of Theodore, who is the source for this figure, or, what is more likely, that the number includes, besides the monks of Studium itself, those of other monasteries more or less under the jurisdiction of Studium.(49) These are large numbers, but they are not characteristic of the Byzantine monastic establishment in general, as is shown by the examples given below.

Α monastery for women located in Lycia at the beginning of the seventh century housed forty nuns.(50) Balentia in Lydia, an establishment founded by Peter of Atroa, had no more than fifteen monks.(51) Polychronion, a monastery located in the environs of Mt. Olympus, contained about seventy monks when Methodius, the brother of Cyril, was its abbot.(52) When Athanasius founded Lavra on Mt. Athos in 963, it was stipulated that it should have eighty monks. By the reign of Constantine Monomachus in the eleventh century, the population of Lavra had increased from one hundred to seven hundred,(53) though the latter figure might include the inmates of the metochia under Lavra's jurisdiction. In 1083, the Athonian monastery of Xenophon, which was founded about 1010, housed fifty-five monks,(54) a relatively large number, according to a modern scholar.(55) The monastery which the historian Michael Attaliates founded in Constantinople in 1078 was intended to have seven monks, but because of the difficulties of the times he was able to recruit only five. He provided, however, that this number might in the future be increased in proportion to any increase in the resources of the monastery.(56) Irene Ducas, wife of the Emperor Alexius, fixed at twenty-four the number of nuns for the nunnery which she founded sometime before 1118. In the event that the resources of the institution increased, the number of nuns might be raised to a maximum of forty. At the same time Irene put under the jurisdiction of her nunnery a much smaller establishment, with a complement of four nuns.(58) The monastery of the Pantocrator, according to the typikon issued in 1136 by its founder, the Emperor John II Comnenus, was to house a maximum of eighty monks. Also under its jurisdiction were six other monasteries, two of which were to be inhabited by eighteen monks each, two by six each, one by sixteen, and the last by twelve.(58) The number of monks to be housed by the monastery of the Kosmosotira, founded about 1152 near Aenos by the Sebastocrator Isaac, the brother of John II, was not to exceed seventy-four.(59) The monastery of St. Mamas, reconstructed about 1147 after it had been allowed to fall into ruins by the charistikarii to whom it had been granted from time to time, was to have twenty monks.(60) The number of monks of the Elegmon, an old monastery located in the diocese of Nicaea which was reconstructed about 1162, was fixed at twenty.(61) The Emperor Michael VΙΙΙ Palaeologus reconstructed two monasteries: St. Demetrius in the capital and that of the Archangel Michael on Mt. Auxentios. The number of monks to be housed by the first was fixed at thirty-six;(62) those to be housed by the second were not to exceed forty.(63) Placed under the jurisdiction of St. Demetrius were eighteen other monasteries in Constantinople, Bithynia, and Thrace. The number of the inmates of each was likewise fixed, totalling, according to my calculations, one hundred and fifteen monks, though the total given by the document is higher.(64) The Athonian monastery of Zographou is said to have had twenty-six monks during the reign of Michael VIII.(65) Two nunneries, one founded by Michael's wife, the other by his niece, were restricted in the number of nuns they could have, the first to fifty,(66) the second to thirty.(67) The Nea Moni of Thessalonica, founded sometime before 1376, was restricted to nineteen inmates.(68) Finally, and this takes us back to the eleventh century, St. George, a monastery established in Thebes by Meletios the Younger (who was a Cappadocian native and, like many other ascetics, achieved sanctity) had twelve monks when Meletios left it.(69) Symbolon, a monastic establishment on Mt. Cithaeron in Attica, to which Meletios moved and which he subsequently enlarged, housed during his regime one hundred monks.(70) In addition to enlarging Symbolon, Meletios built in the same general region a number of smaller monasteries -twenty-two, according to one of his biographers, twenty-four, according to another -each housing from eight to twelve monks.(71)

What inferences may be drawn from these figures is a matter for speculation. It may be meaningful, however, to determine an average number of monks for each of the monasteries in the three groups of the Mt. Cithaeron, the Pantocrator, and the St. Demetrius, giving averages of sixteen, twenty-two, and eight, respectively. However, from an average involving all the monasteries for which we have figures it is difficult to derive any meaning at all, both because the monasteries in question spanned several centuries, and because they were not stable in the number of their inmates. When Studium came under the direction of Theodore, it had no more than twelve monks.(72) Were the monks who soon raised this figure to one thousand new initiates, or were they inmates from other houses? The indications are that many of them were or had been inmates of other houses.(73) Certainly many of the monks of Saccudion, numbering, as has already been said, over one hundred, must have followed their leader to Constantinople. About 977 the monastery of St. Mamas was virtually uninhabited; but under the direction of Symeon, known as the New Theologian, who became its abbot, the number of its inmates was increased to well over thirty.(74) By 1147 it had again fallen into desuetude, with only two remaining monks, who, since their monastery had fallen into ruins, wandered from place to place.(75) In less than a century after Lavra had been founded its complement of monks had reached seven hundred, though at one time it had been only one hundred.(76) This increase may have been due to the acquisition by Lavra of Kellia as well as of lesser monasteries. In 1334 the Athonian monastery of
Koutloumousion had thirty monks and apparently was still growing. Some years earlier it had only twelve.(77)

If a curve were drawn on the basis of our first set of figures, those monasteries that would be out of line would be the three Bithynian monasteries, and Studium, Lavra, and Symbolon on Mt. Cithaeron. Symbolon presents no problem, because the number of its inmates lends itself to the computation of an average. Lavra and Studium may be explained in the manner we have suggested above. As for the three Bithynian monasteries, the large numbers of their inmates might have been a late development, the result of the return to Bithynia of numerous monks who had been dispersed during the iconoclastic persecutions. In any case, if we are right in suggesting that Studium grew at the expense of other monasteries, then the number of inmates of these others must necessarily have declined. This must certainly have been the case with Saccudion, and there is no reason to suppose that it may not have been so with the other two Bithynian monasteries.

Putting aside the monastic establishments that supported one hundred or more monks, there remain roughly ninety-four monasteries about the number of whose inmates something is known: one had eighty monks; one, seventy-four; one, fifty-five; one, fifty; two; forty; one, thirty-six; two, thirty; two, between thirty and twenty; and the rest under twenty. The inference that may be drawn from these figures is that the vast majority of the Byzantine establishments housed between ten and twenty monks. This inference finds confirmation in the actual averages, which we have been able to compute for three groups of monasteries -the one centring around Symbolon in Attica, the Pantocrator group, and the St. Demetrius group.

What follows is speculative, but may approach actuality. It has been said on good authority that some few years before the fall of Constantinople, in 1453, there still stood in the Byzantine capital eighteen monasteries.(78) These were famous monasteries, especially noted by travellers. Nothing is known, Ι believe, about the number of monks which each housed at this time. It would be no exaggeration to suppose, however, that they may have housed, on the average, as many as thirty each. This figure is, to be sure, out of line with what we have suggested for the vast majority of Byzantine monasteries, but these eighteen were particularly important ones, and, in any case, it is not inconsistent with the minimum figure suggested by Janin.(79) If this figure were accepted, there would have been a total of five hundred and forty monks in the eighteen monasteries, by no means an impossible number. In a city whose population at the time was about fifty thousand,(80) the existence of five hundred and forty monks would produce a ratio of slightly more than one monk per one hundred inhabitants, a proportion which seems to have obtained also in Thessalonica toward the end of the fourteenth century.(81)

In the course of the centuries the Byzantine Empire underwent many changes
-in territorial extent, size of population, economic power, and administrative machinery. But throughout these centuries its worldview, its general intellectual style, sustained no fundamental change. This was particularly true, as has already been stated, of its attitude toward monastic life. It is not unreasonable to suppose, therefore, that the ratio of monks to the general population remained more or less the same throughout the centuries.

The population of the Empire at any one period of its existence is not known, and, given the nature of the sources; it is not likely ever to be known. For about the year 1000, Ε. Stein has estimated a population of approximately 20,000,000; another scholar has put it at 15,000,000.(82) For reasons which have been explained elsewhere,(83) the latter figure is probably too low, but we may use it as a conservative representation of reality. Applying to this figure the ratio of monks to the general population of Constantinople on the eve of its fall, we may say that in the year 1000 there were in the Byzantine Empire slightly more than 150,000 monks and over 7,000 monastic establishments. This estimate may be too low. Nicephorus II Phocas, in his famous novel prohibiting new monastic establishments, speaks of myriads of monasteries already in existence, and Basil II, in his, conveys the idea that in many of the villages located in every theme of the Empire there existed establishments which could be called monasteries.(84) And, for purposes of comparison, the situation which obtained in Crete in 1632 may be cited. In that year there were 376 monasteries and 4,000 monks in Crete, whose total population then was 200,000.(85) These figures yield an average of slightly less than eleven monks per monastery and α ratio of two monks per one hundred inhabitants. The vast majority of the Byzantine monks fell, generally speaking, within the age group of twenty-five to forty-five; from any point of view the most productive period of life.

His aggregate number, some degree of organization, occasional articulate leadership, a philosophy which emphasized simplicity, kindness, love -these were the factors which made the monk an influential element in Byzantine society.(86) But it was another, mystical quality that gave him special status and formed his image. By the condition of his life he had come very close to the Lord; had, so to speak, touched His garments, and thereby absorbed certain powers which the Lord possessed and which He alone could transmit. The monk's prayers thus became much more effective than the prayers of ordinary folk, and the effectiveness of a monk's prayers was often the principal reason why many laymen founded new monasteries or endowed old ones. In every monastic typikon there is the important provision that the monks of the house should pray on behalf of the founder and intercede in favour of his soul when he is dead. And, since the effectiveness of that prayer depended on the way of life of the monk, his life was carefully regulated so that there would be no deviations from the commandments of the Lord, the strict observance of which brought the monk very close to the Lord. Legends circulated that monks had the power to heal the diseased, even to restore life to the dead, to drive evil spirits from one's soul, and to prophesy about one's future.(87)

This matter of prophecies at times even affected politics. Everyone knows the story of the ascetic of Philomelion and the visit to him by Bardanes, the powerful general of Nicephorus Ι, who contemplated the overthrow of his master. Bardanes, accompanied by three associates -a man by the name of Leo, another, Michael, and-a third, Thomas- visited the hermit and inquired of him whether his projected attempt to seize the throne would succeed. The hermit's response was at first rather obscure, but when he saw Bardanes' companions he became specific: "The first and second of these men," he said, "will possess the empire, but thou shalt not. As for the third, he will be merely proclaimed, but will not prosper and will have a bad end." Bardanes failed, but Leo eventually became emperor, as did Michael also. The third, Thomas, better known as Thomas the Slavonian, was proclaimed emperor and even crowned, but after a long and vigorous attempt in the end failed actually to seize the throne.(88) In the form in which it has been transmitted, the prediction was no doubt, to use the expression of J. Β. Bury,(89) post eventum, but it is not at all unlikely that it may have been based on a prophecy actually made to one of the persons involved. Well known also is the story of the encounter in Patras between Basil the Macedonian and the wealthy lady Danelis, an encounter which gave to Basil the economic foundation for his future. Basil had entered the cathedral church of St. Andrew and while there was greeted by a monk who showed him unusual honour. The widow Danelis heard about the episode and asked the monk why it was that he had acted thus toward a stranger, and an unworthy one to boot, whereas at no time had he ever distinguished by any special act herself, her son, or her grandson. "It was not a chance fellow that Ι saw," the monk replied, "but the future emperor of the Romans anointed by Christ."(90) But one can never know with certainty the inner motives of men: Danelis was a widow, and the unusual care, gifts, and honours which, immediately after this episode, she bestowed on Basil may require another explanation; the prophecy was perhaps an invention designed to cover something else. Nevertheless, the point is that prophecies were very common, that they influenced people, and that the prophets were almost always monks.

Ιn his memoirs Michael Psellos refer to those who have scorned the world in order to lead a life of meditation as the "true philosophers."(91) The reference is, of course, to monks, but not to monks who claimed to have the power to foretell the future or to alter the course of nature and thus to influence people as they wished. He has nothing but contempt for such men. "These men," he writes elsewhere in the same work, "model themselves on the Divine ... Some of them utter prophecies with the assurance of an oracle, solemnly declaring the will of God. Others profess to change natural laws, cancelling some altogether and extending the scope of others; they claim to make immortal the dissoluble human body and to arrest the natural changes which affect it ... Ι know their kind and Ι have often seen them. Well, these were the men who led the empress (Theodora) astray, telling her she would live forever, and through their deceit she very nearly came to grief herself and brought ruin on the whole Empire as well."(92) Αnna Comnena, in a somewhat different context, expresses much the same view.(93) Αnna is speaking of her father, but her words would apply to anyone, including monks. She writes: "The Emperor was unable to say to the paralytic, 'Rise up and walk!' or to bid the blind to see, and him who had not feet to walk. This was only in the power of the Only Begotten Son, who for our sakes became man and lived this life here below for the sake of men." Anyone who claimed to do the things that only the Lord could do was obviously a fake, and Αnna knew too much medicine to believe otherwise. In this context, however, in fairness to the Byzantine monk, it should be said that he did not neglect the remedies that medicine had to offer, that the monastery was often the only place where a peasant could go to receive, besides the blessings of the monk, practical medical advice for the treatment of his ailments.(94)

"Nothing was more democratic," a modern scholar has written, "than the recruitment of monasteries. Coarse peasants rubbed shoulders with the greatest lords."(95) The statement can be illustrated by specific source references. Here, the Lives of saints are of the greatest usefulness, although their accuracy is not always unquestionable. Ioannikes, a monk of some prominence during the first half of the ninth century, was a peasant by origin who, from the age of seven to about nineteen, when he entered the army, earned his living by tending hogs.(96) Peter of Atroa was most probably of similar origins.(97) Peasant, too, were the origins of Paul of Latmos and his brother, the monk Basil.(98) Euphymius the Younger came from a family of soldier-peasants,(99) and the parents of Neophytus of Cyprus were farmers.(100) The Vast majority, if not all, of those who came to Meletios the Younger on Mt. Cithaeron were certainly peasants. Lampros is of the opinion that most were brigands;(101) his opinion has been disputed by another Greek scholar, or rather ecclesiastic, but there is really no evidence one way or the other.(102) Brigands did often become monks.(103) Peasants themselves, according to the novel of Basil II prohibiting new foundations, were often founders of small monastic establishments which were usually absorbed by the larger ones.(104)

Saints' Lives are laudatory in character, and usually tend to give their heroes a noble origin. There is no reason to doubt, however, the noble origin of Plato and his nephew Theodore, the famous Studite,(105) or that Theophanes, the chronicler, was of good family.(106) When Alexius Musele, under the Emperor Theophilus, decided to become a monk, he bore the title Caesar.(107) Some years earlier, during the reign of Michael II, another high officer of administration chose to abandon the world and embrace monasticism ; he is known in hagiography as Saint Anthony the Υoung.(108) The father of Ignatius had been an emperor.(109) Michael Maleinos, the uncle of Nicephorus Phocas, belonged to the aristocracy.(110) Athanasius, the founder of Lavra on Mt. Athos, came from a rich family from the Ρontus.(111) Nicephorus himself was expected to embrace monasticism, and the quite different direction in which the course of events led him proved very painful to his ascetic friends, particularly Athanasius.(112) Saint Luke, the New Stylite, one of the more famous ascetics of the tenth century, is said also to have been of wealthy origin.(113) The parents of Symeon, the New Theologian, were very well-to-do, possessing a library of their own. Symeon's uncle was an influential figure in the imperial court and was eager to launch his youthful nephew into a career of administration, but the young man's thoughts ran in a different direction.(114)

These men, and others who might have been cited, embraced the monastic life on their own volition. There were others high up the social ladders that were forced to do so, in the vast majority of cases for political reasons. These persons were usually unsuccessful rebels, or suspected of contemplating some plot, or perhaps the subject of a prophecy that they would reach the throne. Rather than being put to death, such people were relegated to a monastery, there to pass the rest of their lives in peace and tranquillity. The list, too long for detailed analysis -and such an analysis is not necessary-(115) includes twelve former emperors(116) and a number of imperial princesses,(117) the latter no doubt forced to take the vows for dynastic reasons. Interdynastic marriages, at least in the middle Byzantine period, were very rare.(118) If imperial princesses were to be allowed to marry, they would have had to marry Byzantine potentates, which was too dangerous for the ruling monarch. Virtually all the former emperors who were confined to a monastery accepted their new fate with equanimity. Three of them, Michael IV, Isaac Ι Comnenus, and John VI Cantacuzenus, may actually have wished it. It was illness, of course, that pushed Michael IV out of the throne and sent him to a monastery. About his predilection for the monastic life, however, there is little doubt. Throughout his reign he had shown special regard for the genuine monks, the ones Psellos calls philosophers. "What land and sea," Psellos writes, "did he not thoroughly search, what clefts in the rocks, what secret holes in the earth, that he might bring to the light of day one who was hidden there? Once he had found them, he would carry them off to his palace. And then what honour did he not pay them, washing their dust-covered feet, even putting his arms about them and gladly embracing their bodies, secretly clothing himself in their rags and making them lie down on his imperial bed, while he cast himself down on some humble couch, with a hard stone for a pillow."(119) Illness, too, was the initial factor, which eventually led Isaac Comnenus to abandon the throne and then to enter a monastery. Once he became a monk, he conducted himself with all humility, performing various menial chores, including that of a doorman.(120) In the case of John Cantacuzenus, it was not illness but frustration, a realization perhaps of the havoc he had wrought in his efforts to put himself on the throne, that led him to abandon the imperial seat in favour of monasticism.(121) It was during his long life as a monk that Cantacuzenus composed his Memoirs and other writings. Michael VII, when forced from the throne, embraced monasticism and subsequently became bishop of Ephesus. Eventually, however, he abandoned his see and returned to the monastery; where he worked the fields with his own hands.(122)

It is, of course, a familiar fact that the Byzantine Empire, in its ethnic composition, was not purely Greek; that it included within its borders a number of other peoples. This fact was reflected in the monastic population of the Empire.
The various national monasteries, which were early, established in Constantinople disappeared with the loss of Egypt and Syria.(123) Later, other monasteries of a more or less national character, such as the Slavic monasteries on Mt. Athos, made their appearance. The point to stress, however, is that there were elements other than Greek in the population of the general monastic establishments. From the ninth century there were Georgians in at least three monasteries or hermitages on Mt. Olympus. The Georgians who founded the Athonian monastery of Iviron about 980 had sojourned for some time on Οlymρus.(124) Iviron eventually housed Slavs in addition to Georgians. Saint Mary the Younger, who founded a monastic establishment in Thrace, was Armenian by origin.(125) Armenian monks are met with on Mt. Galasion.(126) We are told that Saint Euthymius the Younger, while sojourning on Mt. Athos, had as his constant companion a certain Armenian hermit by the name of Joseph. The biographer of Euthymius apparently did not like Armenians, for he says: "This Joseph, though Armenian by race, was not a stealthy and crafty man. He was simple, candid and guileless."(127) When all is said and done, however, it should be emphasized that Byzantine monastic establishments -leaving out of consideration the Georgian, Armenian, and Slavic provinces- whatever their composition, ended by becoming Greek, unless special circumstances affected the situation. This statement finds confirmation in the typikon, which the Georgian Gregory Pacourianos issued in favour of the monastery, which he founded and richly endowed at Petritzos (Backovo in Bulgaria), then, of course, a Byzantine province. Pacourianos founded the monastery for fellow Georgians and made it a point to specify that no Greek should ever be admitted, because Greeks, he said, had a way of taking things over.(128)

What was it that turned a Byzantine away from the world to embrace monasticism?
The question admits of no single answer. Monasticism was an established way of life, and, as such, drew men and women to it. But there were surely specific reasons, which varied from individual to individual. Peasants were drawn to monasteries because there they could better their lot.(129) This was most probably the reason why so many of them flocked around Meletios on Mt. Cithaeron. Some shocking experience, some disappointment in life may perhaps have moved others. Ioannikes is said to have decided to leave the army and become a monk after he had seen so many of his comrades lying dead on the battlefield in Bulgaria in 795.(130) Α similar story is told about a certain Nicholas, a soldier in the army of Nicephorus Ι when that emperor led his last expedition into Bulgaria. Nicholas had a dream to the effect that the battlefield would be strewn with Roman bodies, and when the next day he saw that this was indeed the case, he decided to leave the army and become a monk.(131) He eventually achieved sainthood. Musele, the Caesar under. Theophilus and for a time heir apparent to the throne, may have decided to become a monk because with the birth of Michael, he saw his chances for accession destroyed.(132) It is said of a certain person who achieved high position in the army under Theophilus that he saw, while praying, how vain all things in the world were, and thereupon renounced his military career and became a monk.(133) He, too, achieved sainthood. Euthymius the Younger never allowed himself to forget the saying of the Lord: "And everyone who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or children or lands, for my name's sake will receive a hundred fold and inherit eternal life.(134) Symeon the New Theologian read a great deal of the ascetic literature, including the spiritual ladder of John Climacus.(135) This was perhaps what decided him to become a monk. General environment, too, may have played a role. The household of Theodore the Studite when he was young was run by his mother as though it were a monastery.(136) All these reasons, of course, apply to those who took the vows on their own volition. As for those who were forced to do so, their vows apparently were not binding. Α certain John, for instance, a favourite of Romanus II, was allowed by the Patriarch Polyeuctos to abandon monastic life on the grounds that he had been forced into it by Constantine VII.(137)

The degree and extent of literacy in the Byzantine Empire constitute a problem, which is not likely ever to be settled, but the matter may perhaps be somewhat different in the case of the monks. That monks should be able to read was an expectation, which became part of the tradition from the very beginning of organized Christian monasticism. Pachomius had ruled that anyone who was ignorant when he entered a monastery should first have to learn the rules that he must observe. He would then be given twenty psalms, or two epistles of the Apostle, or a part of another book of the Scriptures to learn. If he did not know how to read, he had to learn by studying three times a day with the one who was capable of teaching him.(138) Thus illiterates might enter a monastery, but as monks they could not remain illiterate. The matter of reading skill found general acceptance in Byzantine monasticism and was expressed in law.(139) Theodore the Studite put it very clearly: "It should be known that on days when we perform no physical labour the librarian strikes a gong once, the brothers gather at the place where the books are kept, and each takes one, reading it until late. Before the bell is rung for evening service the librarian strikes again, and all come to return their books according to the list. If anyone is late with his book, he is subject to a penalty."(140) We find the same regulations expressed in almost the same language in a document relating to the monastery of Lavra on Mt. Athos.(141) Reading was done, of course, from religious books;(142) in Byzantine monastic circles there was definite hostility to profane literature.(143)

This obligation to read was the reason why monasteries collected libraries and in many cases included among the ranks of the brethren a calligrapher.(144) These libraries constituted, relatively speaking, important collections of books and were used by scholars for their enlightenment.(145) It is said of a certain intellectual, for instance, that he went about visiting the various monasteries searching in their libraries, and so arrived at the level of knowledge which he finally achieved.(146) It would be a mistake, however, to infer from all this that the Byzantine monks of organized establishments were all and always literate. Persons are known by name that was illiterate when they became monks, but subsequently learned to read. St. Neophytus of Cyprus, for instance, learned not only to read, but also to write.(147) There are others, however, who remained illiterate even as acknowledged monks. One of these, Gerasimus, became patriarch in 1320.(148) It is difficult not to suspect that the majority of those who followed Meletios on Mt. Cithaeron were illiterates to begin with and never learned to read. There is a provision, which the reader encounters in some of the monastic typika to the effect that some of the monks were to occupy themselves exclusively with the offices of the Church, the service of the liturgy, while others were to perform merely menial tasks. Thus, in the typikon issued by the Sebastocrator Isaac in 1152 in favour of the monastery of the Kosmosotira, which he founded near Aenos, it is specified that fifty of the monks housed therein must occupy themselves exclusively with liturgical services; twenty-four others, however, were to perform various manual tasks.(149) So it was also in the typikon issued by Michael VIII Palaeologus in favour of the monastery of St. Demetrius. The typikon calls for a complement of thirty-six monks: fifteen to occupy themselves exclusively with liturgical matters, twenty-one with various manual tasks.(150) To infer from this that the monks whose duties were strictly liturgical were those who knew how to read, while the others were probably illiterate is by no means unreasonable. This inference finds some confirmation in a monastic document of about 1164, which bears the signatures of twenty-eight monks. Of these twenty-eight, seventeen actually signed their own names; eleven affixed their signature by a symbol. Among the latter, two were tenders of the vineyards, one was a gardener, and one a doorkeeper.(151) It may be that in some Byzantine monasteries monks who were able to read predominated, while in others the opposite held true. Ιn any case, the central point is that there were many monks who could read in the Byzantine organized monastic establishments.

Tο read is not necessarily to be educated. The Byzantine monk, with some notable exceptions, remained essentially an uneducated man. He read his Scriptures
or chanted the psalms and adhered to tradition.(152) Nor did any Byzantine monastic establishment ever become a major educational centre. The monastic schools which are occasionally mentioned in the sources were purely elementary establishments, places where young boys left in the care of the monasteries were taught how to read in order that they might be able to read the Scriptures.(153)
Such young boys were often dedicated to monasteries by their parents, or were assigned to them in some other way. Αnna Comnena, for instance, says of her father: "The children who had lost their parents and were afflicted with the bitter evil of orphan hood he distributed among his relations or others who, as he knew, led a well-conducted life, or sent them to the abbots of the holy monasteries with orders to bring them up, not as slaves, but as free children and allow them a thorough education and instructions in the Holy Writings."(154)

"Monks are of service for neither war nor any other necessity... they have appropriated the greater part of the earth. On a pretext of giving everything to the poor they have, so to speak, made everyone poor." This statement is by Zosimus,(155) the fifth-century "pagan" historian, and its intent is obviously hostile. Monks are, of course, not useful as soldiers and by reason of their vows cannot participate in the process of procreation. These considerations have been touched upon elsewhere in this paper, and the suggestion bears repeating that these may have been the reasons why Constantine V sought to put an end to monasticism.

The question of giving to the poor is another matter, and here we shall have to divest ourselves of the hostility of Zosimus. The dispensation of charity, a function early assumed by the church, in due course was also assumed by monastic establishments. This function was not simply a matter of giving alms to the poor or of offering shelter to the weary traveller. It was that, of course, but it was something more. Throughout the history of the Byzantine Empire, there were various establishments designed to take care of the needs of a variety of unfortunate people. There were houses for the poor; for the old, for orphans; there were hostels and hospitals: Α great many of these establishments were associated with monasteries; maintained, managed, and directed by the monks. This matter has been thoroughly discussed by Dr. Constantelos in the book which he has recently published,(156) and, as a consequence, we need not here enter into details. There is one hospital, however, which has always struck my fancy and about which Ι would like to make some remarks.

That hospital is the one attached to the monastery of the Pantocrator which the Emperor John II founded in Constantinople in the twelfth century, more exactly in 1136.(157) This hospital was a remarkable institution. Its fifty-odd beds were divided into five sections or wards, each ward directed by two physicians and open to specific types of cases. One was given to general medical service, where acute ailments were treated; it consisted of twenty beds. Another, containing ten beds, was devoted to surgery, where care of wounds, fractures, and cases involving surgical intervention was undertaken. Α ward consisting of twelve beds was open only to women for the treatment of diseases and irregularities peculiar to their sex, while another of eight beds housed patients who suffered from eye ailments. Finally, there was a psychiatric ward, where epilepsy and various mental disorders were treated. There was, in addition, what could be called an outpatient department, where the ailing came, were examined, and -their ailments diagnosed and treatment prescribed- returned home to come back sometime later for a check-up. The staff consisted of thirty-six physicians of various grades, including several women, and some nurses. Attached to the hospital was also a professor of medicine, whose presence there gave it something of the character of a medical school. There were also a number of service establishments. These included a pharmacy, a mill, a bakery, a kitchen, a laundry, and bathing houses. The bathing establishment must have been in frequent use, for it was prescribed that patients should be made to take two baths a week. The laundry, too, must have been a busy place, for upon entering the hospital the patient was provided with hospital clothes; while his own were taken away, washed and ironed, and returned to him when he was dismissed. The medicine practiced in this hospital was no doubt that of Galen, but its organization seems remarkably modern.

The remark of Zosimus that the monk "appropriates the greater part of the earth," was, of course, a rhetorical exaggeration. Nevertheless, a competent modern authority on the internal history of the Byzantine Empire has estimated that at the end of the seventh century, about one-third of the usable land of the Empire was in the possession of the church and the monasteries.(l58) For a time, the iconoclastic movement checked the growth of monasticism, and by confiscations considerably reduced the property holdings of monasteries. But once the movement was over, monasteries grew greatly in number, and their properties increased. Original endowments, subsequent gifts by the pious, purchases, and downright encroachments on the property of others were the principal, sources for this increase. The property amassed was beyond measure, and the major sufferers were the peasant proprietors and eventually the State itself. There were emperors -we have treated this matter elsewhere in detail- who tried to check this evil. Some even resorted to confiscations. But, in the end, the monks won. As the Empire approached its end, much of its usable land was in the possession of monasteries.(159) The monks did not bring about the decline of the Byzantine Empire; they did, however, create economic and social conditions which helped to bring it about.

The monk was an omnipresent ingredient of Byzantine society. Nothing short of a thorough overhauling of that society, a complete change in its constituents could have altered his position. He furnished the Church with its bishops and patriarchs. According to Bréhier, between 705, when Cyrus -a hermit of Amastreia who had predicted to Justinian II his restoration to the throne became patriarch, and 1204, when Constantinople fell to the Latins, forty-five of the fifty-seven patriarchs were monks.(160) The situation was not much different in the period that followed. Ιn Byzantium, the populace respected and admired the monk and frequently turned to him in time of need. Emperors loved him, shared their table with him, sought his blessing, and when on the point of launching some important undertaking, often consulted him.(161) Monks were considered to be a spiritual force upon which the very safety of the Empire depended. This matter was clearly expressed by Alexius III of Trebizond in the chrysobull, which he issued in 1364 in favour of the monastery at Soumela. He said that he relied for the defence of his Empire more upon spiritual than material weapons; that he placed greater faith in monasteries than in fortresses.(162) This seems wrong, of course. What he needed were more fortresses and the manpower to garrison them, and this was how some of the emperors of the past, however fond of monks they may have been, would have viewed the matter. Yet, when account is taken of the situation, as it then actually existed, he may have been right. For the monastery as an institution survived the general catastrophe, and in due course helped the Christian peoples of the Balkan Peninsula to regain their dignity.

Postscriptum

Harun-ibn-Yahya, an Arab prisoner held in Constantinople sometime during the second half of the ninth century, mentions six monasteries located in the environs of Constantinople. One of them, he says, had a population of 500 monks; another, 1,000; the other four together, 12,000. The accuracy of these figures is, to say the least, highly questionable: Α. Α. Vasiliev, "Harun-ibn-Yahya and his Description of Constantinople," Seminarium Kondakovianum, V (1932), 161.


NOTES

  1. - Revised and enlarged by Francois Halkin (Brussels, 1957), 3 vols.

  2. - Kirche und theologische Literatur in byzantinischen Reich (Munich, 1959), 207-27.

  3. - In making this revision, the following references have been used. Hélène Ahrweiler, "L'Histoire et la géographie de la région de Smyrne entre les deux occupations turques (1081-1317), particulièrement au XIIIe siècle," Travaux et mémoires, 1 (1965), 92-98; V. Laurent, Le corpus des sceaux de l'Empire byzantin, V, 2, L'Église (Paris, 1965), 147-222; Gabriel Millet, "Les monastères et les églises de Trébizonde," Bulletin de correspondance hellénique, 19 (1895), 419-59. Millet describes six monastic establishments located in the region of Trebizond. Ιn a discourse delivered by Joseph, metropolitan of Trebizond (1364-1367), we read that in Trebizond the monasteries and the houses for virgins were densely populated and those who lived in them not easily enumerated: Fontes Trapezuntini Ι, ed. Α. Papadopulos-Kerameus (St. Petersburg, 1897), 58: μοναί δε και παρθενώνες διαβεβοημέναι κατάπυκτοι και πλήθος λαού ούκουν ραδίως αριθμητόν. G. de Jerphanion, Une nouvelle province de l'art byzantin. Les églises rupestres de Cappadoce, Ι, 1 (Paris, 1925), 43-52; Nicole and Michel Thierry, Nouvelles églises rupestres de Cappadoce, Région du Ηasan Daği (Paris, 1963), 21, 22, 24-25, 26, 31, 35, 41, 175ff.; J. Lafontaine-Dosogne, "Nouvelles notes cappadociennes," Byzantion, 33 (1963), 139, 142, 144, 158, 167, 173, 174, 180; J. Hackett, Α History of the Orthodox Church of Cyprus ... (London, 1901), 329ff.; George Hill, Α History of Cyprus, Ι (Cambridge, 1940), 272 f.; Cyril Mango and Ernest J. W. Hawkins, "The Hermitage of St. Neophytos and Its Wall Paintings," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 20 (1966), 204; Antoine Βon, Le Péloponnèse byzantin jusqu'en 1204 (Paris, 1951), 143ff.; Dion. Α. Zakythinos, Le Despotat grec de Morée, II (Athens, 1953), 295ff. Of the numerous monasteries located on the islands, Beck's list includes only three, the famous monastery of John the Theologian on Patmos, and two located in Cyprus. No monastery in pre-Venetian Crete and Epirus is mentioned and there is no reference to Skripou and Sagmata in Boetia. On Cretan monasteries, see St. Xanthoudides, Η Ενετοκρατία εν Κρήτη και οι κατά των Ενετών Αγώνες των Κρητών (Athens, 1939), 8-9. For a general reference to Epirote monasteries, see G. L. Tafel and G. Μ. Thomas, Urkunden zur alteren Handels- und Staatsgeschichte der Republik Venedig, Ι (Vienna, 1856), 470ff., 490f. On the church and monastery in Skripou, see Μ. Sotiriou, "Ο ναός της Σκριπούς Βοιωτίας," Αρχαιολογική Εφημερίς (1931), 119-57. For a good illustration of the church, see Μ. Chatzidakis, A.Tassos, and Ph. Zachariou, Byzantine Monuments in Attica and Boeotia (Athens, 1956), pl.1. On Sagmata: Α. Η. S. Megaw, "The Chronology of some Middle-Byzantine Churches in Athens," annual of the British School at Athens, 32 (1931-32), 95.

  4. - Une terre de légendes. L'Olympe de Bithynie. Ses saints, ses couvents, ses sites (Paris, 1935) 8-9.

  5. - On Mt. Olympus as a monastic centre, Menthon's work (note 4) remains fundamental. On Latros as a holy mountain, see Ahrweiler, op. cit., 91 and note 123. See also Ρ. L. Bokotopoulos, "Λάτρος," Επετηρίς Εταιρείας Bυζαντινών Σπουδών, 35 (1966-67), 69-106.

  6. - The literature on Mt. Athos is very extensive. For a sound general survey with references to the basic bibliography, see Ε. Amand de Mendieta, La presqu'île des Caloyers. Le Mont-Athos (Bruges, 1955). For the latest detailed study on Mt. Athos, see John Ρ. Mamalakes, Το Άγιον Όρος (Αθως) διά Μέσου των Αιώνων (Thessalonike, 1971). This publication has just reached me and Ι have not therefore had the time to examine it with care, but at first glance it appears to be a very solid work. For a collection of documents relating to it as a monastic centre, that by Ph. Meyer is still basic: "Die Haupturkunden fur die Geschichte der Athoskloster (Leipzig, 1894).

  7. - On Ganos, see Laurent, op. cit., 152. 8.- Ibid., 159.

  8. - Chr. Α. Papadopoulos, "Ο όσιος Μελέτιος ο νέος," Θεολογία, 13 (1935).

  9. - For a general account on the Meteora, one may consult D. Μ. Nicol, Meteora. The Rock Monasteries of Thessaly (London, 1963).

  10. - La géographie ecclésiastique de l'Empire byzantin. Première partie. Le siége de Constantinople et le patriarcat œcuménique. III. Les églises et les monastères (Paris, 1953), p. 4 for the figure 325, but all monasteries of Constantinople whose existence could be established are treated in the book. On the monks in Constantinople about 451, see now G. Dagron, "Les moines et la ville. Le monachisme a Constantinople jusqu'au Concile de Chalcedon (451)," Travaux et mémoires, 4 (1970), 229 ff.

  11. - John Cameniates, De excidio Thessalonicensi (Βonnι 1838), 494. Cf. Ρ. Ν. Papageorgiou, "Εκδρομή εις την βασιλικήν και πατριαρχικήν μονήν της αγίας Αναστασίας της Φαρμακολουτρίας...," Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 7 (1898), 59; Ο.Tafrali, Topographie de Thessalonique (Paris, 1913), 192-202; idem, Thessalonique au quatorzième siècle (Paris, 1913), 99-101; Μ. Th. Lascaris, "Ναοί και μοναί Θεσσαλονίκης το 1405 εις το οδοιπορικόν του εκ Σμολένσκ Ιγνατίου," Τόμος Κωνσταντίνου Αρμενοπούλου επί τη εξακοσιετηρίδι της Εξαβίβλου αυτού (1345-1945) (=Επιστημονική Επετηρίς, 6 (Thessaloniki, 1952), 319-27.

  12. - Laurent, οp. cit. (supra, note 3), 197-98.

  13. - Michael Syrus, Chronique de Michael le Syrien, Patriarche Jacobite d'Antioche (1166-1199), ed. and trans. J.-B. Chabot, 3 (Paris, 1905), 100.

  14. - On the monasteries of Mistra, see Zakythinos, op. cit.(supra, note 3), 296ff.

  15. - Janin, op. cit. (supra, note 11), 15ff.

  16. - Ibid., 9, 86ff., 103f., 285, 335, 446.

  17. - Ibid., 395, 462, 344.

  18. - Ibid., 65.

  19. - Ibid., 59, 283, 293, 335.

  20. - Ibid., 460.

  21. - Ibid., 281.

  22. - Ibid., 100, 201, 233, 326.

  23. - Ibid., 511. 25.- Ibid., 486. On page 471 there is a reference to a monastery, which existed in 729, but nothing more is said about it.

  24. - J. Pargoire, L'église byzantine de 527 a 847 (Paris, 1923), 308.

  25. - Theophanes, Chronographia, ed. C. de Boor, Ι (Leipzig, 1883), 442-43; Nicephorus, Opuscula historica, ed. C. de Βοοr (Leipzig, 1880), 71-72, 74; Cedrenus-Scylitzes, Historiarum compendium, II (Bonn, 1839), 14-15.

  26. - Theophanes, ibid., 445-46; Cedrenus-Scylitzes, II, 15-16. See further: Alfred Lombard, Constantin V, empereur des Romains (740-775) (Paris, 1902), 149-69.

  27. - Peter Charanis, "Observations on the Demography of the Byzantine Empire," Proceedings of the XIIIth International Congress of Byzantine Studies (Oxford, 1967), 445ff.

  28. - Ibid., 456, 457.

  29. - V. Laurent, La vie merveilleuse de saint Pierre d'Atroa (+ 837), Subsidia Hagiogyaphica, 29 (Brussels, 1956), 35.

  30. - On these legislations, see Charanis, "The Monastic Properties and the State in the Byzantine Empire," Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 4 (1948), 56f., 63f.

  31. - Ibid., 56f.

  32. - On all this, see Α. Soloviev, "Histoire du monastère russe au Mont-Athos," Byzantion, 8 (1933), 213-38.

  33. - On this, see Ε. Herman, "La 'stabilitas loci' nel Monachismo Bizantino," Orientalia Christiana Periodica, 21 (1955), 115-42.

  34. - Cedrenus-Scylitzes, op. cit. (supra, note 27), II; 108; II, 118-19; II, 241; II, 269; II, 31. Theophanes, op. cit. (supra, note 27), Ι, 478; Ι, 494; Ι, 481.

  35. - Cedrenus-Scylitzes, op. cit., II, 275; II, 263; II, 265. Theophanes Continuatus (Βοnn,1838), 365, 366. 38.- Cedrenus-Scylitzes, op. cit., II, 488; II, 497; II, 513; II, 593.

  36. - Theophanes, op. cit., Ι, 478; Ι, 494; Cedrenus-Scylitzes, op. cit., II, 31; II, 108; II, 241; II, 313; II, 497; II, 513; ΙI, 593. Theophanes Continuatus, op. cit., 365. What Theophilus had founded was a home for the aged, but the foundation was transformed into a monastery.

  37. - Ahrweiler, op. cit. (supra, note 3), 91 ff.

  38. - Amand de Mendieta, op. cit. (supra, note 6), 32f.; ef. Beck, op. cit. (supra, note 2), 220f.

  39. - Tafrali, Thessalonique au quatorzieme siecle, 99ff.; cf. Lascaris, op. cit. (supra, note 12), 319ff.

  40. - Janin, op. cit. (supra, note 11), 4.

  41. - Beck, op. cit. (supra, note 2), 209.

  42. - Menthon, op. cit. (supra, note 4), 157.

  43. - Ibid., 162.

  44. - Vita S. Theodori Studitae in Migne, Patrologia Graeca, 99, col. 145.

  45. - Ibid., 148.

  46. - D. Julien Leroy, "La v

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The Monk As An Element Of Byzantine Society (Conc.)

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  1. - D. Julien Leroy, "La vie quotidienne du moine studite," Irenikon, 27 (1954), 26 and note 4.

  2. - John Moschus, Pratum Spirituale in Migne, PG, 87a, col. 2997.

  3. - V. Laurent, La vie... (as in note 31, supra), 165-67.

  4. - Fr. Dvornik, Les légendes de Constantin et de Méthode vues de Byzance (Prague, 1933), 385 (chap. iv); cf. 211.

  5. - Meyer, op. cit. (supra, note 6), 114.

  6. - Louis Petit, Actes de l'Athos, Actes de Χenοphοn (= Appendix of Vizantiiskij Vremennik, 10 [1903]), 22.

  7. - Laurent, Le corpus... (as in note 3, supra), 149.

  8. - F. Miklosich and J. Muller, Acta et Diplomata Graeca Medii Aevi, 5 (Vienna; 1887), 311. 57.- Ibid., 337, 372.

  9. - Α. Dmitrievsky, Opisanie Liturgicheskikh Rukopisei, Ι. Typika (Kiev, 1895), 671 675ff.

  10. - L. Petit, "Typikon du monastère de la Kosmosotira près d'Aenos (1152)," Bulletin (Izvestija) de l'Institut archéologique Russe a Constantinople, 13 (1908), 21.

  11. - Dmitrievsky, op, cit., 1: 702-15; S. Eustratiades, "Τυπικόν της εν Κωνσταντινουπόλει μονής του αγίου μεγαλομάρτυρος Μάμαντος," `Ελληνικά, 1 (1928), 256-311. On the "charιsticium" defined as a grant of a monastery to a layman for the economic exploitation of its properties, see G. Ostrogorsky, History of the Byzantine State, trans. J. Hussey, 3rd ed. (Oxford, 1968), 372 f.; Charanis, "Monastic Properties..." (As in note 32, supra), 72 ff.; Ε. Herman; "Ricerche sulle istituzioni monastiche byzantine. Typika ktetorika, caristicari e monasteri 'liberi,"' OCP, 6 (1940), 293-375; Ρ. Lemerle, "Un aspect du rôle des monastères a Byzance: Les monastères donnes a des laïcs, les charisticaires," Comtes rendus de l'Acad. d. Inscr. et Belles-Lett. (1967), 9-28; Η. Ahrweiler, "Charisticariat et autres formes d'attribution de fondations pieuses au Xe-XIe siècles," Recueil des travaux de l'Institut d'études Byzantines, 10 (1967), 1-27.

  12. - Dmitrievsky, op. cit. (supra, note 58), 725.

  13. - Η. Gregoire, ed. and trans., "Imperatoris Michaelis Palaeologi de Vita Sua," Byzantion, 29-30 (1959-60), 473.

  14. - Dmitrievsky, op. cit. (supra, note 58), 780.

  15. - Gregoire, op. cit., 473-74.

  16. - Sp. Lampros, "Τα Πάτρια του Αγίου όρους," Νέος Ελληνομνήμων, 9 (1912), 159.

  17. - Ηippolyte Delehaye, Deux typica byzantins de l'époque des Paléologues (Brussels, 1921), 109. 67.- Ibid., 32.

  18. - V. Laurent, "Une nouvelle fondation monastique des Choumnos : La Nea Moni de Thessalonique," Revue des études byzantines, 13 (1955), 116-17. Cf. idem, "Écrits spirituels inédits de Macaire Choumnos (+ c.1382)," Ελληνικά, 14 (1955), 54, where (probable a mis print) the figure is sixteen.

  19. - Papadopoulos, οp. cit. (supra, note 9), 106. 70.- Ibid.,109.

  20. - Ibid., 109f. Cyril Mango called to my attention an inscription published in volume 33 (1914) of the Ελληνικός Φιλολογικός Σύλλογος εν Κωνσταντινουπόλει, which refers to a monastery located in Nicaea. The editor dates the inscription as of 591, but it no doubt belongs to a much later period. According to this inscription (p.138), this monastery had forty-two monks. This monastery has not been taken into account in the calculations, which follow. See also Postscriptum.

  21. - Vita S. Theodori Studitae (supra, note 47), cοl. 145.

  22. - Leroy, οp. cit. (supra, note 49), 27, note 3.

  23. - Irénée Hausherr, ed. and trans., Vie de Symeon le Nouveau Théologien (Rome, 1928) (= Orientalia Christiana, 12, no. 45), 46, 50.

  24. - Dmitrievsky, op. cit. (supra, note 58), 1: 711. 76.- Meyer, op. cit. (supra, note 6), 157.

  25. - Archives de l'Athos, Ιl. Actes de Kutlumus, ed. Paul Lemerle (1945), 81.

  26. - Janin, op. cit. (supra, note 11), 4.

  27. - Ibid., 5: "Si certains couvents ont compte plusieurs centaines de moines, comme celui de saint Jean-Baptiste de Studius, la plu part n'en avaient guerre que trente ou quarante."

  28. - Α. Μ. Schneider, "Die Bevolkerung Konstantinopels in XV. Jahrhundert," Nachrichten der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Götingen, Philologisch-historische Klasse (1949), 236-37. Ι took Schneider's figure in order to be on the conservative side. My own estimate, expressed some years ago, of the population of Constantinople at this time is 75,000. See Charanis, "Α Note on the Population and Cities of the Byzantine Empire in the Thirteenth Century," The Joshua Starr Memorial Volume (New York, 1953), 139.

  29. - According to one source, the population of Thessalonica at about 1423 numbered 40,000; according to another, it numbered 25,000. See Charanis, ibid., 141 and note 23. At the end of the fourteenth century, there still stood in Thessalonica and environs about nineteen monasteries. Cf. Tafrali, Tessadonique au quatorzième siècle, 99-102. Cf. Lascaris, op. cit. (supra, note 12), 320-27.

  30. - Charanis, "Observations..." (as in note 29 supra), 446. 83.- Ibid., 446f.

  31. - Idem, "Monastic Properties..." (as in note 32 supra), 56f.; 63f.

  32. - Xanthoudides, op. cit. (supra, note 3), 162.

  33. - Brief, sound accounts of Byzantine monasticism: Beck, op. cit. (supra, note 2), 120ff.; J. Μ. Hussey, "Byzantine Monasticism," in The Cambridge Medieval History, 4. The Byzantine Empire. Pt. II, Government, Church and Civilisation (Cambridge, 1967), 161-84; Olivier Rousseau, Le rôle important du monachisme dans l'Église d'Orient," in Il Monachesimo Orientale (= Orientalia Christiana Analecta, 153) (Rome, 1958), 31-55.

  34. - The mentality which permeates the Pratum Spirituale of John Moschus characterizes virtually all Byzantine hagiographical texts. Peter of Atroa (Laurent [supra, note 31], 119), to give one example, restored life to the dead. On saintly monks as healers, see Η. J. Magoulias, "The Lives of the Saints as Sources of Data for the History of Byzantine Medicine in the Sixth and Seventh Centuries," ΒΖ, 57 (1964), 127ff.; cf. Charanis, "Some Aspects of Daily Life in Byzantium," The Greek Orthodox Theological Review, 8 (1962-63), 66ff.

  35. - Genesius, Historia (Bonn, 1834), 8.

  36. - Magoulias, οp. cit. (supra, note 87), 127ff:; Ph. Koukoules; Βυζαντινών βίος και πολιτισμός (Athens, 1955), 6: 100ff. Cf. Charanis, "Some Aspects of Daily Life..." (as in note 87 supra), 66-67.

  37. - Louis Bréhier, "L'Enseignement classique et l'enseignement religieux a Byzance," Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 21 (1941), 59-60. The internal administration of monasteries as it related to the absence of privileges was not always democratic: Ε. Jeanselme and L. Oeconomos, "La Satire contre les Higoumenes," Byzantion, 1 (1924), 317-39; Koukoules, ibid, 6: 84ff.

  38. - Vita S. Joannicii a. Saba monacho, ed. J. Vanden Gheyn in ΑctaSS., Νοv., II, 1 (1894), 333-83. 97.- He was born in a village in Asia Minor of apparently obscure parents: Laurent, La vie... (as in note 31 supra), 69.

  39. - Vita S. Pauli Iunioris, ed. Η. Delehaye (= Th. Wiegand, Milet, Band III, Heft Ι: Der Latmos [Berlin, 1913]), 106. Paul and his brother Basil were relatives of Ioannikes; ibid., 105.

  40. - Petit, "Vie et office de saint Euthyme le jeune," Revue de l'Orient chrétien, 8, nο. 2 (1903), 168-205. 100.- Mango and Hawkins, op. cit. (supra, note 3), 123.

  41. - Sp. Lampros, "Η Ελλάς επί των Βυζαντινών," Νέος Ελληνομνήμων, 18 (1924), 199. 102.- Chr. Α. Papadopoulos, οp. cit. (supra, note 9),111.

  42. - John Moschus, op. cit. (supra, note 50), 3004-5, 3032-33; cf. Menthon, op. cit. (supra, note 4), 141.

  43. - Charanis, "Monastic Properties.... " (as in note 32 supra), 63. 105.- Vita S. Theodori Studitae (as in note 47 supra), 116.

  44. - Vitae, ed. C. de Βoor in Theophanes Chronographia, II (Leipzig, 1885), 4, 14, 28, 30.

  45. - P. Charanis, The Armenians in the Byzantine Empire (Lisbon, 1963), 25.

  46. - S. Halkin, "saint Antoine le Jeune et Péronnas le Vainqueur des Arabes en 863 (d'après un texte inédit)," Analecta Βοllandiana, 62 (1944), 188; cf. Menthon, op. cit. (supra, note 4), 141 ff.

  47. - Michael Ι (811-813).

  48. - Petit, "Vie de Saint Michel Maleinos...,"RevOrChr, 7 (1902), 550f.

  49. - Meyer, op. cit. (supra, note 6), 22.

  50. - Ibid., 103f.

  51. - A. Vogt, "Vie de S. Luc le Stylite," Analecta Βοllandiana, 28 (1909), 16-17; F. Vanderstuyf, "La vie de saint Luc le Stylite (897-979). Text grec édite et traduit," Patrologia Orientalis, 11 (1915), 200.- Η. Delehaye, Les saints stylites (= Subsidia Hagiographica, 14) (Brussels, 1923), 195-237; Menthon, op. cit. (supra, note 4) 121-25.

  52. - Hausherr, op. cit. (supra, note 74), 2, 4, 12.

  53. - For exemples: Theophanes, op. cit. (supra, note 27), Ι, 469, 479, 483; Cedrenus, op. cit. (supra, note 27), ΙΙ, 128, 172, 277, 281, 297, 302, 311, 342, 351, 478, 497, 511, 535, 550, 561.

  54. - R. Guilland, Études byzantines (Paris, 1959), 34-37. 117.- Ibid., 44-45.

  55. - Cf. Constantine Porphyrogenitus, De Administrando Imperio, ed. and trans. Gy. Moravcsik and R. J. Η. Jenkins, rev. ed., Dumbarton Oaks Texts, Ι (Washington, D. C., 1967), 70-72.

  56. - Psellos, op. cit. (supra, note 91), Renauld, Ι, 73; Sewter, 73. The language of the translation is that of Sewter.

  57. - Ibid., Renauld, II, 132; Sewter, 247; Cedrenus (as in note 27 supra), ΙΙ, 647ff. Cf. Guilland, op. cit., 34f.

  58. - Guilland ibid. 35; D. Μ. Nicol, The Byzantine Family of Kanκtakouzenos (Cantacuzenus) ca. 11001460: Α Genealogical and Prosopographical Study, Dumbarton Oaks Studies, ΧΙ (Washington, D. C.,1968), 86; V. Parisot, Cantacuzene homme d'état et historien... (Paris, 1845), 285ff.

  59. - Guilland, op. cit., 36f.

  60. - R. Janin, "Les monastères nationaux et provinciaux a Byzance (Constantinople et environs)," Échos d'Orient, 32, nο. 172 (Oct. - Dec., 1933), 429-38.

  61. - Ρ. Peeters "S. Hilarion d'Ibérie "AnalBoll, 32 (1913), 253; idem, "Histoires monastiques géorgiennes " ibid., 36-37 (1917-19), 17, 19; idem, "Un colophon géorgien de Thornik le moine," ibid., 50 (1932), 364, 365. Cf. Cedrenus (as in note 27 supra), ΙΙ, 487-88. Cf. D. Μ. Lang, Lives and Legends of the Georgian Saints... (London, 1956), 154ff.

  62. - P. Peeters, "Une sainte arménienne oubliée. Sainte Marie la Jeune (+ 902-903)" in his Recherches d'histoire et de philologie orientales (= Subsidia Hagiographica, 27) (Brussel, 1951), 1: 129-35.

  63. - De Sanctο Lazaro, mοnachο in Monte Galesio, ActaSS, Νον., 3 (1910), 542.

  64. - Petit, "Vie et offιce..." (as in note 99 supra), 184.

  65. - Louis Petit, "Typikon de Grégoire Pacourianos pour le monastère de Petritzos (Backovo) en Bulgarie," VizVrem, 11 (Suppl.1) (1904), 44.

  66. - This was most probably the reason why Paul of Latros and his brother Basil embraced monasticism. Cf. Vita S. Pauli... (as in note 98 supra), 106.

  67. - Vita S. Joannicii... (as in note 96 supra), 337-38.

  68. - Léon Clugnet, "Histoire de saint Nicolas, soldat et moine. Texte grec," RevOrChr, 7 (1902), 319-20. St. Luke, the new stylite, is said to have had the same experience: Vogt, op. cit. (supra, note 113), 8. Another high official is said to have become a monk as the result of the wrecking of the fleet which he commanded. Vita S. Arsenii, ed. Η. Delehaye, in Wiegand, op. cit. (supra, note 98), 171-72. 132.- Charanis, The Armenians... (as in note 107 supra), 25.

  69. - Menthon, op. cit. (supra, note 4), 135.

  70. - Petit, "Vie et office..." (as in note 99 supra), 177, 181.

  71. - Hausherr, op. cit. (supra, note 74), 12.

  72. - Alice Gardner, Theodore of Studium, his life and times (London, 1905), 14-17. 137.- Cedrenus (as in note 27 supra), II, 339.

  73. - As cited by G. Bardy, "Les origines des écoles monastiques en Orient," Mélanges Joseph de Ghellinck, Ι, Antiquité (Gembloux, 1951), 295.

  74. - Corpus Juris Civilis, 3: Novellae, ed. R. Schoell (Berlin, 1854), 669 (Νοv. CXXXIII, 2).

  75. - Theodore Studite, "Constitutiones Studitanae;" PG, 99, cοl. 1713; Dmitrievsky, Typika (as in note 58 supra) 1: 233. Ι used the translation of Nigel G. Wilson, "The Libraries of the Byzantine World," Greek-Roman and Byzantine Studies, 8 (1967), no. 1, 63.

  76. - Dmitrievsky, ibid., 255.

  77. - Bréhier, op. cit. (supra, note 95), 64, 65.

  78. - Ρ.Van Den Ven, La vie grecque de S. Jean le Psichaite, ext. Le Museon, N.S., 3 (1902), 17. Cf. Dvornik, op. cit. (supra, note 52), 29-30; Bury, op. cit. (supra, note 89), 440-41.

  79. - See, for instance, Meyer, op. cit. (supra, note 6), 129.

  80. - Wilson, op. cit., 53-80. Wilson used Ο. Volk, Die byzantinischen Klosterbibliotheken von Konstantinopel, Thessalonike und Kleinasien (Diss. Munich, 1955). Ι was not able to get access to this work.

  81. - Cedrenus (as in note 27 supra), 2: 170.

  82. - Mango and Hawkins, op. cit: (supra, note 3), 123. Ioannikes learned to read after he became a monk: Vita S. Joannicii... (as in note 96 supra), 340.

  83. - Nicephorus Gregoras, Byzantina historia (Βοnn, 1829), 292.

  84. - Petit, "Typikon du monastère..." (as in note 59 supra), 21. 150.- Gregoire; οp. cit. (supra, note 62), 173.

  85. - Dmitrievsky, Typika (as in note 58 supra), 1: 709-10.

  86. - The synod which examined the ascetic Theodore of Coloneia, whom John Tzimiskes had nominated to become patriarch of Antioch, found that he was completely ignorant of all profane learning, but was well instructed in things divine; Leo Deaconus, Historiae (Βοnn, 1828), 100-101.

  87. - Leroy, op. cit. (supra, note 49), 42; Bréhier, op. cit. (supra, note 95), 63-64.

  88. - Αnna Comnena, op. cit. (supra, note 93), Leib, 3: 214; Dawes, 409. The translation used is that of Dawes.

  89. - Historia Νοva, ed. L. Mendelssohn (Leipzig, 1887), 244; idem, Historia Νova: The Decline of Rome, trans. James Βuchanan and Harold Τ. Davis (San Antonio, 1967), 217. Ι use the words of the translators.

  90. - Demetrios J. Constantelos, Byzantine Philanthropy and Social Welfare (New Brunswick, 1968), xxviii, 356.

  91. - Dmitrievsky, Typika (as in note 58 supra), 682 ff. ; cf. Charanis, "Some Aspects of Daily Life ..." (as in note 87 supra), 68f.

  92. - V.G. Vasilievsky, "Materials for the Study of the Byzantine State,"Ζhurnal Ministerstva Narodnago Prosveshcheniia, 202 (St. Petersbuτg, 1879) (in Russian), 162. Ι consulted this work some time ago with the help of Mrs. Nathalie Scheffer.

  93. - On all this, see my study, "Monastic Properties ... " (as in note 32 supra), 51-118.

  94. - Bréhier, Le monde byzantin, 2. Les institutions de l'Empire byzantin (Paris, 1949), 483.

  95. - Leo IV is said to have been a friend of the monks: Theophanes, op. cit. (supra, note 115), Ι, 449. Petronas visited Latros to consult and obtain the blessings of the monks before launching his expedition against the Arabs: Cedrenus, op. cit. (supra, note 27), II, 163; Halkin, op. cit: (supra, note 108), 218-19. Leo VI shared his table with monks: Theophanes Continuatus, 365f. Romanus Ι is said to have honoured the monks: Cedrenus, ibid., Il, 320. Constantin VII visited Mt. Olympus and sought the blessings of the monks; Cedrenus, ibid., II, 337. Constantin Χ Ducas is referred to as a lover of monks: Cedrenus, II, 652. Reference has already been made to Michael IV as a lover of monks.

  96. - Miklosich and Muller, op. cit. (supra, note 56), 5: 276f. Cf. G. Α. Soteriou, Aι Mοναί της Ελλάδος και η εθνική αυτών δράσις κατά τους βυζαντινούς χρόνους (Athens, 1936).

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Selected Readings On Hesychasm

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Hesychasm: Selected Readings


[HALSALL: Introduction]

Hesychasm can be a complex issue to understand, but it is easier when one realizes it has three distinct but interrelated meanings.

(The word itself derives from "hesychia" which means stillness, quiet, cf 1 Thess 4:1, 2 Thess 3:12, 1 Tim 2:2, 1 Pet 3:4)

  1. A Method of Prayer

A psychosomatic method of prayer, probably dating back a long way in Byzantine monasticism [to St. Symeon the New Theologian in the 11th century, and earlier]. There is a possible, and speculative link to Buddhist methods [as with the rosary]. The method involved control of breathing, posture [perhaps including navel-gazing - hence the charge that the monks were "omphalapsychoi" - men (and it seems only to have involved men) with souls in their navels]. The intended effect of this prayer was the vision of light, often compared with the light seen at the Transfiguration at Mt. Tabor.

These methods, and in a sense monastic power, were attacked by Barlaam of Calabria [later in life Petrarch's Greek teacher] in the early 13th century.

  1. A Theological System: Palamism

In response a distinct theological response, also known as Hesychasm, but also as Palamism, was evolved by St. Gregory Palamas (d. 1359), an Athonite monk and later Archbishop of Thessalonica.

The essential point is that Palamas defended the reality of the monks' prayer experience. He did this by establishing a theological distinction analogous to that between Unity/Trinity with respect to God and nature/person with respect to Christ. Palamas said the God can be considered as, by nature, having an unknowable essence [a position required by the Neoplatonic Paradigm of an infinite and perfect being, by definition ineffable to finite beings] and [this is new, although Palamas would have denied it] knowable "energies".

One way of thinking about this is to say that for Palamas, in some sense, God's grace was part of God. These energies were knowable, and were what the monks were seeing during their prayer..

[In contrast Roman Catholic theologies of mystical experience, some of which is quite apophatic, have a real problem. Catholic theology also insists on God's ineffability, so how can mystical experience be understood? The one pope who insisted that the beatific vision was available on earth was castigated as being in error! Catholic writers vary between theories of some special grace, or are willing to assert that mystics do not experience God at all, but that God's grace give them a simulacrum of the experience - at least that was the argument of my Dominican friend, Fr. Aidan Nichols OP].

Although Palamas method was to use language of negation, I would not get too carried away with that, or modern mystagogy by some Orthodox writers. His project was in a sense related to that of Aquinas, who also faced the problem of the denial of possibility of saying anything about God. Aquinas answer was to develop [even if textbook theology took this too far] the notion of "analogy of being..

Palamite writers specifically call the process of reception of grace ["sanctification" to Catholics, impossible according to classical Protestantism] "theosis" which means "divinization" in reference to the words of Athanasios of Alexandria that "God became man that man might become God".

Palamas' theology represents intellectual footwork of a high order - completely analogous to that of the fourth and fifth century theological and Christological debate. The eventual adoption of Palamite theology and its significance is not always realized. One sometimes finds, for instance, Orthodox writers who accuse the Latins of altering the faith by adding the "filioque", but who do not recognize that the Orthodox also "developed" their theology just as much, perhaps more. [The whole issue was avoided at the Council of Florence, but by the late 19th and 20th centuries, this had become an area of dispute between Orthodox and Catholics, see for instance the very well informed, but incredibly hostile, writings of Martin Jugie, handily available in French in the Dictionaire de theologie Catholique.]

  1. A Byzantine Political Grouping

Palamas theology, which brought about a huge conflict, got involved in Byzantine internal politics, which are particularly complex in the 14th century. There ended up being a Hesychast party, whose members might be neither monks nor theologians, and anti-Hesychasts who were extremely pious and even monastically inclined. eventually in series of councils in the mid-fourteenth century Palamite theology was adopted as the official position of the Orthodox Church.

This represented a victory both for the particular theology of Palamas, and for the monastic, especially Athonite, party in general. The result was a veritable monastic takeover of the Church - all later patriarchs, and many later bishops.

In effect this made the church stronger: and this same monastic, or Hesychast, party was responsible, at least if you take John Meyendorff's position, for pushing the spread of Orthodoxy in the Slavic world, along with its particular theology of prayer, and prayer directed at mystical experience. [This theme remained strong in Russia.]

The Hesychasts were not, in fact, hostile to the general population: the stress in its prayer methods on didactic repetition, and on physical approaches to grace, along with a new stress on the liturgy, stood the Orthodox church well under Turkish and Tsarist domination when preaching, as seen in Protestantism, was not possible due both to low education levels and state prohibition.

So in the widest perspective "Hesychasm" can be seen as the mystical aesthetic of the Orthodox church in its later Byzantine and post-Byzantine periods.

In sum, there is not one definition of "Hesychasm", rather a variety of meanings related to mystical prayer, Palamite theology, Byzantine politics and later Orthodox and monastic aesthetics.

The texts which follow are from http://www.digiserve.com/mystic/Christi ... kunda.html, A website on mystical experience in many different religions. They represent the prayer tradition of Orthodoxy.

The Quotations

  1. Pervading
  2. Detachment and Renunciation
  3. Without Preferences
  4. Thinking about no thing
  5. Devotion
  6. Humility
  7. Sacred invocation

PERVADING
St. Symeon in Practical & Theological Discourses, 1.1:
When men search for God with their bodily eyes they find Him nowhere, for He is invisible. But for those who ponder in the Spirit He is present everywhere. He is in all, yet beyond all.

DETACHMENT AND RENUNCIATION

It is recorded somewhere of Amma Sarah that once as she was going along the road with some nuns a groups of monks came from the other direction. As they came near the monks discreetly crossed to the other side so as not to confront the nuns. Amma Sarah observed, "If you were true monks you would not have noticed that we are women."
"On Guarding the Intellect", taken from the Philokalia:

Abba Isaiah the Solitary:

  1. Shut all the gates of your soul, that is the senses, so as to not be lured astray. When the intellect sees that it is not dominated by anything, it prepares itself for immortality, gathering its senses together and forming them into one body.
    8-9. If your intellect is freed from all hope in things visible, this is a sign that sin has died in you. If your intellect is freed, the breach between it and God is eliminated.

St. Isaiah the Solitary:

  1. The first virtue is detachment, that is, death in relation to every person or thing. This produces desire for God, and this in turn gives rise to the anger that is in accordance with nature, and that flares up against all the tricks of the enemy. Then the fear of God will establish itself within us, and through this fear love will be made manifest.

Saying of the Desert Fathers, The Alphabetical Collection, translated by Sr. Benedicta Ward:

Amma Syncletica:

  1. Amma Syncletica said, "There are many who live in the mountains and behave as if they were in the town, and they are wasting their time. It is possible to be a solitary in one's mind while living in a crowd, and it is possible for one who is a solitary to live in the crowd of his own thoughts."

Amma Sarah:

  1. Some monks of Scetis (an area of many hermits in the Egyptian desert) came one day to visit Amma Sarah. She offered them a small basket of fruit. They left the good fruit and ate e bad. So she said to them, "You are truemonks of Scetis."

WITHOUT PREFERENCES

Evagrios the Solitary, On Prayer, in the Philokalia
23 If you patiently accept what comes, you will always pray with joy.

THINKING ABOUT NO THING

Evagrios Ponticus, "On Prayer 61," in the Philokalia
Prayer is the laying aside of thoughts.

St. Isaac the Syrian in the Sebastian Brock translation of Homily 64
True wisdom is gazing at God. Gazing at God is silence of the thoughts. Stillness of mind is tranquillity which comes from discernment.

John the Solitary in On Prayer:
For God is silence, and in silence is he sung by means of that psalmody which is worthy of Him. I am not speaking of the silence of the tongue, for if someone merely keeps his tongue silent, without knowing how to sing in mind and spirit, then he is simply unoccupied and becomes filled with evil thoughts: ...There is a silence of the tongue, there is a silence of the whole body, there is a silence of the soul, there is the silence of the mind, and there is the silence of the spirit.

St. Isaac the Syrian writes that we pray with words until the words are cut off and we are left is a state of wonder.

Evagrios the Solitary, "On Prayer," in the Philokalia
If, then, you wish to behold and commune with Him who is beyond sense-perception and beyond concept, you must free yourself from every impassioned thought. Persevere with patience in your prayer, and repulse the cares and doubts that arise within you. Try to make your intellect deaf and dumb during prayer, you will then be able to pray.

Dionysius the Areopagite in Mystical Theology, Chapter 1:
In diligent exercise of mystical contemplation, leave behind the senses and the operations of the intellect, and all things sensible and intellectual, and all things in the world of being and non-being, that you may arise by unknowing towards the union, as far as is attainable, with Him who transcends all being and all knowledge. For by the unceasing and absolute renunciation of yourself and of all things you may be borne on high, through pure and entire self-abnegation, into the superessential Radiance of the Divine Darkness.

Abbot Vasilios of Iveron Monastery in Hymn of Entry, p. 92:
by receiving a new sense of taste and a new form of knowledge in "stillness" and in giving himself over to God totally. Be still and know. Be still: remain in a state of spiritual wakefulness, with your prospects and your senses open, to hear what God's will is at each moment.

Abbot Vasilios of Iveron Monastery in Hymn of Entry, p. 103
Those who have been cleansed through following the path of stillness (hesychis) are counted worthy to see things invisible..., undergoing, as it were, the way of negation and not forming ideas about it. (citing St Gregory Palamas)

DEVOTION

St. Antony the Great once was living in the desert. The demons were giving him a hard time, beat him up, left him in a coma. Eventually folks found the body and carried him to the church, planning a funeral in the morning. In the middle of the night he got up and went back to his cave. And immediately the mean and nasties were at him again. Finally he called out in desperation, "Lord, help me!" and immediately Christ appeared and the demons scattered. "Lord, where were you when I needed you?" "I was always here, but I wanted to see what you were made of. As soon as you called (rather than relying on your own struggle) I am present."

Evagrios the Solitary, "On Prayer," in the Philokalia
The state of prayer is one of dispassion, which by virtue of the most intense love transports to the noetic realm the intellect that longs for wisdom.

HUMILITY

Saying of the Desert Fathers, The Alphabetical Collection, translated by Sr. Benedicta Ward:

Amma Syncletica:
11....She also said, Choose the meekness of Moses and you will find your heart which is a rock changed into a spring of water.

  1. She also said, "Just as a treasure that is exposed loses its value, so a virtue which is known vanishes; just as wax melts when it is near fire, so the soul is destroyed by praise and loses all the results of its labor."
  2. She also said, "Just as one cannot build a ship unless one has some nails, so it is impossible to be saved without humility."

Amma Theodora:
The same Amma said that a teacher ought to be a stranger to the desire for domination, vain-glory, and pride; one should not be able to fool him by flattery, nor blind him by gifts, nor conquer him by the stomach, nor dominate him by anger; but he should be patient, gentle and humble as far as possible; he must be tested and without partisanship, full of concern and a lover of souls.
She also said that neither asceticism, nor vigils nor any kind of suffering are able to save, only true humility can do that.

There was an anchorite (hermit) who was able to banish demons; and he asked them:
Hermit: What make you go away? Is it fasting?
The demons: We do not eat or drink.
Hermit: Is it vigils?
The demons: We do not sleep.
Hermit: Is it separation from the world?
The demons: We live in the deserts.
Hermit: What power sends you away then?
The demons: Nothing can overcome us, but only humility. Do you see how humility is victorious over the demons.?

SACRED INVOCATION

Invoke the Name of God, that's all we can do on our side, until God responds and leaves us wondering in silence. But that moment of silence changes all the sounds. The moment of divine light-filled darkness changes our perception of all colors.

THE TEACHER

Abbot George of Gregoriou Monastery on Mt. Athos in Eros of Repentance, pp. 18-19
The holy elders instruct the younger men not by calling them to imitate their virtues, but by showing them how much they feel thenselves to be sinners and unworthy. Athonites do not pretend to be good..A characteristic of the monk who lives in repentance is his attribution of every good thing to God...Those who possess the spirit of repentance and humility will normally withdraw from giving advice.

Saying of the Desert Fathers, The Alphbetical Collection, translated by Sr. Benedicta Ward:

Amma Syncletica:

  1. She also said, "It is dangerous for anyone to teach who has not first been trained in the practical life. For if someone who owns a ruined house receives guests there, he does them harm because of the dilapidation of his dwelling. It is the same in the case of someone who has not first built an interior dwelling; he causes loss tothose who come. By words one may convert them to salvation, but by evil behaviour, one injures them."

Amma Theodora:
The same amma said that a teacher ought to be a stranger to the desire for domination, vain-glory, and pride; one should not be able to fool him by flattery, nor blind him by gifts, nor conquer him by the stomach, nor dominate him by anger; but he should be patient, gentle and humble as far as possible; he must be tested and without partisanship, full of concern and a lover of souls.

THE LIGHT

St. Symeon the New Theologian in The Catechetical Discourses XXII
During the day he managed a patrician's household and daily went to the palace, engaged in worldly affairs, so that no one was aware of his pursuits. One day, as he stood and recited, "God, have mercy upon me, a sinner" Lk. 18:13), uttering it with his mind rather than his mouth, suddenly a flood of divine radiance appeared from above and filled all the room. As this happened the young man lost all awareness [of his surroundings]and forgot that he was in a house or that he was under a roof. He saw nothing but light all around him and did not know if he was standing on the ground. He was not afraid of falling: he was not concerned with the world nor did anything pertaining to men and corporeal beings enter his mind. Instead, he seemed to himself to have turned into light. Oblivious of all the world he was filled with tears and with ineffable joy and gladness. His mind then ascended to heaven and beheld yet another light, which was clearer than that which was close at hand. In a wonderful manner there appeared to him standing close to that light, the saint of whom we have spoken, the old man equal to angels, who had given him the commandment and the book. ...

St. Symeon the New Theologian in Catechetical Discourse XVI
So I entered the place where I usual prayed and mindful of the words of the holy man I began to say, "Holy God". At once I was so greatly moved to tears and loving desire for God that I would be unable to describe in words the joy and the delight I then felt. I fell prostrate on the ground, and at once I saw,and behold, a great light was immaterially shining on me and seized hold of my whole mind and soul, so that I was struck with amazement at the unexpected marvel and I was, as it were, in ecstasy. Moreover I forgot the place where I stood, who I and where and could only cry out, 'Lord, have mercy,' so that when I came to myself I discovered I was reciting this. But who it was that was speaking, and who moved my tongue, I do not know - only God knows.

St. Gregory Palamas in The Triads in Defence of the Hesychasts, Book3, Chapter 1, Paragraphs 29:
Deification is an enhypostatic and direct illumination which has no beginning, but appears in those worthy as something exceeding their comprehension. It is indeed mystical union with God, beyond intellect and reason, in the age when creatures will no longer know corruption.

St. Gregory Palamas in The Triads in Defence of the Hesychasts, Book 3, Chapter 1, Paragraphs 15:
Moreover, the transformation of our human nature, its deification and transfiguration - were these not accomplished in Christ from the start, from the moment in which He assumedour nature? Thus He was divine before, but He bestowed at thetime of His Transfiguration a divine power upon the eyes of the apostles and enabled them to look up and see for themselves.
This light, then was not a hallucination but will remain for eternity, and has existed from the beginning.

UNION

Abbot Vasilios of Iveron Monastery in Hymn of Entry, p. 102:
The soul can attain to the secrecy which is in God, where the mystery of unity beyond understanding and speech is celebrated, only when it has gone not only beyond the categories of vice and ignorance and of falsehood and wickedness - the vices which are opposite to virtue and knowledge and truth and goodness - but even, if one may say this, beyond the categories of virtue itself and of knowledge and truth and goodness as they are known to us. In the Kingdom of the Spirit of God, which lies beyond our senses and intellectual concepts and virtues, everything exists in a different way. It exists truly. (citing St. Maximos the Confessor)


This text is part of the Internet Medieval Source Book. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts related to medieval and Byzantine history.

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Paul Halsall June 1997
halsall@murray.fordham.edu

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