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JOHN CASSIAN
THE TWELVE BOOKS
ON THE INSTITUTES OF THE COENOBIA
AND THE REMEDIES
FOR THE EIGHT PRINCIPAL FAULTS
BOOK IV
OF THE INSTITUTES OF THE RENUNCIANTS.
CHAPTER I.
Of the training of those who renounce this world, and of the way in which
those are taught among the monks of Tabenna and the Egyptians who are received
into the monasteries,
FROM the canonical system of Psalms and prayers which ought to be observed
in the daily services throughout the monasteries, we pass, in the due course
of our narrative, to the training. of one who renounces this world endeavouring
first, as well as we can, to embrace, in a short account, the terms on which
those who desire to turn to the Lord can be received in the monasteries; adding
some things from the rule of the Egyptians, some from that of the monks of
Tabenna,(1) whose monastery in the Thebaid is better filled as regards numbers,
as it is stricter in the rigour of its system, than all others, for there are
in it more than five thousand brethren under the rule of one Abbot; and the
obedience with which the whole number of monks is at all times subject to one
Elder is what no one among us would render to another even for a short time,
or would demand from him.
CHAPTER II.
Of the way in which among them men remain in the monasteries even to extreme
old age.
And I think that before anything else we ought to touch on their untiring
perseverance and humility and subjection,-- how it lasts for so long, and by
what system it is formed, through which they remain in the monasteries till
they are bent double with old age; for it is so great that we cannot recollect
any one who joined our monasteries keeping it up unbroken even for a year:
so that when we have seen the beginning of their renunciation of the world,
we shall understand how it came about that, starting from such a commencement,
they reached such a height of perfection.
CHAPTER III.
Of the ordeal by which one who is to be received in the monastery is tested.
One, then, who seeks to be admitted to the discipline of the monastery is
never received before he gives, by lying outside the doors for ten days or
even longer, an evidence of his perseverance and desire, as well as of humility
and patience. And when, prostrate at the feet of all the brethren that pass
by, and of set purpose repelled and scorned by all of them, as if he was wanting
to enter the monastery not for the sake of religion but because he was obliged;
and when, too, covered with many insults and affronts, he has given a practical
proof of his steadfastness, and has shown what he will be like in temptations
by the way he has borne the disgrace; and when, with the ardour of his soul
thus ascertained, he is admitted, then they enquire with the utmost care whether
he is contaminated by a single coin from his former possessions clinging to
him. For they know that he cannot stay for long under the discipline of the
monastery, nor ever learn the virtue of humility and obedience, nor be content
with the poverty and difficult life of the monastery, if he knows that ever
so small a sum of money has been kept hid; but, as soon as ever a disturbance
arises on some occasion or other, he will at once dart off from the monastery
like a stone from a sling, impelled to this by trusting in that sum of money.(2)
CHAPTER IV.
The reason why those who are received in the monastery are not allowed to
bring anything in with them.
Any for these reasons they do not agree to take from him money to be used
even for the good of the monastery: First, in case he may be puffed up with
arrogance, owing to this offering, and so not deign to put himself on a level
with the poorer brethren; and next, lest he fail through this pride of his
to stoop to the humility of Christ, and so, when he cannot hold out under the
discipline of the monastery, leave it, and afterwards, when he has cooled down,
want in a bad spirit to receive and get back--not without loss to the monastery--what
he had contributed in the early days of his renunciation, when he was aglow
with spiritual fervour. And that this rule should always be kept they have
been frequently taught by many instances. For in some monasteries where they
are not so careful some who have been received unreservedly have afterwards
tried most sacrilegiously to demand a return of that which they had contributed
and which had been spent on God's work.
CHAPTER V.
The reason why those who give up the world, when they are received in the
monasteries, must lay aside their own clothes and be clothed in others by the
Abbot.
Wherefore each one on his admission is stripped of all his former possessions,
so that he is not allowed any longer to keep even the clothes which he has
on his back: but in the council of the brethren he is brought forward into
the midst and stripped of his own clothes, and clad by the Abbot's hands in
the dress of the monastery, so that by this he may know not only that he has
been despoiled of all his old things, but also that he has laid aside all worldly
pride, and come down to the want and poverty of Christ, and that he is now
to be supported not by wealth sought for by the world's arts, nor by anything
reserved from his former state of unbelief, but that he is to receive out of
the holy and sacred funds of the monastery his rations for his service; and
that, as he knows that he is thence to be clothed and fed and that he has nothing
of his own, he may learn, nevertheless, not to be anxious about the morrow,
according to the saying of the Gospel, and may not be ashamed to be on a level
with the poor, that is with the body of the brethren, with whom Christ was
not ashamed to be numbered, and to call him-self their brother, but that rather
he may glory that he has been made to share the lot of his own servants.(1)
CHAPTER VI.
The reason why the clothes of the renunciants with which they joined the monastery
are preserved by the steward.
But those clothes, which he laid aside, are consigned to the care of the steward
and kept until by different sorts of temptations and trials they can recognize
the excellence of his progress and life and endurance. And if they see that
he can continue therein as time goes on, and remain in that fervour with which
he began, they give them away to the poor. But if they find that he has been
guilty of any fault of murmuring, or of even the smallest piece of disobedience,
then they strip off from him the dress of the monastery in which he had been
clad, and reclothe him in his old garments which had been confiscated, and
send him away.(2) For it is not right for him to go away with those which he
had received, nor do they allow any one to be any longer dressed in them if
they have seen him once grow cold in regard to the rule of their institution.
Wherefore, also, the opportunity of going out openly is not given to any one,
unless he escapes like a runaway slave by taking advantage of the thickest
shades of night, or is judged unworthy of this order and profession and lays
aside the dress of the monastery and is expelled with shame and disgrace before
all the brethren.
CHAPTER VII.
The reason why those who are admitted to a monastery are not permitted to
mix at once with the congregation of the brethren, but are first committed
to the guest house.
When, then, any one has been received and proved by that persistence of which
we have spoken, and, laying aside his own garments, has been clad in those
of the monastery, he is not allowed to mix at once with the congregation of
the brethren, but is given into the charge of an Elder, who lodges apart not
far from the entrance of the monastery, and is en-trusted with the care of
strangers and guests, and bestows all his diligence in receiving them kindly.
And when he has served there for a whole year without any complaint, and has
given evidence of service towards strangers,(5) being thus initiated in the
first rudiments of humility and patience, and by long practice in it acknowledged,
when he is to be admitted from this into the congregation of the brethren he
is handed over to another EIder, who is placed over ten of the juniors, who
are entrusted to him by the Abbot, and whom he both teaches and governs in
accordance with the arrangement which we read of in Exodus as made by Moses.(1)
CHAPTER VIII.
Of the practices in which the juniors are first exercised that they may become
proficient in overcoming all their desires.
And his anxiety and the chief part of his instruction--through which the juniors
brought to him may be able in due course to mount to the greatest heights of
perfection--will be to teach him first to conquer his own wishes; and, anxiously
and diligently practising him in this, he will of set purpose contrive to give
him such orders as he knows to be contrary to his liking; for, taught by many
examples, they say that a monk, and especially the younger ones, cannot bridle
the desire of his concupiscence unless he has first learnt by obedience to
mortify his wishes. And so the lay it down that the man who has not first learnt
to overcome his desires cannot possibly stamp out anger or sulkiness, or the
spirit of fornication; nor can he preserve true humility of heart, or lasting
unity with the brethren, or a stable and continuous concord; nor remain for
any length of time in the monastery.
CHAPTER IX.
The reason why the juniors are enjoined not to keep back any of their thoughts
from the senior.
By these practices, then, they hasten to impress and instruct those whom they
are training with the alphabet, as it were, and first syllables in the direction
of perfection, as they can clearly see by these whether they are grounded in
a false and imaginary or in a true humility. And, that they may easily arrive
at this, they are next taught not to conceal by a false shame any itching thoughts
in their hearts, but, as soon as ever such arise, to lay them bare to the senior,
and, in forming a judgment about them, not to trust anything to their own discretion,
but to take it on trust that that is good or bad which is considered and pronounced
so by the examination of the senior. Thus it results that our cunning adversary
cannot in any way circumvent a young and inexperienced monk, or get the better
of his ignorance, or by any craft deceive one whom he sees to be protected
not by his own discretion but by that of his senior, and who cannot be persuaded
to hide from his senior those suggestions of his which like fiery darts he
has shot into his heart; since the devil, subtle as he is, cannot ruin or destroy
a junior unless he has enticed him either through pride or through shame to
conceal his thoughts. For they lay it down as an universal and clear proof
that a thought is from the devil if we are ashamed to disclose it to the senior.(2)
CHAPTER X.
How thorough is the obedience of the juniors even in those things which are
matters of common necessity.
Next, the rule is kept with such strict obedience that, without the knowledge
and permission of their superior, the juniors not only do not dare to leave
their cell but on their own authority do not venture to satisfy their common
and natural needs. And so they are quick to fulfil without any discussion all
those things that are ordered by him, as if they were commanded by God from
heaven;(3) so that sometimes, when impossibilities are commanded them, they
undertake them with such faith and devotion as to strive with all their powers
and without the slightest hesitation to fulfil them and carry them out; and
out of reverence for their senior they do not even consider whether a command
is an impossibility.(4) But of their obedience I omit at present to speak more
particularly, for we propose to speak of it in the proper place a little later
on, with instances of it, if through your prayers the Lord carry us safely
through. We now proceed to the other regulations, passing over all account
of those which cannot be imposed on or kept in the monasteries in this country,
as we promised to do in our Preface; for instance, how they never use woollen
garments, but only cotton, and these not double, changes of which each superior
gives out to the ten monks under his care when he sees that those which they
are wearing are dirty.
CHAPTER XI.
The kind of food which is considered the greater delicacy by them.
I pass over, too, that difficult and sublime sort of self-control, through
which it is considered the greatest luxury if the plant called cherlock,(1)
prepared with salt and steeped in water, is set on the table for the repast
of the brethren; and many other things like this, which in this country neither
the climate nor the weakness of our constitution would permit. And I shall
only follow up those matters which cannot be interfered with by any weakness
of the flesh or local situation, if only no weakness of mind or coldness of
spirit gets rid of them.
CHAPTER XII.
How they leave off every kind of work at the sound of some one knocking at
the door, in their eagerness to answer at once.
And so, sitting in their cells and devoting their energies equally to work
and to meditation, when they hear the sound of some one knocking at the door
and striking on the cells of each, summoning them to prayer or some work, every
one eagerly dashes out from his cell, so that one who is practising the writer's
art, although he may have just begun to form a letter, does not venture to
finish it, but runs out with the utmost speed, at the very moment when the
sound of the knocking reaches his ears, without even waiting to finish the
letter he has begun; but, leaving the lines of the letter incomplete, he aims
not at abridging and saving his labour, but rather hastens with the utmost
earnestness and zeal to attain the virtue of obedience, which they put not
merely before manual labour and reading and silence and quietness in the cell,
but even before all virtues, so that they consider that everything should be
postponed to it, and are content to undergo any amount of inconvenience if
only it may be seen that they have in no way neglected this virtue.(2)
CHAPTER XIII.
How wrong it is considered for any one to say that anything, however trifling,
is his own.
Among
their other practices I fancy that it is unnecessary even to mention this
virtue, viz., that no
one is
allowed to possess a box or basket as his
special property, nor any such thing which he could keep as his own and secure
with his own seal, as we are well aware that they are in all respects stripped
so bare that they have nothing whatever except their shirt, cloak, shoes, sheepskin,
and rush mat;(3) for in other monasteries as well, where some indulgence and
relaxation is granted, we see that this rule is still most strictly kept, so
that no one ventures to say even in word that anything is his own: and it is
a great offence if there drops from the mouth of a monk such an expression
as "my book," " my tablets," " my pen," " my
coat," or "my shoes;" and for this he would have to make satisfaction
by a proper penance, if by accident some such expression escaped his lips through
thoughtlessness or ignorance.
CHAPTER XIV.
How, even if a large sum of money is amassed by the labour of each, still
no one may venture to exceed the moderate limit of what is appointed as adequate.
And although each one of them may bring in daily by his work and labour so
great a return to the monastery that he could out of it not only satisfy his
own moderate demands but could also abundantly supply the wants of many, yet
he is no way puffed up, nor does he flatter himself on account of his toil
and this large gain from his labour, but, except two biscuits,(4) which are
sold there for scarcely threepence, no one thinks that he has a right to anything
further. And among them there is nothing (and I am ashamed to say this, and
heartily wish it was unknown in our own monasteries) which is claimed by any
of them, I will not say in deed but even in thought, as his special property.
And though he believes that the whole granary of the monastery forms his substance,
and, as lord of all, devotes his whole care and energy to it all, yet nevertheless,
in order to maintain that excellent state of want and poverty which he has
secured and which he strives to preserve to the very last in unbroken perfection,
he regards himself as a foreigner and an alien to them all, so that he conducts
himself as a stranger and a sojourner in this world, and considers himself
a pupil of the monastery and a servant instead of imagining that he is lord
and master of anything.
CHAPTER XV.
Of the excessive desire of possession among us.
To this
what shall we wretched creatures say, who though living in Coenobia and established
under
the government
and care of an Abbot yet carry about our
own keys, and trampling under foot all feeling of shame and disgrace which
should spring from our profession, are not ashamed actually to wear openly
upon our fingers rings with which to seal what we have stored up; and in whose
case not merely boxes and baskets, but not even chests and closets are sufficient
for those things which we collect or which we reserved when we forsook the
world; and who sometimes get so angry over trifles and mere nothings (to which
however we lay claim as if they were our own) that if any one dares to lay
a finger on any of them, we are so filled with rage against him that we cannot
keep the wrath of our heart from being expressed on our lips and in bodily
excitement. But, passing by our faults and treating with silence those things
of which it is a shame even to speak, according to this saying: "My mouth
shall not speak the deeds of men,"(1) let us in accordance with the method
of our narration which we have begun proceed to those virtues which are practised
among them, and which we ought to aim at with all earnestness; and let us briefly
and hastily set down the actual rules and systems that afterwards, coming to
some of the deeds and acts of the elders which we propose carefully to preserve
for recollection, we may support by the strongest testimonies what we have
set forth in our treatise, and still further confirm everything that we have
said by examples and instances from life.
CHAPTER XVI.
On the rules for various rebukes.
If then
any one by accident breaks an earthenware jar (which they call "baucalis "),
he can only expiate his carelessness by public penance; and when all the brethren
are assembled for service he must lie on the ground and ask for absolution
until the service of the prayers is finished; and will obtain it when by the
Abbot's command he is bidden to rise from the ground. The same satisfaction
must be given by one who when summoned to some work or to the usual service
comes rather late, or who when singing a Psalm hesitates ever so little. Similarly
if he answers unnecessarily or roughly or impertinently, if he is careless
in carrying out the services enjoined to him, if he makes a slight complaint,
if preferring reading to work or obedience he is slow in performing his appointed
duties, if when service is over he does not make haste to go back at once to
his cell, if he stops for ever so short a time with some one else, if he goes
anywhere else even for a moment, if he takes any one else by the hand, if he
ventures to discuss anything however small with one who is not the joint-occupant
of his cell,(2) if he prays with one who is suspended from prayer, if he sees
any of his relations or friends in the world and talks with them without his
senior, if he tries to receive a letter from any one or to write back without
his Abbot's leave.(3) To such an extent does spiritual censure proceed and
in such matters and faults like these. But as for other things which when indiscriminately
committed among us are treated by us too as blameworthy, viz.: open wrangling,
manifest contempt, arrogant contradictions, going out from the monastery freely
and without check, familiarity with women, wrath, quarrelling, jealousies,
disputes, claiming something as one's own property, the infection of covetousness,
the desire and acquisition of unnecessary things which are not possessed by
the rest of the brethren, taking food between meals and by stealth, and things
like these--they are dealt with not by that spiritual censure of which we spoke,
but by stripes; or are atoned for by expulsion.
CHAPTER XVII.
Of those who introduced the plan that the holy Lessons should be read in the
Coenobia while the brethren are eating, and of the strict silence which is
kept among the Egyptians.
BUT we have been informed that the plan that, while the brethren are eating,
the holy lessons should be read in the Coenobia did not originate in the Egyptian
system but in the Cappadocian. And there is no doubt that they meant to establish
it not so much for the sake of the spiritual exercise as for the sake of putting
a stop to unnecessary and idle conversation, and especially discussions, which
so often arise at meals; since they saw that these could not be prevented among
them in any other way.(1) For among the Egyptians and especially those of Tabenna
so strict a silence is observed by all that when so large a number of the brethren
has sat down together to a meal, no one ventures to talk even in a low tone
except the dean, who however if he sees that anything is wanted to be put on
or taken off the table, signifies it by a sign rather than a word. And while
they are eating, the rule of this silence is so strictly kept that with their
hoods drawn down over their eyelids (to prevent their roving looks having the
opportunity of wandering inquisitively) they can see nothing except the table,
and the food that is put on it, and which they take from it; so that no one
notices what another is eating.(2)
CHAPTER XVIII.
How it is against the rule for any one to take anything to eat or drink except
at the common table.
In between their regular meals in common they are especially careful that
no one should presume to gratify his palate with any food:(3) so that when
they are walking casually through gardens or orchards, when the fruit hanging
enticingly on the trees not only knocks against their breasts as they pass
through, but is also lying on the ground and offering itself to be trampled
under foot, and (as it is all ready to be gathered) would easily be able to
entice those who see it to gratify their appetite, and by the chance offered
to them and the quantity of the fruit, to excite even the most severe and abstemious
to long for it; still they consider it wrong not merely to taste a single fruit,
but even to touch one with the hand, except what is put on the table openly
for the common meal of all, and supplied publicly by the steward's catering
through the service of the brethren, for their enjoyment.
CHAPTER XIX.
How throughout Palestine and Mesopotamia a daily service is undertaken by
the brethren.
In order that we may not appear to omit any of the Institutes of the Coenobia
I think that it should be briefly mentioned that in other countries as well
there is a daily service undertaken by the brethren. For throughout the whole
of Mesopotamia, Palestine, and Cappadocia and all the East the brethren succeed
one another in turn every week for the performance of certain duties, so that
the number serving is told off according to the whole number of monks in the
Coenobium. And they hasten to fulfil these duties with a zeal and humility
such as no slave bestows on his service even to a most harsh and powerful master;
so that not satisfied only with these services which are rendered by canonical
rule, they actually rise by night in their zeal and relieve those whose special
duty this is; and secretly anticipating them try to finish those duties which
these others would have to do. But each one who undertakes these weeks is on
duty and has to serve until supper on Sunday, and when this is done, his duty
for the whole week is finished, so that, when all the brethren come together
to chant the Psalms (which according to custom they sing before going to bed)
those whose turn is over wash the feet of all in turn, seeking faithfully from
them the reward of this blessing for their work during the whole week, that
the prayers offered up by all the brethren together may accompany them as they
fulfil the command of Christ. the prayer, to wit, that intercedes for their
ignorances and for their sins committed through human frailty, and may commend
to God the complete service of their devotion like some rich offering. And
so on Monday after the Martin hymns they hand over to others who take their
place the vessels and utensils with which they have ministered, which these
receive and keep with the utmost care and anxiety, that none of them may be
injured or destroyed, as they believe that even for the smallest vessels they
must give an account, as sacred things, not only to a present steward, but
to the Lord, if by chance any of them is injured through their carelessness.
And what limit there is to this discipline, and what fidelity and care there
is in keeping it up, you may see from one instance which I will give as an
example. For while we are anxious to satisfy that fervour of yours through
which you ask for a full account of everything, and want even what you know
perfectly well to be repeated to you in this treatise, we are also afraid of
exceeding the limits of brevity.(1)
CHAPTER XX.
Of the three lentil beans which the Steward found.
During the week of a certain brother the steward passing by saw lying on the
ground three lentil beans which had slipped out of the hand of the monk on
duty for the week(2) as he was hastily preparing them for cooking, together
with the water in which he was washing them; and immediately he consulted the
Abbot on the subject; and by him the monk was adjudged a pilferer and careless
about sacred property, and so was suspended from prayer. And the offence of
his negligence was only pardoned when he had atoned for it by public penance.
For they believe not only that they themselves are not their own, but also
that everything that they possess is consecrated to the Lord. Wherefore if
anything whatever has once been brought into the monastery they hold that it
ought to be treated with the utmost reverence as an holy thing. And they attend
to and arrange everything with great fidelity, even in the case of things which
are considered unimportant or regarded as common and paltry, so that if they
change their position and put them in a better place, or if they fill a bottle
with water, or give anybody something to drink out of it, or if they remove
a little dust from the oratory or from their cell they believe with implicit
faith that they will receive a reward from the Lord.
CHAPTER XXI.
Of the spontaneous service of some of the brethren.
We have been told of brethren in whose week there was such a scarcity of wood
that they had not enough to prepare the usual food for the brethren; and when
it had been ordered by the Abbot's authority that until more could be brought
and fetched, they should content themselves with dried food,(3) though this
was agreed to by all and no one could expect any cooked food; still these men
as if they were cheated of the fruit and reward of their labour and service,
if they did not prepare the food for their brethren according to custom in
the order of their turn--imposed upon themselves such uncalled-for labour and
care that in those dry and sterile regions where wood cannot possibly be procured
unless it is cut from the fruit trees (for there are no wild shrubs found there
as with us), they wander about through the wide deserts, and traversing the
wilderness which stretches towards the Dead Sea,(4) collect in their lap and
the folds of their dress the scanty stubble and brambles which the wind carries
hither and thither, and so by their voluntary service prepare all their usual
food for the brethren, so that they suffer nothing to be diminished of the
ordinary supply; discharging these duties of theirs towards their brethren
with such fidelity that though the scarcity of wood and the Abbot's order would
be a fair excuse for them, yet still out of regard for their profit and reward
they will not take advantage of this liberty.
CHAPTER XXII.
The system of the Egyptians, which is appointed for the daily service of the
brethren.
These things have been told in accordance with the system, as we remarked
before, of the whole East, which also we say should be observed as a matter
of course in our own country. But among the Egyptians whose chief care is for
work there is not the mutual change of weekly service, for fear lest owing
to the requirements of office they might all be hindered from keeping the rule
of work. But one of the most approved brethren is given the care of the larder
and kitchen, and he takes charge of that office for good and all as long as
hi s strength and years permit. For he is exhausted by no great bodily labour,
because no great care is expended among them in preparing food or in cooking,
as they so largely make use of dried and uncooked food,(1) and among them the
leaves of leeks cut each month, and cherlock, table salt,(2) olives, tiny little
salt fish which they call sardines,(3) form the greatest delicacy.
CHAPTER XXIII.
The obedience of Abbot John by which he was exalted even to the grace of prophecy.
And since this book is about the training of one who renounces this world,
whereby, making a beginning of true humility and perfect obedience, he may
be enabled to ascend the heights of the other virtues as well, I think it well
to set down just by way of specimen, as we promised, some of the deeds of the
elders whereby they excelled in this virtue, selecting a few only out of many
instances, that, if any are anxious to aim at still greater heights, they may
not only receive from these an incitement towards the perfect life, but may
also be furnished with a model of what they purpose. Wherefore, to make this
book as short as possible we will produce and set down two or three out of
the whole number of the Fathers; and first of all Abbot John who lived near
Lycon(4) which is a town in the Thebaid; and who was exalted even to the grace
of prophecy for his admirable obedience, and was so celebrated all the world
over that he was by his merits rendered famous even among kings of this world.
For though, as we said, he lived in the most remote parts of the Thebaid, still
the Emperor Theodosius did not venture to declare war against the most powerful
tyrants before he was encouraged by his utterances and replies: trusting in
which as if they had been brought to him from heaven he gained victories over
his foes in battles which seemed hopeless.(5)
CHAPTER XXIV.
Of the dry stick which, at the bidding of his senior, Abbot John kept on watering
as if it would grow.
And so
this blessed John from his youth up even to a full and ripe age of manhood
was subject to his
senior
as long as he continued living in this world,
and carried out his commands with such humility that his senior himself was
utterly astounded at his obedience; and as he wanted to make sure whether this
virtue came from genuine faith and profound simplicity of heart, or whether
it was put on and as it were constrained and only shown in the presence of
the bidder, he often laid upon him many superfluous and almost unnecessary
or even impossible commands. From which I will select three to show to those
who wish to know how perfect was his disposition and subjection. For the old
man took from his woodstack a stick which had previously been cut and got ready
to make the fire with, and which, as no opportunity for cooking had come, was
lying not merely dry but even mouldy from the lapse of time. And when he had
stuck it into the ground before his very eyes, he ordered him to fetch water
and to water it twice a day that by this daily watering it might strike roots
and be restored to life as a tree, as it was before, and spread out its branches
and afford a pleasant sight to the eyes as well as a shade for those who sat
under it in the heat of summer. And this order the lad received with his customary
veneration, never considering its impossibility, and day by day carried it
out so that he constantly carried water for nearly two miles and never ceased
to water the stick; and for a whole year no bodily infirmity, no festival services,
no necessary business (which might fairly have excused him from carrying out
the command), and lastly no severity of winter could interfere and hinder him
from obeying this order. And when the old man had watched this zeal of his
on the sly without saying anything for several days and had seen that he kept
this command of his with simple willingness of heart, as if it had come from
heaven, without any change of countenance or consideration of its reasonableness--approving
the unfeigned obedience of his humility and at the same time commiserating
his tedious labour which in the zeal of his devotion he had continued for a
whole year--he came to the dry stick, and "John," said he, "has
this tree put forth roots or no?" And when the other said that he did
not know, then the old man as if seeking the truth of the matter and trying
whether it was yet depending on its roots, pulled up the stick before him with
a slight disturbance of the earth, and throwing it away told him that for the
future he might stop watering it.(1)
CHAPTER XXV.
Of the unique vase of oil thrown away by Abbot John at his senior's command.
Thus the
youth, trained up by exercises of this sort, daily increased in this virtue
of obedience,
and shone forth
more and more with the grace of humility;
and when the sweet odour of his obedience spread throughout all the monasteries,
some of the brethren, coming to the older for the sake of testing him or rather
of being edified by him, marvelled at his obedience of which they had heard;
and so the older called him suddenly, and said, "Go up and take this cruse
of oil"(2) (which was the only one in the desert and which furnished a
very scanty supply of the rich liquid for their own use and for that of strangers) "and
throw it down out of window." And he flew up stairs when summoned and
threw it out of window and cast it down to the ground and broke it in pieces
without any thought or consideration of the folly of the command, or their
daily wants, and bodily infirmity, or of their poverty, and the trials and
difficulties of the wretched desert in which, even if they had got the money
for it, oil of that quality, once lost, could not be procured or replaced.
CHAPTER XXVI.
How Abbot John obeyed his senior by trying to roll a huge stone, which a large
number of men were unable to move.
AGAIN,
when some others were anxious to be edified by the example of his obedience,
the elder called
him and said: "John, run and roll that stone hither as
quickly as possible;" and he forthwith, applying now his neck, and now
his whole body, tried with all his might and main to roll an enormous stone
which a great crowd of men would not be able to move, so that not only were
his clothes saturated with sweat from his limbs, but the stone itself was wetted
by his neck; in this too never weighing the impossibility of the command and
deed, out of reverence for the old man and the unfeigned simplicity of his
service, as he believed implicitly that the old man could not command him to
do anything vain or without reason.
CHAPTER XXVII.
Of the humility and obedience of Abbot Patermucius,(3) which he did not hesitate
to make perfect by throwing his little boy into the river at the command of
his senior.
So far let it suffice for me to have told a few things out of many concerning
Abbot John: now I will relate a memorable deed of Abbot Patermucius. For he,
when anxious to renounce the world, remained lying before the doors of the
monastery for a long time until by his dogged persistence he induced them--contrary
to all the rules of the Coenobia--to receive him together with his little boy
who was about eight years old. And when they were at last admitted they were
at once not only committed to the care of different superiors, but also put
to live in separate cells that the father might not be reminded by the constant
sight of the little one that out of all his possessions and carnal treasures,
which he had cast off and renounced, at least his son remained to him; and
that as he was already taught that he was no longer a rich man, so he might
also forget the fact that he was a father. And that it might be more thoroughly
tested whether he would make affection and love(1) for his own flesh and blood
of more account than obedience and Christian mortification (which all who renounce
the world ought out of love to Christ to prefer), the child was on purpose
neglected and dressed in rags instead of proper clothes; and so covered and
disfigured with dirt that he would rather disgust than delight the eyes of
his father whenever he saw him. And further, he was exposed to blows and slaps
from different people, which the father often saw inflicted without the slightest
reason on his innocent child under his very eyes, so that he never saw his
cheeks without their being stained with the dirty marks of tears. And though
the child was treated thus day after day before his eyes, yet still out of
love for Christ and the virtue of obedience the father's heart stood firm and
unmoved. For he no longer regarded him as his own son, as he had offered him
equally with himself to Christ; nor was he concerned about his present injuries,
but rather rejoiced because he saw that they were endured, not without profit;
thinking little of his son's tears, but anxious about his own humility and
perfection. And when the Superior of the Coenobium saw his steadfastness of
mind and immovable inflexibility, in order thoroughly to prove the constancy
of his purpose, one day when he had seen the child crying, he pretended that
he was annoyed with him and told the father to throw him into the river. Then
he, as if this had been commanded him by the Lord, at once snatched up the
child as quickly as possible, and carried him in his arms to the river's bank
to throw him in. And straightway in the fervour of his faith and obedience
this would have been carried out in act, had not some of the brethren been
purposely set to watch the banks of the river very carefully, and when the
child was thrown in, had somehow snatched him from the bed of the stream, and
prevented the command, which was really fulfilled by the obedience and devotion
of the father, from being consummated in act and result.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
How it was revealed to the Abbot concerning Patermucius that he had done the
deed of Abraham; and how when the same Abbot died, Patermucius succeeded to
the charge of the monastery.
And this man's faith and devotion was so acceptable to God that it was immediately
approved by a divine testimony. For it was forthwith revealed to the Superior
that by this obedience of his he had copied the deed of the patriarch Abraham.
And when shortly afterwards the same Abbot of the monastery departed out of
this life to Christ, he preferred him to all the brethren, and left him as
his successor and as Abbot to the monastery.
CHAPTER XXIX.
Of the obedience of a brother who at the Abbot's bidding carried about in
public ten baskets and sold them by retail.
We will also not be silent about a brother whom we knew, who belonged to a
high family according to the rank of this world, for he was sprung from a father
who was a count and extremely wealthy, and had been well brought up with a
liberal education. This man, when he had left his parents and fled to the monastery,
in order to prove the humility of his disposition and the ardour of his faith
was at once ordered by his superior to load his shoulders with ten baskets
(which there was no need to sell publicly), and to hawk them about through
the streets for sale: this condition being attached, so that he might be kept
longer at the work, viz.: that if any one should chance to want to buy them
all together, he was not to allow it, but was to sell them to purchasers separately.
And this he carried out with the utmost zeal, and trampling under foot all
shame and confusion, out of love for Christ, and for His Name's sake, he put
the baskets on his shoulders and sold them by retail at the price fixed and
brought back the money to the monastery; not in the least upset by the novelty
of so mean and unusual a duty, and paying no attention to the indignity of
the thing and the splendour of his birth, and the disgrace of the sale, as
he was aiming at gaining through the grace of obedience that humility of Christ
which is the true nobility.
CHAPTER XXX.
Of the humility of Abbot Pinufius, who left a very famous Coenobium over which
he presided as Presbyter, and out of the love of subjection sought a distant
monastery where he could be received as a novice.
THE limits
of the book compel us to draw to a close; but the virtue of obedience, which
holds the
first place
among other good qualities, will not allow us altogether
to pass over in silence the deeds of those who have excelled by it. Wherefore
aptly combining these two together, I mean, consulting brevity as well as the
wishes and profit of those who are in earnest, we will only add one example
of humility, which, as it was shown by no novice but one already perfect and
an Abbot, may not only instruct the younger, but also incite the elders to
the perfect virtue of humility, as they read it. Thus we saw Abbot Pinufius(1)
who when he was presbyter of a huge Coenobium which is in Egypt not far from
the city of Panephysis,(2) was held in honour and respect by all men out of
reverence either for his life or for his age or for his priesthood; and when
he saw that for this reason he could not practise that humility which he longed
for with all the ardour of his disposition, and had no opportunity of exercising
the virtue of subjection which he desired, he fled secretly from the Coenobium
and withdrew alone into the furthest parts of the Thebaid, and there laid aside
the habit of the monks and assumed a secular dress, and thus sought the Coenobium
of Tabenna, which he knew to be the strictest of all, and in which he fancied
that he would not be known owing to the distance of the spot, or else that
he could easily lie hid there in consequence of the size of the monastery and
the number of brethren. There he remained for a long time at the entrance,
and as a suppliant at the knees of the brethren sought with most earnest prayers
to gain admission. And when he was at last with much scorn admitted as a feeble
old man who had lived all his life in the world, and had asked in his old age
to be allowed to enter a Coenobium when he could no longer gratify his passions,--as
they said that he was seeking this not for the sake of religion but because
he was compelled by hunger and want, they gave him the care and management
of the garden, as he seemed an old man and not specially fitted for any particular
work. And this he performed under another and a younger brother who kept him
by him as intrusted to him, and he was so subordinate to him, and cultivated
the desired virtue of humility so obediently that he daily performed-with the
utmost diligence not only everything that had to do with the care and management
of the garden, but also all those duties which were looked on by the other
as hard and degrading, and disagreeable. Rising also by night he did many things
secretly, without any one looking on or knowing it, when darkness concealed
him so that no one could discover the author of the deed. And when he had hidden
himself there for three years and had been sought for high and low by the brethren
all through Egypt, he was at last seen by one who had come from the parts of
Egypt, but could scarcely be recognized owing to the meanness of his dress
and the humble character of the duty he was performing. For he was stooping
down and hoeing the ground for vegetables and bringing dung on his shoulders
and laying it about their roots. And seeing this the brother for a long time
hesitated about recognizing him, but at last he came nearer, and taking careful
note not only of his looks but also of the tone of his voice, straightway fell
at his feet: and at first all who saw it were struck with the greatest astonishment
why he should do this to one who was looked up. on by them as the lowest of
all, as being. a novice and one who had but lately forsaken the world: but
afterwards they were struck with still greater wonder when he forthwith announced
his name, which was one that had been well known amongst them also by repute.
And all the brethren asking his pardon for their former ignorance because they
had for so long classed him with the juniors and children, brought him back
to his own Coenobium, against his will and in tears because by the envy of
the devil he had been cheated out of a worthy mode of life and the humility
which he was rejoicing in having discovered after his long search, and because
he had not succeeded in ending his life in that state of subjection which he
had secured. And so they guarded him with the utmost care lest he should slip
away again in the same sort of way and escape from them also.
CHAPTER XXXI.
How when Abbot Pinufius was brought back to his monastery he stayed there
for a little while and then fled again into the regions of Syrian Palestine.
And when
he had stopped there for a little while, again he was seized with a longing
and desire for
humility,
and, taking advantage of the silence of
night, made his escape in such a way that this time he sought no neighbouring
district, but regions which were unknown and strange and separated by a wide
distance. For embarking in a ship he managed to travel to Palestine, believing
that he would more securely lie hid if he betook himself to those places in
which his name had never been heard. And when he had come thither, at once
he sought out our own monastery(1) which was at no great distance from the
cave(2) in which our Lord vouchsafed to be born of a virgin. And though he
concealed himself here for some time, yet like "a city set on an hill"(3)
(to use our Lord's expression) he could not long be hid. For presently some
of the brethren who had come to the holy places from Egypt to pray there recognized
him and recalled him with most fervent prayers to his own Coenobium.
CHAPTER XXXII.
The charge which the same Abbot Pinufius gave to a brother whom he admitted
into his monastery in our presence.
THIS old man, then, we afterwards diligently sought out in Egypt because we
had been intimate with him in our own monastery; and I propose to insert in
this work of mine an exhortation which he gave in our presence to a brother
whom he admitted into the monastery, because I think that it may be useful.
You know, said he, that after lying for so many days at the entrance you are
to-day to be admitted. And to begin with you ought to know the reason of the
difficulty put in your way. For it may be of great service to you in this road
on which you are desirous to enter, if you understand the method of it and
approach the service of Christ accordingly, and as you ought.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
How it is that, just as a great reward is due to the monk who labours according
to the regulations of the fathers, so likewise punishment must he inflicted
on an idle one; and therefore no one should be admitted into a monastery too
easily.
FOR as
unbounded glory hereafter is promised to those who faithfully serve God and
cleave to Him
according
to the rule of this system; so the severest
penalties are in store for those who have carried it out carelessly and coldly,
and have failed to show to Him fruits of holiness corresponding to what they
professed or what they were believed by men to be. For "it is better," as
Scripture says, "that a man should not vow rather than that he should
vow and not pay;" and "Cursed is he that doeth the work of the Lord
carelessly."(4) Therefore you were for a long while declined by us, not
as if we did not des re with all our hearts to secure your salvation and the
salvation of all, nor as if we did not care to go to meet even afar off those
who are longing to be converted to Christ; but for fear lest if we received
you rashly we might make ourselves guilty in the sight of God of levity, and
make you incur a yet heavier punishment, if, when you had been too easily admitted
by us without realizing the responsibility of this profession, you had afterwards
turned out a deserter or lukewarm. Wherefore you ought in the first instance
to learn the actual reason for the renunciation of the world, and when you
have seen this, you can be taught more plainly what you ought to do, from the
reason for it.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
Of the why in which our renunciation is nothing but mortification and the
image of the Crucified.
Renunciation
is nothing but the evidence of the cross and of mortification. And so you
must know
that to-day
you are dead to this world and its deeds and
desires, and that, as the Apostle says, you are crucified to this world and
this world to you.(5) Consider therefore the demands of the cross under the
sign(6) of which you ought henceforward to live in this life; because you no
longer live but He lives in you who was crucified for you.(7) We must therefore
pass our time in this life in that fashion and form in which He was crucified
for us on the cross so that (as David says) piercing our flesh with the fear
of the Lord,(8) we may have all our wishes and desires not subservient to our
own lusts but fastened to His mortification. For so shall we fulfil the command
of the Lord which says: "He that taketh not up his cross and followeth
me is not worthy of me."(9) But perhaps you will say: How can a man carry
his cross continually? or how can any one who is alive be crucified? Hear briefly
how this is.
CHAPTER XXXV.
How the fear of the Lord is our cross.
THE fear of the Lord is our cross. As then one who is crucified no longer
has the power of moving or turning his limbs in any direction as he pleases,
so we also ought to affix our wishes and desires--not in accordance with what
is pleasant and delightful to us now, but in accordance with the law of the
Lord, where it constrains us. And as he who is fastened to the wood of the
cross no longer considers things present, nor thinks about his likings, nor
is perplexed by anxiety and care for the morrow, nor disturbed by any desire
of possession, nor inflamed by any pride or strife or rivalry, grieves not
at present injuries, remembers not past ones, and while he is still breathing
in the body considers that he is dead to all earthly things,(1) sending the
thoughts of his heart on before to that place whither he doubts not that he
is shortly to come: so we also, when crucified by the fear of the Lord ought
tO be dead indeed to all these things, i.e. not only to carnal vices but also
to all earthly things,(1) having the eye of our minds fixed there whither we
hope at each moment that we are soon to pass. For in this way we can have all
our desires and carnal affections mortified.
CHAPTER XXXVI.
How our renunciation of the world is of no use if we are again entangled in
those things which we have renounced.
BEWARE therefore lest at any time you take again any of those things which
you renounced and forsook, and, contrary to the Lord's command, return from
the field of evangelical work, and be found to have clothed yourself again
in your coat which you had stripped off;(2) neither sink back to the low and
earthly lusts and desires of this world, and in defiance of Christ's word come
down from the rod of perfection and dare to take up again any of those things
which you have renounced and forsaken. Beware that you remember nothing of
your kinsfolk or of your former affections, and that you are not called back
to the cares and anxieties of this world, and (as our Lord says) putting your
hand to the plough and looking back be found unfit for the kingdom of heaven.(3)
Beware lest at any time, when you have begun to dip into the knowledge of the
Psalms and of this life, you be little by little puffed up and think of reviving
that pride which now at your beginning you have trampled under foot in the
ardour of faith and in fullest humility; and thus (as the ApOstle says) building
again those things which you had destroyed, you make yourself a backslider.(4)
But rather take heed to continue even to the end in that state of nakedness
of which you made profession in the sight of God and of his angels. In this
humility too and patience, with which you persevered for ten days before the
doors and entreated with many tears to be admitted into the monastery, you
should not only continue but also increase and go forward. For it is too bad
that when you ought to be carried on from the rudiments and beginnings, and
go forward to perfection, you should begin to fall back from these to worse
things. For not he who begins these things, but he who endures in them to the
end, shall be saved.(5)
CHAPTER XXXVII.
How the devil always lies in wait for our end, and how we ought continually
to watch his head.(6)
FOR the
subtle serpent is ever "watching our heel," that is, is
lying in wait for the close, and endeavouring to trip us up right to the end
of our life. And therefore it will not be of any use to have made a good beginning
and to have eagerly taken the first step towards renouncing the world with
all fervour, if a corresponding end does not likewise set it off and conclude
it, and if the humility and poverty of Christ, of which you have now made profession
in His sight, are not preserved by you even to the close of your life, as they
were first secured. And that you may succeed in doing this, do you ever "watch
his head," i.e. the first rise of thoughts, by bringing them at once to
your superior. For thus you will learn to "bruise" his dangerous
beginnings, if you are not ashamed to disclose any of them to your superior.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
Of the renunciant's preparation against temptation, and of the few who are
worthy of imitation.
WHEREFORE,
as Scripture says, "when you go forth to serve the Lord stand
in the fear of the Lord, and prepare your mind"(7) not for repose or carelessness
or delights, but for temptations and troubles. For "through much tribulation
we must enter into the kingdom of God." For "strait is the gate and
narrow is the way which leadeth unto life, and few there be which find it."(1)
Consider therefore that you belong to the few and elect; and do not grow cold
after the examples of the lukewarmness of many: but live as the few, that with
the few you may be worthy of a place in the kingdom of God: for "many
are called, but few chosen, and it is a "little flock to which it is the
Father's good pleasure to give"(2) an inheritance. You should therefore
realize that it is no light sin for one who has made profession of perfection
to follow after what is imperfect. And to this state of perfection you may
attain by the following steps and in the following way.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
Of the way in which we shall mount towards perfection, whereby we may afterwards
ascend from the fear of God up to love.
"THE beginning" of our salvation and the safeguard of it is, as
I said, "the fear of the Lord."(3) For through this those who are
trained in the way of perfection can gain a start in, conversion as well as
purification from vices and security in virtue. And when this has gained an
entrance into a man's heart it produces contempt of all things, and begets
a forgetfulness of kinsfolk and an horror of the world itself. But by the contempt
for the loss of all possessions humility is gained. And humility is attested
by these signs: First of all if a man has all his desires mortified; secondly,
if he conceals none of his actions or even of his thoughts from his superior;
thirdly, if he puts no trust in his own opinion, but all in the judgment of
his superior, and listens eagerly and willingly to his directions; fourthly,
if he maintains in everything obedience and gentleness and constant patience;
fifthly, if he not only hurts nobody else, but also is not annoyed or vexed
at wrongs done to himself; sixthly, if he does nothing and ventures on nothing
to which he is not urged by the Common Rule or by the example of our elders;
seventhly, if he is contented with the lowest possible position, and considers
himself as a bad workman and unworthy in the case of everything enjoined to
him; eighthly, if he does not only outwardly profess with his lips that he
is inferior to all, but really believes it in the inmost thoughts of his heart;
ninthly, if he governs his tongue, and is not over talkative; tenthly, if he
is not easily moved or too ready to laugh. For by such signs and the like is
true humility recognised. And when this has once been genuinely secured, then
at once it leads you on by a still higher step to love which knows no fear;(4)
and through this you begin, without any effort and as it were naturally, to
keep up everything that you formerly observed not without fear of punishment;
no longer now from regard of punishment or fear of it but from love of goodness
itself, and delight in virtue.(5)
CHAPTER XL.
That the monk should seek for examples of perfection not from many instances
but from one or a very few.
And that you may the more easily arrive at this, the examples of the perfect
life of one dwelling in the congregation, which you may imitate, should be
sought from a very few or indeed from one or two only and not from too many.
For apart from the fact that a life which is tested and refined and purified
is only to be found in a few, there is this also to be gained, viz.: that a
man is more thoroughly instructed and formed by the example of some one, towards
the perfection which he sets before him, viz.: that of the Coenobite life.
CHAPTER XLI.
The appearance of what infirmities one who lives in a Coenobium ought to exhibit.(6)
And that
you may be able to attain all this, and continually remain subject to this
spiritual rule,
you must
observe these three things in the congregation:
viz.: that as the Psalmist says: "I was like a deaf man and heard not
and as one that is dumb who doth not open his mouth; and I became as a man
that heareth not, and in whose mouth there are no reproofs,"(7) so you
also should walk as one that is deaf and dumb and blind, so that--putting aside
the contemplation of him who has been rightly chosen by you as your model of
perfection--you should be like a blind man and not see any of those things
which you find to be unedifying, nor(8) be influenced by the authority or fashion
of those who do these things, and give yourself up to what is worse and what
you formerly condemned. If you hear any one disobedient or insubordinate or
disparaging another or doing anything different from what was taught to you,
you should not go wrong and be led astray by such an example to imitate him;
but, "like a deaf man," as if you had never heard it, you should
pass it all by. If insults are offered to you or to any one else, or wrongs
done, be immovable, and as far as an answer in retaliation is concerned be
silent "as one that is dumb," always singing in your heart this verse
of the Psalmist: "I said I will take heed to my ways that I offend not
with my tongue. I set a guard to my mouth when the sinner stood before me.
I was dumb and was humbled and kept silence from good things."(1) But
cultivate above everything this fourth thing which adorns and graces those
three of which we have spoken above; viz.: make yourself, as the Apostle directs,(2)
a fool in this world that you may become wise, exercising no discrimination
and judgment of your own on any of those matters which are commanded to you,
but always showing obedience with all simplicity and faith, judging that alone
to be holy, useful, and wise which God's law or the decision of your superior
declares to you to be such. For built up on such a system of instruction you
may continue forever under this discipline, and not fall away from the monastery
in consequence of any temptations or devices of the enemy.
CHAPTER XLII.
How a monk should not look for the blessing of patience in his own case as
a result of the virtue of others, but rather as a consequence of his own longsuffering.
You should therefore not look for patience in your own case from the virtue
of others, thinking that then only can you secure it when you are not irritated
by any (for it is not in your own power to prevent this from happening); but
rather you should look for it as the consequence of your own humility and long-suffering
which dues depend on your own will.
CHAPTER XLIII.
Recapitulation of the explanation how a monk can mount up towards perfection.
AND in
order that all these things which have been set forth in a somewhat lengthy
discourse may
be more easily
stamped on your heart and may stick in
your thoughts with all tenacity, I will make a summary of them so that you
may be able to learn all the changes by heart by reason of their brevity and
conciseness. Hear then in few words how you can mount up to the heights of
perfection without an effort or difficult "The beginning" of our
salvation and of wisdom" is, according to Scripture, "the fear of
the Lord."(3) From the fear of the Lord arises salutary compunction. From
compunction of heart springs renunciation, i.e. nakedness and contempt of all
possessions. From nakedness is begotten humility; from humility the mortification
of desires. Through mortification of desires all faults are extirpated and
decay. By driving out faults virtues shoot up and increase. By the budding
of virtues purity of heart is gained. By purity of heart the perfection of
apostolic love is acquired.
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