Instabilitas loci: the Wanderlust of late Byzantine Monks
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Published:1985
Issue:
Volume:22
Page:193-202
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ISSN:0424-2084
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Container-title:Studies in Church History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Stud. Church Hist.
Abstract
The Byzantines took more kindly than the westerners of the middle ages to their eccentrics of the spiritual life. They never lost sight of the true meaning of the word monachos — a solitary, a man who lives alone with God. The ultimate and deepest purpose of the monastic life was, as Saint Basil himself had declared, the ‘salvation of one’s own soul’. The way of the monachos was a lonely one. For the many who were called it was perhaps only bearable in the gregarious circumstance of a community, a koinobion or coenobitic monastery; and Saint Basil believed that they were right. But in the Byzantine world it was always accepted that there would be a chosen few for whom even the koinobion was too gregarious. For them the communal monastery would be the primary school of askesis from which they would one day graduate to the harder and more rarefied discipline of an asketerion, a small group of monks living in a lavra or a skete under the supervision of a spiritual father.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Religious studies,History
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Introduction;Les mobilités monastiques en Orient et en Occident de l’Antiquité tardive au Moyen Âge (IVe-XVe siècle);2019