History of the Church Part 2 Lesson 5: Monks

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History of the Church Part 2 Lesson 5: Monks Randy Broberg Maranatha Chapel School of Ministry Fall 2010 Mont-St-Michel, France

Monasticism began on a Sunday morning in the year 270 or 271 in an Egyptian village. The Gospel passage read in worship that day included the words "If you want to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me" (Matt. 19:21). In the congregation sat a young man called Antony, who, upon hearing these words, sought a life not merely of relative poverty but of radical solitude. Antony's step into the uninhabited desert was little noticed outside, or even inside, his village at the time. But when he died at the age of 106, his friend and biographer Athanasius of Alexandria (d. 373) informs us that his name was known "all over the road." "The desert," he wrote, "had become a city," meaning thousands had regularly flocked to Antony to be taught by him. Athanasius' Life of Anthony was a powerful argument for asceticism and the monastic life in his time. Anthony (c. 250 to 355):

Monastic Philosophy Neoplatonist spirituality: soul is naturally divine, flesh is evil. Heavily influenced by Origen A repudiation of the physical A three-fold ascent of the soul to God Praktike, Psychike, Theologike The goal: a content-less contemplation of God

The earliest monks were hermits who left the decadent Roman society of their upbringing and went into the wilderness. They were disgusted at the increasingly worldly Church of their day and they sought a closer walk with God through solitude and depriving themselves of physical comforts. The common term for this practice is called asceticism. Celibacy/virginity Fasting and simple foods little bathing Obedience to the abbot ( abba = father) Voluntary poverty and chastity Opus Dei (the daily cycle of work and prayer) Ascetic life

Geographic Spread The center of Eastern monasticism moved from Egypt to Asia Minor in the late 300s, to Palestine in the 400s, to Sinai in the 500s, and in the 900s to Mount Athos, Greece, where these three types of monasticism still exist. Irish Model Rule of Benedict Egyptian Model

Types of Monasticism Anchorite a monk by himself (hermits) Anthony (251-356) in Middle Egypt. Gave up wealth, hermit, ascetic Macarius the Great (ca. 300-390) Cenobite many monks together (monasteries) Pachamius (287-346) of Egypt. Established large society of monks. Basil the Great s Rule (ca. 360) in East Benedict of Nursia s Rule (ca. 540) in West Stylite monks living on pillars St. Simeon (390-459) lived on 60 foot pillar for 36 years. Simeon the younger, 592, spent 68 years on a pillar

Women s Monasteries There were also monasteries for women, which may have risen earlier than those for men. Before retiring to the desert, Antony had placed his sister in a "home for virgins," a fact that unintentionally reveals that women were already organized into Christian communities in Egypt. 320-325: In the upper valley of the Nile, Pachomius founded a communal monastic life for men and his sister Mary set up first community for women The Prioress

The practice of oblation Medieval schools and hospitals The importance of silence and prayer Oblations of a Child In the Middle Ages children dedicated to a monastery and left there to be brought up werecalled oblates. Later, oblates were laity who lived at or in close connection with a monastery but who did not take religious vows. Great fighters of heresy

Monks as Scholars Liturgy of the Psalms Dominant scholarly method: Exegesis -- expounding on the mysteries of the sacred scriptures Contemplation of those Truths The Venerable Bede Monks Library

Monks as Scribes Professional scribes, many books survived thanks to the monks For the first part of the middle ages, monks were responsible for the transmission of learning. Copying sacred and secular texts: Cassiodorus initiated this first in Italy (540)

Illuminated Manuscripts Books written by hand, decorated with paintings. The word `illuminated' comes from a usage of the Latin word illuminare -- `adorn'. The decorations are of three main types: miniatures or small pictures, into the text or occupying the whole page or part of the border; initial letters either containing scenes (historiated initials) or with elaborate decoration; borders, which may consist of miniatures, occasionally illustrative, or more often are composed of decorative motifs.

How the Irish Saved Civilization

From Gregorian Chants To Organ Hymns Liturgical music of the Roman Catholic church consisting of unaccompanied melody sung in unison to Latin words. It is named for Pope Gregory I the Great, who may have contributed to its collection and codification. Chant has traditionally been performed at the mass and the canonical hours (the eight prayer services traditionally held daily in monasteries). Its texts come primarily from the biblical psalms, metrical hymns, and texts specific to the mass and the hours. Pipe Organ

Monks as Farmer Evangelists Great Missionaries Saint Patrick for example They also served as the missionaries of early Europe. Often the first thing done among a pagan nation would be the founding of monasteries, from which would spread the teachers of the whole society. Monks were also agricultural innovators The Plowman

Prayer Prayer and personal sanctity, are the ways to the knowledge of God, and not disputation. The saint, not the disputant, comprehends God. 600-- prayers directed to Mary, angels and saints adopted officially 1090 Rosary, repetitious praying with beads, invented by Peter the Hermit The practice of kneeling or bowing and clasping the hands became common around 1000 AD and was patterned after homage given to feudal lords. Before that time most prayers were offered standing with hands upheld. Bernard of Clairvaux was a mystic in his devotion. He is the author of many hymns as well as devotional books. Oh Sacred Head Now Wounded

Rosaries, Crucifixes and Medas

Monastic Prayer Monk s main vocation was prayer. The goal of prayer, and of all monastic life, was union with God. Such union was made possible only through a life of spiritual purification and total renunciation a self-stripping of both material possessions and intellectual projections and a purification from wrongful desires. The cell was foremost a place of prayer

BENEDICTINES

John Cassian (360-435) Benedict of Nursia (480-547) Benedictine Order, Founded 529 Benedict founds Monte Casino in 525 and establishes the Benedictine Order. Benedict's "Rule" for monks (c. 540) will become the most influential over future centuries. The abbot Christ s representative Obedience and humility Structure No private ownership of anything Prayer, study, and work

CISTERCIANS

Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153) Mystic. Oh Sacred Head Now Wounded The primacy of grace The centrality of love A union of will-- one spirit as in 1 Cor. 6:17 Union will only be complete after the final resurrection Bernard s images The visitation by the Word Spiritual marriage Between 1130 and 1145 he mediated civil and ecclesiastical councils and theological debates; he was the confidant of five popes and became perhaps the most renowned religious figure in Europe. He opposed the rationalism of Peter Abelard and defended the cult of the Virgin Mary.

Bernard Forms Cistercian Order, 1115 --St. Bernard establishes monastery at Clairvaux, and served as its abbot. Born into an aristocratic family near Dijon, he turned away from a literary education for a life of renunciation, entering an austere religious community at Cîteaux in 1112. The Reform-minded Cistercian Order was founded at Citeaux Benedictines dissatisfied with their abbey's laxity. Cistercians were severely ascetic, rejected feudal revenues, and engaged in manual labor. Uniform rules applied to all houses, and all abbots were to meet annually at Cîteaux. Until the 1960s, they slept, ate, and worked in perpetual silence.

Dominicans

Dominic and the Dominicans (1170-1221) 1220: Dominic Founds of the Order of Friars Preachers express purpose: to preach against and otherwise combat heresy entrusted by the Pope with the Inquisition. Some became missionaries to Central Asia, Persian Gulf, India, and China. Dominic oversees the burning of unacceptable books

FRANCISCANS

Francis (1182-1226) of Assisi He sold his property, gave the proceeds to the church, and began a life of poverty and devoutness.

Teachings of Francis He soon attracted followers, whom he sent to preach throughout Europe, 1209 Innocent III gave approval for the Franciscan order. The patron saint of ecology Devotion to the humanity of Jesus The incarnation makes all of creation a sacrament The witness of radical poverty St Francis Cathedral

The Begging/Wandering (Mendicant) Friars The Friar

The Franciscans 1209--Francis of Assisi establishes Franciscans Poverty and the Regula primitiva, primitive rule The Rule of St. Francis stressed the need to imitate the life of Jesus. In many ways a mystic, Francis viewed all nature as a mirror of God, calling all creatures his brothers and sisters.

Questions to Consider and Discuss What exactly is expected us to be in the world but not of it? Could monasticism be right for anyone? Are there certain people it is right for? What s your focus, avoiding sin or doing good? What was it about Medieval Society that made monasticism so popular and why don t we have that today? What s missing now that was present then? Based on everything we ve seen so far in the Middle Ages, do you think the true believers then were nearly all Monks and Nuns?