John Cassian and The Reading of Egyptian Monastic Culture
John Cassian and The Reading of Egyptian Monastic Culture
John Cassian and The Reading of Egyptian Monastic Culture
edited by
Francis G. Gentry
Professor of German
Pennsylvania State University
A ROUTLEDGE SERIES
OTHER BOOKS IN THIS S ERIES
2. TOPOGRAPHIES OF GENDER IN
MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN
ARTHURIAN ROMANCE
Alexandra Sterling-Hellenbrand
4. WORD OUTWARD
Medieval Perspectives on the Entry
into Language
Corey Marvin
7. WHERE TROUBADOURS
WERE BISHOPS
The Occitania ofFolc
ofMarseille (c. 1150-1231)
Nichole M. Schulman
JOHN CASSIAN AND THE
READING OF EGYPTIAN
MONASTIC CULTURE
Steven D. Driver
RO U T L E D G E
NEW YORK & LONDON
Published in 2002 by
Routledge
29 West 35th Street
New York, NY 10001
www.Routledge-NY.com
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized
in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter
invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or
retrieval system, without written permission from the publishers.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Francis G. Gentry
Vll
This page intentionally left blank
To my parents, whose love and support made this book possible
This page intentionally left blank
Contents
Preface Xlll
Introduction 1
1. John Cassian 11
What Can Be Known 12
Intriguing Possibilities 14
Xl
xu Contents
Bibliography 121
Index 145
Preface
Xlll
XlV Pre/ace
In the second decade of the fifth century, Castor, the bishop of Apt, estab
lished a monastery in his episcopal see. Having already undertaken a monastic
vocation on his own, Castor sought a way of life that could serve as a model
for himself and for his community.! There were already several monastic com
munities in the surrounding region which could have provided such a model.
There were also at Lerins and elsewhere rudimentary rules which Castor could
easily have adapted to govern his own fledgling community.2 Nevertheless,
Castor rejected the examples of his countrymen and instead looked to the East.
It would seem that Castor had accepted the widely held belief that only in the
East, and particularly in Egypt, was monasticism practised in its truest form.
He therefore commissioned John Cassian, a recent emigre from the East and
an erstwhile resident of the Egyptian monastic communities of Nitria, Kellia
and Scetis, to describe the fundamental principles of monastic life.3 Cassian
responded to this commission with a series of books on the institutes of the
Egyptians and an elementary discussion of the discernment of thoughts.
Before he had even seen the Institutes, Castor commissioned Cassian again, this
time to relate the spiritual teachings of the desert fathers.4 At the behest of
Castor and others after him, Cassian would eventually complete twenty-four
dialogues or Conferences, each of which purported to relate his conversations
with the elders of the Egyptian desert.
To have earned these commissions, Cassian must have commanded signifi
cant respect. He had already been allowed by Proculus, the bishop of
Marseilles, to establish monasteries for both men and women in the city's envi
rons.5 The interest of Castor and later patrons shows that Cassian's reputation
had spread well beyond this port. Cassian's authority to teach, however, did
not come from his own reputation as much as it did from his lengthy sojourn
among the desert fathers. Castor and the others wanted to hear the Egyptian
abbas, not Cassian himself. Cassian ostensibly accepted these limitations
and described his function as an author as being nothing more than that of an
1
2 Introduction
organizer and reporter. He promised that he would describe only what he had
seen and experienced while travelling among the Egyptians more than two
decades earlier and that he would introduce no innovations of his own. As
though to guarantee this promise, Cassian cast much of his teaching in the
form of autobiographical dialogues in which he recorded the very words
the abbas had spoken to him.
For the most part, Cassian was taken at his word. While his contemporaries
noted that some of his conferences had more to do with western theological
debates than with life in the Egyptian desert, Cassian was nevertheless respect
ed as a witness to a long line of saints who had surrendered all for the sake of
union with God.6 Fifteen centuries later, the first modern scholars to examine
Cassian also took him at his word.7 While Salvatore Marsili and M. Olphe
Galliard noted that Cassian's monastic theology differed in some respects from
that of his masters, his "historical account" went largely unchallenged.8
This credulity was partly due to ignorance of ancient Egyptian monastic life,
for much of the literary and archaeological evidence upon which we rely
today was not available to earlier scholars. However, Cassian's historical
account was also accepted because of modern expectations about the nature of
autobiography. Cuthbert Butler, for example, found "it impossible to doubt
the substantial truth of Cassian's picture of monastic life, based, as it appears
to be, upon the writer's personal observation."9 Consequently, scholars traced
Cassian's itinerary, identified the saints he mentioned, and used his description
of the lives and doctrines of the monks to fill out otherwise sketchy informa
tion about the origins of Egyptian monasticism. If Cassian should be shown to
err or to contradict other witnesses, it would typically be dismissed as an
inevitable lapse in memory.
More recently, a greater knowledge of Egyptian monasticism and a closer
analysis of Cassian's claims have led scholars to question Cassian's role as an
historian. Owen Chadwick, for example, demonstrated that Cassian's account
of the origin of Matins is inconsistent and cannot possibly be accurate.10
Adalbert de Vogue noted that Cassian's two different versions of the origins
of monasticism are more concerned with his monastic theology than with his
torical fact.l1 In a sweeping survey of Cassian's historical claims, Jean-Claude
Guy effectively sounded the death knell for Cassian as an historian by arguing
that his itinerary is unlikely at best, his topographical errors cannot be put
down to mere lapses in memory, and his account of the anthropomorphite
controversy is one-sided and incomplete.12 Most importantly, Guy concluded
that Cassian likely did not meet some of the abbas whose acquaintence he
claimed. While the fictive aspect of Cassian's dialogues had long been
acknowledged, Guy argued that some of the conferences likely had not
occurred at all. While Guy did not deny the fundamental role that Cassian's
Egyptian experiences had played in his formation, he asserted that Cassian's
choice of an autobiographical form was little more than an attempt to invoke
the authority of a venerated lineage of desert fathers.13
Introduction 3
monk; from discussions among the brethren; etc. Each of these ways had in
common the fact that they were situated within a coherent and systematic way
of life. Spheres of interaction between the master and student, and among
the brethren themselves, were clearly demarcated. It was necessary for each
member to act within established parameters if the community as a whole
were to function effectively.
Cassian's difficulty lay in how to "systematize", or convey in a written text,
an experience heavily based upon supervision, discernment, and discourse
among one's fellows. A guide for conduct or a list of monastic practices would
not have conveyed the depth and richness of the monastic experience. Nor
would it have addressed the practical problems of guidance and supervision.
The young monk seeking a logos from a book could not benefit from the dis
cernment of an abba. There would be no certainty that the logoi would address
either the reader's plight or his capacity for understanding. On the other hand,
a theoretical discourse on the goals of the spiritual life would have risked offer
ing sacred mysteries to those who should not possess them. If a monk were
more ambitious than spiritually trained, he might stumble upon texts for
which he was unprepared. Like Evagrius and the fathers of the Apophthegmata,
Cassian believed that incautious authors shared in the guilt of their readers.26
These difficulties were compounded by the fact that Cassian's Gallic audi
ence had at best a very limited access to the literary and cultural milieu of the
Origenist monks. They did not share with their Egyptian counterparts a com
mon monastic experience; nor did they possess the exegetical keys to unlock
Egyptian monastic teaching. The view of Egyptian monasticism which pre
vailed in Gaul was in some ways worse than ignorance. Instead of a tabula rasa,
Cassian was confronted with a series of misconceptions and unrealistic expec
tations. One must include among these a peculiar fascination with miracles
and thaumaturgy; a skewed perception of anachoresis as complete isolation; a
partial knowledge of mysteries that exceeded any degree of praxis; and little
understanding of the relationship between master and student that was the
crux of Egyptian monastic life. It is also likely that Cassian's readers were ill
disposed to the name of Origen. His entire corpus had been summarily con
demned by Anastasius I in 400 and Jerome, who had embedded much of his
polemic against Origen in his biblical commentaries and monastic writings,
enjoyed wide circulation among Gallic monks. Thus, while Cassian's audience
would not often possess a complete grasp of Origen's theology, they were
nonetheless hostile to things "Origenist".
Cassian's task was consequently threefold. First, he was asked to convey in
a written text the totality of the Egyptian monastic experience. Second, he was
compelled to anticipate the expectations and preconceptions of his readers in
order to lead them to a new understanding of their vocation. Finally, he faced
the challenge of conveying his tradition in a way that preserved its fundamen
tal principles while avoiding the hostility toward Origen that still simmered in
the West.
6 Introduction
From a critical standpoint, these three problems are closely related. This
study will argue that Cassian addressed the absence of a common monastic
experience by attempting to recreate it as an experience of reading. In other
words, Cassian encouraged a form of interaction between reader and text that
in some ways corresponded to the interaction between disciple and abba. To
understand this interaction, we must first examine the ways in which the struc
ture of Cassian's text encouraged structured acts within the reader. This
requires an analysis of how the text both anticipates and transforms the images
the reader can be supposed to have brought to it. It is this transformation that
would lead the reader to a deeper understanding of himself and his vocation,
and his deeper understanding in turn would facilitate the development of new
modes of conduct. Consequently, Cassian's first two tasks are closely linked,
for the successful creation of a particular kind of reading experience depended
upon his ability to anticipate and respond to his reader's expectations. The
third aspect of Cassian's task comes into play when we consider the implica
tions of this reading experience for the reader. As the reader's understanding
of himself and his vocation is transformed through the act of reading, it will
combine with newly formed or altered habits to create a disposition different
from that which had existed before. This transformation is described accord
ing to the understanding of the human condition and of monastic life that
Cassian had gained while among the monks of Egypt. Consequently, as the
reader is transformed through interaction with the text, he is transformed
according to the terms of Origenist monastic thought.
The problems that Cassian faced and the way in which he attempted to
address them bring us once again to the "autobiographical" structure of
Cassian's text. Cassian's description of his travels in Egypt is vivid. He does
not merely observe the Egyptians; he interacts with them. He accepts their
warm hospitality and, in exchange, adopts their way of life. As a fellow monk
he shares in their synaxeis and participates in their sacred rites. He records the
words of the monks not as a mere stenographer but as a participant in their
conversations. Cassian himself seeks words of advice from the abbas and their
responses address his innermost needs and fears. Through his discourse with
the desert fathers and the application of their words, Cassian eventually sheds
his youthful ignorance and acquires the maturity necessary for pure prayer.
The true subject of Cassian's account is his inner self. His autobiography is
a journey of the soul. It is his interior life that is important, for his interior self
forms the essence of his humanity. Any account of events that pertained more
to his external condition was of secondary importance. While Cassian likely
misrepresented or even entirely fabricated some of his "historical" encounters
with the abbas, he nevertheless faithfully represented his interior growth
and transformation. Guy's argument that Cassian's account is not autobio
graphical is therefore not entirely valid. The fact that Cassian's physical
sojourn could not have occurred exactly as he described it does not mean that
he misrepresented the salient features of the journey of his soul.
Introduction 7
NOTES
7. The following brief survey is intended merely to indicate the general direction that
studies of Cassian have taken. For a more complete survey of the scholarship
through 1960, see Weber, Stellung, 1-18, and to the present, Stewart, Cassian, 3-26.
8. Marsili, Giovanni Cassiano; Olphe-Galliard, "Purete de coeur," 28-60 and "Vie
contemplative," 252-288.
9. Butler, Lausiac History, 1:205.
10. O. Chadwick, John Cassian, 2nd ed., 71-77.
1 1 . De Vogue, "Monachisme et eglise," 213-240.
12. Guy, "Jean Cassien," 363-372.
13. Guy, "Jean Cassien," 372.
14. "En fait, Cassien n'a rien d'un historien: il est un theoricien de la vie spirituelle, et
un theoricien d'une originalite et d'une profondeur remarquable." Guy, "Jean
Cassien," 372.
15. Weber, Stellung; de Vogue, "Sources," 241-312.
16. Munz, "John Cassian," 1-22.
17. Rousseau, Ascetics, 169-234.
18. Christophe, Cassien, 7-40. Markus, End, 157-197.
19. Clark, Origenist, 249-259.
20. De Vogue, "Interpolation," 217-22 1, and "Morceau," 7-12, is an exception to this,
although even de Vogue's interest is principally one of source criticsm.
21. O. Chadwick, John Cassian, 2nd ed., 43.
22. De Vogue, "Comprehendre," 250-272.
23. Stewart, "Unceasing," 159-177.
24. Inst., praef 3.
25. E.g., Inst. 4.1, 17; Can. 17.2.2; 17.5.2.
26. Inst. 7.13; Can. 1 . 1 ; 21 .32. 1 .
27. Courcelle, Recherches, 188-202.
28. Augustine, Confessiones 8.12.
29. Augustine, Confessiones 2.4.
30. Torjeson, Hermeneutical, 50.
3 1 . Rondeau, Commentaires, passim.
32. Can. 10.10-11; Athanasius, Ep. ad Marc. 15-23.
CHAPTER 1
John Cassian
Whether tracing the course of Cassian's life or interpreting his theology, one
cannot help but be drawn into the various controversies that swirled around
Origen and the so-called Origenists. It might therefore seem odd that Cassian
rarely alluded, even indirectly, either to Origen's theology or to the Origenist
controversies. Cassian recorded that he was present in the Egyptian monastic
community of Nitria when Theophilus, the patriarch of Alexandria, used his
annual paschal letter to condemn imagining God in human form during
prayer. However, Cassian's narrative ends before Theophilus' dramatic rever
sal and subsequent persecution of the Origenist monks residing there. Nor did
Cassian mention his embassy to Rome on behalf of John Chrysostom, the
patriarch of Constantinople, even though the same Theophilus played a
significant role in John's deposition and John had lost favor in Constantinople
in part because of his support of the exiled Origenist monks who had fled to
him. While Cassian is largely silent about the years between his leaving
Constantinople and arriving in Marseilles, it is quite possible that he was in
Palestine when another controversy over Origen arose, this time under the
guise of Pelagianism and its supporters. Even when Cassian defended his vision
of Egyptian monastic life and theology against the attacks of Jerome, a
late-comer to the anti-Origenist camp who compensated for lost time with
the ferocity of his attacks, he did so obliquely rather than through direct
confrontation.
The controversies that Cassian so carefully avoided mentioning do more
than provide beacons for charting the course of his career; they also offer
insight into the presentation and content of his monastic theology. Even
though they had been tainted with the stain of Origenism, Cassian numbered
some of the Origenist monks among the great heroes of monastic life. He was
also heavily influenced by the theology of Evagrius Ponticus, the most prolif
ic author if not the intellectual leader of the Origenists. At times, one can also
detect the influence of Origen on Cassian's theology in a way that has not been
11
12 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
The information that Cassian provides about himself is limited by his concern
to record an interior rather than an exterior journey. Rather than slavishly
record the actual events of his sojourn through Egypt, Cassian describes his
spiritual journey from an immature novice filled with misconceptions about
the monastic vocation to one sufficiently mature to grasp the nature of pure
and ceaseless prayer. He tends to record those facts and events that relate the
customs and doctrines of the Egyptian monks and are of spiritual and didactic
import, rather than those that would be of most use to a modern biographer.
Nevertheless, Cassian does reveal a few things about himself. He was born
of wealthy Christian parents whose piety was such that they would have sup
ported him in his monastic endeavors if he had ever returned home.l Longing
for his home in his last Conference, Cassian describes its surrounding terrain.2
At some point early in his life, he befriended Germanus. Despite Germanus'
greater age, the two were of one mind in their monastic zeal. 3 At an uncertain
date, they travelled together to Palestine where they entered a monastic
community near the cave of the nativity. The two companions soon became
dissatisfied with the monks of the region and Cassian frequently expresses his
frustration with monastic life in Palestine, criticizing the Palestinians for their
legalism and lack of zeal and comparing their customs unfavorably to those of
the Egyptians.4 As will be shown in chapter 3, Cassian's complaints about
Palestinian and Syrian monasticism are typically general and do not always
refer to his own community near Bethlehem. However, he does write that he
and Germanus feared their spiritual life would be jeopardized if, upon return
ing from Egypt to Bethlehem, they had been compelled to remain there.5
While a young monk in Bethlehem, Cassian and Germanus did encounter
one exemplar of monastic perfection, the abba Pinufius. Tellingly, Pinufius
hailed not from Palestine but from Egypt. As part of a continuing effort to
John Cassian 13
seek a more humble station, Pinufius had fled from his responsibilities as abba
of the monks at Panephysis.6 Some of his brethren ultimately discovered
Pinufius while they were on pilgrimage to Bethlehem and they convinced him
to return to Egypt, but the example of Pinufius' humility and the perfection
of his virtue were not lost on Cassian and Germanus.
The companions' own circumstances in Palestine could not compete with
the example of Pinufius and the growing reputation of Egyptian monastic life.
Adopting the widely held belief that the solitary life was superior to the
communal, they left their community in Bethlehem in order to dwell among
the Egyptian anchorites who had come to exemplify the utter abandonment
of one's self for God.7 According to the itinerary set out in Cassian's monastic
writings, the two travelled a great deal in lower Egypt and the Delta and
eventually settled at Nitria.8 They sought guidance from a number of monks,
including their friend Pinufius, and the advice that was given to them
comprises the bulk of the Conferences.9
Before leaving Bethlehem Cassian and Germanus had been compelled by
their superiors to vow that they would soon return.10 This came to weigh
heavily upon them and after seven years in Egypt they felt it necessary to
fulfill their vow. 11 This return was merely perfunctory. Upon arriving back at
Bethlehem, the companions announced to their superiors that they intended
to reside permanently at Nitria. Although they quickly returned to Egypt, this
intention would also go unfulfilled. Sometime after their return, Theophilus'
paschal letter of 399 inaugurated strife and even violence among the monks
of Nitria and Kellia.12 Cassian is next seen in Constantinople being ordained
deacon against his will by John Chrysostom.13
Cassian later composed his Institutes and Conferences at the request of
several monastic and episcopal figures in southern Gaul. He dedicated his first
work, the Institutes, to Castor, for whom the only date is a mention in a papal
letter from 419.14 Chadwick has plausibly argued that Cassian's second set of
Conferences, numbered 11-17, were published in 427 and that the third set,
Conferences 18-24, were published a year later.1s Cassian's last work, written
against Nestorius, would have been superfluous after the Council of Ephesus
in 431. It is therefore possible on the basis of internal evidence to place
Cassian's literary activity roughly in the third decade of the fifth century.
Other writers have also provided information about Cassian's career.
Gennadius, is the most authoritative source. even though he wrote in the
latter part of the fifth century. He relates that Cassian was born in Roman
Scythia minor, or modern Dobrudj a, and was ordained deacon by John
Chrysostom. As a priest at Marseille, Cassian founded two monasteries, one
each for men and for women. Gennadius also provides a detailed description
of Cassian's monastic and theological works which confirms the order of
composition set out in their prefaces. Finally, Gennadius writes that Cassian
died a monk in Marseille.16 Palladius wrote half a century earlier than
Gennadius but from a greater distance. He relates that Cassian was a disciple
14 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
INTRIGUING POSSIBILITIES
Cassian does not reveal his age upon entering the monastery near
Bethlehem and his emphasis on his spiritual rather than temporal journey in
Egypt render it impossible to derive a precise chronology of his career. When
describing his infantia and pueritia, for example, Cassian could easily have
been refering to his spiritual development rather than to the span of his life.
Chadwick has suggested that Cassian was most likely not an oblate. While he
concedes that youths, or even boys, were not unheard of in monasteries at this
John Cassian 15
time, he rightly points out that placing a boy in a monastery so far from his
home would have been very unusuaU6 Chadwick instead proposes that, as a
youth, Cassian made a conscious decision to travel to Palestine to pursue a
monastic vocation. Cassian's departure from Palestine for the more rigorous,
and potentially more fruitful, ascesis in Egypt would also indicate a personal
vocation to the monastic life. His journey to Egypt might also shed light on
his willingness to travel from Scythia Minor to Bethlehem, for it shows that
distance and inconvenience were not barriers to his spiritual endeavors.
Eduard Schwartz has suggested that Germanus encouraged Cassian's initial
venture, but again this is not certain.27 Cassian was deferential to Germanus
and frequently referred to him as abba. However, he also spoke of Germanus
as a companion in spiritual combat and noted the harmony of their minds and
souls, which would imply equality rather than subordination.28
Cassian is also silent about when he arrived at Bethlehem and how long he
remained there. Schwartz, noting Cassian's frequent references to ill health
and fear of not completing his literary endeavors, assumes that he died some
time in the 430's. This can also be supported by Gennadius. Counting back,
Schwartz concluded that Cassian must have arrived in Palestine within the last
two decades of the fourth century. An earlier arrival, Schwartz suggested,
would have warranted comment as to Cassian's longevity.29
Chadwick has attempted to be more precise and argues that Cassian proba
bly left Bethlehem before 386 and must have left by 391 .30 The first date hinges
on Cassian's relative silence about Jerome, who with Paula took up residence
near the cave of the nativity in the autumn of 386.31 Essentially, Chadwick
doubts that Cassian could have been reserved when commenting on Jerome
if they had lived within close proximity of each other. If Jerome's forceful
personality had not provoked comment, then surely his bitter harassment of
the Origenist monks fleeing to Palestine from Nitria would have required
some mention.32 Palladius, who was a younger contemporary of Cassian and a
partisan of the Origenists, was acerbic in his description of Jerome. 33
This argument is not compelling. Admittedly, in his polemic against
Nestorius, Cassian praised Jerome as a teacher of catholic Christians.34 This
praise is not effusive, however, and may very well have been exaggerated
according to the principles of the genre. To bolster his position, Cassian would
have wanted to inflate the reputations of all those who supported the ortho
dox view. In like manner, Cassian praised Rufinus of Aquileia, whom Jerome
had come to hold in bitter contempt. What is more telling is that, in the pref
ace to his Institutes, Cassian belittles Jerome's monastic experience and quietly
undercuts him as a monastic writer. When referring to Jerome's own monas
tic writings and translations, Cassian criticizes Jerome for describing only
what he has heard, not what he has experienced.35 Even if Cassian had not crit
icized Jerome, Cassian's silence would not necessarily demonstrate a lack of
acquaintance, for he makes no mention of figures who had made a far greater
impact on his life, such as Evagrius. Cassian also avoids openly criticizing the
16 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Augustinians who had labelled him a heretic, even though he engaged them
in debate in Conference 13. Cassian's associations with other people and
affiliations with certain schools of thought are not to be traced through the
names he drops. Rather, they are to be traced through the ideas he espouses.
Chadwick's second date hinges on Cassian's brief return to Bethlehem. To
have remained in Egypt for seven years, visited Palestine and returned to
Nitria in time to hear the paschal letter of 399 would require him to have first
arrived in Egypt by 391. However, in the second edition of his work,
Chadwick himself suggests that the passage describing Cassian's brief return
to Bethlehem may be an interpolation. Consequently, the seven-year delay,
and even the return itself, may not have occurred.36 Therefore, Cassian may
have been in Egypt for a period that could be measured either in decades or
in months.
These chronological uncertainties make it difficult to determine the specif
ic events that contributed to Cassian's monastic formation. His sojourn in
Palestine before he arrived in Egypt could have been much longer than the
time he spent in Egypt. Also, the itinerary of the Conferences suggests that
Cassian and Germanus wandered for some time before arriving at Nitria in
time to hear Theophilus' paschal letter. It is therefore possible that, while
undoubtedly influenced by Evagrius' thought, Cassian may not have been in
Nitria and Kellia sufficiently long to have become acquainted with him per
sonally. Finally, given that Cassian was associated with the Origenist monks
who had fled from Egypt to Constantinople and may have resided with them
for several years in Syria, he may have had a more profound exposure to
Egyptian monastic life and even to Evagrius' theology as a refugee in Syria
rather than in Egypt itself. Regardless of whether he encountered them more
often in their Egyptian monasteries or as refugees in Constantinople and Syria,
the theology and way of life of these monks were determining factors in how
Cassian understood the monastic vocation.
Theophilus. John had appointed many of these monks to church offices and
their presence angered many. Even if Cassian had left Egypt before the exodus,
once in Constantinople he would have been closely associated with the monks
from Nitria and Kellia. It was in this context that Palladius remembers him.39
After his mission to Innocent, Cassian disappears from recorded history for
at least a decade. It is possible that, after fulfilling his responsibilities to
Chrysostom, Cassian remained in Rome, where he formed a friendship with
Leo that Cassian would later mention in the preface to his anti-Nestorian
treatise.40 It need not have been during the first decade of the fifth century,
however, that Cassian befriended a much younger Leo. Moreover, the con
ventions of correspondence in Late Antiquity would have allowed Cassian to
refer to Leo as a friend even if they had never met.
Elie Griffe has pointed out that it would be more reasonable to assume that
Cassian returned to Constantinople to report on the success of his mission.4!
While he was only one of many who had appealed to Innocent on
Chrysostom's behalf, Cassian played an important role as messenger. This role
was perhaps facilitated by his knowledge of Latin. Griffe has further argued
that the compresbyter Cassianus mentioned in Innocent's later letters was
indeed John Cassian. This would mean that Cassian, along with many other
of John Chrysostom's supporters, was expelled from Constantinople soon
after his return to the city and travelled with them to Syria and Palestine.42
There he would have come to know Alexander, the future patriarch of
Antioch and a supporter of Chrysostom's followers. According to Griffe,
Cassian then conducted a second mission to Innocent on behalf of Alexander,
who wished to re-establish communion between the two patriarchates.
Cassian may have been elevated from the diaconate to the priesthood as prepa
ration for this mission, thereby earning Innocent's attribution of compresbyter.
Marseille
Such a scenario raises the inevitable question of why Cassian would make a
third journey to the West, this time to settle in Marseille. Griffe has proposed
that Cassian accompanied Lazarus of Aix on his return to Provence from
Palestine. Lazarus' friendship with Proculus, the bishop of Marseille, would
explain how Cassian came to establish two monasteries there. Cassian's third
journey to the West would also reveal something about his character. Rather
than having fled the turmoil of the East at the turn of the century, it would
show him as once more travelling a great distance to find an atmosphere
conducive to the spiritual life. Rather than as a fugitive, he should be portrayed
as a restless, unsettled man, who at least four different times abandoned his
current situation in the hope of finding something better. It still remains to be
shown, however, why Cassian and Lazarus should have been drawn to one
another and what Lazarus could have offered Cassian in Marseille.
The answer to the first question may come from a brief glimpse at Lazarus'
career. In the last decade of the fourth century, Lazarus had acted with
18 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
What is not known about Cassian is perhaps more intriguing than what is
known. We simply cannot be sure of Cassian's activities between 403 and his
writing of the Institutes. However, Griffe's hypothesis is reasonable. It is more
plausible than the assumption that Cassian abandoned his first mission to
Rome without reporting back to Constantinople. It also helps to indicate at
least some of the threads linking Martinian monasticism and the growth of an
ascetic movement in Provence. The sparse details of Cassian's life can only
suggest the atmosphere of his spiritual development and the context of his
literary efforts. If these suggestions are to be given any weight, we must
examine Cassian's ascetic works with an eye to the milieux from which they
arose. This requires a basic understanding of the origins and development of
Christian monasticism in Egypt and in Gaul.
NOTES
19. Innocentius, "Apostolici favoris" and "Quam gratia mihi." For the dates, Jaffe, Regesta
ponti/icum, 47.
20. For Cassian's immediate legacy, Stewart, Cassian, 24-25.
21. Cassian's arrival before 426 is based on the only firm date for his writings, Can.
1 1-18, in 427.
22. Stewart describes the speculation on this issue as "a subindustry within Cassian
studies." Cassian, 4.
23. Gennadius, De viris inlustribus 62.
24. Marrou, "Patrie," 588-596. Cassian's description, Can. 24. 1.2.
25. Marrou, "Jean Cassien," 7. For a detailed survey of the arguments concerning Cassian's
birthplace, Stewart, Cassian, 4-6.
26. o. Chadwick, Cassian, 1st ed., 9. This of course requires accepting Scythia or some
other distant place as Cassian's home.
27. Schwartz, "Lebensdaten," 4.
28. Can. 1 . 1 ; 16.1.
29. Schwartz, "Lebensdaten," 10.
30. o. Chadwick, Cassian, 2nd. ed., 10-18.
3 1 . Kelly, Jerome, 129, for the date of Jerome's arrival in Palestine.
32. o. Chadwick, Cassian, 2nd. ed., 1 1 .
3 3 . Palladius, Historia Lausiaca 36, 4 1 .
34. De incarnatione domini 7.26.
35. Inst., praef 5-7.
36. o. Chadwick, Cassian, 2nd ed., 17-18.
37. Rousseau, Ascetics, 171-172. This argument is challenged by the internal chronolo
gy of the Conferences, which describes Cassian pining for home long before the
eruption of the anthropomorphite controversy.
38. Marrou, "Jean Cassien," 17.
39. Palladius, Dialogus 3.
40. De Incarnatione domini, praef 1 .
41. Griffe, "Cassien," 240-244.
42. Palladius, De vitaJoannis 20, mentions this region among others as a place of refuge.
43. Zosimus, "Postquam a nobis" 3.
44. Zosimus, "Cum adversus statuta" 2.
45. Augustine, De gestis Pelagii 2.
46. Zosimus, "Cum adversus statuta" 2, written 2 1 September 417. For the date, Jaffe,
Regesta, 49.
47. "Vir sanctus et beati Martini discipulus." Prosper, Epitoma Chronicon, an. 412
(1247).
48. Much of Palestine had been overrun by raiders in 4 1 1 . Jerome and his community
had felt it necessary to flee. Jerome, Ep. 126.2; Kelly, Jerome, 306, n. 53.
49. Griffe, L'eglise, 254-255, later became much more sure of his hypothesis.
50. Stewart, Cassian, 1 14-130 for a "tentative" (although to this reader quite profound)
study of these influences.
5 1 . Inst., praef 7; Can. 15.2.3; 18. 1.3.
CHAPTER 2
The story of the beginning of Christian monasticism is one that has been told
and retold many times. It is, according to many narrators, a story that is easy
to tell.! With the advent of a Christian Empire, monastic withdrawal replaced
martyrdom as the ultimate expression of selfless love for God. This new ideal
was first manifested by the hermits of Egypt, who rejected all human inter
course for the sake of communion with God. The life of the hermits was harsh
and their monastic practices exceeded the limits of human endurance. Known
for their withdrawal from society, or anachoresis, these anchorites shunned all
forms of human interaction and penetrated deeper and deeper into the desert
for the sake of God.
The hermits' journey into the desert was more than simply a flight from the
crowds; it was also a declaration of war against the powers of darkness. If the
desert was a shelter from the distractions of daily life, it was also a wasteland
inhabited by demons.2 The hermits were the first to flee society, but they were
also the vanguard for the conquest of the desert and its demonic inhabitants in
the name of God. Freed from all distractions, the hermits could confront the
demons with a fixed mind and clarity of purpose that could be achieved
nowhere else.
While no one doubted the sanctity of such a life, few could endure its hard
ships. Consequently, eremitical zeal was slowly harnessed and trained, and the
communal virtues of humility and obedience came to be emphasized over soli
tary contemplation.3 Cenobitic monasticism, especially in the form practiced
by the Pachomian communities, came to be regarded as the second of only two
legitimate monastic vocations. Monks who wandered from village to village,
or who depended on the gifts of others for their sustenance, or who lived in
small and undisciplined groups, were regarded as being in some sense hetero
dox. Eventually, nearly all true monks began their vocation within a commu
nity. If they proved their worthiness, they could later join an elite group who
21
22 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
had progressed beyond the more limited life of the cloister to pursue a solitary
life of prayer." As the fourth century drew to a close, the number of cenobites
was growing almost exponentially while that of the hermits was slowly dwin
dling. The fiery zeal for conquering the desert was cooling as the initial fervor
of the apostolic community had a few centuries earlier.
Whether anchorites or cenobites, Egyptian monks shared a profound mis
trust of speculative theology. Drawn largely from the ranks of Egyptian peas
ants, few spoke Greek and most were illiterate. Their faith was simple, almost
crude, and they possessed a child-like simplicity. Some had not even pro
gressed sufficiently beyond their former pagan idolatry to allow them to con
ceive of an abstract God.5 The monks were therefore deeply suspicious of
"Greek" theological speculation and the principles of allegorical exegesis
that had originated in Alexandria. They were especially careful to avoid the
heretical teachings of Origen and his followers.
After more than half a century of glory, Egyptian monasticism was rent
asunder by heresy, violence and the corruption of its institutions. Origenism
had penetrated the desert and tainted the spiritual teachings of the fathers.
Strife had arisen between the native Egyptians and the Greek interlopers and
the ensuing violence reverberated throughout the Christian world. Proven to
be dangerous asps rather than saintly monks, the Origenists were finally driv
en from Egypt, but this could not halt the decline of Egyptian monasticism.
Even the native communities had declined. Discipline had become lax and the
reasons for many practices had been forgotten. Where discipline had been
preserved, it had taken on a regimented, almost military aspect.6 The heroes of
the past had passed and they had not been replaced. Instead of demons in the
desert, the pious now feared the presence of boys within the community.
Nevertheless, even as it declined in its native land, Egyptian monasticism
flourished as an ideal that had already spread throughout the Christian world.
Athanasius had been the first to carry this ideal to the West, initially through
the example of the monks in his entourage and then by the Latin translations
of his Life 0/ Antony.7 After Athanasius the West became inundated with
monastic literature. Pilgrims brought back accounts of monks. Ecclesiastical
turmoil produced many exiles, exposing the West to eastern practices and
allowing westerners access to monastic havens in the East.S Jerome offered
advice based on his experiences as a hermit in Syria and later as a cenobite in
Bethlehem. He defended the burgeoning monastic tradition from the mali
cious attacks of Jovinian and he translated Pachomius' rules into Latin.
Rufinus of Aquileia, though not as innovative as Jerome, was an even more
prolific translator. He gave to the West several works of Origen, Basil's
Asceticon, the Historia monachorum in Aegypto, the Sententiae of Sextus, and
the Practicus, Sententiae ad monachos and Ad virginem of Evagrius Ponticus.
The Latin West embraced the Egyptian ideal with astonishing enthusiasm.
Accounts of western monks were patterned after Egyptian literary models.
Monks in Gaul were measured according to Egyptian standards and, at least in
Early Egyptian Monasticism 23
the case of Martin of Tours, an ascetic competition between Gaul and Egypt
was created. Gallic aspirants to the monastic life eagerly sought information
about the heroes of the Egyptian desert and descriptions of their practices
served as the basis for establishing western monastic communities.9 John
Cassian played a crucial role in providing this information, for he recounted
his own experiences in Egypt at length and recorded the words of the elders
themselves.1o
Although it was undoubtedly inspired and given form by the Egyptians,
Latin monasticism evolved to accommodate the more reserved and civilized
disposition of the West.l1 While westerners continued to venerate the hermit
as a monastic hero, they clearly emphasized the establishment of well-run,
orderly communities. Obedience to an abbot replaced discipleship to a charis
matic leader. Monastic rules were expanded and refined. Monastic practices
were modified and regulated both to accommodate the Gallic climate and to
avoid extreme and unsavory behavior.12 Western monks also interacted more
easily with the church as a whole than did their Egyptian counterparts. They
were more receptive to ecclesiastical authority and it was not uncommon to
find them holding ecclesiastical office.13 Some modern scholars would attribute
this heightened ecclesiastical role to the higher levels of education found in
western monasteries for, in order to accommodate the aristocratic sensibilities
of many of the monks, monastic communities often established schools.14
Other scholars ascribe the education and civilized behavior of western monks
to the more civilized Latin temperament. IS
It would be difficult to have imagined a better story. There are identifiable
protagonists (Antony, Athanasius, and Jerome) and antagonists Govinian, the
Origenist monks, and monks who by their manner of life can be classified nei
ther as anchorites nor as cenobites) . It explains the origin and nature of many
of the monastic practices which still exist today and places many elements of
monastic life into easily grasped and recognizable categories. The story also
helps to define orthodoxy, both in doctrine and in practice. What can be
traced back in a clear line of descent to Egypt is acceptable, while what cannot
be so easily traced is at the very least suspect. Finally, the story has a happy
ending. After a variety of fits and starts, the threads that appear hopelessly
tangled at the beginning are slowly woven together to produce a beautiful
fabric that is the Western European monastic tradition.
As attractive as this story is, however, it is not accurate. The origins of
Christian monasticism are not so easily traced and the multitude of monastic
practices that existed in the fourth century are not so easily categorized. The
story that has been told is not so much an historical account as it is a pastiche
of literary artifacts taken largely from the Life 0/ Antony, Jerome's ascetic
works and other early monastic literature. It is therefore derived from a genre
of monastic literature that accentuated the eremitical hero to the point of
excluding more common forms of monastic life. As such, the story is more a
part of the history of early monasticism than a description of it.
24 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Egypt's Jewish population did reside in Alexandria, many Jews had settled fur
ther south, enabling Christianity to spread rapidly southward as well.
Moreover, the Jewish community in Egypt suffered greatly after its revolt
against Trajan (115-117) and this compelled Christians in Egypt to forge an
identity independent of their Jewish forebears.!S By the end of the second
century, evidence begins to appear of widespread and unstructured Christian
communities throughout Egypt.!9
Administration
It is also at the end of the second century that changes can be seen in the
administration of Egypt. While Augustus had established a Roman prefect in
Alexandria answerable only to the emperor, Septimius Severus moved away
from this central administration to a greater reliance on the Egyptians
themselves.2o He extended considerable administrative authority to the metro
politan cities by allowing them to form their own councils, or boulai. While
they had no legislative powers, these councils maintained the food supply
and infrastructure of the cities, helped to supply the army, and ensured the
collection of taxes.
Membership in these boulai entailed some risk, for the office-holders were
responsible for making up any short-fall in the taxes out of their own pockets.
Nevertheless, many thought the risk worth taking when these councils were
first introduced.2! As the Empire increasingly fell into disarray during the third
century, these offices became increasingly burdensome. The maintenance of
the food supply became more difficult and many civic institutions began to
decline.22 At least one attempt was made to incorporate wealthy villagers into
the ranks of the bouleutai in order to relieve the burden of the position, but
this apparently met with little success.23
About this time one also begins to read more often of withdrawal
(anachoresis) as a means of fleeing financial and civic responsibilities. Both the
economic turmoil of the Empire and the failure of the Severan reforms
contributed to the distress of propertied and poor alike. Farmers began to
abandon their land because they were unable to pay the taxes on it. Prominent
citizens began to grow more aggressive in their attempts to avoid the liturgies
that were imposed upon them. Land began to lie fallow and the population as
a whole became more transient.24 Anachoresis became a significant concern
for both the Romans and the Egyptians. The Romans wanted to maintain the
supply of grain that Egypt traditionally provided and the Egyptian villagers
shared a corporate responsibility to ensure that Rome's demands were
met. When people fled, the burden increased for those who remained. The
imperial response was to offer a reward for the return of anchorites and to
forbid towns and villages from harboring them. This resulted in poorer
Egyptians becoming tied to their villages in a manner similar to coloni tied to
their estates.25
Bagnall has argued that "far from being crushing and steadily increasing,
[the system of taxation] was moderate, fairly proportioned to normal
26 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
productivity of land, and stable over a period of more than 250 years."26
However, this does not address the manner in which the taxes were levied or
who bore the principal responsibility for paying the tax. Boak and Youtie, for
example, have noted a papyrus from 309/310 that complains of townsmen who
plotted to burden yet another person in the town with an unfair proportion of
the liturgies. Moreover, these same townsmen were sheltering others from hav
ing to pay any tax at all.27 It is not difficult to imagine such machinations occur
ring fairly frequently as responsibilities were placed more and more into the
hands of local land-holders.28
Diocletian again reorganized the administration of Egypt by weakening
the boulai in favor of the administration of a single logistes, or curator
civitatis, who was himself a townsman.29 The financial administration of the
surrounding countryside was reorganized in a piecemeal fashion and a new set
of offices was created within the towns themselves. The effect of these changes
was to link the administration of the countryside more directly with that
of the towns and their principal citizens. As administration increasingly came
to be accomplished through the liturgical responsibilities of the native
Egyptians, Egyptian property owners in turn established closer relations with
the imperial government. 3D The divisions between urban and rural became less
distinct and the separation between local, native government and imperial
administration became less clear.]! This has led Bagnall to conclude that "in a
small village, it is not difficult to imagine that a quarter or a third of the adult
male population had some liturgical appointment, even without taking
compulsory labor into account. When villagers met the bureaucracy, then, it
was themselves."l2
The changing roles of native Egyptians in their government and the loss of
a clear delineation between city and countryside make it difficult to imagine a
significant percentage of Egyptians avoiding contact with Greek language and
culture. The shifting administrative and social structures also make it difficult
to claim that a clear hierarchy existed in which the most Hellenized would
inevitably be dominant. Instead, the history of Roman Egypt suggests a much
more fluid society where dividing lines constantly shifted, if they could be
drawn at all.
Language
This fluidity is reflected in the evolution of the Egyptian language. The
Ptolemies had established Greek as the official language of the government, an
act that quickly rendered Egyptian court scribes obsolete. This left the priest
hood as the only significant institution capable of preserving Egyptian in writ
ten form. Using Demotic, a difficult script to write, the priesthood continued
to serve as a producer and repository of written Egyptian. In the early stages
of Roman rule the priesthood even received a boost, for Augustus sponsored
building projects throughout Egypt and portrayed himself as the successor to
the pharaohs.33 Augustus also provided the priests with direct monetary sup
port. This direct support came at a tremendous cost, however, for Augustus
Early Egyptian Monasticism 27
also confiscated temple lands. In this way, he brought the priesthood under his
direct influence and made it dependent upon the empire for its survival. When
later emperors no longer felt dependent upon the priesthood to maintain
stability in Egypt, they withdrew their financial support and the priesthood
withered. There is no evidence of imperial sponsorship of Egyptian religious
practices after Antoninus and no evidence of temples receiving money from
the imperial administration after the middle of the third century.34
The decline of the public role of the priesthood contributed to the decline
of written Egyptian, at least as it was traditionally recorded in Demotic. A
vicious cycle gradually developed in which the fading of the traditional priest
hood from public view discouraged the already rare use of the Demotic script.
This in turn led to the further decline of the priesthood. From the middle of
the first to the middle of the third centuries, it was generally necessary for
Egyptian to be translated into Greek in order to be recorded.15
The gradual disappearance of Demotic goes far toward explaining why the
earliest Christian papyri are in Greek rather than in Egyptian. For most peo
ple, Greek was the only readily available written language. The use of Greek
by Christian copyists does not necessarily indicate that Christianity was the
province of an educated, Hellenized culture that existed apart from native
Egyptian culture. In fact, most of the papyri that betray a definite Christian
provenance are not written in educated or cultivated hands. The scripts instead
suggest that the papyri were written by "tradesmen, farmers, minor govern
ment officials to whom knowledge of and writing in Greek was an essential
skill, but who had few literary interests."l6 Thus, rather than Christianity
being the possession of an educated elite, linguistic and papyrological evidence
suggests the rapid diffusion of Christianity into all levels of society. It also
argues against Christianity being imposed by Hellenes from Alexandria. The
Egyptian Church of the late-second and third centuries, which was prospering
in Middle and Upper Egypt as well as in the Delta region, was "composed not
so much of intellectuals or the wealthy as of ordinary men of the middle and
lower classes."l?
The decline of Demotic paved the way for various attempts to transliterate
Egyptian into Greek characters and Coptic eventually triumphed. As Coptic
came to be more widely used, it was taken up by Egyptian Christians for use
in biblical and liturgical texts. Many of the earliest Coptic papyri have a
Christian provenance and Christianity gave impetus to the widespread use of
the script. However, the use of Coptic in the liturgical life of the Egyptian
church should not be taken to mean that Egyptian Christianity arose inde
pendently of or in hostility to its Greek-speaking counterpart. Coptic would
have failed as a liturgical language if some form of Greek had not been
common currency, for Coptic's numerous borrowings from Greek would
otherwise have rendered the liturgy unintelligible. Moreover, Bagnall and oth
ers have demonstrated that Coptic was not the product of an educated or cler
ical elite deliberately attempting to cultivate a linguistic identity independent
of Greek language and culture. It arose instead as a practical necessity within a
largely bilingual milieu and functioned alongside Greek for several centuries.18
28 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Thus, contrary to the earlier view of late Roman Egypt, it is now possible
to conclude that there was little hostility between the two linguistic groups.
To be fair, Greek remained the language of the government and pejorative
references to native Egyptians do appear, but the dissolution of traditional
administrative and religious institutions tended to blur the distinctions
between Egyptian and Greek. Egyptian religion had been waning since
the Ptolemies, and its twilight was marked more by disuse than by the impo
sition of Hellenistic culture from above. Egyptians possessed considerable
auton-omy, especially at the local level, and there was extensive and varied
interaction between the two linguistic groups. By the fourth century there is
evidence of an Egyptian, rather than Greek, elite in the towns and villages.39
While Egypt cannot be described as a wholly bilingual society, papyrological
evidence does suggest that the use of Greek was widespread and that there was
a significant overlap between the Greek and Egyptian communities.40
By the beginning of the fourth century the Egyptian church resembled the
society as a whole. There was not inherent within the church, just as there was
not inherent within Egyptian society, an unbridgeable chasm between Greek
and native. Christianity was not imposed from above, even in the South, and
it was not a mechanism of social or economic exclusion. This revised descrip
tion of Egyptian society and the church can also be applied to its monks. "The
bilingualism of the fourth-century papyrus finds connected with monastic
establishments certainly shows that literate members of these communities
were bilingual, but it may also point to bilingualism as a widespread-but not
universal-condition of life."41 The fact that most of the monks were Egyptian
does not mean that most were hostile to Greek language or culture.42
The second claim that must be addressed is that only two forms of monas
tic life were regarded as legitimate in Egypt: anchoretic and cenobitic. The
earliest historical records suggest otherwise. The first recorded use of the term
monachos provides a significant insight into the role of Christian monks in
Egyptian society. The papyrus in which the term occurs describes a criminal
assault to which a deacon and a monk were witnesses. Monachos is used in the
papyrus in a straightforward manner, which has led E. Judge to conclude that
the term was accepted as a title within legal, or at least conventional, discourse.
Moreover, the fact that the monk was cited as a witness to a crime suggests that
he would be available for any future proceedings.43 It is therefore reasonable to
assume that the monachos was not a dweller of the deep desert. Judge has gone
even further to argue that the monk's association with a deacon means that the
former was associated with a local church.44 This may not have been the case,
for the meeting of the two may have been by chance, or the deacon may have
been associated with a nearby monastery. Judge is correct, however, in his
assertion that the monk was easily recognizable, readily available and likely
connected with the village in some way. This would not have been unusual.
Early Egyptian Monasticism 29
Other papyri reveal apotaktikoi (those who renounce) , the more common
term for monks, functioning within a wide variety of circumstances. They
owned, inherited and bequeathed property; they rented rooms; and they
appeared as both plaintiffs and defendants in civil and criminal cases.45
It is tempting to dismiss these worldly monks as belonging to Jerome's
Remnuoth, false monks who were regarded with scorn by the Christian
community.46 This dismissal would be inappropriate, however, for these
apotaktikoi appear often in the papyri and their existence seems to have been
readily accepted. Moreover, a brief look at the traditional sources of monastic
history reveals that even properly delimited hermits and cenobites often
played active roles in neighboring villages and towns.
The Pachomian communities, for example, were often established in the
midst of populated areas.47 This was in consonance with Pachomius' ideal
of "an asceticism closely bound up with a sense of obligation toward other
people," an obligation which entailed both relief of suffering and the evange
lization of the countryside.48 The Pachomian communities engaged in exten
sive economic activity, both to support themselves and to relieve the plight
of the poor. They produced clothing, baskets and other goods both for them
selves and for public sale. They farmed their own land and hired themselves
out as laborers. They received and managed extensive estates and farmed
abandoned land.49 The latter activity would have been of great assistance to
the neighboring villages, for it would have helped to ease their corporate
responsibilities. Since the monasteries were not free from taxation, they would
have shared the burden with surrounding farmers. This extensive economic
activity blurred the distinction between monastic community and wealthy
estate, and Pachomian monks would have been a common sight in the
surrounding region.
Nor was this sort of activity limited to the Pachomians. The Historia
monachorum describes Oxyrhynchus as a veritable city of monks.50 Apollo,
although a hermit living in the desert, was nonetheless frequently of service to
neighboring villages. He interfered with a pagan procession in order to
convert a village. 51 On more than one occasion he interceded between villages
about to engage in armed combat over disputed boundaries. 52 He also acted as
a healer and provided relief to the poor during a famine. 53 Sarapion is described
as both ruling a large community and managing a sizable rural estate.54
The monks under his jurisdiction produced so much surplus food that they
were able to ship some of it to Alexandria to relieve the poor in that city. The
author of the Historia monachorum notes that all the monks whom he
mentions gave alms to the pOOr.55 While he records this activity to show
the sanctity of the monks, his description goes far toward demonstrating that
even hermits were not entirely isolated from the surrounding community.
They interceded in crises, healed the sick, fed the poor and even helped to fend
off the occasional wild animal. 56 Other sources suggest much the same thing. 57
Evagrius Ponticus describes a monk who sold his Bible in order to help the
30 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
poor and elsewhere writes of the need to give alms.58 While there can be no
doubt that Evagrius vigorously championed complete detachment from the
distractions of urban life, he nevertheless acknowledged that this might not
be possible.59 Even the gnostic who has acquired the stillness necessary for the
contemplation of divine mysteries is expected to receive guests hospitably
and to care for the poor through alms and healing.60 Palladius mentions the
presence of Christian monks in and around Atribis and Arsinoe.61 The
Canones of ps.-Athanasius also attest to urban monks.62
The need for both anchorites and cenobites to support themselves is reflect
ed throughout early monastic literature. Palladius describes the monks of
Nitria as supporting themselves through the manufacture of cloth.63 Palladius,
Evagrius and the Apophthegmata record the presence of bursars to manage the
economy of the monasteries.64 The Apophthegmata provide further testimony
to the economic affairs of the monks.65 The monks traded with nearby towns
and villages to obtain the necessities they could not produce themselves and
to acquire the raw materials for their manufacturing.66 They owned and
cultivated fields, and hired themselves out to other land-owners during the
harvest season.67 John the Dwarf wove baskets and ropes and arranged for their
transportation to market.68 Poemen interceded in the affairs of a nearby town
in a manner reminiscent of Apollo.69 The layout and location of monastic cells
also suggest economic activity. Cells often contained walled gardens, storage
rooms, diversified living spaces and, in some cases, luxurious appointments.7o
Many communities were located in or near suburbs in order to facilitate inter
action with the general population.71
Trade was not sought for its own sake and in many instances the
Apophthegmata celebrate those who managed to avoid such distractions.
Although John the Dwarf engaged in manufacture and trade, for example, he
is praised for the utterly detached manner in which he carried this out.72
Complete isolation was an option available to only a very few, however, and
the more typical monk labored to support himself and his community in a
manner similar to that of his previous life in a nearby village or town. Not
surprisingly, this continuity of activity is reflected in monastic dwellings.
Many of the cells that have been uncovered bear a strong resemblance to the
houses that existed in the nearby villages.
The traditional view of Egyptian monks as illiterate peasants completely
withdrawn from the larger world must therefore be revised. Most monks did
not entirely abandon human intercourse. Many lived within towns and
villages, and for others the desert was nothing more than the strip of wasteland
that immediately adjoined cultivated fields. Some monks even inhabited pock
ets of desert in the midst of populated areas. Many retained ties with local
churches and several assumed important roles in neighboring towns. Monks
engaged in a wide range of economic activity and this variety suggests that they
came from a wide range of backgrounds.
Early Egyptian Monasticism 31
the coming of Christ.8! As the mind of God, Christ facilitates the restoration
of the soul to God by mediating between our rational natures and the divine
nature. Antony characterizes the restored unity of the soul as membership in
Christ's body.82
Because we are created in the image of God, knowledge of God begins with
knowledge of ourselves.83 In order to know ourselves truly and to recognize
the image of God within us, we must resist the deleterious effects of our
material bodies and cultivate our rational natures. We must be attentive to
ourselves by purifying our bodies, quelling the interior movements of our
souls and living in harmony with reason.84 A rational life requires discernment,
which enables us to distinguish not only good from bad, but what is real from
what is unreal. 85 Rather than as a means of punishing the body because it is the
source of sin or an opportunity to share in the suffering of Christ, Antony
describes ascesis as the process of purification necessary to know oneself and
God. In Rubenson's terms, Antony's ascesis is a "method of purification of the
body and soul in order to bring them into harmony and regain man's natural
condition."86
Antony's emphasis on attention to oneself in order to know God recalls the
theology of Origen. In his Commentary on the Song of Songs, for example,
Origen comments on the verse beginning "Unless you know yourself" nisi -
more generally. In both instances, teaching took place "in the context of a
personal relationship."111 Both traditions were concerned with the student's
life and moral development as well as the imparting of knowledge. Both
devised methods of instruction that allowed for meditation and rumination.
One therefore cannot easily separate the instruction of the desert fathers from
the milieu in which it arose, just as one cannot easily isolate the content of the
instruction. This is not to suggest that the method of instruction found
in Antony's Letters or in the Apophthegmata was derived solely from Stoic
or other philosophical instruction. It is intended merely to challenge Guy's
claim that the desert fathers had developed "an altogether original method of
education. "112
Perhaps the best example of the nature of monastic instruction is the corpus of
Evagrius Ponticus. The son of a chorepiscopus in Pontus, Evagrius was
ordained lector by Basil of Caesarea and deacon by Gregory N azianzen. He
later travelled to Constantinople with Gregory, where he served as archdea
con.11l Evagrius learned philosophy and sacred scripture under Gregory, and it
was probably Gregory who introduced Evagrius to the work and theology of
Origen.ll4 After Gregory's retirement, Evagrius remained in Constantinople
and developed a reputation as a skillful debater with heretics.ll5 At prayer
one evening, Evagrius had a vision that warned him away from his love for
the wife of a high official, and within twenty-four hours he took leave of the
capita1.116 He eventually arrived at the monastic community at the Mount of
Olives, which was governed by Melania the Elder and Rufinus of Aquileia.
While there Evagrius became extremely ill. Melania nursed him back to health
and convinced him to take monastic VOWS.ll7 Evagrius remained at the Mount
for two years before departing for Egypt.
After arriving in Egypt Evagrius maintained a correspondence with both
Melania and Rufinus. ll8 Palladius would seem to have played a significant role
in this, for he most likely served as Evagrius' messenger.ll9 Later in his career,
Evagrius returned briefly to the Mount of Olives to seek refuge from
Theophilus, who had threatened to ordain him bishop of Thmuis. 120 Evagrius
spent two years at Nitria and then fourteen at Kellia, dying on Epiphany,
399.121 While in Egypt Evagrius became associated with a group of monks
known for their fondness for Origen. These monks were led by Ammonius,
the Tall Brothers and, according to Palladius, Evagrius himself.122
Evagrius composed several works and many of these are small collections
of logoi or aphorisms. These collections have often been characterized as
without order; as possessing discernible themes but no discernible structure.
Despite this characterization, many of Evagrius' works show signs of having
been intricately constructed. In his extensive study of the Sententiae ad mona
chos, for example, Jeremy Driscoll has shown that Evagrius carefully linked
logoi together to form a coherent summary of the spiritual life.123 Driscoll
36 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
further argues that this is Evagrius' most complete work, for in it he surveys
the spiritual life from an incipient fear of the Lord to the contemplation of the
Trinity.124 Driscoll's approach is promising and deserves to be applied to other
of Evagrius' works.
Although it is not as comprehensive as the Sententiae ad monachos,
Evagrius' De oratione shows similar signs of being structured in the form of a
spiritual ascent. The work begins with the need for compunction and purity
and moves on to consider the various obstacles to prayer. It eventually ascends
to a discussion of the nature of pure prayer. The work is premised on the
notion that the reader is progressing in his own spiritual life as he progresses
through the text. Transitions from one topic to another are often marked, and
it is assumed that the reader has mastered what has been read before going on.
When he first introduces true prayer, for example, Evagrius cautions that if the
reader cannot remain focused during prayer, then he still prays as one attached
to the world rather than as a monk.125 When discussing the dangers that assail
the mind at the height of prayer, he writes as though the reader has already
made significant progress toward this goal. 126 Evagrius later expresses his hope
that the reader has achieved the full gift of prayer and counsels patience if
he has not. 127 Evagrius' aphorisms encourage intensive study and rumination.
The reader is not to go on to the next until he has mastered the last.
The role which memorization plays in reading Evagrius' texts can be seen
in the guarded and coded language that he frequently uses. He often alludes to
key elements of his thought through cryptic and even incomprehensible
references to them. Only later, or perhaps in a different work entirely, will
the references be explained. As the reader progresses through the text, and
eventually through Evagrius' entire corpus, he will return to key terms
and concepts many times. He will thereby be forced to consider the terms in
a new light. The depth and richness of the terms grow in proportion to the
reader's capacity for understanding.
An example of this is Evagrius' description of the logismoi, or evil thoughts,
as children. In his Sententiae ad monachos, Evagrius echoes Psalm 137 (136):9
when he writes: "He who completely destroys evil thoughts in his heart, he is
like the one who dashes his children against the rock."128 Evagrius also refers
to children in his Rerum monachalium rationes. There, he cites Jeremiah 16.4,
which prohibits Jeremiah from fathering children. Evagrius explains that the
children whom Jeremiah mentioned signify not only human children but also
the desires of the flesh, for they are the sons and daughters of the heart.129 In
his Scholia in psalmos, Evagrius sheds more light on the matter. He reinforces
the idea that children signify evil thoughts and also explains that the rock
against which they are dashed is the doctrine of Christ.130 A similar chain
explains the different dimensions of "rock" as a metaphor for Christ. Yet
another example is how Evagrius describes the shield of faith that quenches
flaming arrows. He takes up this Pauline image in his Sententiae ad monachos
when he writes: "A flaming arrow ignites the soul, but the man of praktike will
Early Egyptian Monasticism 37
extinguish it."131 In the Kephalaia gnostica Evagrius explains that the arrows are
evil thoughts which are formed in the passionate part of the soul.132 In the
Practicus we read that praxis is the method of purifying the passionate part of
the soul. 133
The reader is not expected to have all of Evagrius's works at hand so that
he might cross-reference these terms. Instead, the terms and the aphorisms are
to be memorized over a long period of time. The meanings of the text, and
hence the depth of Evagrius' monastic teaching, will be revealed only slowly.
A text that has been learned, or even memorized without being understood,
will gradually be explained as the student progresses. The use of aphorisms
allows Evagrius to interweave introspection and practical advice in a spiralling
manner in which the reader, when he moves on to a new aspect of the
spiritual life, is already expected to have mastered the former.
Using aphorisms in this way also allows for the simultaneous discussion of
several themes, which reflects the complex personality of a reader whose
spiritual life cannot be compartmentalized in convenient linear categories. In
a manner similar to the philosophical instruction described above, the reader
is to explore every aspect of his emotional and spiritual life. The manner in
which the reader is to read and memorize Evagrius' aphorisms has led Driscoll
to describe the Sententiae ad monachos, which is a collection of sayings, as
a model dialogue. He concludes that the text "can hold no interest for the
reader who does not accept the proverbs as invitations to dialogue."134
This approach to Evagrius' corpus does not differ greatly from his approach
to the Bible, for the Bible also possesses many levels of meaning that can only
be mastered after a long period of prayer and study. 135 Both texts also require
the practical application of their principles for their meaning to be grasped.
The goal of scriptural interpretation is to establish a unity between the princi
ples in the text and the life of the reader. "It is through the fulfillment of the
text in one's life that the text expresses its full transformative power."136 A
monk therefore cannot claim to have mastered a text, either biblical or
Evagrian, until he has successfully applied it to his life. In each case, the text
must engage the reader and transform him, thereby leading him to a deeper
awareness of himself and of God.
There is an inherent irony in Evagrius' corpus, however, in that the com
munity which provided the basis for these writings in some ways would have
been antithetical to them. I am not here referring to the supposed anti-intel
lectualism revealed in the Apophthegmata, which can easily be explained by the
fact that the sayings were collected after the Origenist and other theological
controversies. These later writings are evidence of a wariness of theological
speculation that was not such a force in the latter part of the fourth century.
Nor do I wish to suggest that Evagrius was not read in Egypt. O'Laughlin, for
example, cites evidence that Evagrius was read in Scetis.1J7 Guillaumont goes so
far as to suggest that Evagrius' De oratione was the flash point for the Origenist
controversy, for it attacks the visualization of God during prayer, a practice
common among some of the monks in the region. 138
38 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
How could one represent in a written text a method of instruction that was
dependent upon the personal relationship between master and disciple? As will
be seen below, one method that Cassian used to overcome this enormous dif
ficulty was to attempt to recreate as far as he could the dialogue between abba
and disciple as an experience of reading. Before this can be examined in more
detail, however, we must first become familiar with the context in which he
wrote.
NOTES
1. The following account is derived from a number of studies and represents a tradi
tional view of the origin of Christian monasticism. The account merely indicates
the direction many previous studies have taken and is in no way a detailed survey
of scholarship in the field.
2. For this two-fold image of the desert, Guillaumont, "Conception," 3-2 1.
3. Hardy, Egypt, 90; De Clerq, "Influence," 169-176; Spidlik, Spirituality, 21.
4. Chitty, Desert, 32; Byrne, "Cenobitic," 282.
5. Baus, Reichskirche, 378; Clark, Origenist, 56-57.
6. Griggs, Egyptian, 201.
7. Lorenz, "Anfange," 1-2.
8. Baus, Reichskirche, 390-391.
9. Baus, Reichskirche, 398.
10. Byrne, "Cassian," 4-5.
1 1 . Lorenz, "Anfange," 35.
12. Courtois, "Evolution," 53.
13. J. F. Kelly, "Gallic," 506.
14. Frend, "Paulinus," 10. Bardy, "Occident," 86-104, challenges this view.
15. E.g., Antin, "Monachisme," 108-109.
16. Pace Klijn, "Jewish Christianity," 161-175, who argues that there was more theo
logical and ethnic variety in the early Alexandrian communities.
17. Roberts' analysis of Christian nomina sacra provides much of the evidence for the
spread of Christianity among the Jewish population. Manuscript, 26-48.
18. For the devastation of both the Jewish and the Gentile populations that resulted
from these revolts, Smallwood, Jews, 393-412.
19. Roberts, Manuscript, 71.
20. Bowman, Town Councils, 126-127.
21. Bagnall, Egypt, 55-56.
22. Bagnall, Egypt, 59-61.
23. Lewis, Life, 49-50.
24. Rubenson, Letters, 93.
25. Boak, "Flight," 327-329.
26. Bagnall, Egypt, 172.
27. Boak, "Flight," 332-337.
28. Bagnall, Egypt, 56, n. 71.
40 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
The story of ancient monasticism that began the previous chapter is very
much a western story. Although it has its roots in Egypt, and Egyptian
practices are described as normative, the story nevertheless flowered most
fully among Latin-speaking Christians. The story appealed to the West because
it satisfied the strong desire of many Christians to find roots within a contin
uing tradition. The gulf between the apostolic and the imperial church had
come to be keenly felt, especially after the triumph of Christianity under
Theodosius.1 The Egyptian monks were often portrayed as successors to the
apostles, for they had preserved unblemished the purity of the apostolic
church.2 The story also appealed to the West because it came at a time when
the beleaguered cause of monasticism was encountering strong opposition
from both pagans and Christians. By tracing the history of monasticism to
the very beginning of the Christian tradition, proponents of the monastic
life could parry what was perhaps their critics' most powerful thrust: that
monasticism was a recent aberration concocted by extreme and irrational
zealots.3 Finally, the story helped to classify and assess monastic practices and
imposed order on the variety of rules and communities that had arisen. By
limiting the origins of monasticism to Egypt and by describing Egyptian
practices as normative, monastic writers offered a clear pedigree of orthodox
monastic practices. By telling the story of past heroes, they could shape
monks' present way of life. In a sense, narrating the past allowed monastic
writers to control their present.
This is perhaps most evident in the western reception of the Life 6/ Antony. By
representing the stages of Antony's withdrawal as corresponding to the stages
of his spiritual development, the Life firmly established exterior solitude as a
metaphor for interior purity.4 When studying the practices of other ascetics,
Antony passed from being a novice to one capable of withstanding the assaults
45
46 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
he modifies them to suit his own unique vision. At no time does Jerome
denigrate Antony. His only direct challenge to Antony is his refutation of the
claim that Antony was the first to enter the desert. In the course of the Life 0/
Paul, however, Jerome clearly establishes Paul's priority in virtue. Paul has
gained a more complete isolation; his abstinence is more rigorous; he is more
impoverished; he is acknowledged as superior in virtue by both Antony and
God.13 During their encounter, Antony begs that he may accompany Paul on
his journey to Heaven. 14
For the most part, these differences in virtue are matters of degree rather
than substance. What is more significant for discerning Jerome's particular
interests is how Paul's vocation deviates from the pattern established
by Antony's biographer. In opposition to Antony's famous illiteracy, for
example, Jerome represents Paul as being well-educated in both secular and
Christian literature. IS Jerome's depiction of Paul also betrays a fascination with
rigorous ascetic practices that transcends what is found in the Life 0/ Antony.
Like Antony, Paul's ascesis consists of minimal consumption of food, lack
of concern for the body, and nearly continuous prayer. 16 Unlike Antony,
however, Paul does not rely upon a small garden and instead receives his
meager diet of half a loaf a day through divine beneficence. 17 In order to make
this paltry fare seem plausible, Jerome offers two examples of even more
extreme fasts. One hermit subsists entirely on barley bread and muddy water,
while the another consumes only five dried figs a day.I' Jerome also dwells at
length on the story of a young man who bites off his tongue to prevent his
arousa1.19 Jerome's description of Paul's way of life is wanting. While he
mentions Paul's practice of continual prayer, he does little more than claim
that Paul's body retained the posture of prayer even after his soul had left it.20
While he contrasts Paul's education to Antony's supposed illiteracy, he does
not explain what role this education might have played in Paul's monastic life.
Ironically, in his desire to emphasize Paul's poverty and isolation, Jerome
renders it virtually impossible for Paul to have any access to books.
Unlike the Life 0/ Antony, the Life 0/ Paul does not contain a sophisticated
theology of the monastic life or debates with pagan philosophers. It instead
presents Paul's exemplary conduct and other Christian heroes almost entirely
in terms of their isolation, extreme fasts, mastery over carnal desire and
nearly continuous prayer. This ideal is almost entirely self-interested, being
concerned solely with individual salvation and showing little evidence of
having a place within the larger Christian community. Paul's isolation would
have prevented him from participating in the sacramental life of the Church
and the other hermits are described in a similar vein. Nor does Jerome make
any provision for cenobitism or other forms of communal activity. Paul's
complete isolation denies him even the role of intercessor which Athanasius'
Life had allowed for Antony. Following Christ demands the severance of all
communal and familial bonds. While Jerome's conception of the monastic life
will evolve and become richer over the years, the deficiencies of the Life a/ Paul
are indicative of much of his early monastic literature.
48 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Mark Vessey has recently argued that Jerome used his first set of public letters
to create a model of Christian literary activity.21 In essence, Jerome portrayed
himself as a Latin Origen; a portrayal that would later come back to haunt
him. Basing his model on descriptions of classical poets and Eusebius' descrip
tion of Origen, Jerome created a Christian literary persona whose principal
attributes were a tireless commitment to reading and writing "in the service of
religion," a single-minded engagement with the Bible, and a high level of
literary productivity.22 Vessey's argument is sound and provides an insight into
both Jerome's literary activity and his understanding of the perfect Christian
life. However, it is necessary to add one more attribute to Jerome's cultivated
persona: a dedicated monastic life.
Jerome put great stock in his experience as a hermit in the Syrian desert,
writing that he would gladly have remained there if he had not been driven
out by false and unorthodox monks.23 It was in Syria that he made the acquain
tance of monks who claimed to have met the hermit Paul. Jerome's greatest
patron while in Syria was Evagrius of Antioch, who produced a polished and
widely read translation of the Life 0/ Antony.24 Finally, while ostensibly
pursuing the life of a solitary, Jerome in fact engaged in extensive literary
activity, composing many of his first public letters either from his cell or on
his way there. Thus, Jerome did not depend entirely upon forging a link with
Athanasius to establish himself as an authority on the monastic life. He
claimed that his experience, his travels and his acquaintances had allowed
him to tap into the major currents of the monastic tradition. This unique
familiarity with the monastic life gave Jerome the authority to shape its future.
In this early set of letters Jerome describes the monastic life in heroic
terms.25 Christian ascesis is little short of mortal (or immortal) combat, in
which the lone hero fights against both his own evil inclinations and the
demonic enemies of God. Purity comes through physical withdrawal and
struggle against the forces of evil. The solitary in the desert gains a commun
ion with God that is possible nowhere else. Jerome praises his friend Rufinus,
who went to live among the solitaries of Nitria, as dwelling with a heavenly
family on earth.26 He later describes Rufinus as having been washed clean by
his experience at Nitria and made as white as snow.27 Jerome's companion
Bonosus also abandoned the world and ensconced himself on a small, unin
habited island in the Adriatic. He demonstrated his absolute commitment to
God through his abandonment of his social position, his familial obligations
and even his dearest friend.28
Jerome wrote twice in praise of Bonosus' vocation. Describing the desola
tion of Bonosus' isle in vivid detail, Jerome sets it against the heavenly reward
which Bonosus will surely receive. He contrasts Bonosus' loneliness to his cit
izenship in the heavenly city; his isolation to the presence of Christ; his lack
of drinking water to the plentiful water of life. "You will be able to praise the
victory," Jerome writes, "when you realize the effort of the combatant."29 He
Western Perceptions 0/ Egyptian Monasticism 49
likens Bonosus to John the Evangelist on the island of Patmos, suggesting that
Bonosus "might see [a vision] in the manner of John."30 Alone on his island but
for the presence of Christ, Bonosus "saw the glory of God, which even the
apostles did not see except in the desert."3!
This description is uncompromising. Bonosus' renunciation and isolation
are complete; his life is dedicated entirely to a struggle against Satan and to
communion with God. His efforts are of heroic proportions and call to mind
the deeds of the apostles. Bonosus best fulfills the call to Christian perfection,
for it is in the desert that evil can best be fought and there that the glory of
God might be seen. Although Jerome writes that he was the first of the two to
desire a monastic life, Bonosus was the first to live it.32 What Jerome merely
willed, Bonosus carried to completion.33 Though somewhat overawed by the
prospect, Jerome hopes that he, too, might soon embark upon a similar
retreat. Jealous of his friend, he chafes at his prolonged stay at Antioch and
longs for the opportunity to join the anchorites in the desert of Chalcis. The
desert is more beautiful to him than any city and is made into an image of
paradise by the saints who dwell there.34 Only poor health prevents his imme
diate departure.35
Soon after writing these letters, Jerome fulfilled his desire and established
himself in a cell at Chalcis. Once there, he strongly urged his friend
Heliodorus to abide with him there. Heliodorus had earlier resigned from the
army and, upon being baptized, had taken a vow of chastity.36 Heliodorus,
however, did not equate chastity with dwelling in the desert and chose instead
to remain in his native city of Altinum. He hoped that by remaining in the
city, he could fulfill his responsibilities to his family and answer a call to the
episcopacy. Jerome angrily disagreed with this choice and strenuously argued
that Heliodorus' vow required his complete renunciation of the world.37 He
demanded that Heliodorus immediately abandon his family, his responsibili
ties as a citizen and the potential rewards of becoming a bishop. Jerome went
so far as to accuse Heliodorus of seeking the honor of the episcopacy rather
than the duties of pastoral care.38
Jerome argued that Christian perfection demands chastity and mortifica
tion, which in turn require complete abandonment of the world. It is not
possible to seek perfection and yet remain among people. The duties of a
cleric are incompatible with the monastic vocation. Pastoral concern should
not prevent Heliodorus from entering the desert. Only after an extended
diatribe against remaining in the world does Jerome attempt to mollify his
harshness and to entice, rather than to command, Heliodorus to join him. In
contrast to his invective on the evils and temptations of the world, Jerome
praises the sublime joy of life in the desert and describes the wilderness as
rejoicing in the presence of God.39
The uncompromising ideals and naIve expectations that Jerome took with
him into the desert were not borne out by his own experience. Ill-disposed to
solitude, he suffered greatly from what he perceived to be utter isolation. This
solitude was very much a matter of perception, for Jerome never truly
50 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
renounced the world. Visits from friends were frequent and he deeply
regretted their departure.4o He maintained an extensive correspondence that
was facilitated by a small group of copyists.41 In a petulant voice Jerome
demanded that those who could not visit should write and he reprimanded
several who had either not responded with sufficient speed or had not written
at sufficient length.42
Regardless of his own failure in the desert, Jerome did not consider that
there might be virtually insurmountable difficulties inherent within the
eremitic ideal itself. He continued to idealize the desert and wrote again in
praise of Bonosus. Repeating his earlier allusion to John the Evangelist, Jerome
described Bonosus as master over his desires.43 Unable to commend his own,
less than admirable experience, or the conduct of the Syrian monks whom he
had come to despise, Jerome looked instead to the heroic past for exemplars
of the Christian life. After leaving Chalcis, Jerome composed, or at least
disseminated, his Life of Paul.H It is significant that Paul's hermitage was not in
Syria but in Thebes. Egypt had now come to embody Jerome's ideal of
Christian perfection.
Jerome abandoned Syria and travelled in a roundabout way to Rome. Like
the monks of Chalcis, he felt that this community, too, lacked sufficient zeal.
Yet, within this community, small groups of women practiced a rigorous
ascesis and were dedicated to biblical study. No sooner did Jerome begin to
associate with these women than he began to dominate at least some of them.
His role was multifold. He directed various women, especially Paula and
her daughter Eustochium, in their studies. He advised them concerning
their ascetic discipline, encouraging them to pursue their rigorous fasts and
extended vigils with all the more determination. He also used his public
correspondence with them, which contained both encouragement and
reproach, as a means to articulate further his views on the monastic life.
While in Rome Jerome continued to praise the desert.45 Writing to
Eustochium, he even expressed regret that he had not remained in the Syrian
waste; a regret made somewhat hollow by his failure ever again to attempt
a similar vocation.46 In this same letter, however, Jerome also entertained
the possibility of a communal form of monasticism. When describing the
monastic life to Eustochium, he only briefly discussed the eremitic life,
mentioning its biblical antecedents and the more recent examples of Paul and
Antony. Postponing a more complete discussion to another time, Jerome
wrote only that the hermits go out from the monasteries, taking nothing
with them into the desert but bread and salt. 47 A discussion of the communal
monasticism practiced in Egypt, as well as sniping at Syrian monks, absorb the
remainder of Jerome's attention.
Jerome also eulogized two women while in Rome: Asella and Lea. Inspired
by a prophetic dream, Asella's father had consecrated her to virginity as a
girl of ten. At twelve, she dedicated herself as a virgin and thenceforth under
took a life of extreme self-denial.48 She went out rarely, and then only to visit
secretly the shrines of the martyrs.49 With a diet consisting of bread, salt, and
Western Perceptions 0/ Egyptian Monasticism 51
cold water, she fasted for days at a time. During Lent, she extended these fasts
to a week.50 Though she had not left Rome, Asella "sought delight in solitude
and found in the turbulent city the desert of the monks. "5! Lea, on the other
hand, was a Roman widow who had supervised a community of virgins until
her death in December of 384.52 She had paid little attention to her appearance,
eaten only coarse food, and maintained nightly vigils. Through her ascesis, Lea
had trampled Satan underfoot and won for herself a crown in Heaven. She had
rejected her position as a matron and converted her household into a monas·
terium.53 Her life was proof that one cannot serve two masters. One must
choose between Christ and the world. 54
In these two eulogies and in his Letter to Eustochium, Jerome set out the two
forms of monastic life he deemed legitimate. The eremitic was more noted
for its rigorous fasts and constant vigils. The communal life had its own
perfection, but he also described it as a training ground for future hermits.
This hierarchy was echoed in the West in monastic hagiography and other
descriptions of monastic life that praised the isolated hero and spoke of
his utter abandonment of the world for the sake of Heaven. In the second
decade of the fifth century, the Gaul Rusticus believed the surest path toward
intimacy with God was the desert and Cassian mentions the prevalence of a
similar view even later.55 Eucherius, a younger contemporary of Cassian, called
the desert the principal dwelling place of God.56
JEROME'S INFLUENCE
Friends from boyhood, Jerome and Rufinus surrendered their worldly aspira
tions and chose to live in a loosely arranged Christian community at Aquileia.
When this community disintegrated a short time later, each went his separate
way.80 While in Antioch awaiting his own sojourn in the desert, Jerome
learned that Rufinus was dwelling among the monks of Nitria, whom Jerome
characterized as a heavenly family on earth.8! A short time later, he echoed
Psalm 5 1 when he described Rufinus as washed clean by his experience in
Egypt and made as white as snow.82 Jerome's admiration for Egyptian monas
tic life was only to rise in the next few years as he became disenchanted with
his own experience in Syria.
Later in their lives there seemed every possibility for Jerome and Rufinus
to revive their friendship. When Jerome arrived in Bethlehem to establish a
monastic community, he found Rufinus only a few miles away in Jerusalem.
However, controversy over Origen's theology was to drive the friends apart
forever. Jerome had incautiously relied on Origen in his earlier biblical com
mentaries and, in his later years, was desperate to demonstrate he was and
always had been free of the taint of heresy. He vociferously condemned not
only Origen but all who were sympathetic to the long dead theologian. This
blanket condemnation included his old friend Rufinus, who responded to
Jerome's attacks by defending Origen and by reminding all who would listen
that Jerome had once embraced Origen enthusiastically. Never one to back
away from a quarrel, Jerome unleashed a stream of invective against Rufinus
that would continue long after the latter had died.
54 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
the first to raise the ghost of Origen. As Robert Evans has shown, it would
not have been to Jerome's benefit to mention Origen. He had indeed relied
heavily on Origen in his early biblical commentaries and his subsequent
recantations and denials could not entirely hide this fact. Pelagius, on the
other hand, could have hoped to weaken Jerome's support in the West by
reminding Latin readers of his earlier errors and the bitter nature of his
earlier conflicts.88 Since Jerome enjoyed little popularity in Palestine, he was
heavily dependent upon support from the West to sustain the monasteries that
he and Paula had founded.89
Jerome's reversal of Pelagius' accusation may also have been more than an
attempt to turn the tables on his foe. He may have seen the affinity between
the supporters of Pelagius and the earlier supporters of Rufinus and Melania
the Elder. As his stance against Pelagius developed in the course of his writ
ings, Jerome became increasingly convinced that Pelagius had gained his
understanding of sin from Origen, or at least from Origen's intellectual
descendants. Basing his study on the efforts of A. J. Smith and Torgny Bohlin,
Evans has noted that Pelagius was very much indebted to Rufinus' translation
of Origen's commentaries on PauPo Evans and later Clark have argued that
Jerome perceived the root of Pelagius' doctrine to be an understanding of the
origin and nature of the soul more at home with Origen's thought than with
Augustine's.91 If Jerome could prove the existence of a link between Origen
and Pelagius, then his battle would be over before it had begun.
NOTES
86. The following discussion relies on my "Palestinian Ignorance." In the same year,
Elm published "Genealogies," which examines genealogies of heresy (including
Jerome's) as rhetorical constructions.
87. Jerome, In Hieremiam, prol. 3; also 4.4 1. For Rufinus' earlier attack, Apologia
1.23-44.
88. Evans, Pelagius, 7-9.
89. Palladius, Historica Lausiaca 36,41 .
90. Evans, Pelagius, 1 8-20.
91. Evans, Pelagius, 7, argues that Jerome has been largely ignored by students of the
Pelagian debate because of his different approach to the problem. See also Clark,
Origenist, 221-222.
92. Jerome, Ep. 133. 1-3.
93. "quae enim potest alia maior esse temeritas quam dei sibi non dicam similitudinem
sed aequalitatem uindicare et breui sententia omnium hereticorum uenena
conplecti, quae de philosophorum et maxime Pythagorae et Zenonis, principis
Stoicorum, fonte manarunt? illi enim, quae Graeci appellant pathe, nos perturba
tiones possumus dicere, aegritudinem uidelicet et gaudium, spem et metum,
quorum duo praesentia, duo futura sunt, adserunt extirpari posse de mentibus et
nullam fibram radicemque uitiorum in homine omnino residere meditatione
et adsidua exercitatione uirtutum." Jerome, Ep. 133.1.
94. "aduersum quos et Peripatetici, qui de Aristotelis fonte descendunt, fortissime
disputant et Academici noui, quos Tullius sequitur, et eorum non dico res-quae
nullae sunt-sed umbras et uota subuertunt. hoc est enim hominem ex homine
tollere et in corpore constitutum esse sine corpore et optare potius quam docere
dicente apostolo: miser ego homo, quis me liberabit de corpore mortis huius?"
Jerome, Ep. 133.1.
95. Regarding Stoicism, for example, Colish, Stoic, vol. 2, 90, concludes that "there are,
then, a few areas in which Jerome reflects an integral grasp of Stoic ethics and
where he coordinates it appositely with Christian problems and concerns. On
balance, however, the Stoic gleanings from his works are few, his uses of them
are tendentious and superficial, and he is not interested in their implications or
interconnections."
96. For a detailed discussion of the use of apatheia in classical philosophy and early
Christian literature, Frohnhofen, Apathiea, and J oest, "Die Bedeutung," 7-53.
97. Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
98. "Euagrius Ponticus Hiborita, qui scribit ad uirgines, scribit ad monachos, scribit ad
earn, cuius nomen nigredinis testatur perfidiae tenebras, edidit librum et sententias
peri apatheias, quam nos 'inpassibilitatem' uel 'inperturbationem' possumus dicere,
quando numquam animus ulla cogitatione et uitio commouetur et-ut simpliciter
dicam-uel saxum uel deus est." Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
99. Jerome preferred perturbatio to passio. E.g., "quas nos perturbationes interpretati
sumus, graeci pathe appellant, quae si kakozelos in passiones uertamus, uerbum
magis quam sensum uerbi expresserimus." Jerome, In Ioelem 4, 11. 175-177.
100. That in his early years Jerome wrote more favorably of a mind undisturbed by
passions, Colish, Stoic, 2:77.
Western Perceptions 0/ Egyptian Monasticism 63
101. "huius [Evagrii] libros per orientem Graecos et interpretante discipulo eius Rufino
Latinos plerique in occidente lectitant." Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
102. Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
103. "illam autem temeritatem, immo insaniam eius, quis possit digno explicare ser
mone, quod librum Sexti Pythagorei, hominis absque Christo atque ethnici,
inmutato nomine Xysti, martyris et Romanae ecclesiae episcopi, praenotauit? in
quo iuxta dogma Pythagoricum, qui hominem exaequant deo et de eius dicunt
esse substantia, multa de perfectione dicuntur, ut, qui uolumen philosophi nesci
unt, sub martyris nomine bibant de aureo calice Babylonis." Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
104. Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
105. "multis et de toto huc orbe confluentium turbis et sanctorum fratrum monasteri
ique curis occupatus commentarios in Hieremiam per interualla dictabam, ut,
quod deerat otio, superesset industriae, cum subito heresis Pythagorae et Zenonis
apatheias et anamartesias, id est 'inpassibilitatis' et 'inpeccantiae,' quae olim in
Origene et dudum in discipulis eius Grunnio Euagrioque Pontico et Iouiniano
iugulata est, coepit reuiuescere et non solum in occidente, sed et in orientis part
ibus sibilare et in quibusdam insulis, praecipueque Siciliae et Rhodi, maculare
plerosque et crescere per dies singulos, dum secreta docent et publice negant."
Jerome, In Hieremiam 4.1.
106. Jerome, Ep. 133.3.
107. Jerome first described Jovinian's position in the following way: "nititur approbare
eos, qui plena fide in baptismate renati sunt, a diabolo non posse subverti."
Aduersus Iouinianum 1.3. Later in the same treatise, Jerome attempted to build a
straw man by changing the action from overthrow to tempt. "Secunda proposi
tio est, eos qui fuerint baptizati, a diabolo non posse tentari." Jerome, Aduersus
Iouinianum 2.1.
108. "miserabilis Grunnius, qui ad calumniandos sanctos uiros aperuit os suum
linguamque suam docuit mendacium, Sexti Pythagorei, hominis gentilissimi,
unum librum interpretatus est in Latinum diuisitque eum in duo uolumina et sub
nomine sancti martyris Xysti, Romanae urbis episcopi, ausus est edere, in quibus
nulla christi, nulla spiritus sancti, nulla dei patris, nulla patriarcharum et
prophet arum et apostolorum fit mentio, et hunc librum solita temeritate et insa
nia 'Anulum' nominauit, qui per multas prouincias legitur, et maxime ab his, qui
apatheian et inpeccantiam praedicant." Jerome, In Hieremiam 4.41.
109. Jerome, Dialogus aduersus Pelagianos, prol. 1.
1 10. "Nulli enim dubium, quin Stoicorum et Peripateticorum, hoc est ueteris
Academiae, ista contentio sit, quod alii eorum asserunt pathe, quas nos perturba
tiones possumus dicere, aegritudinem, gaudium, spem, timorem, eradicari et
exstirpari posse de mentibus hominum, alii frangi, regi atque moderari, et quasi
infrenes equos quibusdam lupatis coerceri." Jerome, Dialogus aduersus Pelagianos,
prol. 1 .
1 1 1. Jerome, Dialogus aduersus Pelagianos, prol. 1.
1 12. "quorum omnium [hereticorum] ista sententia est, posse ad perfectionem, et non
dicam similitudinem, sed aequalitatem Dei humanam uirtutem et scientiam peru
enire, ita ut se asserant ne in cogitatione quidem et ignorantia, cum ad
64 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
And pouring forth tears we begged that same abba for a word of instruction,
because we knew most clearly this inflexibility of his mind, that he would
never consent to open the gate of perfection except to those desiring it faith
fully and seeking it with every contrition of heart, for fear that if he should
hold it forth randomly either to those not wishing it or to those thirsting for
it in a lukewarm manner, and opening to the unworthy and to those receiv
ing scornfully what ought to be learned only by those hoping for perfection,
he would appear to commit either the vice of bragging or the crime of treach
ery. At last, worn down by our prayers, he began.'
At the beginning of his Conferences Cassian described a scene that was typical
of the instruction he had received while in Egypt. A young monk would seek
out an abba in the hope of receiving logoi, or words of advice about how he
might attain the kingdom of God. After evaluating the sincerity of the
younger monk's desire and discerning his particular needs, the abba would
reply, often briefly but sometimes at great length.2 This ritual, recorded often
in the Apophthegmata and other monastic literature, lay at the heart of the
relationship between master and student.] Each monk engaged in the dialogue
with definite expectations about what was to occur, and each was mindful of
the role he was expected to play. The younger monk owed his abba complete
trust and obedience, believing his elder to be a better judge of the origin and
nature of his thoughts than himself.. If the disciple were to ignore his abba's
advice, then the teaching relationship would collapse and the abba's grace
of teaching itself would be jeopardized.5 The abba, on the other hand, was
expected to provide not only discernment and sage advice, but also a living
example of what he taught.6 If the abba should fail to discern properly the
needs of his student, then he would endanger his disciple by offering sacred
mysteries to one who was not yet ready to receive them. If the abba should fail
65
66 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
to exemplify the content of his teaching, then his words would possess no
authority. For this ritual of instruction to be effective, it was necessary for
each participant to fulfill his role.
Ironically, the very commission to record the institutes of the Egyptians
for a Gallic audience prevented Cassian from offering instruction in the
intimate setting he so eloquently described. A written text would mediate the
close relationship between master and disciple that was crucial to monastic
instruction. Reading would replace an experience founded upon supervision,
discernment, and the practical application of what has been taught. Cassian
could not discern the needs of his individual readers; nor could there be any
certainty that his logoi would fulfill a particular reader's needs. The reader
would be left to his own devices, seeking from a written text the remedy for a
self-diagnosed disease.
Despite these tremendous obstacles, Cassian did not entirely abandon the
model of instruction he had encountered as a youth. He instead attempted
to recreate the interaction between master and disciple as an act of reading. To
accomplish this, Cassian structured the bulk of his monastic teaching in the
form of dialogues between Germanus (Cassian's erstwhile companion) on
the one hand and the Egyptian abbas on the other. He hoped by means of these
dialogues "to place before [the reader] the men themselves embodied, in a fash
ion, in their own institutes, and what is more, speaking in Latin."7 Cassian
intended the Conferences to be more than living descriptions of the abbas and
his reader was to be more than a mute witness to the dialogues. Instead, the
Conferences establish the setting in which the interaction between reader and
text is to occur. Rather than merely apprehending their words, the reader is to
converse with the abbas, sometimes challenging them, other times asking for
more. Imagining the very abbas themselves before them, living the very
life they described, Cassian's readers are to "receiv[e] into their cells
the authors of the Conferences themselves along with the very volumes of the
Conferences and, in a fashion, [speak] with them through daily questions and
answers."8 By participating directly in the dialogues, the reader will interact
with the abbas in a manner reminiscent of the ritual Cassian described at the
very beginning of his first Conference.
In order to participate, or play a role, in these dialogues, the reader must
temporarily suspend his own self-awareness and to imagine himself as one of
the interlocutors of the text.9 In essence, the reader must adopt Germanus'
voice as his own. To encourage this, Cassian frequently uses the first person
plural to invoke the empathy of his reader. While the "we" of the text often
refers to Germanus and the young Cassian, it also incorporates the reader.
When using the metaphor of a money-changer to describe the discernment of
spirits, for example, Cassian laments the counterfeit spirits that may drive "us"
from the cloister.lo In a later Conference Cassian describes Germanus, like the
reader, as having renounced his possessions and ceased to be driven by carnal
desires, but he cautions that "we" mustn't become complacent after having
made the first step.l1 Both Germanus and the reader regret "our" carelessness
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 67
in the monastic life when compared to the discipline of the early anchorites.12
Even at the threshold to pure and ceaseless prayer, Cassian regrets that "we"
are still plagued by carnal desire and suggests that "we" ought to aim first for
more basic prayers.13 The use of the first person plural allows Germanus and
the reader to share the same perspective and suffer the same hopes, fears and
difficulties. Germanus' observations and experiences gradually become those
of the reader. As Germanus grows, so too does the reader.
Cassian hoped that the Conferences would not only teach, but also provide
a mechanism for the progressive self-revelation of the reader. His intended
audience, however, had been shaped by a markedly different formation than
he and Germanus had received. Largely ignorant of Egyptian monastic instruc
tion, Cassian's reader likely did not possess the literary competence necessary
to embrace the dialectical structure of the text. Formed more by the prevail
ing caricature of Egyptian monasticism than by the teaching of the abbas, it
would have been difficult for Cassian's Gallic reader to empathize with
Germanus' circumstances and frame of mind. This gulf between the circum
stances of reader and the role he was to play posed a grave problem. If the sit
uation of Germanus were so far removed from that of the reader that the
monastic teaching ceased to be relevant, then there would be little to encour
age the reader to participate in the dialogue. The interaction that Cassian
hoped to facilitate between the reader and the abba, between the reader and the
text itself, would therefore not occur. Such a failure to establish an affinity
between the reader and Germanus would vitiate both the structured act of
reading and the teaching that depended so heavily upon it.
It was therefore necessary for Cassian to establish some connection, some
sort of link between the ideas of the reader and those of the interlocutor he is
to become. A common point of reference was necessary to allow the reader to
make the leap from his own situation to the situation of the companions
described in the text.14 Cassian facilitated this leap by arranging the Conferences
in a narrative that begins when the companions' life in the desert begins and
ends just before their departure from Egypt. When Germanus and Cassian sit
at the feet of abba Moses at the beginning of the first Conference, they confi
dently proclaim that they are willing to endure any hardship for the sake of
the kingdom of God. Victims of a poor monastic formation in Bethlehem and
the erroneous portrayal of ana chores is popular at the time, they mistakenly
regard themselves as mature monks who have embraced the monastic life and
fully understand its practices and goals. This confidence is soon dispelled,
however, and they quickly learn that they know almost nothing of either the
end or the immediate goal of monasticism. The companions' conversation
with abba Moses leads to both dismay and hope. While they are dismayed by
the depth of their own ignorance, they find hope in the fact that they have
finally been put on the true path to the kingdom of God.
Cassian continues throughout the first set of Conferences to paint Germanus
and his younger self as barely trained novices who know little of monastic
68 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
practices or the reasons for them. Their knowledge is fragmentary at best, and
what little knowledge they possess makes them impatient and difficult to form
rather than wise. While they desire to cling to God in prayer, they know
little of the purity of heart that is necessary for such prayer. 15 Although they
regard themselves sufficiently mature to set out on their own, they soon learn
that they must seek an elder to lead them.16 Of the three renunciations that
all monks must make, the companions have succeeded in only the first
(the renunciation of worldly goods) . They have not attained the second
(renunciation of sin) and have barely heard of the third (withdrawal from
present and visible things to what is invisible) . 17 While able to recognize that
scripture might contain spiritual meaning beyond the literal word, they
frequently misconstrue even its most basic meaning. While they might
occasionally be swept up in rapturous prayer, at other times they can barely
pray at al1.1s In the fourth Conference abba Daniel praises Germanus because he
has finally recognized the depth of his ignorance.19
The companions have not even grasped what Cassian taught in his
Institutes. The fifth Conference provides a summary of spiritual warfare
discussed in Institutes 5-12. In the sixth Germanus asks why God would send
forth evil into the world, a question that should not be asked by someone who
has fully grasped the discussion of divine wrath in Institute 8 .20 In the seventh
Conference Germanus laments that time and solitude have taught him only
what he is unable to be.21 In the ninth he complains that he is still afflicted by
carnal desire (the topic of Institutes 5 and 6) and that he has not achieved the
prayer of the anchorite.22 It is not until the last Conference of the set that
Germanus is praised for his wisdom. Though he has not gained the purity or
perfection of the inner man and he is still ignorant of how to pray without
ceasing, Germanus has at last learned to ask the proper questions. This marks
a turning point in his spiritual journey and abba Serapion finally regards him
as worthy to learn the deepest mysteries of the monastic life.23
The first ten Conferences encompass the monastic life from the companions'
ignorance even of the immediate goal of such a life to their possession of the
purity necessary for ceaseless prayer. These Conferences occur at key stages
of the companions' growth, and are therefore capable of engaging the reader
at the various stages of his own spiritual development. The questions and
immature expectations of the young Germanus reflect those of a younger
reader. As the reader progresses in his vocation, he can continue to appropri
ate the maturing Germanus' words as his own.24 This only addresses one
problem, however. While situating the dialogues at particular stages of the
reader's spiritual journey might encourage the empathy of individual readers
at different times, it risks leaving some of the dialogues unfulfilled. The
content of a later work might exceed a younger reader's capacity for
understanding, or a more mature reader might not condescend to imagine
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 69
Reading the Conferences in this way means that it might take many months,
years, or even a lifetime, to complete them. The first Institutes pertain to the
novitiate, which Cassian described as requiring at least a year. Conference 10
culminates in the pure prayer achieved only by a few of the elders. Such an
understanding of reading might seem unlikely at first, but one need only
consider the story of Pambo to place it in its proper context. Pambo asked an
abba to provide a Psalm for meditation. No sooner did the abba begin to recite
the Psalm, however, than Pambo interrupted him and asked him to stop.
Pambo regarded the first verse itself as sufficient for meditation and did not
want to hear more until he mastered what he had already heard. Six months
were to pass before Pambo returned for more of the Psalm.29 Reading the
Conferences was to encompass the monastic life they described.
Although he asks his reader to adopt Germanus' initial naivete as his own,
Cassian does not depend solely upon shared ignorance to establish an empathy
between the two. Lack of knowledge does not necessarily mean a tabula rasa.
Even if the reader could abandon, at least conceptually, what he had already
been taught, he could not entirely set aside the hopes and expectations that had
led him to take up the monastic life.30 Rather than ask his reader to abandon
his hopes and dreams, Cassian anticipated that his Gallic reader would bring
to the text assumptions and expectations drawn from his own experience
and the Latin monastic literature available at the time. This literature described
Egyptian practices in terms of a rigid distinction between anchorites and
cenobites, excessive veneration of the desert as the special residence of God,
and asceticism of heroic proportions. Cassian does not immediately attack
these views as unrealistic. He instead uses them to cultivate further an empa
thy between the reader and Germanus, between the self of the reader and
the self of the text. Cassian describes Germanus as not merely ignorant of
monastic practices, but also as possessing the same erroneous and unrealistic
expectations that the reader would possess. Thus Cassian's Gallic reader
initially found his own thoughts echoed by Germanus, and he could more
easily appropriate Germanus' voice as his own.
This does not mean that Cassian merely confirms the images the reader
brought to the text. He instead transforms them. Over the course of the
Conferences Cassian actively undermines some of his reader's most cherished
presuppositions. By doing this, however, he also undermines the original basis
for the empathy of the reader for the text. A new set of images must therefore
be provided; a set, moreover, that can resolve the tension of the reader who
has been cast adrift from the norms he has brought to the text. To borrow a
term from Wolfgang Iser, Cassian accomplishes this by describing Germanus'
journey and conversations in a way that "prestructures" the experience of his
reader.31 Germanus is portrayed as maturing and being transformed by a new
way of life, and the continued appropriation of Germanus' voice requires the
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 71
reader to apply what Germanus has learned. The reader is asked to mature as
Germanus himself had matured. Through the act of reading, the reader sheds
the misconceptions he has brought to the text and adopts the institutes of the
Egyptians.
Cassian challenges the images of the reader and questions the validity of his
knowledge in the same way that his own had been challenged by the desert
fathers. He creates a new set of images that encourage the reader to identify
with the self of the text. He then encourages structured activities in the reader
to reorient his perspective and create a new disposition. This is not to say that
the reader's own disposition ever disappears entirely. Again borrowing Iser's
terms, Cassian creates a tension between the role assumed by the reader and
the reader's habitual orientation.
The resultant tension calls for a resolution. The resolution, however, cannot
come about simply by restoring habitual orientation to the self which had
been temporarily relegated to the background. Playing the role involves
incorporating the new experience. Consequently, the reader is affected by the
very role he has been given to play, and his being affected does not reinvoke
the habitual orientation but mobilizes the spontaneity of the self.32
In Cassian's terms, if one hopes truly hopes to understand the Egyptian monks
and their practices, then "let him first hasten to take up their purpose with
similar zeal and with a similar way of life, and then he will at last discover that
those things which seemed beyond human capability are not only possible but
even most pleasant. "]]
In this way Cassian was able to recreate as an act of reading the interaction
between master and student that was the foundation of Egyptian monastic
instruction. Arriving at a crisis in his vocation, or needing to learn the answer
to a pressing question, the reader approaches an abba who stands as the embod
iment of virtue. The abba discerns the desire of the reader and offers appro
priate advice. The reader then goes away to apply the advice, not returning to
the text (or seeking further advice from the abba) until he has mastered what
he has been taught. By anticipating what a Gallic monk might bring to the
text, and by recommending the discipline his reader should adopt, Cassian is
able to foresee many of the problems and dilemmas his reader will face during
the course of reading the Conferences.
It must be admitted, however, that this recreation is partial at best. While
Cassian might have been able to set out the topography of a spiritual journey
that would hopefully become the reader's own, he still could not predict
precisely when or even if the reader might undertake each stage of the journey.
The reader, not the abba, must discern whether he has mastered what he has
been taught and can move on, or whether he should pause and not seek knowl
edge for which he is unprepared. In the end, Cassian is left with the need to
trust his student in a way similar to an Egyptian abba. It was necessary for
both teachers to be confident that their students approached in good faith. If
a student should fail to follow their advice, their instruction would be useless
72 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
and possibly even harmful. If a student were dishonest about his needs, then
both Cassian and the abba risked being unable to discern his true plight
and offering sacred mysteries to one who should not possess them. For the
dialogue between abba and student, or between reader and text, to succeed,
the one seeking advice must faithfully fulfill his role.
The Novitiate
In his preface to the Institutes Cassian contends that he has been away from
Egypt too long to remember much of what he learned,
especially since the reason for these things can in no way be taught or under
stood or kept in the memory by idle meditation and verbal teaching. For it
consists entirely in experience and practice alone and, as these things cannot
be taught save by one who is experienced in them, so they cannot be per
ceived or understood except by one who has tried with equal exertion and
toil to grasp them; however, if they are not frequently discussed and worn
smooth by constant conversation with spiritual men, they will quickly fade
again through carelessness of mind.34
Cassian thus declares from the beginning his fundamental belief that monastic
instruction is inseparable from praxis. Reading the Institutes is not to be a pas
sive exercise. If the reader hopes to master fully the institutes of the Egyptians,
then strenuous effort and frequent conversation must accompany the reading
of the text. The principles espoused in the text are to be frequently examined
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 73
prefer it [obedience] not only to manual work and reading and the silence and
quiet of the cells, but also to all virtues, so that they consider everything to
be placed after it and are content to undergo all suffering so that they are not
seen to have violated this good in any way."49
The novice consults his elder about even his most basic needs and at no time
is he to act on his own wishes (uoluntates).5o This obedience pertains to
the novice's interior as well as exterior life. Allowed neither discretion nor
freedom of action, the novice must reveal all his thoughts, even the most
basic or trivial, to his elder so that their origins might be interpreted and
explained.51 While Cassian encourages the novice to control his thoughts, he
describes them as "dangerous schemes" and "vicious designs" (conspirationi
noxiae and consilii praui) rather than as vices.52 Such thoughts must be
confessed to the elder in an exchange that resembles therapy more than a
petition for forgiveness and redemption. The probing questions of a discern
ing elder help the offending novice to understand the origins of his thoughts
and to avoid similar circumstances in the future. Like idle talk and other
activities, such thoughts can be regulated by the habituation of monastic
practices. The novice must repeat psalms and work continuously in order to
cultivate habits that will lead to a new disposition. Although largely external
acts, these practices encourage internal discipline.
The disciplines Cassian describes in the first four Institutes are to be
practiced by the reader with the same spirit of obedience that the novice owes
his elder. Both the authority of the elder and the institutes of the Egyptians
are of divine origin.53 Egyptian practices are even to take precedence over those
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 75
demanded by the local abbot.54 All readers, even the leaders of monasteries,
must adopt the discipline of the novitiate. Like those he hopes to govern,
the abbot must acquire the virtues of humility and obedience and master the
Institutes. Only after he has proven himself to all will he be able to teach or to
govern others. Echoing his preface, Cassian declares that one must learn before
he can teach.55
Cassian concludes the first four Institutes, and therefore the novitiate itself,
with a speech by Pinufius. An abbot of a community at Panephysis, Pinufius
desperately sought the peace of a more humble station. He twice fled his
responsibilities at Panephysis, each time to be found by his monks and
brought home. His second flight took him to Palestine, where he came to
reside temporarily with Cassian and Germanus.56 The two would later seek out
Pinufius during their travels through the Delta and witness Pinufius' speech at
the induction of a novice into his monastery.
Pinufius' speech encapsulates the material discussed in the first four
Institutes. In them, Cassian lays a foundation for monastic life in which renun
ciation, obedience and humility are the highest virtues. They are the founda
tion of abbatial authority, of the disposition of the individual monk, and of
the community itself. Mental and spiritual discipline are little more than the
restriction of one's wishes and the confession of all things to an elder. The
novice possesses no discernment or judgment of his own and little introspec
tion is required of him. While the first elements of self-evaluation are encour
aged, this is limited to the analysis of external behavior. The elder, rather than
the renunciant, is concerned with the movements of the sou1.57
Pinufius' speech also marks a significant transition both in the text and in
the life of the reader. Cassian begins his Institutes by addressing his reader as
an untrained infant who hopes to achieve the heights of Christian perfection.
More important, Cassian describes himself as sharing in this same spiritual
infantia. Using "we" to include himself among his readers, Cassian does not
represent himself as a veteran of the Egyptian desert or as the founder of two
monasteries. He instead claims to be plagued by thoughts he would hesitate to
reveal to an elder.58 Like his reader, Cassian is unable to offer proper obedience
to an abbot.59 Cassian is prone to drowsiness during nocturnal prayers.60 He
shares with his contemporaries in Gaul an improper desire for possessions, and
even identifies himself as a Gaul looking from a distance upon the customs of
the Egyptians.61 Cassian is not an abba writing for the instruction of others.
He is himself a novice who possesses the same goals and suffers the same
difficulties as his reader.
This identification of author and reader, or the self in the text and the self
of the reader, is evident in the record of Pinufius' speech. Cassian again uses
the first person plural, but the emphasis has been subtly changed. Earlier
Cassian's "we" had encompassed himself and the reader who shares with him
the struggles of the novitiate. Now, however, the "we" invites the reader to
become Cassian's companion in the desert. Cassian first describes Pinufius'
flight from abbatial responsibility and then their encounter at Bethlehem.
76 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Through Cassian, the reader lives vicariously with Pinufius in Palestine and
later stands in the monastery at Panephysis, a privileged witness to the conse
cration of a brother. During Pinufius' speech, Cassian withdraws himself from
the reader's attention and becomes a spectator, allowing Pinufius to speak
directly. Pinufius is rendered almost physically present. Silent, the reader sits
next to Cassian at Pinufius' feet. With Cassian, he listens to the old man's
words and is inspired to examine the depth of his own commitment.
The setting of Pinufius' speech is similar to that of the Conferences. Cassian
describes the physical environment; he relates the elder's virtues; he allows the
elder to assess the needs of the one seeking advice; and the elder speaks in his
own voice. As a novice, however, the reader is not yet able to participate in
these conferences. The consecration ceremony provides a workable compro
mise. The setting is established, the needs of the initiate made known and the
speech recorded. Cassian and his reader, however, are witnesses rather than
participants.
Pinufius' speech brings to a close the early formation of the reader. It recalls
the stages of the spiritual life through which the reader has progressed as he has
progressed through the text itself. Like Cassian before him, the reader has
passed through his novitiate and been trained in the institutes of the Egyptian
coenobia. In order to determine if the reader has successfully applied what he
has read and has adopted the humility and obedience proper to a novice,
Cassian (through Pinufius) describes the virtue's external manifestations.
These signs of humility, which will be quoted often in Latin monastic litera
ture, offer the reader a standard by which he can gauge his progress.62 Just as
in the Conferences to come, Cassian provides an opportunity for the reader to
discern his condition and to judge whether he can profitably move on.
The last eight Institutes no longer describe the institutes of the Egyptians,
just as they no longer address a reader who is serving his novitiate. Instead they
speak to one who has gained some maturity in his spiritual life and can now
participate in the initial skirmishes of the war against the vices. This shift in
content also encourages a shift in the role of the reader. Early in the fifth
Institute Cassian records a speech attributed to Antony.63 In this speech
Antony addresses a monk who has "learned by an examination of discretion,
[and] is now able to stand on his own judgment, and to arrive at the summit
of anachoresis, [and who] ought in no way to seek all kinds of virtues from one
man however great."64 Cassian is no longer writing to a novice under the tute
lage of a single elder and possessing no judgment of his own. He instead
addresses a reader who has proven himself as a novice and can now exercise his
own judgment. Recalling Paul's athletic imagery, Cassian likens his reader to
a youth who has proven himself to the president of the games and is now per
mitted to wander among the athletes.65 No longer subject to a single elder, the
reader must discern the particular abilities of individual monks and learn from
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 77
each the virtue he best exemplifies. Moreover, the reader should possess at least
some ability to discern his own condition and the motives for his actions.
Gluttony, the first of the vices and the principal topic of the Institute, cannot
be defeated merely by obeying a universal rule. Differences in age, health, dis
position and environment require flexibility in fasting. True fasting will arise
only from the judgment of the reader's conscience (iudicium conscientiae).66
By addressing his reader as though he has moved beyond his novitiate and
now lives within the monastic community, Cassian maintains the reciprocal
relationship between progress in the monastic life and progress in the text. The
reader has acquired the first elements of discretion and no longer owes
absolute obedience to a single mentor. Similarly, absolute obedience to a uni
versal and over-arching authority in the text is no longer profitable. Cassian
now portrays monks who excel in and teach about particular virtues, just as
individual monks would excel at different virtues within the community.
Antony's speech performs a necessary function at the beginning of a new
phase of the spiritual life by removing restrictions that had been placed on the
reader as a novice and opening a new path for a young monk.
The large collection of anecdotes at the end of the Institute provides a prac
tical exercise in the use of this discretion and offers a key to understanding the
structure of Cassian's text as a whole. At first glance, this collection seems dis
organized and somewhat out of place, not least because few of these anecdotes
pertain directly to gluttony.67 Upon further reflection, however, they can be
grouped into related themes and they fall into discernible patterns.68 The first
few stories are taken from Cassian's own experiences in Egypt and relate how
the rules of fasting were abandoned in favor of hospitality.69 When recounting
these events, Cassian again uses the first person plural. In a manner similar to
how he included the reader among Pinufius' audience, Cassian this time invites
the reader into his Egyptian cell. The reader encounters the abbas much as
Cassian encountered them. Both Cassian and the reader benefit from the
hospitality of an abba and later the reader as well as Cassian will be chastened
for preferring sleep to vigils.
The first of the elders to be considered is John, an abba of great age and
virtue. When John heard abba Paesius claim that the sun had not seen him eat
for forty years, he was able to reply that for an equal length of time the sun
had not seen him angry.70 Cassian then explains how John had reached such
heights of virtue. When asked on his deathbed to give his monks a word, he
replied with what amounts to a succinct summary of the first four Institutes:
"Never, he said, did I do my own will nor did I teach anything that I had
not first done myself."71 The foundation laid by John's unquestioning obedience
and the application of what he had been taught withstood the test of time. He had
maintained a humble spirit and also excelled in other virtues. That John and Paesius
each excelled in a different virtue is entirely in accord with Antony's speech.
Cassian next considers Machetes, who was blessed with the gift of being
able to fall asleep during idle chatter and to remain awake during spiritual
conferences.72 The two stories that follow reveal different aspects of this virtue.
78 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
The first explains that on the three occasions that Machetes spoke against
another monk, it was revealed to him that he was or would be entangled in
this same sin.7l The second again relates Machetes' miraculous ability to listen
to spiritual conferences and reminds the reader to pay careful attention to the
words of the elders.74 Cassian then tells of a monk who received letters
from his family and burnt them unread.75 This recalls the need for complete
renunciation and links physical exile to the internal quiet of the soul.
This is followed with yet another cluster of tales that focus on the gifted
exegete Theodore, whose skill was gained from prayer and fasting rather than
from any formal education.76 Theodore explains that purity of heart rather
than learning is necessary for scriptural exegesis. There are many differences
and errors among the commentators because most of them care nothing for
the purification of the mind and "rushing to interpret [the Scriptures], and
forming ideas that, in proportion to the grossness and worldliness of their
heart, are different from and contrary to the faith or to each other, they
cannot comprehend the light of truth."77 Theodore then reprimands Cassian
for sleeping after Vespers rather than maintaining a vigil. As with the account
of Machetes, the first story of the set establishes the elder's virtue and
subsequent stories elaborate upon it. The account of some anchorites living on
an island in the Delta follows a similar pattern.78
These stories are directed toward one who is just beginning spiritual
combat. From John, the reader is reminded of the fruits of obedience and
humility he has so recently acquired himself. Machetes tells him to pay close
attention to conferences and to refrain from feeling superior to others.
Theodore reminds him that prayer and purity of heart are the true source of
biblical knowledge. Even though educated, Cassian will not gain further
understanding if he should continue to sleep.
The last story of the collection is poignant evidence of Cassian's intended
audience. It tells of two novices who were ordered by John to deliver
especially fine figs to an old and enfeebled monk. On their way the two
became lost and starved to death, choosing to lose their life on earth rather
than violate their abba's command.79 At first, this story would seem bizarre in
light of Cassian's repeated calls for moderation. However, the abba who gave
the command was John, whose own humility and judgment was beyond
question. The key to the story would seem to be that the monks were young.
It serves as a caution to the reader, also a young monk, that obedience is
still necessary. Freedom of judgment cannot be invoked without it having
been earned.
The arrangement of Cassian's anecdotes confirms Antony's view of discre
tion. The reader first learns of an elder's special charism as though discerning
it himself. The elder then provides instruction, either by word or by example,
that is relevant to his particular virtue. Thus, both Antony's discourse and the
collection of stories fit neatly into Cassian's larger scheme. They also confirm
Cassian's belief that example is a necessary part of teaching and that the
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 79
we can neither acquire the judgment of right discretion nor possess the
insight of honest contemplation or ripeness of council, nor can we be par
takers of life or steadfast in justice, nor indeed can we be repositories of spir
itual and true light.82
In the end, if anger should be allowed to darken our soul, then we will lose the
purity of our mind and never think to pray.83 This language describes a stage
of the spiritual life not previously addressed; one in which the vices disturb the
mind and inhibit the infusion of "true light." The reader is no longer thought
to be prodded by fear of God and compunction over carnal passions. Now
inspired by love of virtue, he has made considerable progress toward the
80 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Aaron's clothing received the oil of his anointing, so the heart must be fit to
receive the Holy Spirit. If a moth-eaten garment cannot be worn by a
priest, then a dejected heart cannot receive the Spirit. The metaphor of the
destroyed wood is also given a heightened meaning. As wormwood cannot
be used to adorn an earthly temple, so the dejected heart is unfit for building
a spiritual temple.
Institute 10 takes this new, specifically monastic exegesis a step further by
offering an extended analysis of Paul's call for Christians to work steadily
and not become busy-bodies. Cassian interprets Paul as though he wrote
concerning the monastic vice of acedia, a kind of spiritual torpor that can be
remedied by continuous work. Paul's command for Christians to be quiet
becomes an injunction to remain in one's cell. The command to work with
one's hands becomes a command to labor continuously.93
Finally, Cassian also suggests a sophisticated understanding of Acts 20:35,
which states that it is more blessed to give than to receive. In his discourse on
covetousness he had interpreted this passage within the historical context of
the Jerusalem community. He here adds the deeper meaning of the shared
poverty of the true donor and the recipient.94 In Institute 12 he will write that
those who cannot understand the true meaning of this passage have failed
in their spiritual life.95 In this same Institute Cassian will extend allegorical
interpretation to historical events. While the defeat of Joash by the Syrians
provides a concrete example of the dangers of pride, the story can also be read
to signify the battle between the soul Goash) and the vices (the Syrians) .96
Before introducing the struggle against anger, biblical exegesis had been
largely of a literal kind. Having progressed in his spiritual life, the reader must
now turn his attention more fully toward prayer and biblical study. Shedding
any misconceptions about the nature of God, the reader must penetrate the
mysteries of scripture in order to gain true knowledge of God. Cassian had
earlier described Theodore, an abba whose knowledge of scripture was gained
through prayer and discipline rather than academic expertise.97 Now, Cassian
has shown in a concrete way the reciprocal relationship between purity of
heart and spiritual knowledge.
This does not mean that Cassian has abandoned the structured activity
between the reader and the text. While these last vices address a stage of monas
tic life that transcends anything the reader can be expected to have achieved,
they also afflict those who have just begun to make spiritual progress.99 While
not himself subject to their more advanced attacks, the reader has gained suf
ficient understanding to perceive how the vices might afflict one who is more
advanced. After discussing the more advanced attacks of pride, Cassian returns
to the level of the reader when he speaks of its more lowly manifestations.
On the other hand, he [Satan] does not deem worthy to tempt us in this way,
but overthrows us, who are still entangled in earthly passions, by a grosser
and, I should say, a carnal pride. And so according to my promise I think
it is also necessary to say something concerning that by which we or men of
our measure, and especially the minds of youths and beginners, are usually
imperiled. 100
Cassian then recounts how this lower form of pride takes possession of the
lukewarm monk and corrupts him. The description serves as a synopsis
of the Institutes. The monk first makes a poor beginning and is unable to
abandon his worldly haughtiness and possessions.101 He does not recognize
that he must die in the body and conquer the carnal vices. Failure to make
a complete renunciation leads to avarice.102 Gradually, the monk becomes
wrathful and can no longer be taught anything of the spiritual life.
This tale looks both forward and back. It recalls the lessons of the Institutes,
for the monk's descent into depravity follows the course of Cassian's analysis
of the vices. The decline is described in vivid detail and special attention
is given to the monk's growing impatience with conversation and spiritual
guidance. The prideful monk resents instruction and deliberately twists its
meaning, using it as a weapon against others. The conferences soon become
harmful and it would have been better for the one possessed by pride never to
have begun them.
The tale looks forward by warning the reader to reflect upon his condition
before proceeding to the Conferences. The Conferences may not simply be
impenetrable; they may actually cause significant harm. To aid the reader in
discerning his condition, Cassian briefly lists the ways in which pride can lead
to a feeling of triumph early in the spiritual journey. "For, as we said before,
the state of the inner man will be known from his outward behavior (motus).
Therefore, that carnal pride which we mentioned earlier is shown by these
signs."103 The beginner who falls prey to pride will be loud in speech, bitter in
silence, quick to laugh, morose when serious, etc. The list is then extended to
describe conduct with others. Even the most spiritually dense reader might
easily learn that he has not eradicated pride from his heart.
The final chapter of the section is again a call to humility.I04 In effect,
Cassian has come full circle, for the principal virtue of the first Institutes is also
humility. This virtue has been raised to a new level, however, and given a
more profound significance. Cassian has moved beyond the humiliation of
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 83
the renunciant and the need for absolute obedience to true humility, which
is the purity of heart necessary to stand before God.
NOTES
37. Inst. 4.2. Cassian and Germanus had similarly abandoned their earlier formation,
for they had been told to forget what they had learned in Palestine in order to
embrace more fully the Egyptian ideal. Con. 18.3.1.
38. Inst. 1 . 1 .2-5.
39. Inst. 1.3-9.
40. Cf. o. Chadwick, John Cassian, 2nd. ed., 47-48, who argued that this last chapter
has no place here.
41. Inst. 1 . 1 1 . 1-3.
42. Inst. 2 . 1 .
4 3 . Inst. 2.3.3-5. Cf. o . Chadwick, who argued that this digression i s inappropriate
here. John Cassian, 2nd. ed., 48.
44. Inst. 2.10.1.
45. Inst. 2. 12.2.
46. Inst. 2. 15-16; 3 passim.
47. Inst. 4.6.
48. Inst. 4.10.
49. "quam non solum operi manuum seu lectioni uel silentio et quieti cellae, uerum
etiam cunctis uirtutibus ita praeferunt, ut huic iudicent omnia postponenda et uni
uersa dispendia subire contenti sint, dummodo hoc bonum in nullo uiolasse
uideantur." Inst. 4.12.
50. Inst. 4.8, 10.
51. Inst. 4.9.
52. Inst. 2.15.1.
53. Inst. 2.5. 1-5; 4.10.
54. Cassian castigates abbots who introduce novelty or shy from the difficult regimen
of the Egyptians. Inst. 2.3.3-5.
55. Inst., praef 4-5.
56. Inst. 4.30-3 1; also Con. 20. 1.2-5.
57. Pinufius reiterated Cassian's earlier call for a single mentor. The system Pinufius
described was not as structured, however, and the novice seems to have had some
choice in his superior. Inst. 4.40-41.
58. Inst. 4.9.
59. Inst. 4.2.
60. Inst. 2.7.3; also Inst. 5.35.
61. Inst. 4.15-16.
62. Inst. 4.39.2-3. This list later travelled on its own and even appeared in a Greek ver
sion under Evagrius's name. De Vogue, "Interpolation," 2 17-221, and "Morceau,"
7-12.
63. o. Chadwick, John Cassian, 2nd ed., 43, argues that this passage has no place in the
Institute and that it would be more appropriate near the beginning of Conference
14. The argument is based on two premises: that the story has nothing to do with
gluttony and that it is more appropriate for anchorites, and therefore belongs in
the Conferences.
Literary Structure and Monastic Praxis 89
64. "adprehenso discretionis examine proprio iam potens est stare iudicio atque ad
arcem anachoreseos peruenire, minime debere ab uno quamuis summo uniuersa
genera uirtutum expetere." Inst. 5.4. 1.
65. Inst. 5.13.
66. Inst. 5.9.
67. Chadwick described the anecdotes as "a collection of apophthegmata, or stories,
not heaped together under any system whatever. There is no common theme." (0.
Chadwick, John Cassian, 2nd ed., 43-44.) According to Chadwick, either the anec
dotes were added later by copyists who wished to augment Cassian's list of elders
or the original exemplar had become disorganized and been badly reconstructed.
68. E.g., Guy, Institutions, 1 89, groups the stories thematically and interprets them as
examples of spiritual, rather than bodily fasting. For an analysis of the intricate
structure of Institute 5 as a whole, Pristas, "Theological Anthropology," 34-44.
69. Inst. 5.24-26.
70. Inst. 5.27.
71. "numquam, ait, meam feci uoluntatem nec quemquam docui quod prius ipse non
feci." Inst. 5.28.
72. Inst. 5.29.
73. Inst. 5.30. 1-3.
74. Inst. 5.31.
75. Inst. 5.32. 1-3.
76. Inst. 5.33-35.
77. "prosilientes ad interpretandum eas, pro pinguetudine uel inmunditia sui cordis
diuersa atque contraria uel fidei uel sibimet sentientes ueritatis lumen conprehen
dere nequiuerunt." Inst. 5.34.
78. Inst. 5.36-38.
79. Inst. 5.40. 1-2.
80. E.g., the account of Pinufius in Con. 20. 1.
8 1 . Cassian's discussion of fornication immediately follows that of gluttony. It furthers
the transition to independent judgment inaugurated by Antony's speech, for here
Cassian speaks of the need to confess all things to God rather than to an elder. Inst. 6.21.
82. "nec iudicium rectae discretionis adquirere nec honestae contemplationis intuitum
nec maturitatem consilii possidere nec uitae participes nec iustitiae tenaces, sed ne
spiritalis quidem ac ueri luminis capaces poterimus exsistere." Inst. 8 . 1 . 1 .
8 3 . Inst. 8.22.
84. Inst. 7.7-10.
85. This is also evident in the subsequent Institutes.
86. Inst. 8.4.1.
87. "de ira dei uel furore cum legimus, non anthropomorphos, id est secundum humili
tatem humanae perturbationis, sed digne deo, qui omni perturbatione alienus est,
sentire debemus." Inst. 8.4.3.
88. Inst. 8.4.1.
89. Inst. 8.9.
90. Inst. 8. 10.
91. Inst. 8. 10.
90 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Amid all the different views of the nature of monastic life current in southern
Gaul in the early fifth century, there was at least one resounding theme: the
polarity of solitary and communal life, or of anachoresis and the vita coeno
bialis_ There was little doubt that each was a separate vocation and that each
possessed its own perfection. Nevertheless, in the hierarchy of merits so
vigorously championed by many Latin writers, life as a hermit was typically
regarded as superior to life in a community. One might, or perhaps even
should, begin monastic life in the company of others, but the perfection of
such a life lay in complete withdrawal from human interaction. Only in isola
tion could one worship God without distraction and pray without ceasing.
At first glance, Cassian's monastic literature would seem to reinforce this
polarity. In a manner that accorded much more with his Gallic readers than
with the reality of Egyptian monasticism, Cassian frequently divides the
monastic vocation between the practical and the contemplative, or between
the communal and the solitary lives. He also writes that anachoresis ought to
succeed communal life as part of a natural progression. In the voice of Antony,
for example, Cassian describes anachoresis as leading to a more sublime perfec
tion than is available to those living within a community.! He introduces
Paphnutius as one who mastered cenobitic discipline at a young age and who
in his later years sought greater purity by penetrating far into the desert.2
Cassian even portrays his own monastic journey as an evolution from the
cloister to the desert.
A closer reading of Cassian's monastic corpus, however, reveals that the
dichotomy he proposes between the cenobitic and anchoretic lives is not as
straightforward as it first appears. Cassian does not offer an unqualified praise
of the solitary life. Nor does he recommend evolution from one vocation to
the other without reservation. In fact, anachoresis very often presents more
dangers than rewards and there are more impure than pure motives for
91
92 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
contemplation, and pure and unceasing prayer pertain to the inner person.
While Cassian describes these stages as concerning cenobitism and anachoresis
respectively, the distinction between the two cannot simply be identified
with the distinction between life in a community and life as a hermit. To
understand better Cassian's distinction between cenobitic and anchoretic, or
between our exterior and interior lives, we must ask three questions: how does
Cassian describe anachoresis in the Institutes; how does he compare cenobitism
and anachoresis when he again takes up the topic in Conferences 18 and 19; and
what does he mean by solitude?
withdrawal from the coenobium as a viable cure, Cassian agrees with the bulk
of Latin monastic literature and the popular view of solitude that it had helped
to form. In the end, however, Cassian manages to leave his reader's expecta
tions unfulfilled. Against the eagerness for the anchoretic life that prevailed, he
consistently argues that disturbances of the soul can best be quelled in the
company of others.!! Isolation only exacerbates vices. Rather than being a cure,
anachoresis almost inevitably worsens a monk's affliction.
Cassian eloquently describes the need for the protection of the coenobium
in his discussion of covetousness. Resulting from an inadequate foundation
and a lukewarm love of God, the affliction will eventually drive the monk
from the company of his brethren. If unchecked, it will harden his heart and
chase away all virtue, to the point that even in Hell he will remain unrepen
tant.!2 If true poverty is the goal,
we [Cassian and his reader] should seek out both the discipline and the insti
tution of a monastery, so that we may in truth renounce this world, saving
for ourselves nothing of those things we despised because of being held back
by infidelity, but we should seek our daily food not from hoarded money,
but from our own work. 13
Obsession with money and fear of poverty will drive the monk from the secu
rity of the monastery in search of a very elusive wealth in the world. However,
the failed monk will never be able to acquire wealth sufficient to dispel his fear
or sate his thirst for more.!4
Cassian also takes up the need for community in his discussion of anger. He
admits that human interaction can cause irritation and strife among the
brethren, and that this may in turn lead to anger. This does not mean, how
ever, that we can blame external circumstances for our anger.
And while we turn the causes of our error onto others, we will never be able
to arrive at the goal of patience and perfection. Therefore the greatest part of
our correction and peace must not be laid on the will of another, which is
never in our power, but rather it lies in our own authority.!5
Anger arises from within. Like a dangerous beast in its lair, it cannot be called
harmless merely because it has no opportunity to strike. Alone in the desert a
monk will still experience wrath, either at visitors, at memories of past
wrongs, or even at inanimate objects.!6 Such anger will inhibit pure prayer and
obviate the true vocation of the anchorite.!?
A monk should undertake the anchoretic life for the sake of divine con
templation and with a desire for more profound insight, not as a cowardly
flight.!' An ill-considered retreat into the desert will cause more harm than
good. Whatever vices a monk carries uncured into the desert will remain hid
den within him. The desert will not cleanse him of sin.!9 On the other hand,
interaction with others can indicate a propensity to anger and their correction
can help us to root out the vices. If we are pure of heart, our companions can
do nothing to incite our wrath.
Implications for Praxis 95
And so God, the creator of all things, recognizing before all else the care for
his work, and because the roots and causes of our offenses lie not in others
but in ourselves, commanded that we should not abandon intercourse with
our brethren, nor avoid those whom we think we have injured or by whom
we have been offended, but he [God] orders that they be mollified, knowing
that the perfection of the heart is to be sought not so much by separation
from men as by the virtue of patience.2!
This is no longer the advice of Cassian or even the doctrine of the Egyptian
abbas. It is a divine command rooted in the fundamental order of creation. The
argument is simple. If we are not perfect, we will never be at peace, either
among people or separated from them. On the other hand, if we are free from
vices, we will be at peace not only with other people, but even with wild and
brutal animals iferis ac beluis).22 Either the monk is not ready to leave the
monastery or there is no longer any reason to leave.
Cassian strengthens this argument in the following Institute, where he
describes acedia as being especially dangerous to hermits. Like anger and dejec
tion, acedia produces a contempt for communal life and urges the monk to
regard his companions as the source of his spiritual stupor.21 As the soul is
gradually worn out, the monk will seek what appear to be remedies, but which
in fact cause further harm. Eventually, he will leave the community to begin
life as a solitary. Far from being a cure, this will invite a redoubled attack.
Acedia will not permit the monk to remain in his cell, and will lead him to
become entangled in secular affairs, "so that finally, as though bound by the
coils of a serpent, he will never be able to free himself to return to the perfec
tion of his first profession."24 A monk should neither fall prey to the slumber
of acedia nor leave the walls of the monastery.25 He should instead remain in
his cell, work with his hands, and pray without ceasing.26
The further the reader progresses in virtue and comes to regard anachoresis
as an attainable goal, the more strenuously Cassian undermines its foundation.
96 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Vainglory is like a phoenix that arises from its ashes when conquered, for it
can occur only when some degree of virtue has been acquired. It also requires
an audience, for one cannot become vain without the approval and acclama
tion of others. While this might suggest flight from others as a viable cure,
Cassian repeats his claim that no vice can be purged that penetrates the desert
along with the one fleeing.27 "In solitude also it [vainglory] does not cease from
pursuing the fugitive from intercourse with all mortals for the sake of glory,
and the more fully he has shunned the entire world, so the more vehemently
it pursues him."28 Monastic hagiography gives ample witness to the fact that
withdrawal does not always entail disappearance from the popular imagina
tion. Alone in his cell the saint might wield more influence than if he had
remained among people.29 Such influence could be real, as Cassian's account of
John of Lycopolis suggests.30 It could also be illusory, as Cassian notes in his
story of a hermit who preached to imaginary multitudes in his cell.3!
Like vainglory, pride also induces a monk to seek solitude precipitously.
Once pride has taken hold of the monk and he has fallen from virtue,
result in disaster.37 One could argue, however, that this still does not preclude
the possibility that Cassian may have favored the solitary life. At no point in
the Institutes does he deny that the solitary life is a valid vocation. He merely
argues that it invites special dangers and that there are many more impure than
pure motives for seeking it. If the Institutes are addressed only to the cenobite,
it would not be surprising to find in them that Cassian discourages the solitary
life. This would agree with the survey of the Institutes made in Chapter 4. If
Cassian had intended a reciprocal relationship between the ascent of the read
er and progress through the text, then it would be reasonable for him to dis
courage retreat to the desert until all of the vices had been explained and con
quered. It would also conform to Leroy's thesis, which suggests that the first
four Institutes are intended for cenobites and that the last eight are at best
ambiguous about their intended audience. In short, the arguments made above
would not be contradicted, Leroy's thesis would be satisfied, and the
Conferences would still be addressed to the solitary.
Such a view, however, would fail to take into account some important clues
that Cassian provides to the reader to measure his progress. One of these lies
in his treatment of vainglory and pride, which he divides into two kinds. The
more advanced manifestations of these vices do not pertain directly to the
reader. Instead, he is subject to the attack of their more base and carnal forms.38
Consequently, the relationship between the development of the reader and
progress through the text at least partly breaks down in these last two
Institutes. The reader has progressed only to where he might understand, but
not experience, the vices' more sophisticated attacks, and therefore has not
gained the purity of heart necessary for solitude. Another clue lies in the ascent
of the reader through the first ten Conferences. At the beginning of the
Conferences Germanus aspires to the kingdom of God, but has no idea how
this might be achieved. Ignorant of the immediate aim of purity of heart, he
has no hope of standing in the presence of God without the continued advice
and supervision of elders within the community. Yet one more clue appears in
Conference 10, which marks the end of the ascent of the reader to the heights
of pure prayer. Germanus complains that Isaac, the interlocutor of Conferences
9 and 10, has not fairly answered Germanus' earlier question about how to
pray ceaselessly. Isaac responds that the subtlety of Germanus' questions reveal
that he is finally approaching the discernment of an abba and is therefore
worthy to learn this most holy mystery.39
The ascent of the reader through the text therefore does not cease with
the conclusion of Institute 12. It continues until he has gained the zenith of the
monastic life, which is pure and unceasing prayer. Only in Conference 10,
the culmination of Cassian's monastic instruction, is the reader assumed to
have attained the purity of heart that is necessary for taking up the life of
the anchorite. The reader of the first nine Conferences, like the reader of the
Institutes, does not possess the purity of heart that anachoresis requires.
98 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
The Institutes and the first ten Conferences describe the monastic life from
the donning of the monastic habit to the attainment of pure and ceaseless
prayer. In as much as ceaseless prayer is the goal of the monastic life, these
works comprise a complete and coherent corpus.40 Cassian goes on, however,
to compose fourteen more Conferences. In these latter works he clarifies issues
raised in his original corpus and sometimes offers a different perspective entire
ly. Just as these later Conferences return to earlier issues, they also return to a
time prior to Germanus' conversations with Isaac (Conferences 9 and 10).
Conferences 11-24 do not continue Germanus' journey through Egypt. They
instead return to a period very early in his travels. The last set of Conferences,
which take place near Diolcos, return the reader to the very beginning of
Cassian's journey.4!
This is significant, for while the latter Conferences may not accurately rep
resent Cassian's Egyptian itinerary, they provide strong indications as to how
they were to be read.42 The Germanus of the latter Conferences is not the monk
who sat at Isaac's feet. He is younger, and he resembles more the rudis ana·
choreta mentioned in Institute 5 than the discerning monk of Conferences 9 and
10.43 Cassian did not believe that his readers had fully grasped his monastic
teaching.44 He was nevertheless unwilling to abandon his method of instruc
tion, and chose instead to revisit an earlier stage of his reader's formation.45
The final fourteen Conferences must therefore be read with care. While they
are not part of his original description of the prayerful ascent of the soul, they
nevertheless shed light on what Cassian meant by this ascent.
Cassian used these hermits to take up once again the relationship between
anachoresis and cenobitism. The tenor of Cassian's works suggests that there
was a pressing need. Conference 18 describes the goals and virtues of the dif
ferent kinds of monastic life. In a manner similar to that of Jerome, Cassian
divides the monastic life between two valid vocations: cenobitism and ana·
choresis.46 The cenobites, Cassian claims, arose from the apostolic community
in Jerusalem.47 As the first Christians began to accommodate gentile converts
by relaxing the requirements of the Law, the community as a whole became
lukewarm in its commitment. Those who were still dedicated to sharing every
thing in common and to living according to the precepts of their elders soon
separated from these tepid Christians and lived apart. Renunciation of world
ly goods and obedience to tradition have been the foundation of the cenobitic
life ever since.48 The anchorites are the flowers and fruit of the cenobites who
later left the community not from the "disease of impatience" but from the
"desire for a loftier progress and divine contemplation."49
Cassian also describes two other kinds of monastic life which he holds to be
abominations. The first of these he terms Sarabaites. Descended from Ananias
and Sapphira, these monks have no respect for the authority of the fathers.
They possess no discipline, are not subject to an elder, and remain their own
masters. While they call themselves cenobites, the Sarabaites stand as a hollow
Implications for Praxis 99
mockery of the true tradition of the fathers. They do not surrender their
worldly goods, possess no stability and live an unsupervised life.50
The second kind of false monk stands as a mockery of true anchorites.
These monks rejected the coenobium in favor of living alone, but their desire
for solitude is borne from an impatience with the brethren rather than from a
genuine desire for union with God. Their fervor is consequently short-lived
and they are easily trapped by the snares that endanger even the most seasoned
hermits. Like the Sarabaites, these monks begin badly and quickly become
worse. At no time do they come close to the purity necessary for the solitary
life. Untrained and undisciplined, their ardor fades quickly into the luke
warmness that is most hated by God.51
Cassian's description of monastic life resembles Jerome's in that he
describes cenobitism and anachoresis as the only valid vocations. It also resem
bles Jerome's in that the corrupt forms of monastic life have more to do with
circumstances in Gaul than with what Cassian saw in Egypt.52 As mentioned
above, there were not two separate and easily identifiable vocations in Egypt.
There was rather a wide variety of monastic practices which included both
urban monks and worldly cenobites. These monks cannot be dismissed as
Sarabaites any more than as Remnuoth.53 Instead, Cassian was much more con
cerned with berating his readers in Gau1.54
Cassian's principal complaint about the Sarabaites is their failure to follow
the traditions of the fathers. He frequently makes the same complaint about
Gallic monks. Early in the Institutes Cassian bemoans abbots who, either from
ignorance or pride, have introduced traditions contrary to those of the
fathers. 55 Just as it was necessary for Germanus to forget what he had learned
in Syria and adopt the institutes of the Egyptians, so also the reader needs to
abandon the corrupt practices he had learned in Gau1.56 Cassian's condemna
tion of the Sarabaites reinforces his oft-repeated call for a cenobitic discipline
founded on humility and on obedience to the tradition of the Egyptian abbas.
The false anchorites also look back to a familiar theme. The Institutes
frequently warn against leaving the community because of anger, impatience
or pride. Cassian again warns that a monk cannot be free from temptation so
long as he hopes for protection from the desert and the doors of his cell. He
moreover condemns the impatient monk by likening him to a wild beast who
is not at peace unless removed to a cave or an isolated cell. This warning is
brought home in Conference 19, where Cassian again examines what he
describes as the two legitimate forms of monastic life. Using the first person
plural to include his Gallic audience, Cassian writes that "we cannot stand the
discipline of the coenobium, I will not say until old age, but for scarcely two
years are content to endure the yoke of submission."57
In contrast to this fickleness, Cassian offers the reader an abba who has
gained vast experience both as a cenobite and as a hermit. John lived in a coeno·
bium for thirty years before setting out on his own. After twenty years as a
hermit he returned to his erstwhile community. John was successful at both
100 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
ANACHORESIS AS INTERIORITY
This paradox forces us to reconsider the traditional equation of cenobitism
with praxis and anachoresis with theoria. If we should accept that Cassian ques
tions the very possibility of the solitary life, then we must deny that he equates
solitary and contemplative. Otherwise, we would be forced to conclude that
Cassian put contemplation out of the reach of the monk. We must therefore
take up John's challenge to Germanus to decide whether he had been induced
to return to the coenobium "by an aversion to or by a desire for that purity of
the solitary [life]. "69 Cassian's praise of John would argue against the former. If
we accept the latter, however, then we must discover how anachoresis might in
fact be located in the heart of the coenobium.
According to John, "the goal of the cenobite is to mortify and crucify all
his desires and, according to the salutary command of evangelical perfection,
to think nothing of tomorrow."70 On the other hand, "the perfection of the
hermit is to have a mind freed from all earthly things and in this way to unite
it, as far as human weakness is able, with Christ."7! These descriptions reflect
a view common in Gaul at the time: the former vocation emphasizes disci
pline, while the latter speaks more of contemplation. Communal life provides
the discipline that makes anachoresis possible. To pray truly, however, one
must cast aside the community and seek the solitude of the desert.
The argument that discipline must precede prayer is valid, in as much as one
cannot pray truly unless one is free from sin and distracting thoughts. This
does not mean, however, that Cassian regards discipline and prayer as succes
sive dimensions of the spiritual life. Instead, discipline and prayer support one
another in a spiraling relationship that ascends toward union with God.
Cassian articulates this relationship when he introduces pure prayer m
Conference 9.72
The aim of every monk and the perfection of his heart tends toward contin
ual and unbroken perseverance in prayer and, as far as is allowed to human
frailty, strives toward an immovable tranquility and perpetual purity of the
mind, for the sake of which we seek unweariedly and practice constantly
every labor of the body as well as contrition of the spirit. And there is
between one and the other a kind of reciprocal and inseparable union."
This reciprocal union between praxis and theoria belies the notion that one
must first master discipline within a community and then leave the coenobium
for a life dedicated to prayer. Instead, clearer sight in prayer is directly associ
ated with greater purity.74 They are two aspects of a unified ascent to God.
Progress in contemplation does not await the purification of the soul. Nor
does it await the abandonment of the coenobium.
John provides the reason for this in his description of the solitary life, for
he offers an important caveat: we may be united with Christ in contemplation
only as far as human weakness permits. Our carnal state prohibits union
with God. Cassian also takes up this theme in other Conferences. We may
102 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
For Cassian, anachoresis is not a retreat into the desert but rather a with
drawal into one's true and inner selpo The locus of solitude is not a hermit's
cell. It is instead the inner life of a soul undisturbed by outward concerns. The
cenobitic and anchoretic lives serve as metaphors for the relationship between
the outer and the inner life. In order to use these metaphors with any success,
however, it was necessary for Cassian first to undermine what the metaphors
had become: a belief that there were two separate monastic vocations, each
having its own perfection but unequal in merit. To accomplish this, Cassian
repeatedly questioned the motives of those who dreamed of physical with
drawal. When this proved insufficient, he argued that, except for a few nearly
miraculous exceptions, the eremitical life is an unattainable goal.
NOTES
44. That his method of reading was not grapsed is evident from the speed with which
his work was excerpted and epitomized, thereby rendering the dialogues useless.
For example, de Vogue, "Une interpolation ," 217-221, and "Un morceau," 7-12.
45. That Cassian still encouraged his reader to participate actively in the Conferences,
see Can. 1 8-24, praef 3.
46. Can. 18.4.2. Jerome, Ep. 22.34.
47. Can. 18.5. This is Cassian's second history of monasticism. In the first he traced
the tradition to Mark's converts in Alexandria. Inst. 2.5. For the implications of
these histories, de Vogiie, "Monachisme," 213-240.
48. Can. 18.5. 1-4.
49. "inpatientiae morbo" and "desiderio sublimioris profectus contemplationisque
diuinae." Can. 18.6.1.
50. Can. 18.7.2-3.
51. Can. 18.8. 1-2.
52. Jerome criticized the Remnuoth for their fascination with external display. Only
a few paragraphs before he had ridiculed "false monks" living in Rome for the
same thing. Ep. 22.28,34.
53. Goehring, "Encroaching," 281-296.
54. Cassian's two legitimate forms of monastic life also have more to do with Gaul
than with Egypt. While he here seems to confirm his reader's expectations, in the
following Conference Cassian will overturn them.
55. Inst. 2.3.3-5.
56. Can. 18.3 . 1 .
57. "non dicam usque a d senectam i n coenobii permanere non possumus disciplina, sed
uix biennio subiectionis iugum sustinere contenti." Can. 19.2.1.
58. For his humility, Can. 19.2.1.
59. "ita diuinis meditationibus ac spiritalibus theoriis animus replebatur." Can. 19.4.1.
60. Can. 19.3.2.
61. Can. 19.5.2.
62. Can. 19.6. 1 .
63. Markus, End, 1 8 1-182.
64. Cassian also pursued this line of thought by describing Gallic monks as inferior to
the Egyptians. E.g., Inst. 4. 10.
65. Can. 19.9. 1-2.
66. Can. 19.5.2.
67. "nec beneficio cellae nec perfugio solitudinis indigebit. Can. 1 8 . 13.
68. Inst. 9.7-8.
69. "fastidio an desiderio solitariae illius puritatis." Can. 19.6. 1 .
7 0 "finis quidem cenobiotae est omnes suas mortificare e t crucifigere uoluntates ac
secundum euangelicae perfectionis salutare mandatum nihil de crastino cogitare."
Can. 19.8.3.
71. "heremitae uero perfectio est exutam mentem a cunctis habere terrenis eamque,
quantum humana inbecillitas ualet, sic unire cum Christo." Can. 19.8.4.
72. The following dicsussion relies on my analysis in "Palestinian," 309-3 1 1 .
106 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
73. "omnis monachi finis cordisque perfectio ad iugem atque indisruptam orationis
perseuerantiam tendit, et quantum humanae fragilitati conceditur, ad inmobilem
tranquillitatem mentis ac perpetuam nititur puritatem, ob quam omnem tam
laborem corporis quam contritionem spiritus indefesse quaerimus et iugiter
exercemus. et est inter alterutrum reciproca quaedam inseparabilisque coniunctio."
Can. 9.2.1.
74. Rousseau, "Cassian," 1 14, has noted that Cassian's discussion of pure prayer also
inaugurates a return to the discussion of monastic praxis.
75. Can. 10.6.2-3.
76. Can. 1.8.1.
77. Can. 9.2 . 1 .
78. Can. 23.13. 1-2.
79. Can. 9.2 . 1 .
8 0 . Cassian described the soul a s a feather which will naturally ascend i f i t i s not imped-
ed by the weight of earthly concerns. Can. 9.4. 1 .
8 1 . Rousseau, "Cassian," 1 14. For the impossibility o f this union, see Can. 1 . 1 3 . 1 .
8 2 . Inst. 4. 10.
83. Inst. 2.15. 1-2; 4. 10.
84. Inst. 2.14.
85. Inst. 9.7,13.
86. Can. 9.15, 26.
87. Leroy, "Les Prefaces," 167-170.
88. For example, Can. 24.3-4.
89. Can. 9.35.
90. For the desert as a metaphor for purity in monastic literature, Guillaumont,
"Conception, " 3-21; Goehring, "Encroaching, " 281-296.
CHAPTER 6
107
108 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
of the inner person.6 The external fast, which is the regulation of diet, must be
joined with an internal fast, which is the quelling of the disturbances of the
souP One should not seek chastity of the body alone. Inner chastity, an
almost angelic separation of the soul from the body, is the true goa1.s The list
could go on.
Cassian also takes up this theme in the Conferences. As Rousseau has noted,
while the declared topic of Conferences 9 and 10 is pure and ceaseless prayer,
they also revive a discussion of the activities and thoughts that disturb us when
we pray.9 Cassian argues that what we do before we pray will return to us as
we pray.lO We must therefore rid ourselves of any actions, attitudes or
thoughts that can distract us from prayer, "so that [our mind] may begin to be
raised little by little (paulatim) to the contemplation of God and to
spiritual insights."!! Paulatim is a key term in this passage. Our ascent to God
in prayer will occur little by little, and this ascent will be in proportion to the
degree of our purity. Praxis and prayer mutually support each other in a recip
rocal and ever-deepening relationship. The correction of habits (emendatio
morum) leads to the peace and equanimity of the soul that is necessary for pure
and ceaseless prayer.
On another level, anchorites withdraw not so much from the visible and
ephemeral as to the invisible and the rea1. Following Paul's second letter to the
Corinthians, Cassian maintains that only what is invisible is rea1.!2 What is vis
ible is merely temporary.13 Thus, like Origen before him, Cassian argues that
in order to gain true knowledge of something, we must penetrate beyond what
is external and visible to the true nature of its being.!4 This pertains not only
to the world around us, but to ourselves as well. Only our spiritual nature, our
animate and intellective capacities, determine who we are as human beings.
Our bodies, which are dumb and insensate except that they participate in our
souls, merely envelop us.!S Dwelling in such dense and limiting bodies is a
visible sign of our separation from God, and to the degree that we are at home
in our bodies, we are apart from God.!6 True self-knowledge therefore requires
that we cease to be driven by or even cognizant of our external condition.
Only by departing from our bodies can we be present to Christ.!?
This does not mean that Cassian regards the body as evi1. Nor does he
describe it merely as a prison that must be transcended or escaped. As a
creation of God, the body is good. It can even be used to lead us back to God.
The material world and our own corporeality provide opportunities to
practice virtue and offer evidence of a benevolent creator. We can regain
knowledge of God lost in the fall through the cultivation of virtue. We can
ascend to the contemplation of spiritual mysteries by contemplating the divine
order of creation.!' Ironically, even the very grossness of our bodies that pulls
us away from the spiritual realm can be of assistance in our ascent to God, for
the denseness of our bodies causes a momentary delay between our desire and
Implications for Theoria 109
our ability to act upon that desire. This delay provides an opportunity to
reflect on the origins of the desire and to consider the consequences of our
actions. Our embodiment therefore places us in a better situation than that of
the demons. Possessing much more ethereal bodies than our own, demons are
not similarly constrained by a delay between desire and action, so that all of
their evil desires immediately become evil acts.19
Our bodies become less helpful as we grow closer to God, however, and
they ultimately prove to be more a hindrance than a help.20 Attending to
bodily needs forces us to descend from the heights of contemplation and
prevents us from dwelling permanently in the kingdom of God. Our reliance
on sense perception and mental images to derive and convey meaning clouds
rather than reveals spiritual mysteries. We must therefore withdraw as far as
possible from the limitations our bodies impose upon us. As was argued above,
complete withdrawal awaits our resurrection, where with new, almost imma
terial bodies we will be granted a new knowledge and dwell permanently in
the kingdom of God. Significant progress is still possible in this life, however,
for divine grace and the practice of Christian ascesis enable us to put aside the
distractions of the visible and temporary in order to comprehend what is
permanent and real within ourselves.
Again like Origen, and also like Antony, Cassian describes this ascesis pri
marily in positive terms. We are not to punish our bodies for past sins. Instead,
we are to look beyond our bodies' needs and desires so that we might dwell in
the kingdom of God. We must give attention only to what is permanent and
real. We must cultivate a growing detachment from our bodily condition and
develop an enhanced awareness of our inner selves.21 Once we have rejected the
vices that plague us, we will be able to recognize that the universe itself is
something to be despised. Though a creation of God and a wonder to behold,
it will eventually pass away. This applies even to the practices and virtues that
lead us to the invisible and the real. Following 1 Corinthians 13, Cassian writes
that there will be no need for Christian ascesis when the kingdom of God is at
hand.22 Even faith and hope will pass away, for only love will remain when
God is revealed in the fullness of his glory.23
Reading is an essential part of the ascesis that leads from the visible to the invis
ible, or from the sign to what is signified. Outwardly, reading (or listening) to
a text is the foundation of the horarium. Reading while alone in one's cell is
also frequently recommended. However, Cassian does not limit reading to the
immediate engagement of a physical text.24 He instead combines the appre
hension of the words of the text with memorization, rumination and ceaseless
meditation upon those words. These practices help to give stability and peace
to a mind that can never truly be at rest. Like a millstone, the mind is always
spinning and seeking some image or thought to grind. If holy images are
not available to it, then the mind will cull the memory for other, potentially
110 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
edge of the most sacred thoughts."37 This second form of knowledge is closely
associated with the act of reading and can itself be divided into two kinds. The
first kind of knowledge is the historical sense of a particular text, which
Cassian calls "knowledge of past and visible things."38 The second kind of
knowledge is the spiritual sense of a text, and this can be further sub-divided
into the tropological (or moral) , allegorical and anagogical senses.39
The historical sense of the text pertains to the activity of God in history and
his express desires and commands for his people. It tells the story of
Abraham's sons, for example, or reveals God's express command not to for
nicate.4o In this Conference, Cassian suggests that deriving the historical sense
of the text does not require an interpretive act, for it contains no meaning
other than the bare sounds of the words.41 The meaning of the text can there
fore be grasped by anyone who possesses the ability to read or listen to the
text. This claim is not entirely consistent with his earlier argument concerning
anthropomorphic descriptions of God, however, for in Institute 8 Cassian
argues that even the historical sense requires some interpretive ability. When
we read of the body or the passions of God, we cannot interpret the text
according to its bare letters and sounds.42 Even the primitive knowledge of
God revealed by the historical sense compels us to recognize these words as
anthropomorphic descriptions of a spiritual and impassible God. If we are to
embrace the knowledge offered by the historical sense of the text, then we
must embrace the God who is revealed by and in the text.
The spiritual senses lay bare the meaning concealed within the historical
sense. The allegorical sense reveals when the words of the text prefigure Christ
in some way. The rock rejected by the builders, for example, prefigures Christ
as the cornerstone of the Church. The food and drink that the Israelites had in
common during the Exodus prefigure the body and blood of Christ on the
altar.43 The tropological sense deepens the bare moral instruction of the
historical sense. More than moral exhortation or a list of prohibitions, this
interpretation enables us to apply knowledge gained from the spiritual sense
to the practical side of our lives. An allegorical reading of Genesis, for
example, reveals to the reader that Isaac and Ishmael prefigure the two
covenants. A tropological reading of these two covenants offers the reader a
deeper understanding of praxis and theoria, the two poles of the monastic life.H
Such a reading extends even to the express moral commands of the historical
sense. God's command not to fornicate can be understood tropologically as
a general prohibition against all impurity, all forms of pagan worship and
idolatry, the superstitions of the law, and even heretical teaching.45 Purification
from vice and the cultivation of virtue do not cease with the mastery of
literal commandments and exemplars. They continue as we enter more deeply
into the text and into our relationship with God.
Of particular interest to Cassian's understanding of reading is the anagogi
cal sense, which he describes as arising "from the spiritual mysteries [of the
allegorical sense] to the even more sublime and sacred mysteries of Heaven."46
112 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
inspired by the Holy Spirit and beyond human comprehension.60 Most often
associated with the anchorite, it is a form of prayer that can occur at any
time in a monk's career. As with the other categories of prayer, the human
mind and the divine will do not permit a simple linear ascent. However,
Cassian continues to speak of a balance between purity and prayer.61 One must
purge the mind of carnal desire and direct it toward spiritual things. One
must withdraw from all that is exterior and ephemeral, even from the signs
and symbols that lead to God, to contemplate the spiritual mysteries with a
pure and undisturbed soul.
It is crucial to Cassian's understanding of reading that the key to such a
continuous and non-discursive prayer is constant meditation upon a single
verse from Psalms: "God come to my assistance; Lord, hasten to my aid."62
This verse "takes all the affections which can be attributed to human nature
and is sufficiently and suitably adapted to any state and to all assaults."63 To
prove this Cassian surveys the vices from gluttony to pride in order to show
how this one small verse addresses each of the vices that plague US.64 It leads us
to call out for aid when plagued by improper desire or incited to anger. It
reminds us of our frailty when puffed up by vainglory or pride. The verse
also reminds us of our continued need for God even after we have triumphed
over the vices. Constant meditation on this single verse will enable us to
cast off all other thoughts. We will then be truly poor in spirit, for we will
recognize in the deepest recesses of our soul that our very life and substance
depend on divine aid. Having been stripped of all worldly concern and
wandering thoughts, we will ascend slowly through the sacred mysteries to
the contemplation of God.65
Cassian extends his treatment of this one verse to the book of Psalms as a
whole. In doing this, he reflects the view of psalmody that Athanasius
expressed in his Letter to Marcellinus. The words of the Psalms serve as a
mirror to the soul. We find in the Psalms types of our own life, our own
experiences and emotions. The Psalms provide a vocabulary for exploring
our interior life and a salve to heal what has been broken.66 Reading and
meditating upon this verse is more than a form of praxis, however. While it
stills our constantly churning mind and provides a means to explore the depths
of our soul, it also pertains to theoria, or the knowledge of the spiritual
mysteries that is derived from reading scripture in an increasingly profound
way. Dwelling upon both the words and the situation of the Psalmist, we
will establish an identity with the Psalmist that bridges the distance of time
and place. Adopting the experience and disposition of the Psalmist as our own,
we will learn to anticipate the meaning of the words rather than merely
respond to them.67 We will sing them as if we, rather than the Psalmist, have
composed them.
In this, Cassian recalls Origen as well as Athanasius. Virtually writing
rather than reading the words of the Psalms implies an immediate encounter
with the Word of God who inspires them. Sharing in the production of the
Psalms requires sharing in the experience of their inspiration, which is an
Implications for Theoria 115
experience of the Word himself. The pinnacle of reading, and of the Christian
life as a whole, is an unmediated encounter with the Word who inspires the
sacred text.68 Such an encounter requires the internalization of the Word,
something Crouzel describes as an "application to each Christian of what is
said of Christ, an interiorisation in each Christian of the facts, of the deeds and
virtues of Christ."69
For both Cassian and Origen, reading is part of the process of human redemp
tion. Scripture is a source of knowledge of the Word who is the Son of God
and the means by which humanity is restored to God. While the incarnation
of the Word in the person of Jesus Christ provided a unique and full revela
tion of God, this revelation did not begin with the incarnation; nor has it
ceased with Jesus' death. The Word is eternally begotten of the Father.
Through the Word all things were created. The Word inspired Moses and
the prophets. All Christians are called upon to embrace the Word through the
practice of virtue, the inculcation of love, and the pursuit of knowledge. As
the Christian is called to and embraces the Word, the Word takes life within
him or her.
Most important for Cassian's understanding of reading is that scripture
itself can be regarded as an incarnation of the Word. 70 It is the spiritual mys
tery of the Word embodied in language, a series of signs. When reading, we
encounter, understand and ultimately discard these signs until we come upon
the Word who is signified. This is possible because the Word simultaneously
accommodates itself to the needs of the reader and calls the reader to ascend
to God in purity, love and knowledge. As we become less concerned with
earthly and material things and grow in knowledge, we transcend the physical,
the revelation of God in history, the words of the text, to encounter the mys
tery of the Word himself. This ascent is revealed in Origen's nomenclature for
the three senses or levels of meaning: body, soul, and spirit.71 The sense of
scripture available to us corresponds to that aspect of the human personality
that dominates us. Only those who have grown in purity and transcended
their physical liabilities will ascend to the loftier senses of scripture and,
ultimately, to the Word himself.72
This ascent of the Christian both through and to the Word is evident in
Origen's commentary on the transfiguration, where he speaks of the Word
being manifest in different forms according to the capacity of the individual.
It is possible, Origen claims, that Jesus might appear to some as transfigured
and yet appear to others as carnaFJ What determines a reader's capacity for
comprehending the divinity of the Word is the grace of God and the reader's
own purity, love and knowledge. If we hope to view the transfigured Word,
we must abandon all earthly and visible things and celebrate a new sabbath,
one in which all creation has been put aside and all signs and symbols of God
have been abandoned. Only then can we behold the divinity of the Son of God.74
116 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
Origen regards it as important that more than just the body of Jesus is
transfigured. His clothes are also transformed; clothes which Origen describes
as the expressions and the letters of the gospels. The words of the apostles are
also part of Jesus' raiment, so that the entire New Testament is worn by Christ
and transformed when the reader apprehends the divinity of the Word.
Moreover, Moses and Elijah also appear transfigured and shine with the light
of the sun. When one has perceived the spiritual mysteries of the gospel, one
has also recognized the spiritual meaning of the law and the prophets.75
For Origen, the words of scripture are signs which lead ultimately to the
divinity of the Word who is the Son of God. Those who are pure in heart
and aided by grace are led to abandon earthly and visible things, including
the words of scripture themselves, to contemplate the divinity of the Word in
all its glory. Those who do not ascend this lofty mountain still know the Word
and this knowledge is redemptive, but their knowledge is confined to the
Word in its flesh, be it the bodily Jesus or the body (the literal sense) of
the text.
Cassian offers a strikingly similar understanding of reading scripture and,
moreover, uses the transfiguration of Christ to express his views. We contem
plate God more clearly, he argues, when we move beyond the historical
manifestation of the Word in the person of Jesus Christ to view the Word
revealed in all his glory.76 This movement can be characterized as withdrawal
into solitude, but not a solitude that results merely from abandoning human
company. Instead, the solitude of which Cassian speaks arises when we
shed all that is foreign to us, all that is merely exterior, and penetrate to the
interior constitution of our being.
But they alone look upon his divinity with the purest eyes who, ascending
from lowly and earthly deeds and thoughts, go apart with Uesus] into the
high mountain of solitude which, free from the tumult of all earthly thoughts
and disturbances, hidden from the confusion of all the vices, and exulted by
the purest faith and the prominence of the virtues, reveals the glory of Uesus']
face and the image of his splendor to those who deserve to see him with the
pure sight of the soul."
Scripture "will appear earthly to the carnal and divine to the spiritual."78 If we
climb the mountain of solitude, we will no longer be limited by the literal
sense of the text. Only by shedding the exterior or fleshly life of the text (the
literal sense and even the words themselves) will we discern its true meaning.
Reading will become a non-discursive act, just as true prayer is inarticulate and
ecstatic, lifted up to God "with indescribable groans and sighs."79 We will move
from the visible to the invisible, from signs to what is signified, from the outer
to the inner life of both scripture and of ourselves. At that point we will no
longer have any use for words, just as we will no longer have any use for our
bodies. We will be able to say with Paul that we see Christ, but no longer
according to the flesh.80
Implications for Theoria 117
Both Cassian and Origen regard climbing the mountain of the transfiguration
as attaining purity of heart and shedding concern for earthly and material
things. Both speak of moving beyond the material to contemplate the Word
in its divinity. Both also speak of the ones left behind who, though redeemed
by the Word, are confined to the literal sense (the "flesh") of scripture and are
unable to apprehend the Word in all its glory. Finally, the two theologians
regard the culmination of reading as a state that transcends the written word,
the physical sign of the divinity, to contemplate the glory of the divinity who
transcends all words and all signs.
However, these similarities do not necessarily mean that Cassian borrowed
directly from Origen or from any other single source. It is far more likely that
they arise from the pervasiveness of Origen's understanding of reading within
Egyptian monastic culture as a whole. While Cassian's reliance on Evagrius
has long been noted, and he was the most prolific writer among the
"Origenist" monks of Nitria and Kellia, he was not typically described as a
leader among them. Antony's Letters and Athanasius' Letter to Marcellinus
demonstrate Origen's influence on Egyptian monastic thought and practice.
Burton-Christie has shown that the Apophthegmata demonstrate a culture that
in many ways is founded upon the act of reading. While the sayings sometimes
reveal an opposition to speculative theology, they also reveal a strong rela
tionship between reading and the practice of virtue, as well as a call to inter
nalize and embody scripture that would be at home among more ostensibly
"Origenist" monks. Origen's influence on Egyptian monastic culture extend
ed well beyond the traditional categories of allegorical exegesis, apokatastasis,
and the Anthropomorphite controversy to embrace a way of life founded to a
large extent by the act of reading itself. 81
Cassian was both a product and a proponent of this culture. Whether
formed in Egypt or among Egyptian monks living in exile, he embraced their
practice of psalmody and was transformed by it. By internalizing the text,
Cassian made it his own. Virtually becoming the author of the text itself, he
moved beyond the visible, the material, the symbolic, the very words them
selves, to the Word who inspired all these things. Penetrating to the veins and
marrow of the text, Cassian encountered the sacred mysteries which lie
beneath it and give it life. He moved beyond an encounter with the written
word to an encounter with the Word who both gives meaning to the text and
who constitutes the deepest level of our own interior selves.
As a proponent of this culture of reading, Cassian calls upon his readers to
attempt much the same thing. Reading serves to constitute the monastic life.
It provides a pattern for behavior and it promotes a solitude that encourages
interpretation and self-reflection. It inculcates the impassibility and interiority
that is the goal of Christian ascesis. Cassian's understanding of reading goes far
118 John Cassian and Egyptian Monastic Culture
NOTES
62. "Deus in adiutorium meum intende: domine ad adiuuandum mihi festina." Can. 10.10.2;
Psalm 69.2.
63. "recipit enim omnes adfectus quicumque inferri humanae possunt naturae et ad
omnem statum atque uniuersos incursus proprie satis et conpetenter aptatur."
Can. 10.10.3.
64. Can. 10.10.3-13.
65. Can. 10. 1 1 . 1-2.
66. "Le 'je' peut et doit etre assume par Ie fidele, qui decouvre en lui comme en un
miroir l'image de sa vie intrieure." Rondeau, Les commentaires, 218.
67. Can. 10. 1 1 . 5-6.
68. Crouzel, Origen, 73, writes the following of Origen's understanding of spiritual
exegesis: "If the Bible is not to remain the 'closed book' of Isaiah or of the
Revelation, an intimate word of God must be heard by the soul when it is read.
The charism of the interpreter is the same as that of the inspired author. To under
stand Isaiah or Daniel one must have in oneself the same Holy Spirit and one can
only interpret the Gospel if one has within oneself the nous, the mind of Christ,
which the Spirit gives."
69. Thus Crouze1, Origen, 76, speaks of Origen's exegesis of the New Testament, but
this can easily be extended to the whole of scripture.
70. Origen, De prin. 4.2.3.
71. Origen, De prin. 4 . 1 . 1 1-14.
72. Origen finds "contained in Scripture . . . an order of doctrine which corresponds
to the progressive steps of the Christian's movement toward perfection."
Torjeson, Hermeneutical Procedure, 41.
73. Origen, Comm. in Matt. 12.37.
74. Origen, Comm. in Matt. 12.36.
75. Origen, Comm. in Matt. 12.38.
76. Can. 10.6. 1-2.
77. "sed illi soli purissimis oculis diuinitatem ipsius speculantur, qui de humilibus ac
terrenis operibus et cogitationibus ascendentes cum illo secedunt in excelso solitu
dinis monte, qui liber ab omnium terrenarum cogitationum ac perturbationum
tumultu et a cunctorum uitiorum permixtione secretus, fide purissima ac uirtutum
eminentia sublimatus, gloriam uultus eius et claritatis reue1at imaginem his qui
merentur eum mundis animae obtutibus intueri." Can. 10.6.2.
78. "uel terrena carnalibus uel diuina spiritalibus adparebit." Can. 14. 1 1 . 1 .
79. "gemitibus inenarrabilibus atque suspiriis." Can. 10. 1 1 .
8 0 . Can. 10.6.2.
8 1 . MacLeod, "Allegory," 371, argues that for Origen "allegory is the expression par
excellence of the spiritual life."
Bibliograp hy
PRIMARY SOURCES
121
122 Bibliography
Origenes. Commentarii in Canticum. Ed. and trans. Luc Bn'�sard and Henri Crouzel.
Commentaire sur Ie cantique des cantiques. SC 375-376. Paris: Editions du Cerf,
1991-92.
-- . Commentarii in Matthaeum. Ed. E. Klostermann and E. Benz. GCS Origines
Werke 10. Leipzig: J. C. Hinrich, 1935.
--. Contra Celsum. Ed. and trans. Marcel Borret. 5 vols. SC 132, 136, 147, 150, 227.
Paris: Editions du Cerf, 1967-76.
--. De principiis. Ed. and trans. Henri Crouze! and Manlio Simonetti. Traite des
principes. 5 vols. SC 252-253, 268-269, 3 12. Paris: Editions du Cerf, 1978-84.
-- . Homiliae in Iesu Nave XXVI. Ed. W. A. Baehrens. GCS Origenes Werke 6.
Leipzig: J. C. Hinrich, 1921.
--. Homiliae in Numeros. Ed. W. A. Baehrens. GCS Origenes Werke 7.2. Leipzig:
J. C. Hinrich, 192 1.
Pachomius Tabennensis. Regula. Latin version. Pachomiana Latina: RegIe et epitres de
PachOme, Epitre de Theodore et 'Liber'de Orsiesius: Texte latin de jerome. Ed. Amand
Boon, pp. 13-74. Appendice: La RegIe de PachOme, fragments coptes et excerpta grecs.
Ed. L. Th. Lefort. Bibliotheque de la Revue d'histoire ecclesiastique, no. 7.
Louvain: Bureaux de la Revue, 1932. Also, PL 23: 65-90.
Palladius. Dialogus de uita Iohannis Chrysostomi. Ed. P. R. Coleman-Norton.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1928.
--. Historia Lausiaca. Ed. G. J. M. Bartelink. Trans. Marino Barchiesi. Palladia: La
storia Lausiaca. Vol. 2, Vite dei Santi, ed. Christiane Mohrmann. [Milan]:
Fondazione Lorenzo Valla, 1974.
Paulinus episcopus Nolanus. Epistulae. Ed. William Hartel. CSEL 29. Prague, Vienna
and Leipzig, 1894.
Pelagius. Epistula ad Demetriadem. PL 30: 15-45.
Prosper Aquitanus. De gratia Dei et libero arbitrio contra Collatorem. PL 51: 213-276.
--. Epitoma Chronicorum. In Chronica minora saeculi IV-VII, ed. Theodore
Mommsen, pp. 385-485. Vol. 1. Monumenta Germaniae historica. A uctores
antiquissimi, tm. 9. Berlin: Weidmann, 1892.
Rufinus Tyrannius. Apologia (contra Hieronymum). In Tyrannii Rufini Opera, ed.
Manlio Simonetti, pp. 37-123. CCSL 20. Turnhout: Brepols, 1961.
Sextus, Pseudo-. Sexti Sententiae. Ed. and trans. Richard A. Edwards and Robert A.
Wild. The Sentences of Sextus. Texts and Translations, no. 22. Early Christian
Literature Series, no. 5. Chico, CA: Scholars Press, 1981. Latin version of Rufinus.
Ed. Henry Chadwick. The Sentences a/Sextus. A Contribution to the History ofEarly
Christian Ethics. Texts and Studies Contributions to Biblical and Patristic
Literature, n.s., 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1959.
Bibliography 125
Sozomenus. Historia ecclesiastica. Ed. Joseph Bidez and Gunther C. Hansen. Sozomenus
Kirchengeschichte. Die griechischen christlichen Schriftsteller der ersten
Jahrhunderte, bd. 50. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1957.
Sulpicius Severus. Dialogorum libri II. Ed. Charles Halm, pp. 152-216. CSEL 1. Vienna,
1866.
-- . Vita Martini Turonensis. Ed. and trans. Jacques Fontaine. Vie de saint Martin.
SC 133-135. Paris: Editions du Cerf, 1967.
Zosimus papa. Epistulae. PL 20: 642-686.
Antin, Paul. "Le monachisme selon saint }�rome." In Recueil sur saint Jrfrome, ed. Paul
Antin, pp. 101-28 . Collection Latomus 95. Bruxelles: Latomus, 1968. First pub
lished in Melanges benedictins publies a l'occasion du XIVe centenaire de la mort de
Saint Benoit par les moines de l'Abbaye de Saint-Jrfr6me de Rome, pp. 71-103.
(Abbaye s. Wandrille: Editions de Fontenelle, 1947).
-- . "Monachologie de saint Jt�rome." In Recueil sur saint Jrfrome, pp. 135-136. First
published in Theologie de la vie monastique: Etudes sur la Tradition patristique, pp.
19 1-199. Theologie 49. ([Paris]: Aubier, 1961).
-- . "Question de vocabulaire: monachisme, 'monachologie'." In Receuil sur saint
Jrfrome, pp. 137-145. First published in Revue d'histoire ecc!esiastique 59 (1964):
89-90.
Appel, Regis. "Cassian's Discretio-A Timeless Virtue." American Benedictine Review
17 (1966): 20-29.
Bacht, Heinrich. "Meditatio in den altesten Monchsquellen." Geist und Leben 28 (1955):
360-373.
Bagnall, Roger. Egypt in Late Antiquity. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993.
Bamberger, John E. Evagrius Ponticus, The Praktikos and Chapters on Prayer. Cistercian
Studies Series, no. 4. Kalamazoo, MI: Cistercian Publications, 1981.
Bammel, C. P. "Problems of the Historia monachorum." Journal a/ Theological Studies,
n.s., 47 (1996): 92-104.
Bardy, Gustave. "Apatheia." Dictionnaire de spiritualite 1 (1937): 727-746.
--. "Les origines des ecoles monastiques en Occident." Sacri erudiri 5 (1953):
86-104.
126 Bibliography
Folsom, Cassian. "Anger, Dejection and Acedia in the Writings of John Cassian."
American Benedictine Review 35 (1984): 219-248.
Fontaine, Jacques. "L'ascetisme chretien dans la litterature gallo-romaine d'Hilaire a
Cassien." In La Gallia Romana: Aui del Colloquio sul tema, pp. 89-1 15. Rome:
Academia nazionale dei Lincei, 1973.
Frank, K. Suso. "Fiktive Miindlichkeit als der Grundstruktur der monastischen
Literatur." SP 25, ed. Elizabeth A. Livingstone, pp. 356-375. Leuven: Peeters
Press, 1993.
-- . "John Cassian on John Cassian." SP 30, ed. Elizabeth A. Livingstone, pp.
418-33. Leuven: Peeters Press, 1996.
Frend, W. H. C. "Paulinus of Nola and the Last Century of the Western Empire."
Journal o/Roman Studies 59 (1969): 1-11.
Frohnhofen, Herbert. Apatheia tou theou: Ober die A/fektlosigkeit Gottes in der griechis
chen Antike und bei den griechischsprachigen Kirchenvatern bis zu Gregorios
Thaumaturgos. Europaische Hochschulschriften: Reihe 23. Theology 3 1 8.
Frankfurt am Main: P. Lang, 1987.
Fuhrmann, Manfred. "Die Monchsgeschichten des Hieronymus. Formexperimente in
erzahlender Literatur." In Christianisme etformes litteraires de l'antiquite tardive en
occident, ed. Manfred Fuhrmann, pp. 69-82. Entretiens sur l'antiquite c1assique 23.
Geneva: Vandoeuvres, 1976.
Gamble, Harry Y. Books and Readers in the Early Church: A History 0/Early Christian
Texts. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1995.
Gams, P. Pius Bonifacius. Series episcoporum ecclesiae catholicae. Leipzig: Verlag Karl W.
Hiersemann, 193 1 .
Garrigues, Jean-Miguel and J . Legrez. Moines dans l'assembLee des jideLes a l'epoque des
peres (IVe- VIlle siecle). Theologie historique 87. Paris: Beauchesne, 1990.
Glorie, F. "La culture lerinienne. Notes de lecture." Sacris erudiri 19 (1969): 71-76.
Goehring, James A. Ascetics, Society and the Desert: Studies in Early Egyptian
Monasticism. Studies in Antiquity and Christianity. Harrisburg, P A: Trinity Press
International, 1999.
-- . "The Encroaching Desert: Literary Production and Ascetic Space in Early
Christian Egypt." Journal o/Early Christian Studies 1 (1993): 281-296.
-- . "Through a Glass Darkly: Diverse Images of the APOTAKTIKOI(AI) of
Early Egyptian Monasticism." In Discursive Formations, Ascetic Piety and the
Interpretation 0/Early Christian Literature, Pt. 2, ed. Vincent L. Wimbush. Semeia
58 (1992): 25-45.
-- . "The World Engaged: The Social and Economic World of Early Egyptian
Monasticism." In Gnosticism and the Early Christian World, ed. James E. Goehring
et a1., pp. 134-144. Sonoma, CA: Polebridge Press, 1990.
132 Bibliography
Gould, Graham. "A Note on the Apophthegmata patrum." Journal a/Theological Studies,
n.s., 37 (1986): 133-138.
-- . The Desert Fathers on Monastic Community. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993.
-- . "Moving on and Staying put in the Apophthegmata Patrum." SP 20, ed.
Elizabeth A. Livingstone, pp. 231-237. Leuven: Peeters Press, 1989.
Grant, Robert M. with Tracy, David. A Short History 0/ the Interpretation 0/ the Bible.
2nd ed. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984.
Gribomont, Jean. "Le origini." In "Preghiera. 1. Nel monachesimo orientale."
Dizionario degli Istituti di PerJezione 7 (1983): 582-59 1.
-- . "Review of Garitte, Les lettres." Revue d'histoire ecclesiastique 51 (1956):
546-550.
-- -. Saint Basile, Evangile et Eglise: Melanges. Spiritualite orientale 36-37. Begrolles
en-Mauges: Abbaye de Bellefontaine, 1984.
Griffe, Elie. "Cassien a-t-il ete pretre d'Antioche?" Bulletin de litterature ecclesiastique 55
(1954): 240-244.
--. La Gaule chretienne a l'epoque romaine. Vol. 2 of L 'eglise des Gaules au Ve siecle.
2nd ed. Paris: Letouzey et Ane, 1966.
-- . "Saint Martin et Ie monachisme gaulois." In Saint Martin et son temps. Memorial
du XVIe centenaire des debuts du monachisme en Gaule, 361-1961. Studia
Anselmiana, fasc. 46, pp. 3-24. Rome: Pontificium Institutum s. Anselmi, 1961.
Griggs, C. Wilfred. Early Egyptian Christianity: From Its Origins to 451 c.E. Coptic
Studies 2. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1990.
Guillaumont, Antoine. "La conception du desert chez les moines d'Egypte." Revue de
l'histoire des religions 188 (1975): 3-2 1.
-- . "Evagre et les anathematismes antiorigenistes de 553." SP 3, ed. F. L. Cross, pp.
219-226. TU 78. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1961.
-- . Les 'Kephalaia gnostica ' d'Evagre Ie Pontique et l'histoire de l'Origenisme chez les
grecs et les syriens. Patristica Sorbonensia, no. 5. Paris: du Seuil, 1962.
-- . "Un philosophe au desert: Evagre Ie Pontique." Revue de l'histoire des religions
1 8 1 (1972): 29-57.
-- . "La preghiera pura di Evagrio e l'influsso del Neoplatonismo." In "Preghiera. 1.
Nel monachesimo orientale." Dizionario degli Istituti di Per/ezione 7 (1983):
591-595.
Guillaumont, Antoine and Claire Guillaumont. "Evagre Ie Pontique." Dictionnaire de
Spiritualite 4.2 (1961): 173 1-1744.
Guy, Jean-Claude. "Educational Innovation in the Desert Fathers." Eastern Churches
Review 6 (1974): 44-5 1 .
-- . "Jean Cassien, historien du monachisme egyptien?" S P 8, ed. F. L . Cross, pp.
363-372. TU 93. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1966.
Bibliography 133
Hunt, E. D. Holy Land Pilgrimage in the Later Roman Empire: A.D. 312-460. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1982.
Husson, Genevieve. "L'habitat monastique en Egypte a la lumiere des papyrus Grecs,
des textes chretiens et de l'archeologie." In Hommages a la memoire de Serge
Sauneron 1927-1976. Vol. 2, Egypte post pharaonique. Bibliotheque d'etude, tm. 82,
pp. 19 1-207. Cairo: Institut fran�ais d'archeologie orientale du Caire, 1979.
Irvine, Martin. The Making of a Textual Culture: 'Grammatica' and Literary Theory,
350-1100. Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature 19. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1994.
Iser, Wolfgang. The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1978.
-- . Prospecting: From Reader Response to Literary Anthropology. Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1989.
Jaffe, Philip, ed. Regesta ponti/icum romanorum ab condita ecclesia ad annum post
Christum natum MCXCVIII. 2nd ed. Wilhelm Wattenbach et al. Leipzig: Viet et
comp., 1 885-1888.
Jauss, Hans Robert. Toward an Aesthetic of Reception. Theory and History of
Literature, vol. 2. Trans. Timothy Bahti. Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota Press, 1982.
Joest, Christoph. "Die Bedeutung von Akedia und Apatheia dei Evagrios Pontikos."
Studia monastica 35 (1993): 7-53.
Judge, Edwin A. "The Earliest Use of Monachos for Monk and the Origins of
Monasticism." Jahrbuch fur Antike und Christentum 20 (1977): 72-89.
-- . "Fourth-Century Monasticism in the Papyri." In Proceedings of the Sixteenth
International Congress ofPapyrology, ed. Roger Bagnall et aI., pp. 613-620. Chico,
CA: Scholars Press, 198 1.
-- and S. R. Pickering. "Papyrus Documentation of Church and Community in
Egypt to the Mid-Fourth Century." Jahrbuch fur Antike und Christentum 20
(1977): 47-71 .
Kardong, Terrence. "Aiming for the Mark: Cassian's Metaphor for the Monastic
Quest." Cistercian Studies 22 (1987): 2 13-220.
-- . "John Cassian's Evaluation of Monastic Practices." American Benedictine
Review 43 (1992): 82-105.
--. "John Cassian's Teaching on Perfect Charity." American Benedictine Review 30
(1979): 249-263.
Katz, Stephen. "Language, Epistemology, and Mysticism." In Mysticism and
Philosophical Analysis, ed. Stephen Katz, pp. 22-74. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1978.
Kelly, J. F. "Eucherius of Lyons: Harbinger of the Middle Ages." SP 23, ed. Elizabeth
A. Livingstone, pp. 138-142. Leuven: Peeters Press, 1987.
Bibliography 135
Lewis, Naphtali. Life in Egypt under Roman Rule. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1983.
Lienhard, Joseph T. Paulinus ofNola and Early Western Monasticism. With a Study ofthe
Chronology ofHis Works and an Annotated Bibliography. Theophania, Beitrage zur
Religions- und Kirchegeschichte des Altertums, bd. 28. Kaln: P. Hanstein, 1977.
Lloyd, A. C. "Emotion and Decison in Stoic Psychology." In The Stoics, ed. John M.
Rist, pp. 233-246. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1978.
Long, A. A. "Dialectic and the Stoic Sage." In The Stoics, ed. John M. Rist, pp. 101-124.
Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1978.
Lorenz, Rudolf. "Die Anfange des abendlandischen Manchtums im 4. Jahrhundert."
Zeitschrz/t fur Kirchengeschichte 77 (1966): 1-61.
Lorie, L. Spiritual Terminology in the Latin Translation of the "Vita Antonii" with
Reference to Fourth and Fifth Century Monastic Literature. Latinitas Christianorum
primaeva, no. 1 1 . Nijmegen: Dekker and van de Begt, 1955.
Louth, Andrew. Discerning the Mystery: An Essay on the Nature of Theology. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1983.
-- . "Messalianism and Pelagianism." SP 17, ed. Elizabeth A. Livingstone, pp.
127-135. New York: Pergamon Press, 1978.
--. "Mysticism." In Early Christianity: Origins and Evolution to AD 600: In Honour
of W H C. Frend, ed. Ian Hazlett, pp. 208-217. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1991.
--. "St. Athanasius and the Greek Life ofAntony." Journal of Theological Studies,
n.s., 39 (1988): 504-509.
Macleod, Colin. "Allegory and Mysticism in Origen and Gregory of Nyssa." Journal of
Theological Studies, n.s., 22 (1971): 362-79.
Macqueen, D. J. "John Cassian on Grace and Free Will. With Particular Reference to
Institutio XII and Conlatio XIII." Recherches de theologie ancienne et medievale 44
(1977): 5-28.
Main, John. "Prayer in the Tradition of John Cassian." Parts 1-3. Cistercian Studies 12
(1977): 184-190, 272-281; 13 (1978): 75-83.
Markus, Robert A. The End ofAncient Christianity. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1990.
Marrou, Henri-Irenee. "Le fondateur de Saint-Victor de Marseille: Jean Cassien."
Provence Historique 16 (1966): 297-308.
--. "Jean Cassien a Marseilles." Revue du moyen age latin 1 (1945): 5-26.
-- . "La patrie de Jean Cassien." Orientalia Christiana Periodica 13 (1947): 588-596.
Marsili, Salvatore. Giovanni Cassiano ed Evagrio Pontico, dottrina sulfa carita e contem
plazione. Studia Anselmiana philiosophica theologica, fasc. 5. Rome: Herder, 1936.
Bibliography 137
Marx, Michael J. "Incessant Prayer in the Vita Antonii." In Antonius Magnus Eremita
356-1956. Studia ad antiquum monachismum spectantia, ed. Basil Steidle, pp.
108-135. Studia Anselmiana, fasc. 38. Rome: Pontificium Institutum s. Anselmi,
1956.
McClure, J. "Handbooks against Heresy in the West, from the Late Fourth to the Late
Sixth Centuries." Journal a/ Theological Studies, n.s., 30 (1979): 1 86-197.
McGinn, Bernard. The Foundations 0/Mysticism. Vol. 1 of The Presence 0/God: A History
0/ Western Christian Mysticism. New York: Crossroad, 199 1.
Meyer, Robert T. "Lectio divina in Palladius." In Kyriakon: Festschrift Johannes Quasten,
ed. Patrick Granfield and Josef Jungmann, pp. 580-584. Munster: Aschendorff,
1970.
-- . "Palladius and Early Christian Spirituality." In SP 10. 1, ed. F. L. Cross, pp.
379-390. TU 107. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1970.
- -- . "Palladius and the Study of Scripture." In SP 13.2, ed. Elizabeth A.
Livingstone, pp. 487-490. TU 1 16. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1975.
Miquel, Pierre. Lexique du desert: Etude de quelques mots-cles du vocabulaire monastique
grec ancien. Spiritualite orientale 44. Begrolles-en-Mauges: Abbaye de
Bellefontaine, 1986.
-- . Le vocabulaire de l'experience spirituelle dans la tradition patristique grecque du
IVe au XIVe si(xle. Theologie historique 86. Paris: Beauchesne, 199 1.
--. Le vocabulaire latin de l'experience spirituelle dans la tradition monastique et
canoniale de 1050 a 1250. Theologie historique 79. Paris: Beauchesne, 1989.
Misch, Georg. A History 0/A utobiography in Antiquity. Trans. Ernest Walter Dickes. 2
Vols. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1950.
Mitsis, Phillip. "Seneca on Reason, Rules and Moral Development." In Passions and
Perceptions: Studies in Hellenistic Philosophy 0/ the Mind. Proceedings 0/ the Fifth
Annual Symposium Hellenisticum, ed. Jacques Brunschwig and Martha Nussbaum,
pp. 285-3 12. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
Morard, Franc,;oise. "Encore quelques reflexions sur monachos." Vigiliae Christianae 34
(1980): 395-401 .
--. "Monachos, Moine: Histoire du terme grec jusqu'au IVe siecle." Freiburger
Zeitschrift fur Philosophie und Theologie 20 (1973): 332-4 1 1 .
Morin, Germain. "Pour l'authenticite de l a lettre de S. Jerome a Presidius." Bulletin
d'ancienne litterature et d'archeologie chdtiennes 3 (19 13): 52-60.
Muhmelt, M. "Zu der neuen lateinischen Dbersetzung des Monchspiegels des
Evagrius." Vigiliae Christianae 8 (1954): 10 1-103.
Munz, Peter. "John Cassian." Journal 0/Ecclesiastical History 11 (1960): 1-22.
138 Bibliography
Shklovsky, Viktor. "Art as Device." In Theory ofProse, trans. Benjamin Sher, pp. 1-14.
Elmwood Park, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 1990.
Sillem, Aelred. "A New Study of Cassian." Downside Review 69 (1951): 333-347.
Le site monastique des Kellia (Basse.Egypte): Recherches des annees 198 1-1983. Mission
Suisse d'archeologie copte de l'Universite de Geneve sous la direction de Rudolphe
Kasser. Louvain: Peeters, 1984.
Simonetti, Manlio. Biblical Interpretation in the Early Church: An Historical Introduction
to Patristic Exegesis. Trans. by John A. Hughes. Edinburgh: T and T Clark, 1994.
Sivan, Hagith. "Holy Land Pilgrimage and Western Audiences: Some Reflections on
Egeria and Her Circle." Classical Quarterly, n.s., 38 (1988): 528-535.
-- . "Who Was Egeria? Piety and Pilgrimage in the Age of Gratian." Harvard
Theological Review 8 1 (1988): 59-72.
Smallwood, E. Mary. The Jews under Roman Rule: From Pompey to Diocletian. Leiden:
E. J. Brill, 1976.
Smith, William and Henry Wace, eds. Dictionary of Christian Biography. 4 vols.
London: John Murray, 1 877.
Somos, R6bert. "Origen, Evagrius and the Ideal of Impassibility." In Origeniana
Septima: Origenes in den A useinandersetzungen des 4. Jahrhunderts, ed. W. A.
Bienert and U. Kiihneweg, pp. 365-373. Leuven: University Press, 1999.
Spidllk, Tomas. The Spirituality of the Christian East: A Systematic Handbook. Trans.
Anthony P. Gythiel. Cistercian Studies Series, no. 79. Kalamazoo, MI: Cistercian
Publications, 1986.
Stancliffe, C. St. Martin and His Hagiographer: History and Miracle in Sulpicius Severus.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1983.
Stewart, Columba. Cassian the Monk. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
-- . "Imageless Prayer and the Theological Vision of Evagrius Ponticus." Journal of
Early Christian Studies 9 (2001): 173-204.
--. "John Cassian on Unceasing Prayer." Monastic Studies 15 (1984): 159-177.
-- . "Scripture and Contemplation in the Monastic Spiritual Theology of John
Cassian." SP 25, ed. Elizabeth A. Livingstone, pp. 457-461. Leuven: Peeters Press,
1993.
Stock, Brian. Augustine the Reader: Meditation, Selfknowledge, and the Ethics of
Interpretation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.
-- . Listening for the Text: On the Uses of the Past. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1990.
Straw, Carole E. Gregory the Great: Perfection in Imperfection. Transformation of the
Classical Heritage, no. 14. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.
Taft, Robert. The Liturgy ofthe Hours in East and West: The Origins ofthe Divine Office
and Its Meaning Today. Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press, 1986.
142 Bibliography
145
146 Index
B 50, 9 1
Bagnall, Ro, 25-26 understood as praxis, 9 1
Bartelink, Go, 52 Chadwick, 0 0 , 2 , 13-16
Bethlehem, 12 Christophe, P o , 3
Boak, Ao, 26 Chrysostom, John, 1 1 , 13, 14, 16, 17
Bohlin, T., 55 Clark, Eo, 3, 55
Bonosus, 48-50 Coptic, 26-28, 3 1
boulai, 25 Courcelle, P o , 7
Briccius, bishop of Tours, 18 Crouzel, Ho, 1 15, 120 no 68
Bunge, Go, 38 Ctesiphon, 54-57
Burton-Christie, Do, 1 1 7
Butler, c . , 2 D
De laude eremi, 52
C Demotic, 26, 27
Cassian, John: Didymus the Blind, 38
anthropology, 79, 8 1 , 101, 102, Diocletian, 26
108, 109, 1 1 3 Diolcos, 92, 93, 98, 103 no 8
biography, 6-7, 12-14 discernment, 75-79, 83, 93, 1 1 3
Christology, 101, 102, 1 10, 1 1 1, Driscoll, J . , 35-37
1 14, 1 15-1 1 8
commission, 4 E
influence of Evagrius, 1 1, 12, 15, Egypt:
16, 83, 1 17 language, 26-28
influence of Origen, 7, 1 1 , 12, 83, native church, 27-28
84, 108, 109, 1 14-1 1 8 religion, pre-Christian, 26-28
intended audience, 5, 1 1 , 67, 74, Roman administration, 25-28
78, 92, 94, 100 social divisions, 25-28
knowledge of God, 1 14-1 1 7 see also Coptic; Demotic; monasti
reading the Institutes, 72-84 cism, Egyptian
renunciation, 68, 75, 82, 92, 98, Eucherius of Lyons, 51, 52
107, 118 no 21 Eusebius of Caesarea, 48
self-knowledge, 33, 68-76, 79, Eustochium, 50, 51, 53
84-86, 1 12-1 1 7 Evagrius of Antioch, 48
supposed disorganization o f text, 3 Evagrius Ponticus:
task as author, 5, 12, 38, 66, 69, 82 biography, 35
use of autobiography, 6, 86 influence of Origen, 22, 35, 38,
use of dialogue, 65-67, 70, 77, 78 56-58
use of exempla, 82-84 influence on Cassian, 3-4, 1 1 , 15,
use of narrative, 67-70 16, 83
see also prayer; reading prayer, 36
Castor, bishop of Apt, 1, 13 reading, 35-39
cenobitism: Evans, Ro, 55
origins, 21
understood as a stepping stone, 13,
Index 147
F J
Fish, S., 1 19 n. 49 Jerome:
influence on West, 23, 5 1-53, 58
G on apatheia, 55-58
Gaul: on inpeccantia, 56-58
Cassian's readership, 5, 12 on Origen, 5, 1 1 , 15, 48, 54-58
hostility toward Origen, 5 on Pelagianism, 54-58
see also Cassian, John; Eucherius of sojourn in Rome, 50, 5 1
Lyons; Hilary of Arles; Jerome, sojourn in Syria, 49, 50
influence on West; Lazarus of Aix; vision of monastic life, 22, 46-5 1,
Martin of Tours; monasticism, 98, 99
Gallic; Prosper of Aquitaine John, abba, 99-102
Gennadius, 13, 15 John, bishop of Jerusalem, 38, 54
Germanus: John Chrysostom, see Chrysostom, John
evolution of, 62, 68-71, 92, 93 John of Lycopolis, 77, 78, 96
friendship with Cassian, 12, 15 John the Dwarf, 30
identity with reader, 66, 67, 69, 70 Jovinian, 22, 23, 52, 57
Gould, G., 34 Judge, E., 28
Griffe, E., 17-19
Guillaumont, A., 37 K
Guy, J-c., 2,6, 19 n. 8, 34, 35 Kellia, 4, 13, 16, 17, 34, 35, 86, 1 1 7
H L
Hadot, P., 32 Lazarus of Aix, 17, 18
Heliodorus, 49, 52 Lea, 50-51
Heros, bishop of Arles, 1 8 Leo, bishop of Rome, 17
Hilary, bishop o f ArIes, 52 Leroy, J, 92, 97, 102
Historia monachorum, 29, 38 Letter to Marcellinus, 8, 85, 86, 1 14, 1 17
humility, 75-77, 82, 96, 97, 103, 1 10, 1 14 Letters of Antony, 3 1-35, 46, 117
Life a/Antony, 23, 31, 33, 45-47, 5 1
I Life a/Paul, 47, 50, 5 1
Innocent, bishop of Rome, 14, 16-18 logoi, 4-5, 35, 3 8 , 69
inpeccantia, 56-58 Logos, see Word
interiority:
relationship to reading, 6-8, M
68-76, 79, 84-86, 1 12-1 1 8 Machetes, abba, 77, 78
relationship t o spiritual exercises, MacLeod, C., 120 n. 8 1
32 Markus, R., 3, 100
understood as anachoresis, 92-93, Marrou, H.-I., 14
10 1-103, 107-109 Marseille, 1 1 , 13, 17, 18, see also Proculus
Iser, W., 70, 1 12 Marsili, S., 2
Martin, bishop of Tours, 1 8-19, 23, 51,
54
148 Index
S z
Sarabaites, 98, 99 Zosimus, bishop of Rome, 1 8
Sarapion, abba, 29
Scetis, 4, 34
Schwartz, E., 15
This page intentionally left blank