THE THIRD PART OF THE CONFERENCES OF JOHN CASSIAN, CONFERENCE OF ABBOT PIAMUN
ON THE THREE SORTS OF MONKS
THE THIRD PART OF THE CONFERENCES OF JOHN CASSIAN.
XVIII. CONFERENCE OF ABBOT PIAMUN.
ON THE THREE SORTS OF MONKS.
CHAPTER I.
How we came to Diolcos and were received by Abbot Piamun. (1)
AFTER visiting and conversing with those three Elders, whose Conferences
we have at the instance of our brother Eucherius tried to describe, as we were
still more ardently desirous to seek out the further parts of Egypt, in which a
larger and more perfect company of saints dwelt, we came -- urged not so much
by the necessities of our journey as by the desire of visiting the saints who
were dwelling there -- to a village named Diolcos, (2) lying on one of the seven
mouths of the river Nile. For when we heard of very many and very celebrated
monasteries rounded by the ancient fathers, like most eager merchants, at once we
undertook the journey on an uncertain quest, urged on by the hope of greater
gain. And when we wandered about there for some long time and fixed our curious
eyes on those mountains of virtue conspicuous for their lofty height, the
gaze of those around first singled out Abbot Piamun, the senior of all the
anchorites living there and their presbyter, as if he were some tall lighthouse. For
he was set on the top of a high mountain like that city in the gospel, (3) and
at once shed his light on our faces, whose virtues and miracles, which were
wrought by him under our very eyes, Divine Grace thus bearing witness to his
excellence, if we are not to exceed the plan and limits of this volume, we feel we
must pass over in silence. For we promised to commit to memory what we could
recollect, not of the miracles of God, but of the institutes and pursuits of the
saints, so as to supply our readers merely with necessary instruction for the
perfect life, and not with matter for idle and useless admiration without any
correction of their faults. And so when Abbot Piamun had received us with welcome,
and had refreshed us with becoming kindness, as he understood that we were not
of the same country, he first asked us anxiously whence or why we had visited
Egypt, and when he discovered that we had come thither from a monastery in Syria
out of desire for perfection he began as follows: --
CHAPTER II.
The words of Abbot Piamun, how monks who were novices ought to be taught by
the example of their elders.
WHATEVER man, my children, is desirous to attain skill in any art, unless
he gives himself up with the utmost pains and carefulness to the study of that
system which he is anxious to learn, and observes the rules and orders of the
best masters of that work or science, is indulging in a vain hope to reach by
idle wishes any similarity to those whose pains and diligence he avoids copying.
For we know that some have come from your country to these parts, only to go
round the monasteries for the sake of getting to know the brethren, not meaning
to adopt the rules and regulations, for the sake of which they travelled hither,
nor to retire to the cells and aim at carrying out in action what they had
learnt by sight or by teaching. And these people retained their character and
pursuits to which they had grown accustomed, and, as is thrown in their teeth by
some, are held to have changed their country not for the sake of their profit,
but owing to the need of escaping want. For in the obstinacy of their stubborn
mind, they not only could learn nothing, but actually would not stay any longer
in these parts. For if they changed neither their method of fasting, nor their
scheme of Psalms, nor even the fashion of their garments, what else could we
think that they were after in this country, except only the supply of their
victuals.
CHAPTER III.
How the juniors ought not to discuss the orders of the seniors.
WHEREFORE if, as we believe, the cause of God has drawn you to try to copy
our knowledge, you must utterly ignore all the rules by which your early
beginnings were trained, and must with all humility follow whatever you see our
Elders do or teach. And do not be troubled or drawn away and diverted from
imitating it, even if for the moment the cause or reason of any deed or action is not
clear to you, because if men have good and simple ideas on all things and are
anxious faithfully to copy whatever they see taught or done by their Elders,
instead of discussing it, then the knowledge of all things will follow through
experience of the work. But he will never enter into the reason of the truth, who
begins to learn by discussion, because as the enemy sees that he trusts to his
own judgment rather than to that of the fathers' he easily urges him on so far
till those things which are especially useful and helpful seem to him
unnecessary or injurious, and the crafty foe so plays upon his presumption, that by
obstinately clinging to his own opinion he persuades himself that only that is holy,
which he himself in his pig-headed error thinks to be good and right.
CHAPTER IV.
Of the three sorts of monks which there are in Egypt.
WHEREFORE yOU should first hear how or whence the system and beginning of
our order took its rise. For only then can a man at all effectually be trained
in any art he may wish, and be urged on to practise it diligently, when he has
learnt the glory of its authors and founders. There are three kinds of monks in
Egypt, of which two are admirable, the third is a poor sort of thing and by
all means to be avoided. The first is that of the coenobites, who live together
in a congregation and are governed by the direction of a single Elder: and of
this kind there is the largest number of monks dwelling throughout the whole of
Egypt. The second is that of the anchorites, who were first trained in the
coenobium and then being made perfect in practical life chose the recesses of the
desert: and in this order we also hope to gain a place. The third is the
reprehensible one of the Sarabaites. (1) And of these we will discourse more fully one
by one in order. Of these three orders then you ought, as we said, first to
know about the founders. For at once from this there may arise either a hatred for
the order which is to be avoided, or a longing for that which is to be
followed, because each way is sure to carry the man who follows it, to that end which
its author and discoverer has reached.
CHAPTER V.
Of the founders who originated the order of coenobites.
AND so the system of coenobites took its rise in the days of the preaching
of the Apostles. For such was all that multitude of believers in Jerusalem,
which is thus described in the Acts of the Apostles: "But the multitude of
believers was of one heart and one soul, neither said any of them that any of the
things which he possessed was his own, but they had all things common. They sold
their possessions and property and divided them to all, as any man had need."
And again: "For neither was there any among them that lacked; for as many as
possessed fields or houses, sold them and brought the price of the things that they
sold and laid them before the feet of the Apostles: and distribution was made
to every man as he had need." (2) The whole Church, I say, was then such as now
are those few who can be found with difficulty in coenobia. But when at the
death of the Apostles the multitude of believers began to wax cold, and
especially that multitude which had come to the faith of Christ from diverse foreign
nations, from whom the Apostles out of consideration for the infancy of their
faith and their ingrained heathen habits, required nothing more than that they
should" abstain from things sacrificed to idols and from fornication, and from
things strangled, and from blood," (1) and so that liberty which was conceded to
the Gentiles because of the weakness of their newly-born faith, had by degrees
begun to mar the perfection of that Church which existed at Jerusalem, and the
fervour of that early faith cooled down owing to the daily increasing number both
of natives and foreigners, and not only those who had accepted the faith of
Christ, but even those who were the leaders of the Church relaxed somewhat of
that strictness. For some fancying that what they saw permitted to the Gentiles
because of their weakness, was also allowable for themselves, thought that they
would suffer no loss if they followed the faith and confession of Christ keeping
their property and possessions. But those who still maintained the fervour of
the apostles, mindful of that former perfection left their cities and
intercourse with those who thought that carelessness and a laxer life was permissible to
themselves and the Church of God, and began to live in rural and more
sequestered spots, and there, in private and on their own account, to practise those
things which they had learnt to have been ordered by the apostles throughout the
whole body of the Church in general: and so that whole system of which we have
spoken grew up from those disciples who had separated themselves from the evil
that was spreading. And these, as by degrees time went on, were separated from
the great mass of believers and because they abstained from marriage and cut
themselves off from intercourse with their kinsmen and the life of this world,
were termed monks or solitaries from the strictness of their lonely and solitary
life. Whence it followed that from their common life they were called
coenobites and their cells and lodgings coenobia. That then alone was the earliest kind
of monks, which is first not only in time but also in grace, and which
continued unbroken for a very long period up to the time of Abbot Paul and Antony; and
even to this day we see its traces remaining in strict coenobia.
CHAPTER VI.
Of the system of the Anchorites and its beginning.
OUT of this number of the perfect, and, if I may use the expression, this
most fruitful root of saints, were produced afterwards the flowers and fruits
of the anchorites as well. And of this order we have heard that the originators
were those whom we mentioned just now; viz., Saint Paul (2) and Antony, men who
frequented the recesses of the desert, not as some from faintheartedness, and
the evil of impatience, but from a desire for loftier heights of perfection and
divine contemplation, although the former of them is said to have found his
way to the desert by reason of necessity, while during the time of persecution he
was avoiding the plots of his neighbours. So then there sprang from that
system of which we have spoken another sort of perfection, whose followers are
rightly termed anchorites; i.e., withdrawers, because, being by no means satisfied
with that victory whereby they had trodden under foot the hidden snares of the
devil, while still living among men, they were eager to fight with the devils in
open conflict, and a straightforward battle, and so feared not to penetrate
the vast recesses of the desert, imitating, to wit, John the Baptist, who passed
all his life in the desert, and Elijah and Elisha and those of whom the Apostle
speaks as follows: "They wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins, being in
want, distressed, afflicted, of whom the world was not worthy, wandering in
deserts, in mountains and in dens and in caves of the earth." Of whom too the Lord
speaks figuratively to Job: "But who hath sent out the wild ass free, and who
hath loosed his bands? To whom I have given the wilderness for an house, and a
barren land for his dwelling. He scorneth the multitude of the city and heareth
not the cry of the driver; he looketh round about the mountains of his
pasture, and seeketh for every green thing." In the Psalms also: "Let now the redeemed
of the Lord say, those whom He hath redeemed from the hand of the enemy;" and
after a little: "They wandered in a wilderness in a place without water: they
found not the way of a city of habitation. They were hungry and thirsty: their
soul fainted in them. And they cried unto the Lord in their trouble and He
delivered them out of their distress;" whom Jeremiah too describes as follows:
"Blessed is the man that hath borne the yoke from his youth. He shall sit solitary
and hold his peace because he hath taken it up upon himself," and there sing in
heart and deed these words of the Psalmist:
"I am become like a pelican in the wilderness. I watched and am become
like a sparrow alone upon the house-top." (1)
CHAPTER VII.
Of the origin of the Sarabaites and their mode of life.
And while the Christian religion was rejoicing in these two orders of
monks though this system had begun by degrees to deteriorate, there arose
afterwards that disgusting and unfaithful kind of monks; or rather, that baleful plant
revived and sprang up again which when it first shot up in the persons of
Ananias and Sapphira in the early Church was cut off by the severity of the Apostle
Peter -- a kind which among monks has been for a long while considered
detestable and execrable, and which was adopted by no one any more, so long as there
remained stamped on the memory of the faithful the dread of that very severe
sentence, in which the blessed Apostle not merely refused to allow the aforesaid
originators of the novel crime to be cured by penitence or any amends, but
actually destroyed that most dangerous germ by their speedy death. When then that
precedent, which was punished with Apostolical severity in the case of Ananias and
Sapphira had by degrees faded from the minds of some, owing to long
carelessness and forgetfulness from lapse of time, there arose the race of Sarabaites, who
owing to the fact that they have broken away from the congregations of the
coenobites and each look after their own affairs, are rightly named in the
Egyptian language Sarabaites, (2) and these spring from the number of those, whom we
have mentioned, who wanted to imitate rather than truly to aim at Evangelical
perfection, urged thereto by rivalry or by the praises of those who preferred the
complete poverty of Christ to all manner of riches. These then while in their
feeble mind they make a pretence of the greatest goodness and are forced by
necessity to join this order, while they are anxious to be reckoned by the name of
monks without emulating their pursuits, in no sort of way practise discipline,
or are subject to the will of the Elders, or, taught by their traditions,
learn to govern their own wills or take up and properly learn any rule of sound
discretion; but making their renunciation only as a public profession, i.e.,
before the face of men, either continue in their homes devoted to the same
occupations as before, though dignified by this title, or building cells for themselves
and calling them monasteries remain in them perfectly free and their own
masters, never submitting to the precepts of the gospel, which forbid them to be
busied with any anxiety for the day's food, or troubles about domestic matters:
commands which those alone fulfil with no unbelieving doubt, who have freed
themselves from all the goods of this world and subjected themselves to the superiors
of the coenobia so that they cannot admit that they are at all their own
masters. But those who, as we said, shirk the severity of the monastery, and live
two or three together in their cells, not satisfied to be under the charge and
rule of an Abbot, but arranging chiefly for this; viz., that they may get rid of
the yoke of the Elders and have liberty to carry out their wishes and go and
wander where they will, and do what they like, these men are more taken up both
day and night in daily business than those who live in the coenobia, but not
with the same faith and purpose. For these Sarabaites do it not to submit the
fruits of their labours to the will of the steward, but to procure money to lay by.
And see what a difference there is between them. For the others think nothing
of the morrow, and offer to God the most acceptable fruits of their toil: while
these extend their faithless anxiety not only to the morrow, but even to the
space of many years, and so fancy that God is either false or impotent as He
either could not or would not grant them the promised supply of food and clothing.
The one seek this in all their prayers; viz., that they may gain
<greek>akthmosunhn</greek> i.e., the deprivation of all things, and lasting poverty: the
other that they may secure a rich quantity of all sorts of supplies. The one
eagerly strive to go beyond the fixed rule of daily work that whatever is not wanted
for the sacred purposes of the monastery, may be distributed at the will of
the Abbot either among the prisons, or in the guest-chamber or in the infirmary
or to the poor; the others that whatever the day's gorge leaves over, may be
useful for extravagant wants or else laid by through the sin of covetousness.
Lastly, if we grant that what has been collected by them with no good design, may
be disposed of in better ways than we have mentioned, yet not even thus do they
rise to the merits of goodness and perfection. For the others bring in such
returns to the monastery, and daily report to them, and continue in such humility
and subjection that they are deprived of their rights over what they gain by
their own efforts, just as they are of their rights over themselves, as they
constantly renew the fervour of their original act of renunciation, while they
daily deprive themselves of the fruits of their labours: but these are puffed up by
the fact that they are bestowing something on the poor, and daily fall
headlong into sin. The one party are by patience and the strictness whereby they
continue devoutly in the order which they have once embraced, so as never to fulfil
their own will, crucified daily to this world and made living martyrs; the
others are cast down into hell by the lukewarmness of their purpose. These two
sorts of monks then vie with each other in almost equal numbers in this province;
but in other provinces, which the need of the Catholic faith compelled me to
visit, we have found that this third class of Sarabaites flourishes and is almost
the only one, since in the time of Lucius who was a Bishop of Arian
mis-belief(1) in the reign of Valens, while we carried alms(2) to our brethren; viz.,
those from Egypt and the Thebaid, who had been consigned to the mines of Pontus and
Armenia(3) for their steadfastness in the Catholic faith, though we found the
system of coenobia in some cities few and far between, yet we never made out
that even the name of anchorites was heard among them.
CHAPTER VIII.
Of a fourth sort of monks.
THERE is however another and a fourth kind, which we have lately seen
springing up among those who flatter themselves with the appearance and form of
anchorites, and who in their early days seem in a brief fervour to seek the
perfection of the coenobium, but presently cool off, and, as they dislike to put an
end to their former habits and faults, and are not satisfied to bear the yoke of
humility and patience any longer, and scorn to be in subjection to the rule of
the Elders, look out for separate cells and want to remain by themselves
alone, that as they are provoked by nobody they may be regarded by men as patient,
gentle, and humble: and, this arrangement, or rather this lukewarmness never
suffers those, of whom it has once got hold, to approach to perfection. For in
this way their faults are not merely not rooted up, but actually grow worse, while
they are excited by no one, like some deadly and internal poison which the
more it is concealed, so much the more deeply does it creep in and cause an
incurable disease to the sick person. For out of respect for each man's own cell no
one ventures to reprove the faults of a solitary, which he would rather have
ignored than cured. Moreover virtues are created not by hiding faults but by
driving them out.
CHAPTER IX.
A question as to what is the difference between a coenobium and a monastery.
GERMANUS: Is there any distinction between a coenobium and a monastery, or
is the same thing meant by either name?
CHAPTER X.
The answer.
PIAMUN: Although many people indifferently speak of monasteries instead of
coenobia, yet there is this difference, that monastery is the title of the
dwelling, and means nothing more than the place, i.e., the habitation of monks,
while coenobium describes the character of the life and its system: and monastery
may mean the dwelling of a single monk, while a coenobium cannot be spoken of
except where dwells a united community of a large number of men living
together. They are however termed monasteries in which groups of Sarabaites live.
CHAPTER XI.
Of true humility, and how Abbot Serapion exposed the monk humility of a
certain man.
WHEREFORE as I see that you have learnt the first principles of this life
from the best sort of monks, i.e., that starting from the excellent school of
the coenobium you are aiming at the lofty heights of the anchorite's rule, you
should with genuine feeling of heart pursue the virtue of humility and patience,
which I doubt not that you learnt there; and not feign it, as some do, by mock
humility in words, or by an artificial and unnecessary readiness for some
duties of the body. And this sham humility Abbot Serapion(1) once laughed to scorn
most capitally. For when one had come to him making a great display of his
lowliness by his dress and words, and the old man urged him, after his custom, to
"collect the prayer"(2) he would not consent to his request, but debasing
himself declared that he was involved in such crimes that he did not deserve even to
breathe the air which is common to all, and refusing even the use of the mat
preferred to sit down on the bare ground. But when he had shown still less
inclination for the washing of the feet, then Abbot Serapion, when supper was
finished, and the customary Conference gave him an opportunity, began kindly and
gently to urge him not to roam with shifty lightmindedness over the whole world,
idly and vaguely, especially as he was young and strong, but to keep to his cell
in accordance with the rule of the Elders and to elect to be supported by his
own efforts rather than by the bounty of others; which even the Apostle Paul
would not allow, and though when he was labouring in the cause of the gospel this
provision might lightly have been made for him, yet he preferred to work night
and day, to provide daily food for himself and for those who were ministering to
him and could not do the work with their own hands. Whereupon the other was
filled with such vexation and disgust that he could not hide by his looks the
annoyance which he felt in his heart. To whom the Elder: Thus far, my son, you
have loaded yourself with the weight of all kinds of crimes, not fearing lest by
the confession of such awful sins you bring a reproach upon your reputation; how
is it then, I pray, that now, at our simple admonition, which involved no
reproof, but simply showed a feeling for your edification and love, I see that
you are moved with such disgust that you cannot hide it by your looks, or conceal
it by an appearance of calmness? Perhaps while you were humiliating yourself,
you were hoping to hear from our lips this saying: "The righteous man is the
accuser of himself in the opening of his discourse?"(3) Further, true humility of
heart must be preserved, which comes not from an affected humbling of body and
in word, but from an inward humbling of the soul: and this will only then
shine forth with clear evidences of patience when a man does not boast about sins,
which nobody will believe, but, when another insolently accuses him of them,
thinks nothing of it, and when with gentle equanimity of spirit he puts up with
wrongs offered to him.
CHAPTER XII.
A question how true patience can be gained.
GERMANUS: We should like to know how that calmness can be secured and
maintained, that, as when silence is enjoined on us we shut the door of our mouth,
and lay an embargo on speech, so also we may be able to preserve gentleness of
heart, which sometimes even when the tongue is restrained loses its state of
calmness within: and for this reason we think that the blessing of gentleness can
only be preserved by one in a remote cell and solitary dwelling.
CHAPTER XIII.
The answer.
PIAMUN: True patience and tranquillity is neither gained nor retained
without profound humility of heart: and if it has sprung from this source, there
will be no need either of the good offices of the cell or of the refuge of the
desert. For it will seek no external support from anything, if it has the
internal support of the virtue of humility, its mother and its guardian. But if we are
disturbed when attacked by anyone it is clear that the foundations of humility
have not been securely laid in us, and therefore at the outbreak even of a
small storm, our whole edifice is shaken and ruinously disturbed. For patience
would not be worthy of praise and admiration if it only preserved its purposed
tranquillity when attacked by no darts of enemies, but it is grand and glorious
because when the storms of temptation beat upon it, it remains unmoved. For
wherein it is believed that a man is annoyed and hurt by adversity, therein is he
strengthened the more; and he is therein the more exercised, wherein he is
thought to be annoyed. For everybody knows that patience gets its name from the
passions and endurance, and so it is clear that no one can be called patient but one
who bears without annoyance all the indignities offered to him, and so it is
not without reason that he is praised by Solomon: "Better is the patient man
than the strong, and he who restrains his anger than he who takes a city;" and
again: "For a long-suffering man is mighty in prudence, but a faint-hearted man is
very foolish."(1) When then anyone is overcome by a wrong, and blazes up in a
fire of anger, we should not hold that the bitterness of the insult offered to
him is the cause of his sin, but rather the manifestation of secret weakness,
in accordance with the parable of our Lord and Saviour which He spoke about the
two houses,(2) one of which was founded upon a rock, and the other upon the
sand, on both of which He says that the tempest of rain and waters and storm beat
equally: but that one which was founded on the solid rock felt no harm at all
from the violence of the shock, while that which was built on the shifting and
moving sand at once collapsed. And it certainly appears that it fell, not
because it was struck by the rush of the storms and torrents. but because it was
imprudently built upon the sand. For a saint does not differ from a sinner in this,
that he is not himself tempted in the same way, but because he is not worsted
even by a great assault, while the other is overcome even by a slight
temptation. For the fortitude of any good man would not, as we said, be worthy of
praise, if his victory was gained without his being tempted, as most certainly there
is no room for victory where there is no struggle and conflict: for "Blessed is
the man that endureth temptation, for when he has been proved he shall receive
the crown of life which God hath promised to them that love Him."(3) According
to the Apostle Paul also "Strength is made perfect" not in ease and delights
but "in weakness." "For behold," says He, "I have made thee this day a fortified
city, and a pillar of iron, and a wall of brass, over all the land, to the
kings of Judah, and to the princes thereof, and to the priests thereof, and to all
the people of the land. And they shall fight against thee, and shall not
prevail: for I am with thee, saith the Lord, to deliver thee."(4)
CHAPTER XIV.
Of the example of patience given by a certain religious woman.
OF this patience then I want to give you at least two examples: one of a
certain religious woman, who aimed at the virtue of patience so eagerly that she
not only did not avoid the assaults of temptation, but actually made for
herself occasions of trouble that she might not cease to be tried more often. For
this woman as she was living at Alexandria and was born of no mean ancestors, and
was serving the Lord religiously in the house which had been left to her by
her parents, came to Athanasius the Bishop, of blessed memory, and entreated him
to give her some other widow to support, who was being provided for at the
expense of the Church. And, to give her petition in her own words: "Give me," she
said, "one of the sisters to look after." When then the Bishop had commended the
woman's purpose because he saw that she was very ready for a work of a mercy,
he ordered a widow to be chosen out of the whole number, who was preferred to
all the rest for the goodness of her character, and her grave and well-regulated
life, for fear lest her wish to be liberal might be overcome by the fault of
the recipient of her bounty, and she who sought gain out of the poor might be
disgusted at her bad character and so suffer an injury to her faith. And when the
woman was brought home, she ministered to her with all kinds of service, and
found out her excellent modesty and gentleness, and saw that every minute she
was honoured by thanks from her for her kind offices, and so after a few days she
came back to the aforesaid Bishop, and said: I asked you to bid that a woman
be given to me for me to support and to serve with obedient complaisance. And
when he, not yet understanding the woman's object and desire, thought that her
petition had been neglected by the deceitfulness of the superior, and inquired
not without some anger in his mind, what was the reason of the delay, at once he
discovered that a widow who was better than all the rest had been assigned to
her, and so he secretly gave orders that the one who was the worst of all should
be given to her, the one, I mean, who surpassed in anger and quarrelling and
wine-bibbing and talkativeness all who were under the power of these faults. And
when she was only too easily found and given to her, she began to keep her at
home, and to minister to her with the same care as to the former widow, or even
more attentively, and this was all the thanks which she got from her for her
services; viz., to be constantly tried by unworthy wrongs and continually
annoyed by her by reproaches and upbraiding, as she complained of her, and chid her
with spiteful and disparaging remarks, because she had asked for her from the
Bishop not for her refreshment but rather for her torment and annoyance, and had
taken her away from rest to labour instead of from labour to rest. When then
her continual reproaches broke out so far that the wanton woman did not restrain
herself from laying hands on her, the other only redoubled her services in
still humbler offices, and learnt to overcome the vixen not by resisting her, but
by subjecting herself still more humbly, so that, when provoked by all kinds of
indignities, she might smooth down the madness of the shrew by gentleness and
kindness. And when she had been thoroughly strengthened by these exercises, and
had attained the perfect virtue of the patience she had longed for, she came to
the aforesaid Bishop to thank him for his decision and choice as well as for
the blessing of her exercise, because he had at last as she wished provided her
with a most worthy mistress for her patience, strengthened daily by whose
constant annoyance as by some oil for wrestling, she had arrived at complete
patience of mind; and, at last, said she, you have given me one to support, for the
former one rather honoured and refreshed me by her services. This may be
sufficient to have told about the female sex, that by this tale we may not only be
edified, but even confounded, as we cannot maintain our patience unless we are like
wild beasts removed in caves and cells.
CHAPTER XV.
Of the example of patience given by Abbot Paphnutius.
NOW let us give the other instance of Abbot Paphnutius, who always
remained so zealously in the recesses of that renowned and far-famed desert of Scete,
in which he is now Presbyter, so that the rest of the anchorites gave him the
name of Bubalis,(1) because he always delighted in dwelling in the desert as if
with a sort of innate liking. And so as even in boyhood he was so good and full
of grace that even the renowned and great men of that time admired his gravity
and steadfast constancy, and although he was younger in age, yet put him on a
level with the Elders out of regard for his virtues, and thought fit to admit
him to their order, the same envy, which formerly excited the minds of his
brethren against the patriarch Joseph, inflamed one out of the number of his
brethren with a burning and consuming jealousy. And this man wanting to mar his beauty
by some blemish or spot, hit on this kind of devilry, so as to seize an
opportunity when Paphnutius had left his cell to go to Church on Sunday: and secretly
entering his cell he slyly hid his own book among the boughs which he used to
weave of palm branches, and, secure of his well-planned trick, himself went
off as if with a pure and clean conscience to Church. And when the whole service
was ended as usual, in the presence of all the brethren he brought his
complaint to S. Isidore(2) who was Presbyter of this desert before this same
Paphnutius, and declared that his book had been stolen from his cell. And when his
complaint had so disturbed the minds of all the brethren, and more especially of
the Presbyter, so that they knew not what first to suspect or think, as all were
overcome with the utmost astonishment at so new and unheard of a crime, such as
no one remembered ever to have been committed in that desert before that time,
and which has never happened since, he who had brought forward the matter as
the accuser urged that they should all be kept in Church and certain selected
men be sent to search the cells of the brethren one by one. And when this had
been entrusted to three of the Elders by the Presbyter, they turned over the
bed-chambers of them all, and at last found the book hidden in the cell of
Paphnutius among the boughs of the palms which they call <greek>seira</greek>, just as
the plotter had hidden it. And when the inquisitors at once brought it back to
the Church and produced it before all, Paphnutius, although he was perfectly
clear in the sincerity of his conscience, yet like one who acknowledged the guilt
of thieving, gave himself up entirely to make amends and humbly asked for a
plan of repentance, as he was so careful of his shame and modesty (and feared)
lest if he tried to remove the stain of the theft by words, he might further be
branded as a liar, as no one would believe anything but what had been found out.
And when he had immediately left the Church not cast down in mind but rather
trusting to the judgment of God, he continually shed tears at his prayers, and
fasted thrice as often as before, and prostrated himself in the sight of men with
all humility of mind. But when he had thus submitted himself with all
contrition of flesh and spirit for almost a fortnight, so that he came early on the
morning of Saturday and Sunday not to receive the Holy Communion(3) but to
prostrate himself on the threshold of the Church and humbly ask for pardon, He, Who is
the witness of all secret things and knows them, suffered him to be no longer
tried by Himself or defamed by others. For what the author of the crime, the
wicked thief of his own property, the cunning defamer of another's credit, had
done with no man there as a witness, that He made known by means of the devil who
was himself the instigator of the sin. For possessed by a most fierce demon,
he made known all the craft of his secret plot, and the same man who had
conceived the accusation and the cheat betrayed it. But he was so long and grievously
vexed by that unclean spirit that he could not even be restored by the prayers
of the saints living there, who by means of divine gifts can command the
devils, nor could the special grace of the Presbyter Isidore himself east out from
him his cruel tormentor, though by the Lord's bounty such power was given him
that no one who was possessed was ever brought to his doors without being at once
healed; for Christ was reserving this glory for the young Paphnutius, that the
man should be cleansed only by the prayers of him against whom he had plotted,
and that the jealous enemy should receive pardon for his offence and an end of
his present punishment, only by proclaiming his name, from whose credit he had
thought that he could detract. He then in his early youth already gave these
signs of his future character, and even in his boyish years sketched the lines
of that perfection which was to grow up in mature age. If then we want to attain
to his height of virtue, we must lay the same foundation to begin with.
CHAPTER XVI.
On the perfection of patience.
A TWOFOLD reason however led me to relate this fact, first that we may
weigh this steadfastness and constancy of the man, and as we are attacked by less
serious wiles of the enemy, may the better secure a greater feeling of calmness
and patience, secondly that we may with resolute decision hold that we cannot
be safe from the storms of temptation and assaults of the devil if we make all
the protection for our patience and all our confidence consist not in the
strength of our inner man but in the doors of our cell or the recesses of the
desert, and companionship of the saints, or the safeguard of anything else outside
us. For unless our mind is strengthened by the power of His protection Who says
in the gospel "the kingdom of God is within you,"(1) m vain do we fancy that we
can defeat the plots of our airy foe by the aid of men who are living with us,
or that we can avoid them by distance of place, or exclude them by the
protection of walls. For though none of these things was wanting to Saint Paphnutius
yet the tempter did not fail to find a way of access against him to attack him;
nor did the encircling walls, or the solitude of the desert or the merits of all
those saints in the congregation repulse that most foul spirit. But because
the holy servant of God had fixed the hope of his heart not on those external
things but on Him Who is the judge of all secrets, he could not be moved even by
the machinations of such an assault as that. On the other hand did not the man
whom envy had hurried into so grievous a sin enjoy the benefit of solitude and
the protection of a retired dwelling, and intercourse with the blessed Abbot and
Presbyter Isidore and other saints? And yet because the storm raised by the
devil found him upon the sand, it not only drove in his house but actually
overturned it. We need not then seek for our peace in externals, nor fancy that
another person's patience can be of any use to the faults of our impatience. For
just as "the kingdom of God is within you," so "a man's foes are they of his own
household."(2) For no one is more my enemy than my own heart which is truly the
one of my household closest to me. And therefore if we are careful, we cannot
possibly be injured by intestine enemies. For where those of our own household
are not opposed to us, there also the kingdom of God is secured in peace of
heart. For if you diligently investigate the matter, I cannot be injured by any man
however spiteful, if I do not fight against myself with warlike heart. But if
I am injured, the fault is not owing to the other's attack, but to my own
impatience. For as strong and solid food is good for a man in good health, so it is
bad for a sick one. But it cannot hurt the man who takes it, unless the
weakness of its recipient gives it its power to hurt. If then any similar temptation
ever arises among brethren, we need never be shaken out of the even tenor of our
ways and give an opening to the blasphemous snarls of men living in the world,
nor wonder that some bad and detestable men have secretly found their way into
the number of the saints, because so long as we are trodden down and trampled
in the threshing floor of this world, the chaff which is destined for eternal
fire is quite sure to be mingled with the choicest of the wheat. Finally if we
bear in mind that Satan was chosen among the angels, and Judas among the
apostles, and Nicholas the author of a detestable heresy among the deacons, it will be
no wonder that the basest of men are found among the ranks of the saints. For
although some maintain that this Nicholas was not the same man who was chosen
for the work of the ministry by the Apostles,(1) nevertheless they cannot deny
that he was of the number of the disciples, all of whom were clearly of such a
character and so perfect as those few whom we can now with difficulty discover
in the coenobia. Let us then bring forward not the fall of the above-mentioned
brother, who fell in the desert with so grievous a collapse, nor that horrible
stain which he afterwards wiped out by the copious tears of his penitence, but
the example of the blessed Paphnutius; and let us not be destroyed by the ruin
of the former, whose ingrained sin of envy was increased and made worse by his
affected piety, but let us imitate with all our might the humility of the
latter, which in his case was no sudden production of the quiet of the desert, but
had been gained among men, and was consummated and perfected by solitude. However
you should know that the evil of envy is harder to be cured than other faults,
for I should almost say that a man whom it has once tainted with the mischief
of its poison is without a remedy. For it is the plague of which it is
figuratively said by the prophet: "Behold I will send among you serpents, basilisks,
against which there is no charm: and they shall bite you."(2) Rightly then are
the stings of envy compared by the prophet to the deadly poison of basilisks, as
by it the first author of all poisons and their chief perished and died. For he
slew himself before him of whom he was envious, and destroyed himself before
that he poured forth the poison of death against man: for "by the envy of the
devil death entered into the world: they therefore who are on his side follow
him."(3) For just as he who was the first to be corrupted by the plague of that
evil, admitted no remedy of penitence, nor any healing plaster, so those also who
have given themselves up to be smitten by the same pricks, exclude all the aid
of the sacred charmer, because as they are tormented not by the faults but by
the prosperity of those of whom they are jealous, they are ashamed to display
the real truth and look out for some external unnecessary and trifling causes of
offence: and of these, because they are altogether false, vain is the hope of
cure, while the deadly poison which they will not produce is lurking in their
veins. Of which the wisest of men has fitly said: "If a serpent bite without
hissing, there is no supply for the charmer."(4) For those are silent bites, to
which alone the medicine of the wise is no succour. For that evil is so far
incurable that it is made worse by attentions, it is increased by services, is
irritated by presents, because as the same Solomon says: "envy endures nothing."(5)
For just in proportion as another has made progress in humble submission or in
the virtue of patience or in the merit of munificence, so is a man excited by
worse pricks of envy, because he desires nothing less than the ruin or death of
the man whom he envies. Lastly no submission on the part of their harmless
brother could soften the envy of the eleven patriarchs, so that Scripture relates
of them: "But his brothers envied him because his father loved him, and they
could not speak peaceably unto him"(6) until their jealousy, which would not
listen to any entreaties on the part of their obedient and submissive brother,
desired his death, and would scarcely be satisfied with the sin of selling a
brother. It is plain then that envy is worse than all faults, and harder to get rid
of, as it is inflamed by those remedies by which the others are destroyed. For,
for example, a man who is grieved by a loss that has been caused to him, is
healed by a liberal compensation: one who is sore owing to a wrong done to him, is
appeased by humble satisfaction being made. What can you do with one who is
the more offended by the very fact that he sees you humbler and kinder, who is
not aroused to anger by any greed which can be appeased by a bribe; or by any
injurious attack or love of vengeance, which is overcome by obsequious services;
but is only irritated by another's success and happiness? But who is there who
in order to satisfy one who envies him, would wish to fall from his good
fortune, or to lose his prosperity or to be involved in some calamity? Wherefore we
must constantly implore the divine aid, to which nothing is impossible, in order
that the serpent may not by a single bite of this evil destroy whatever is
flourishing in us, and animated as it were by the life and quickening power of the
Holy Ghost. For the other poisons of serpents, i.e., carnal sins and faults, in
which human frailty is easily entangled and from which it is as easily
purified, show some traces of their wounds in the flesh, whereby although the earthly
body is most dangerously inflamed, yet if any charmer well skilled in divine
incantations applies a cure and antidote or the remedy of words of salvation, the
poisonous evil does not reach to the everlasting death of the soul. But the
poison of envy as if emitted by the basilisk, destroys the very life of religion
and faith, even before the wound is perceived in the body. For he does not
raise himself up against men, but, in his blasphemy, against God, who carps at
nothing in his brother except his felicity, and so blames no fault of man, but
simply the judgment of God. This then is that "root of bitterness springing up"(1)
which raises itself to heaven and tends to reproaching the very Author Who
bestows good things on man. Nor shall anyone be disturbed because God threatens to
send "serpents, basilisks,"(2) to bite those by whose crimes He is offended.
For although it is certain that God cannot be the author of envy, yet it is fair
and worthy of the divine judgment that, while good gifts are bestowed on the
humble and refused to the proud and reprobate, those who, as the Apostle says,
deserve to be given over "to a reprobate mind,"(5) should be smitten and consumed
by envy sent as it were by Him, according to this passage: "They have provoked
me to jealousy by them that are no gods: and I will provoke them to jealousy
by them that are no nation."(6)
By this discourse the blessed Piamun excited still more keenly our desire
in which we had begun to be promoted from the infant school of the coenobium to
the second standard of the anchorites' life. For it was under his instruction
that we made our first start in solitary living, the knowledge of which we
afterwards followed up more thoroughly in Scete.