The Monastic Tonsure
It is generally accepted that monasticism began in Egypt
towards the end of the Third Century, though its origins may have
been older. Indeed, some form of monasticism may have existed almost
from the birth of the Church. As the word monastic implies (in Greek
monos alone), the Monk was one who went into the desert to live
alone with God. (Such were also called hermits (or anchorites),
which means solitaries.) The first recorded hermitic Orthodox
Christian literature was St. Paul of Thebes ( 341) who lived over
sixty years in a cave in the Egyptian desert. But the greatest of
these hermits, often called the Father of Monasticism, was St.
Anthony the Great ( 356). Yet, even in the life of this father of
monasticism, the desert solitude was gradually modified by the
appearance of disciples. These men wished to pursue the monastic
life under the guidance of one who was already experienced. A
soldier marching into battle would much rather be commanded by an
experienced officer than an inexperienced one, no matter how
educated the latter may be. Nor, if he himself is inexperienced,
would he wish to enter the battle alone. Thus, after struggling many
years as a solitary, St. Anthony gathered to himself a community of
Monks who lived in separate huts, each working out his own salvation
in his own particular way, but under Anthony's supervision, guided
by his great experience in spiritual life.
Anthony knew, however, the difficulties of the solitary life and
he strongly approved of the establishment of the coenobitic or
common life, as it was perfected by another Egyptian father, St. Pachomius the Great (348). In his coenobitic communities the Monks
all lived together in one place, everything being held in common
(there being no private property), and the individual Monk was under
the strict supervision of a spiritual elder (or starets in
this case Pachomius himself). There were still solitaries inhabiting
the surrounding desert, and sometimes the elder would himself choose
to live more frequently in the desert than in the more populated
central community.
Eventually the central community became the norm of monasticism
and the solitary life the exception. Whenever we see examples of
solitary monastic life in later Saint's lives, we see it entered
into almost exclusively by those who had already acquired
considerable experience in communal monastic life. Even as great an
ascetic as Saint Seraphim of Sarov pleaded for a long time before he
was given permission to withdraw into the forest outside of his
monastery in order to pursue the solitary life. Thus, in time, the
communal, coenobitic form became the preferred form of Orthodox
monasticism and thus, the overwhelming majority of Orthodox monastic
communities in the world today are coenobitic communities.
In a coenobitic monastery each of the Monks live in a separate
room, called a cell, wherein he sleeps and performs his private rule
of prayer (the cell-rule) given to him by his elder. All of the
Monks assemble together for the Divine Services, for the common
meals (or trapeza) in the Refectory (often called the Trapeza or
Dining Hall) and in common work. The head of a coenobitic monastery
is the Abbot (or Igumen (Hegumen), meaning leader) or, if the
monastery were particularly famous, the higher ranking Archimandrite
(chief of a fold). In some monasteries under the direct supervision
of the Primate of the Church (who is often called, in such cases,
the Great Abbot) a deputy will be appointed (called, in Russian,
Namestnik or one who acts in the name of the Abbot Deputy Abbot).
In the 14th Century, on Mt. Athos (a monastic republic which has
existed on one of the peninsulas of Greece since the 10th Century),
there appeared a relaxed form of the coenobitic monastery called the
idiorrhythmic monastery (meaning personal way or manner) in which
many of the communal rules were greatly altered. Monks were allowed
to hold private property, they often cooked for themselves in their
own cells, and were not strictly required to attend all Divine
Services as a community. This form of monasticism, for a time, held
sway on Mt. Athos, but at the present time only a minority of the
monasteries there, and in the world as a whole, are, in fact,
idiorrhythmic.
Another form of monastic life which developed was the skete life,
so-called for the famous Egyptian community of Scetis which
originated this form. The skete life has often been called the royal
or middle path of monasticism, midway between the extreme rigors of
solitary life and the common life. A skete, which in modern times is
usually situated on the lands of a sovereign monastery, is, in
effect, a small monastic village, consisting of a small number of
Monks living a stricter ascetical life prayer.
Skete life can take one of two different forms: a) the
idiorrhythm skete, which consists of separate houses surrounding a
small church, in which the Divine Liturgy is usually served on
Saturdays, Sundays and Feast Days. The Daily Services are said in a
chapel to be found in each house, and the general rules of monastic
life are the same as in idiorrhythmic monasteries (the holding of
private property, etc.), and b) the coenobitic skete, which consists
of the common life typical of the coenobitic monasteries in a main
house with Daily Services celebrated in common in the Skete church.
As in the idiorrhythmic sketes, Divine Liturgy is celebrated only on
Saturdays, Sundays and Feast Days.
Finally, there were also to be found hermitages on the monastery
lands (and elsewhere), where those who had especially progressed in
the monastic life were allowed to live as solitaries. In such cases
the hermit was granted a food ration from the main monastery,
usually brought to him by Monks of the monastery, for the hermit
rarely, if ever, left his hermitage, where he spent his remaining
earthly days in strict solitude and ceaseless prayer, just as had
the ancient solitaries of Egypt, Palestine, Syria, and other places.
Considering the predominance of coenobitic monasticism, if the
origin of monasticism was the solitary life and the Monk is, by
definition, alone, why, then, did monasticism become essentially
communal? Why does the Church even seem to discourage those who
would lead a life of solitude? Is this not a departure from the
essence of monasticism?
The answer lies in that physical solitude is not the essence of
monasticism, for this essence is, in fact, the struggle to cast out
the very root of man's sinfulness: pride and self-will. The First
Sin was none other than the desire to live by man's own will rather
than the will of God. It was the desire to be independent, to be as
God in a manner that would free man from obeying anyone but himself.
This is the sin that caused the Fall of man and which is at the
origin of virtually every sin we commit. I steal when my desire to
possess surpasses all other thoughts or reason. I lie when my
desires overcome reality. I hate when someone stands in the way of
what I want. I do not pray when I am the center of my universe, and
not God.
Pride and self-will can be eradicated only through the
acquisition of their opposites: humility and obedience. A Monk
leading a totally solitary life is rarely in a position to
effectively test either of these qualities. A humble attitude
towards God is genuine only if accompanied by humility towards
fellow-men. Obedience to God is empty unless one is able to obey
others. Instead of learning humility and obedience, the Monk who
lives alone runs the serious risk of falling into a special form of
pride, prelest, a Russian word sometimes translated as
spiritual self-deception. The Monk takes pride in his ascetic
labors, in his saintly manner of life and in this state, he can be
completely lost, since true monastic sanctity is always
self-accusing, always mourning its sinfulness. The more severe the
asceticism, the greater the danger of prelest.
Humility and obedience can best and most-safely be acquired
through the total surrender of the Monk to an instructor experienced
in the spiritual life. The Monk confesses even his most intimate
thoughts to his elder and does nothing without his blessing. The
former teaches humility, the latter teaches obedience.
The problem of pride and self-will is, as we have said, common to
all mankind. Obviously, it is not only Monks and Nuns who must
struggle to replace them with humility and obedience. True monastic
life, however, especially under the direction of an elder, is
exceptionally conducive to that particular struggle. The life of a
Monk is specifically regulated to the acquisition of these virtues.
Life outside the monastery, with its own responsibilities and
preoccupations, makes it difficult to discern the state of one's
soul and concentrate on the acquisition of spiritual virtues.
For this reason, Orthodox Christian men and women, clergy and
laity, have been flocking to the monasteries for over a millennium
and a half. They came to learn from those who are, in a sense, at
the front line of battle. They came to learn from the experienced,
to obtain advice for success and consolation in failure. They were
greeted with love, compassion, and deep understanding. They learned
that they were not alone in their struggles, that others had
suffered as they did. They returned to their homes strengthened,
encouraged and wiser, better-equipped to continue the struggle in
their own daily lives.
And so, the goal of monasticism was not one of ego and self, but
of love of God and the desire to set aright the pernicious
influences of pride, self-will and disobedience. Monastic life
elevates a Monk to spiritual perfection in the light of Christ's
love and, by living in this love, bears light and spiritual warmth
to the world. By withdrawing from the world, a Monk does not express
contempt for it, but, on the contrary, acquires a perfect love for
the world, a pure love in Christ which is alien to worldly passions.
By turning away from vanity the Monk strives to perceive himself and
his impotence, and to fortify himself spiritually through prayer to
God. And thus is was that it was to the monasteries that the
faithful turned in order to acquire help and encouragement in their
own daily spiritual struggles.
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Excerpt taken from "These Truths We Hold - The Holy Orthodox
Church: Her Life and Teachings". Compiled and Edited by A Monk
of St. Tikhon's Monastery. Copyright 1986 by the St. Tikhon's
Seminary Press, South Canaan, Pennsylvania 18459.
To order a copy of "These Truths We Hold" visit the
St. Tikhon's Orthodox Seminary Bookstore.
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