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St. Arsenius
Anchorite; born 354, at Rome; died 450, at Troe, in Egypt. Theodosius the
Great having requested the Emperor Gratian and Pope Damasus to find him in the
West a tutor for his son Arcadius, they made choice of Arsenius, a man well read
in Greek literature, member of a noble Roman family, and said to have been a
deacon of the Roman Church. He reached Constantinople in 383, and continued as
tutor in the imperial family for eleven years, during the last three of which he
also had charge of his pupil's brother Honorius. Coming one day to see his
children at their studies, Theodosius found them sitting while Arsenius talked
to them standing. This he would not tolerate, and caused the teacher to sit and
the pupils to stand. On his arrival at court Arsenius had been given a splendid
establishment, and probably because the Emperor so desired, he lived in great
pomp, but all the time felt a growing inclination to renounce the world. After
praying long to be enlightened as to what he should do, he heard a voice saying
Arsenius, flee the company of men, and thou shalt be saved.
Thereupon he
embarked secretly for Alexandria, and hastening to the desert of Scetis, asked
to be admitted among the solitaries who dwelt there. St. John the Dwarf, to
whose cell he was conducted, though previously warned of the quality of his
visitor, took no notice of him and left him standing by himself while he invited
the rest to sit down at table. When the repast was half finished he threw down
some bread before him, bidding him with an air of indifference eat if he would.
Arsenius meekly picked up the bread and ate, sitting on the ground. Satisfied
with this proof of humility, St. John kept him under his direction. The new
solitary was from the first most exemplary yet unwittingly retained certain of
his old habits, such as sitting cross-legged or laying one foot over the other.
Noticing this, the abbot requested some one to imitate Arsenius's posture at the
next gathering of the brethren, and upon his doing so, forthwith rebuked him
publicly. Arsenius took the hint and corrected himself. During the fifty-five
years of his solitary life he was always the most meanly clad of all, thus
punishing himself for his former seeming vanity in the world. In like manner, to
atone for having used perfumes at court, he never changed the water in which he
moistened the palm leaves of which he made mats, but only poured in fresh water
upon it as it wasted, thus letting it become stenchy in the extreme. Even while
engaged in manual labour he never relaxed in his application to prayer. At all
times copious tears of devotion fell from his eyes. But what distinguished him
most was his disinclination to all that might interrupt his union with God. When,
after long search, his place of retreat was discovered, he not only refused to
return to court and act as adviser to his former pupil the Emperor Arcadius, but
he would not even be his almoner to the poor and the monasteries of the
neighbourhood. He invariably denied himself to visitors, no matter what their
rank and condition and left to his disciples the care of entertaining them. His
contemporaries so admired him as to surname him the Great
.
See Acta SS. (19 July) for his life by ST. THEODORE THE STUDITE (d. 826) and another in META.PHRASTES (apud SURILM. De probatis Sanctorum vitis IV, 250), the Lives of the Fathers of the Desert in ROSWEYDE and D'ANDILLY, or P. L., LXXIV; MARIN Vies des pères des déserts d orient, BUTLER, Lives of the Saints, 19 July.
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