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St. Pachomius
Died about 346. The main facts of his life will be found in MONASTICISM
(Section II: Eastern Monasticism before Chalcedon). Having spent some time with
Palemon, he went to a deserted village named Tabennisi, not necessarily with the
intention of remaining there permanently. A hermit would often withdraw for a
time to some more remote spot in the desert, and afterwards return to his old
abode. But Pachomius never returned; a vision bade him stay and erect a
monastery; very many eager to embrace the monastic life will come hither to
thee
. Although from the first Pachomius seems to have realized his mission to
substitute the cenobitical for the eremitical life, some time elapsed before he
could realize his idea. First his elder brother joined him, then others, but all
were bent upon pursuing the eremitical life with some modifications proposed by
Pachomius (e.g., meals in common). Soon, however, disciples came who were able
to enter into his plans. In his treatment of these earliest recruits Pachomius
displayed great wisdom. He realized that men, acquainted only with the
eremitical life, might speedily become disgusted, if the distracting cares of
the cenobitical life were thrust too abruptly upon them. He therefore allowed
them to devote their whole time to spiritual exercises, undertaking himself all
the burdensome work which community life entails. The monastery at Tabennisi,
though several times enlarged, soon became too small and a second was founded at
Pabau (Faou). A monastery at Chenoboskion (Schenisit) next joined the order, and,
before Pachomius died, there were nine monasteries of his order for men, and two
for women.
How did Pachomius get his idea of the cenobitical life? Weingarten (Der
Ursprung des Mönchthums, Gotha, 1877) held that Pachomius was once a pagan monk,
on the ground that Pachomius after his baptism took up his abode in a building
which old people said had once been a temple of Serapis. In 1898 Ladeuze (Le
Cénobitisme pakhomien, 156) declared this theory rejected by Catholics and
Protestants alike. In 1903 Preuschen published a monograph (Mönchthum und
Serapiskult, Giessen, 1903), which his reviewer in the Theologische
Literaturzeitung
(1904, col. 79), and Abbot Butler in the Journal of
Theological Studies
(V, 152) hoped would put an end to this theory. Preuschen
showed that the supposed monks of Serapis were not monks in any sense whatever.
They were dwellers in the temple who practised incubation
, i.e. sleeping in
the temple to obtain oracular dreams. But theories of this kind die hard. Mr.
Flinders Petrie in his Egypt in Israel
(published by the Soc. for the Prop. of
Christ. Knowl., 1911) proclaims Pachomius simply a monk of Serapis. Another
theory is that Pachomius's relations with the hermits became strained, and that
he recoiled from their extreme austerities. This theory also topples over when
confronted with facts. Pachomius's relations were always affectionate with the
old hermit Palemon, who helped him to build his monastery. There was never any
rivalry between the hermits and the cenobites. Pachomius wished his monks to
emulate the austerities of the hermits; he drew up a rule which made things
easier for the less proficient, but did not check the most extreme asceticism in
the more proficient. Common meals were provided, but those who wished to absent
themselves from them were encouraged to do so, and bread, salt, and water were
placed in their cells. It seems that Pachomius found the solitude of the
eremitical life a bar to vocations, and held the cenobitical life to be in
itself the higher (Ladeuze, op. cit., 168). The main features of Pachomius's
rule are described in the article already referred to, but a few words may be
said about the rule supposed to have been dictated by an angel (Palladius, Hist.
Lausiaca
, ed. Butler, pp. 88 sqq.), of which use is often made in describing a
Pachomian monastery. According to Ladeuze (263 sqq.), all accounts of this rule
go back to Palladius; and in some most important points it can be shown that it
was never followed by either Pachomius or his monks. It is unnecessary to
discuss the charges brought by Amelineau on the flimsiest grounds against the
morality of the Pachomian monks. They have been amply refuted by Ladeuze and
Schiwietz (cf. also Leipoldt, Schneute von Atripe
, 147).
In addition to the bibliography already given (Eastern Monasticism before Chalcedon) consult CABROL, Dict. d'archeol. chret., s.v. Cenobitisme; BOUSQUET AND NAU, Hist. de S. Pacomus in Ascetica … patrologia orient., IV (Paris, 1908).
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