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Lives of the Desert Fathers: The Historia Monachorum in Aegypto (Cistercian Studies No. 34)

Lives of the Desert Fathers: The Historia Monachorum in Aegypto (Cistercian Studies No. 34)
By Benedicta Ward, Norman Russell

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Eyewitness accounts of the lives and teachings of the fourth-century Desert Fathers from the Historia monachorum in Aegypto.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #59649 in Books
  • Published on: 1981-06
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 181 pages

Editorial Reviews

Choice
'The work is a gem'

Coptic Church Review
'May make a good source for the historian; it may give some information and pleasure for the casual reader. But the spiritual man will never forget the people he meets in it'


Customer Reviews

An Interesting Collection of Spiritual Wisdom5
THE LIVES OF THE DESERT FATHERS was my first introduction to these early Christian masters who oftentimes gave up wealth and success in the world and fled to the desert to live a life of austerity and faith. These early monks and hermits were viewed as successors to the martyrs. Since Christianity was not being persecuted in the same manner it was in the earliest centuries of the Church, many men and women wanted to show a new way of giving themselves totally for the faith and fleeing to the desert was one such way.

One of the things that makes the desert father and mothers so fascinating is that we do not have a great deal of biographical information about them. Rough collections of sayings, probably recorded a generation or two after they lived is all that survives. While this can be viewed as a disadvantage for the modern reader, it actually gets to the heart of what the people who recorded the sayings intended. We wrestle with the actual words and stories, sometimes simple and insightful, at other times arcane and difficult, and in doing so we find the challenge of what the masters were trying to teach. In our world with its busy pace, constant interruptions, technological gadgets that are supposed to keep us connected, these words from another day and age can seem nothing more than quaint, perhaps irrelevant. However, many of the teachings try to show people what is from God and what is not, what is good and what is a distraction. If we keep this in mind, we discover ways these words are timeless for our day and age.

The book itself reads like a travelogue. A group of monks from Palestine travel to Egypt and visit a group of monks living in the desert regions. Their holiness is well known, so they are not living in a secretive place, just a deserted one. It seems as if they met each of the monks included in the collection though some of the stories seem to be things they heard of the monks, other stories seem to be things observed. There are a variety of tales. Some are quips of spiritual wisdom, usually about humility. Others tell of overcoming great temptations and discerning between a temptation and act of God. Others are of a miraculous sort: people being healed, animals being tamed, etc. Individually we see interesting and often challenging tales. Collectively we see a diverse collection of tales with serving God and becoming more Christ-like as common themes. The book also contains helpful introductions by Sr. Benedicta Ward which tells of early Egyptian monasticism which helps modern readers better appreciate the writings.

Worth Every Penny!5
This book is an inspirational journey to another time and place that should inspire every Christian and give us the strength to live our own lives as God would have us live them. Get it, read it, share it!

Ancient Mysticism5
The book attributed to the recording keeping of a 394AD journeyman and his companions as they traveled through the deserts of Egypt meeting the acetic fathers. The book is as stunning as it is simple. Basic records of extraordinary lives will immediately provoke every kind of reader. Skeptics will try to dismiss it as ancient myth-making and walk away. Believers may embrace it, but only with the uneasy feeling that if these stories are historically accurate, there is something fundamentally missing from the modern day practice of faith. I can't imagine anyone walking away from this book content.

The events of twenty-six men's lives are recorded in the most general of details, some of which receive only a paragraph or two. But the details which are recorded include reports of clairvoyance, the control of wild animals, healing, and exorcisms. All of them practiced an extreme asceticism which left some of them with only a meal a week. There seems to be a general sense that when one practices self-denial to enough of a degree that it takes only a nudge (from a spiritual superior) for one to be able to work miracles. Miracles seem to be the commonplace experience of these hermits.

A summary doesn't do justice to the experience of reading the book. Whether or not one wholeheartedly affirms the accuracy of the stories, one is left with the question of where these stories came from. And if we accept them, there is only a dull sense that we are missing something.