Chapter 29 - ST. BENEDICT, PART 1 (AD 480-529)
Let us now look again at the monks. Their way of life was at first
devised as a means of either practising repentance for sin, or rising
to such a height of holiness as was supposed to be beyond the reach
of persons busied in the affairs of this world. But in course of
time a change took place. As the life of monks grew more common,
it grew less strict; indeed, it would seem that whenever any way
of life which professes to be very strict becomes common, its strictness
will pretty surely be lessened, or given up altogether. People at
first turned monks because they felt that such means of holy living
as they had been used to did not make them so good as they ought
to be, and because they hoped to do better in this new kind of life.
But when the monkish life was no longer new, monks neglected its
rules, just as those before them had neglected the rules which holy
Scripture and the Church had laid down for all Christians.
In the unhappy days which had now come on, the monasteries of the
West had in great measure escaped the evils of war and conquest
which laid waste everything around them. The barbarians, who overwhelmed
the empire, generally respected them; and now the life of monks,
instead of being chosen for its hardships, as it had been at first,
came to be regarded as the easiest and the safest life of all. It
was sought after as one which would free people from the dangers
to which they would be liable if they remained in the world, and
took the common share of the world's risks and troubles.
Another important matter was this--that monkery had taken its rise
in Egypt and in Syria, where the climate and the habits of the people
were very different from those of the western countries. And a great
part of the monkish rules were fitted only for the particular circumstances
and character of the eastern nations;--for instance, they could
do with less food than the people of the West, so that a writer
of the fifth century said, "A large appetite is gluttony in
the Greeks, but in the Gauls it is nature." Again, the Egyptians
and the Syrians, in their hot climate, did not need active employment
in the same way as the western nations do, in order to keep their
minds and their bodies healthful. They could spend their hours and
their days in calmly thinking of spiritual things, or of nothing
at all, in a way which the more active mind of Europeans cannot
bear. And again, many rules as to dress, which are suitable for
one sort of climate, are quite unfit for a different sort.
Now the earlier rules for monks had been drawn up either in the
East or after eastern patterns. And although, when they were brought
into the West, people for a time obeyed them as well as they could,
it was found that they would not obey them any longer when the first
heat of zeal for monkery had passed away. Hence it followed, that,
throughout the monasteries of the West, there was a general neglect
of the rules by which they professed to be governed; and it was
high time that there should be some reformation.
A reformer arose in the sixth century. This was Benedict, who was
born near Nursia, in Italy, in the year 480. At the age of twelve
he was sent to school at Rome, under the care of a nurse, as seems
to have been usual in those days. He worked hard at his studies,
but the bad behaviour of the other boys and young men at Rome so
shocked him, that, when he had been there two years, he resolved
to bear it no longer. He therefore suddenly ran away from the city,
and, after his nurse had gone a considerable distance with him,
he left her, and made his way into a rough and lonely country near
Subiaco, where he took up his abode in a cave. Here he was found
out by a monk of a neighbouring house, named Romanus, who used daily
to save part of his own allowance of food, and to carry it to his
young friend. The cave opened from the face of a lofty rock, and
the way that Romanus took of conveying the food to Benedict was
by letting it down at the end of a string from the top of the rock.
Benedict had lived in this manner for three years when he was discovered
by some shepherds, who at first took him for some wild animal; but
they soon found that he was something very different. He taught
them and others to whom they made his abode known, and his character
came to be so much respected in the neighbourhood that he was chosen
abbot of a monastery. He warned the monks that they would probably
not like him, but they were resolved to have him nevertheless. Their
habits, however, were so bad, that Benedict felt himself obliged
to check them rather sharply; and the monks then attempted to get
rid of him by mixing poison in his drink. But he found out their
wicked design, and the only reproof which he gave them was by reminding
them how he had warned them not to make him their abbot. With this
he left them to themselves, and went quietly back to his cave.
His name now grew more and more famous. Great multitudes of people
flocked to see him, and even persons of high rank sent their sons
to be trained under him. He built twelve monasteries, each for an
abbot and twelve monks. But there was a spiteful monk, named Florentius,
who would not allow him any peace so long as they were near each
other; so Benedict thought it best to give way, and in 528 he left
Subiaco, with some companions, and, after some wanderings, arrived
at Mount Cassino. There he found that the country people still worshipped
some of the old heathen gods, and that there was a grove which was
held sacred to these gods. But he set boldly to work, and, notwithstanding
all that could be done to oppose him, he cut down the grove, destroyed
the idols, and built a little chapel, from which in time grew up
a great and famous monastery, which still exists. And at Mount Cassino
he drew up his Rule in the year 529; so that the beginning of the
monks of St. Benedict was in the very same year in which heathen
philosophy came to its end by the closing of the schools of Athens
(p 143).
PART II (AD 529-543)
Benedict had seen the mischief which arose from too great strictness
of rules. He saw how it led to open disobedience and carelessness
in some, and to hypocritical pretence in others; and therefore he
meant to guard against these faults by making his rule milder than
those of the East. It was to be such that Europeans might keep it
without danger to their health, and he allowed it to be varied according
to the circumstances of the different countries in which it might
be established.
Every Benedictine monastery was to be under an abbot, who was to
be chosen by the monks. The brethren were to obey the abbot in everything,
while the abbot was charged not to be haughty or tyrannical in using
his authority. Next to the abbot there might either be a "provost,"
or (which Benedict liked better) there might be a number of "elders"
or "deans," who were to help and advise the abbot in the
government of his monasteries. Any one who wished to join the order
was to undergo trial for a year before admission. Those who were
admitted into it were required to give in a written vow that they
would continue in it, that they would amend their lives, and that
they would obey those who were set over them. Every monk was obliged
to give up all his property to the order; nobody was allowed to
have anything of his own, but all things were common to the brethren.
The monks might not receive any presents or letters, even from their
nearest relations, without the abbot's knowledge and leave, and
if a present were sent for one of them, the abbot had the power
to keep it from him, and to give it to any other monk.
It was one important part of the rule that the monks should have
sufficient employment provided for them. They were to get up at
two o'clock in the morning; they were to attend eight services a
day, or, if they happened to be at a distance from their monastery,
they were to observe the hours of the services by prayer; and they
were to work seven hours. Portions of time were allowed for learning
psalms by heart, and for reading the Scriptures, lives of holy men,
and other edifying books. At meals the monks were not to talk, but
some book was to be read aloud to them. Their food was to be plain
and simple; no flesh was allowed, except to the sick. But all such
matters were to be settled by the abbot, according to the climate
and the season, to the age, the health, and the employment of the
monks. Their dress was to be coarse, but was to be varied according
to circumstances. They were to sleep by ten or twenty in a room,
each in a separate bed, and without taking off their clothes. A
dean was to have the care of each room, and a light was to be kept
burning in each. No talking was to be allowed after the last service
of the day.
The monks were never to go beyond the monastery without leave,
and, in order that there might be little occasion for their going
out, it was to contain within its walls the garden, the well, the
mill, the bakehouse, and other such necessary things. The abbot
was to set every monk his work; if it were found that any one was
inclined to pride himself on his skill in any art or trade, he was
not to be allowed to practise it, but was obliged to take up some
other employment.
Benedict died in 543, and by that time his order had made its way
into France, Spain, and Sicily. It soon drew into itself all the
monks of the West, and was divided into a number of branches, which
all looked up to Benedict as their founder; and, although it would
be a sad mistake to wish for any revival of monkery in our own days,
we ought, in justice, to see and to acknowledge that through God's
providence these monks became the means of great benefits to mankind.
Not only were their services important for the maintenance of the
Gospel where it was already planted, and for the spreading of it
among the heathen, but they cleared forests, brought waste lands
into tillage, and did much to civilize the rude nations among whom
they laboured. After a time, learning began to be cultivated among
them, and during the troubled ages which followed, it found a refuge
in the monasteries. The monks taught the young; they copied the
Scriptures and other ancient books (for printing was as yet unknown);
they wrote histories of their times, and other books of their own.
To them, indeed, it is that we are mainly indebted for preserving
the knowledge of the past through many centuries.
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