St Anthony is held by the Roman Catholic church to be the founder of Christian monasticism. The chief source of information on St.
Anthony is a Greek Life attributed to St. Athanasius, to be found in any edition
of his works. This Life is received with
practical unanimity by scholars as a substantially historical record, and as a
probably authentic work of St. Athanasius. Valuable subsidiary information is
supplied by secondary sources: the "Apophthegmata", chiefly those collected
under Anthony's name. All this matter may probably be accepted as
substantially authentic, whereas what is related concerning St. Anthony in St.
Jerome's "Life of St. Paul the Hermit" cannot be used for historical purposes.
Anthony was born at Coma, near Heracleopolis Magna in Fayum, about the middle
of the third century. He was the son of well-to-do parents, and on their death,
in his twentieth year, he inherited their possessions. He had a desire to
imitate the life of the Apostles and the early Christians, and one day, on
hearing in the church the Gospel words, "If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell
all thou hast", he received them as spoken to himself, disposed of all his
property and goods, and devoted himself exclusively to religious exercises. Long
before this it had been usual for Christians to practice asceticism, abstain
from
marriage and exercising themselves in self-denial, fasting, prayer, and works of
piety; but this they had done in the midst of their families, and without
leaving house or home. Later on, in Egypt. such ascetics lived in huts, in the
outskirts of the towns and villages, and this was the common practice about 270,
when Anthony withdrew from the world. He began his career by practising the
ascetical life in this fashion without leaving his native place. He used to
visit the various ascetics, study their lives, and try to learn from each of
them the virtue in which he seemed to excel. Then he took up his abode in one of
the tombs, near his native village, and there it was that the Life records those
strange conflicts with demons in the shape of wild beasts, who inflicted blows
upon him, and sometimes left him nearly dead.
Anthony's spiritual combats with the hosts of evil made his life one long
struggle with the devil. St Athanasius of Alexandria, says that Anthony was
first tempted by thoughts of family joys and duties and of the difficulty of his
chosen life, but the devil, finally finding argument useless and hoping to
arouse Anthony the pride of success, appeared as a cringing black boy admitting
that he had been defeated by the Saint. At times the devil appeared in the guise
of a monk bringing bread during his fasts, or in the form of wild beasts, women,
or soldiers, sometimes beating the saint and leaving him in a deathly state.
Anthony endured many such attacks, and those who witnessed them were convinced
they were real. Every vision conjured up by Satan was repelled by Anthony's
fervid prayer and penitential acts. So exotic were the visions and so steadfast
was Anthony's endurance that the subject of his temptations has often been used
in literature and art, notably in the paintings of Hieronymus Bosch, Matthias
Grunewald, and Max Ernst.
After fifteen years of this life,
at the age of thirty-five, Anthony determined to withdraw from the habitations
of men and retire in absolute solitude. He crossed the Nile, and on a mountain
near the east bank, then called Pispir, now Der el Memum, he found an old fort
into which he shut himself, and lived there for twenty years without seeing the
face of man, food being thrown to him over the wall. He was at times visited by
pilgrims, whom he refused to see; but gradually a number of would-be disciples
established themselves in caves and in huts around the mountain, Thus a colony
of ascetics was formed, who begged Anthony to come forth and be their guide in
the spiritual life. At length, about the year 305, he yielded to their
importunities an emerged from his retreat, and, to the surprise of all, he
appeared to be as when he had gone in, not emaciated, but vigorous in body and
mind. For five or six years he devoted himself to the instruction and
organization of the great body of monks that had grown up around him; but hen he
once again withdrew into the inner desert that lay between the Nile and the Red
Sea, near the shore of which he fixed his abode on a mountain where still stands
the monastery that bears his name, Der Mar Antonios. Here he spent the last
forty-five years of his life, in a seclusion, not so strict as Pispir, for he
freely saw those who came to visit him, and he used to cross the desert to
Pispir with considerable frequency. The Life says that on two occasions he went
to Alexandria, once after he came forth from the fort at Pispir, to strengthen
the Christian martyrs in the persecution of 311, and once at the close of his
life (c. 350), to preach against the Arians. The Life says he dies at the age of
a hundred and five, and St. Jerome places his death in 356-357. All the
chronology is based on the hypothesis that this date and the figures in the Life
are correct. At his own request his grave was kept secret by the two disciples
who buried him, lest his body should become an object of reverence.
Of his writings, the most authentic formulation of his teaching is without
doubt that which is contained in the various sayings and discourses put into his
mouth in the Life, especially the long ascetic sermons spoken on his
coming forth from the fort at Pispir. It is an instruction on the duties of the
spiritual life, in which the warfare with demons occupies the chief place.
Though probably not an actual discourse spoken on any single occasion, it can
hardly be a mere invention of the biographer, and doubtless reproduces St.
Anthony's actual doctrine, brought together and co-ordinated. It is likely that
many of the sayings attributed to him in the "Apophthegmata" really go back to
him, and the same may be said of the stories told of him in other writings by Cassian and
Palladius. There is a homogeneity about these records, and a certain dignity and
spiritual elevation that seem to mark them with the stamp of truth, and to
justify the belief that the picture they give us of St Anthony's personality,
character, and teaching is essentially authentic.
A different verdict has to be
passed on the writings that go under his name. The
Sermons and twenty Epistles from the Arabic are by common consent pronounced
wholly spurious. St Jerome knew seven epistles
translated from the Coptic into Greek; the Greek appears to be lost, but a Latin
version exists, and Coptic fragments exist of three of these letters,
agreeing closely with the Latin; they may be authentic, but it would be
premature to decide. Better is the position of a Greek letter to Theodore,
preserved in the "Epistola Ammonis ad Theophilum", and said to be a
translation of a Coptic original; there seems to be no sufficient ground for
doubting that it really was written by Anthony. The authorities are agreed that St Anthony knew no Greek
and spoke only Coptic. There exists a monastic Rule that bears St Anthony's
name, preserved in Latin and Arabic forms. While it cannot be
received as having been actually composed by Anthony, it probably in large
measure goes back to him, being for the most part made up out of the utterances
attributed to him in the Life and the "Apophthegmata"; it contains, however, an
element derived from the spuria and also from the "Pachomian Rules". It was
compiled at an early date, and had a great vogue in Egypt and the East. At this day
it is the rule followed by the Uniat Monks of Syria and Armenia, of whom the
Maronites, with sixty monasteries and 1,100 monks, are the most important; it is
followed also by the scanty remnants of Coptic monasticism.
It will be proper to define St. Anthony's place, and to explain his influence
in the history of Christian monasticism. He probably was not the first Christian
hermit; it is more reasonable to believe that, however little historical St
Jerome's "Vita Pauli" may be, some kernel of fact underlies the story, but Paul's existence was wholly unknown unknown till
long after Anthony has become the recognized leader of Christian hermits. Nor
was St Anthony a great legislator and organizer of monks, like his younger
contemporary Pachomius: for, though Pachomius's first foundations were probably
some ten or fifteen years later than Anthony's coming forth from his retreat at
Pispir, it cannot be shown that Pachomius was directly influenced by Anthony,
indeed his institute ran on quite different lines - being communal rather than
solitary. And yet it is abundantly
evident that from the middle of the fourth century throughout Egypt, as
elsewhere, and among the Pachomian monks themselves, St Anthony was looked upon
as the founder and father of Christian monasticism. This great position was no
doubt due to his commanding personality and high character, qualities that stand
out clearly in all the records of him that have come down. The best study of his
character is Newman's in the "Church of the Fathers" (reprinted in "Historical
Sketches"). The following is his estimate: "His doctrine surely was pure and
unimpeachable; and his temper is high and heavenly, without cowardice, without
gloom, without formality, without self-complacency. Superstition is abject and
crouching, it is full of thoughts of guilt; it distrusts God, and dreads the powers
of evil. Anthony at least had nothing of this, being full of confidence, divine
peace, cheerfulness, and valorousness, be he (as some men may judge) ever so
much an enthusiast". Full of enthusiasm he was,
but it did not make him fanatical or morose; his urbanity and gentleness, his
moderation and sense stand out in many of the stories related of him. Abbot
Moses says he had heard Anthony maintaining that of all
virtues discretion was the most essential for attaining perfection; and the
little known story of Eulogius and the Cripple, preserved in the Lausiac History, illustrates the kind of advice and direction he gave to those who sought
his guidance.
The monasticism established under St Anthony's direct influence became the
norm in Northern Egypt, from Lycopolis (Asyut) to the Mediterranean. In
contradistinction to the fully coenobitical system, established by Pachomius in
the South, it continued to be of a semi-eremetical character, the monks living
commonly in separate cells or huts, and coming together only occasionally for
church services; they were left very much to their own devices, and the life
they lived was not a community life according to rule, as now understood. This was the form of monastic life in the
deserts of Nitria and Scete, as portrayed by Palladius and Cassian. Such groups
of semi-independent hermitages were later on called Lauras, and have always
existed in the East alongside of the Basilian monasteries; in the West St
Anthony's monasticism is in some measure represented by the Carthusians. Such was
St Anthony's life and character, and such his role in Christian history. He is
justly recognized as the father not only of monasticism, strictly so called, but
of the technical religious life in every shape and form. Few names have
exercised on the human race an influence more deep and lasting, more widespread,
or on the whole more beneficent. The rule is still observed by a number of Coptic Syrian and Armenian monks.
Anthony's feast day is January 17th.
Report by Fr. Stephen Fermoyle