Sunday, 24 May 2020

The Desert Fathers



Have you heard of the desert fathers, who lived in the 3rd and 4th century AD in and around Palestine, and Egypt? Who are they? What is their significance to early Christianity? I happened to read about them recently, thanks to Covid -19 lock-down. I was quite amazed at what I learnt about them and I thought of sharing it with you, my readers!

Very early, around 3rd century, monks, who had surrendered their lives to God and wished to stay away from the world so that they can concentrate on God totally, retired to lonely uninhabited places, later on to deserts, for meditation and prayer. This gradually led to monasticism in the 4th century. Bible does not call people to monastic life. But we always had ascetics like John the Baptist in the NT and Elijah and Elisha in the OT. It was a longing to live for God alone, to prepare oneself through practice of asceticism, flight from the world and through fasting and prayer they aspired to get close to God.  

One of the very first desert fathers was Saint Antony, born in 271 in Egypt to very rich Christian parents. His life story is written by Athanasius of Alexandria, Egypt.[1] When his parents died when Antony was 20 years old, he gave all the family property of some 300 acres to the villagers,[2] put her younger sister in a convent and went outside the village to practice discipline in solitude. He practiced severe penance; constant in prayer, read and studied Bible, ate just once a day, that too bread, salt and water; lay on bare ground or a rush mat. He started to live in tombs, went in one of the tombs and shut himself inside, kept praying. Satan and demons tried every trick to dissuade him from prayers, but he firmly held on to his faith. Then he went to the desert nearby, found a ruined fort and made it his home for the next 20 years. He would store for six months bread given by travelers and people, but refused to meet people, but people thronged him. He would weave baskets to give people in return for the food grains, etc, which they gave him.  

Later he started a monastery for young disciples who wanted to follow his footsteps. He was full of Holy Spirit, pure in his soul, and God used him to heal sicknesses, cleanse leprosy, cast out evil spirits, and many miracles were performed. He consoled the sorrowful and exhorted everyone to love Christ more than the world. He advised them to practice prudence, justice, temperance, courage, understanding, love, kindness to the poor, faith in Christ, freedom from wrath and hospitality. His famous exhortation to young monks was, ‘to live as though dying daily.’ He lived up to 105 years and died in 285 AD. His devotion to Christ was legendary.

St. Jerome, (342-420 AD), a Latin priest, theologian and historian, who had translated the Bible into Latin, which is called the Vulgate, who himself had lived for sometime as a hermit in Syrian desert, has written about three other Desert Fathers.

Paul of Thebes, is said to have lived even earlier to St. Antony of Egypt. He was also born rich, in Egypt, but had great love for Christ. Due to persecution during the time of Decius and Velarian, Roman Emperors in 249-260 AD, he fled to rocky mountains and entering a cave fell into prayer and lived there till he was 113 years old! Raven used to feed him with bread.

St. Hilarion was another hermit born near Gaza, a city of Palestine. His parents were idolaters, who sent him to Alexandria to study but he became a Christ-lover. He visited St. Antony and stayed with him for two months. On return to his place, as his parents had died, he gave off his properties to his relatives and poor and became a monk at the age of 14. He went to a nearby place and lived in a hut of reed, lived on dried figs and lay on ground to sleep. He memorized Scripture, prayed, sang, recited these verses and grew close to God. He also performed many miracles as empowered by the Holy Spirit. Many monasteries sprung up all over Palestine. He used to go and visit these cells of the other hermits once a year, guide them, cheer them up and return to his place.

At 63 years of age, Hilarion was the head of a grand monastery with lots of resident brothers. People used to bring their sick to him to be healed and he healed them. But he wanted solitude and so left the place. Where ever he tried to go in search of solitude, his fame preceded him and people started to come to visit him. In the end he went to an interior place in Cyprus and stayed there. At the age of 80 years he died having served the Lord for nearly 70 years.

Malchus was another monk born in Nisibis, Syria. When his parents wanted him to marry and lead a normal life, he fled his place as he wanted to become a monk. He joined some monks in the desert of Chalcis and lived there, fasting and earning his livelihood by labor of his hands. After many years when he decided to return home to see his mother, he was taken captive by Saracen traders and along with another woman, sold as slaves and made to work as laborer. The woman, already married, took him as her brother, and so he was able to keep up his chastity. He prayed continually and sang psalms in spite of all these hardships. After a few years he escaped, along with that woman and they came to Mesopotamia, entered a monastery and lived a monastic life, with that woman taking care of the virgins. This life story is an example of chastity. St. Jerome writes that in the midst of swords and wild beasts of the desert, ‘virtue is never a captive, but free and alive.’

These desert fathers showed the way to monastic life, with complete devotion and surrender of their lives to the Lord Jesus Christ. St. Augustine of Hippo, a contemporary of St. Jerome, entered a monastery when he was converted to Christianity in 386 AD. He was influenced by the life of St. Antony, the desert father, and later became the Bishop of Hippo, and a Christian scholar of repute, also one of the Latin Church Fathers.

These desert fathers and Church Fathers belonged to the undivided church of Christ. Unfortunately after the Reformation, these saints were neglected and relegated as saints of the Catholic Church, thus depriving us of a great theological heritage. We need to claim them as our own and learn good things relating to spirituality from them. They offered their lives as a sacrifice to the Lord and spent their time in poverty and ascetic practices and were used mightily by God to preserve purity and the essence of Christian life. They are great models, whom we may not be able to emulate fully, but at least can adopt their simplicity, spend more time with the study of Bible and prayer, and not run after the world and what the world has to offer.

As the times are nearing to the return of our Lord, these spiritual disciplines become all the more necessary. I am hoping this account will stimulate you to become a serious student of Christ and his teachings just as it did to me.     


[1] Athanasius, the Great, (296-373 AD) was a great theologian, Church Father who defended Trinitarianism against heresy and was the Bishop f Alexandria.
[2] Matthew 19:21

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