This past summer, adrift from school, I had given me the opportunity to do a little free form reading, like I used to do. Just like the good old days.
One of the things I found was an older account of the Desert Fathers of Egypt, titled Paradise of the Holy Fathers. This is a reprint of a translation of an ancient syriac manuscript made by E. A. Wallis Budge, curator of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities in the British Musuem, and first published in 1904. The translation is a little stilted in places, and for those of us used to reading other manuscripts about the Fathers translated by Sister Benedicta Ward and Norman Russell the differences will be obvious. Still, it is a fascinating book, if for no other reason than because it gives us a third source for learning of these remarkable men and women. This one was written by Bishop Palladius in about 420. Palladius himself was a monk, who spent many years in the desert. He knew many of the famous Fathers personally, and heard tales of the others.
For those unfamiliar with the Fathers, it could be said that they were the founders and the fruit of an enormous movement toward monasticism that bloomed in the wastelands of Egypt beginning in the third century. At its height, there were thousands of monks both in community and living as anchorites in cells, caves and other solitary places. The stories of these monks are full of astonishing events. Miracles were almost commonplace, and the holiness found in the desert was of a sort that modern readers find hard to believe. Interestingly, the Fathers have apparently been picked up by some edgier elements in Protestantism, as examples of “x-treme x-tianity”. Unfortunately, the tales of these men and women lose context, power and meaning when taken outside of the Church that nurtured them.
Anyway, one of the interesting things I ran across was a list of 16 guidelines Palladius wrote to the prefect for the area, Lausus. They reflect the simplicity of thought and living that characterized the monastics:
Let the following be before thy mind in all thine acts, and thou shall sin in no particular:
1. To do good to the fool and to bury the dead; both are alike.
2. It is meet that a man should put on armor over the breast, and the word of our Redeemer Christ over grief; armor and shield will hide the breast, but only faith and action can hide the soul.
3. As it is possible to see the skill of the painter on a small tablet, so a small gift shows the greatness of the disposition of the soul.
4. Have no confidence in the belief that that which is placed outside thy soul is thy possession.
5. Clothes and raiment drape statues, but habits and manners drape men.
6. An evil word is the beginning of evil deeds.
7. Speak thou according to what is right, and where it is right, and concerning the things which are right, and hearken not unto that which is not right.
8. It is better to shake a stone vainly than to utter a vain word, and it is better to be under subjection to the Barbarians than to evil passions.
9. The excellence of a horse is made apparent in battle, and the disposition of a friend is put to the test in tribulation.
10. It is impossible to divide the sea, and it is also impossible to still the waves, although for them it is always easy to still themselves.
11. The wise and God-fearing man is he who hates that which is not right.
12. The gentle and gracious man is he who treads pride under foot; but he who is set upon that which is contrary of this is one who is governed by arrogance.
13. Constant prayer is the strength, and the armour, and the wall of the soul.
14. Wine makes warm the body, and the word of God warms the soul.
15. Know thou that not even much time will bring oblivion upon one act which thou would hide.
16. The believing mind is a temple of God which it is meet for a man to adorn daily and to burn incense therein, inasmuch as it is God Who dwelleth there.