Pachomius: The Making of a Community in Fourth-Century Egypt (The Transformation of the Classical Heritage , No 6)
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Pachomius: The Making of a Community in Fourth-Century Egypt (The Transformation of the Classical Heritage , No 6)


Pachomius: The Making of a Community in Fourth-Century Egypt (The Transformation of the Classical Heritage , No 6)
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Pachomius: The Making of a Community in Fourth-Century Egypt (The Transformation of the Classical Heritage , No 6)

by Philip Rousseau
Product Group: Book
Publisher: University of California Press (1999-07-06)
ISBN: 0520219597
EAN: 9780520219595
Dewy Decimal #: 291
Paperback: 250 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: BA08020108
Condition: Used: Like New
Comments: Exactly as shown, Covers flat and shiny, Spine uncreased, Text clean with NO marks.


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
Pachomius, who died in 346, has long been regarded as the "founder of monasticism." Available again, Philip Rousseau's careful reading of the available texts reveals that Pachomius's pioneering enterprise has been consistently misread in light of later monastic practices. Rousseau not only provides a fuller and more accurate portrait of this great teacher and spiritual director but also gives a new perspective on the development of monasticism. In a new preface Rousseau reviews the scholarly developments that have modified his views and emphases since the book was published. The result is to make Pachomius an even less assured pioneer, a man likely to have been more involved in the village and urban society of his time than previously thought.


Customer Reviews


A fresh, instructive account of spiritual adventure
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-03-15

3 out of 3 customers found this reveiw helpful


Rousseau traces the life of the man who founded the first Christian monastic community, bringing his motives and struggles down to the level of step by step, trial and error experience. He introduces an Egyptian man who served as a soldier in the Roman occupation army, and was moved to see local Christians offering food to the troops. Rousseau is concerned with practical details. Like how Pachomius and his followers started out working as field labourers by day, and experimented with prayer and meditation by night. The book explores each issue in managing a community or its spiritual trials, as those issues appeared and as the monks chose to deal with them. Later the very success of the experiment generated growing controversy, as when Archbishop Athanasius came down from Alexandria to the desert, seeking Pachomius' support in a church power struggle. And Pachomius "hid from the pope", taking the guise of a common monk, till Athanasius went away.

As Rousseau shows, Pachomius hoped his monks would avoid being co-opted as functionaries of the imperial church. He feared that with a rise of institutional overlords, "good men will no longer feel able to speak out for the benefit of the community, but will remain silent and still". For Pachomius, ambition for control over others was an immaturity to be overcome. He openly confessed and ridiculed his own craving for superiority, admitting that he sometimes imagined himself preceded by a voice calling "Make way for the man of God!".

I found the book very good in raising questions about how I manage my life, and how I make my own lifetime a spiritual adventure.

--author of "Different Visions of Love"

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