Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Swimming against the Tide: How the Monks of Medikion Challenged Traditional Notions of Sainthood
View through CrossRef
Abstract
Byzantine monasticism is known to us chiefly through two types of texts, the lives of saints, and spiritual treatises. The two genres give us quite different impressions of what it meant to be a perfect monk. The spiritual tradition focused on the inner life, advising the practitioners to purify themselves from sins and contemplate God’s creation, and promising them visionary experiences once they had completed all the requisite steps. By contrast, hagiographical texts focused on visible actions, either ascetic feats or wonderworking. Yet this does not mean that the two discourses are completely unrelated. A common feature is the ability to read thoughts, even if its acquisition is explained in different ways. Both genres give the impression of changelessness. It seems as if all holy men and all spiritual paragons behaved in the same manner. This impression is not altogether wrong but one must be careful not to generalise too much. In this article I will show that two texts from the early ninth century, the Lives of the abbots Nicephorus and Nicetas of Medikion, go against the grain. The hagiographers reject important tenets of the spiritual tradition, as exemplified in the Climax, and criticise, implicitly or explicitly, qualities that were commonly considered to be indispensible for holy men. In order to make my case I will discuss in turn the following topics: healing, mourning, the vision of God, clairvoyance, and prophetic powers.
Title: Swimming against the Tide: How the Monks of Medikion Challenged Traditional Notions of Sainthood
Description:
Abstract
Byzantine monasticism is known to us chiefly through two types of texts, the lives of saints, and spiritual treatises.
The two genres give us quite different impressions of what it meant to be a perfect monk.
The spiritual tradition focused on the inner life, advising the practitioners to purify themselves from sins and contemplate God’s creation, and promising them visionary experiences once they had completed all the requisite steps.
By contrast, hagiographical texts focused on visible actions, either ascetic feats or wonderworking.
Yet this does not mean that the two discourses are completely unrelated.
A common feature is the ability to read thoughts, even if its acquisition is explained in different ways.
Both genres give the impression of changelessness.
It seems as if all holy men and all spiritual paragons behaved in the same manner.
This impression is not altogether wrong but one must be careful not to generalise too much.
In this article I will show that two texts from the early ninth century, the Lives of the abbots Nicephorus and Nicetas of Medikion, go against the grain.
The hagiographers reject important tenets of the spiritual tradition, as exemplified in the Climax, and criticise, implicitly or explicitly, qualities that were commonly considered to be indispensible for holy men.
In order to make my case I will discuss in turn the following topics: healing, mourning, the vision of God, clairvoyance, and prophetic powers.
Related Results
Ankle joint flexibility affects undulatory underwater swimming speed
Ankle joint flexibility affects undulatory underwater swimming speed
The movement of undulatory underwater swimming (UUS), a swimming technique adapted from whales, is mainly limited by human anatomy. A greater ankle joint flexibility could improve ...
Writing/performing myself on-screen: Daniel Monks’ memory work on film
Writing/performing myself on-screen: Daniel Monks’ memory work on film
Performing memories is a way of working through and reconstructing the self. Films that draw on autobiographical experiences are a way of working through and constructing narrative...
The Fastskin Revolution: From Human Fish to Swimming Androids
The Fastskin Revolution: From Human Fish to Swimming Androids
The story of fastskin swimsuits reflects some of the challenges facing the impact of technology in postmodern culture. Introduced in 1999 and ratified for the Sydney 2000 Olympic G...
A Comparison of Fat Utilization during Exercise: Walking and Swimming
A Comparison of Fat Utilization during Exercise: Walking and Swimming
Women, considering swimming as a form of exercise to lose weight, have been discouraged from doing so, since researchers suggest that swimming does not burn fat as efficiently as l...
Robustness of Connectionist Swimming Controllers Against Random Variation in Neural Connections
Robustness of Connectionist Swimming Controllers Against Random Variation in Neural Connections
The ability to achieve high swimming speed and efficiency is very important to both the real lamprey and its robotic implementation. In previous studies, we used evolutionary algor...
Wild Swimming Methodologies for Decolonial Feminist Justice-to-Come Scholarship
Wild Swimming Methodologies for Decolonial Feminist Justice-to-Come Scholarship
This article thinks with oceans and swimming, in dialogue with decolonial feminist materialist approaches and other current novel methodologies which foreground embodiment and rela...
Spenser, Everard Digby, and the Renaissance Art of Swimming
Spenser, Everard Digby, and the Renaissance Art of Swimming
In Book v of The Faërie Queene Spenser describes a curious combat between Artegall and Pollente. Both contestants precipitate themselves into the river from a booby-trapped bridge,...
The characteristics and influencing factors of the spatial distribution of intangible cultural heritage in the Yellow River Basin of China
The characteristics and influencing factors of the spatial distribution of intangible cultural heritage in the Yellow River Basin of China
AbstractThis paper explores the characteristics and influencing factors of the spatial distribution of 889 national intangible cultural heritage sites in the Yellow River basin of ...