Monasticism
as a model of baptismal life
9. I would now
like to look at the vast panorama of Eastern Christianity from a specific
vantage point which affords a view of many of its features: monasticism.
In the East,
monasticism has retained great unity. It did not experience the development of
different kinds of apostolic life as in the West. The various expressions of
monastic life, from the strictly cenobitic, as conceived by Pachomius or Basil,
to the rigorously eremitic, as with Anthony or Macarius of Egypt, correspond
more to different stages of the spiritual journey than to the choice between
different states of life. In any event, whatever form they take, they are all
based on monasticism.
Moreover, in the
East, monasticism was not seen merely as a separate condition, proper to a
precise category of Christians, but rather as a reference point for all the
baptized, according to the gifts offered to each by the Lord; it was presented
as a symbolic synthesis of Christianity.
When God's call
is total, as it is in the monastic life, then the person can reach the highest
point that sensitivity, culture and spirituality are able to express. This is
even more true for the Eastern Churches, for which monasticism was an essential
experience and still today is seen to flourish in them, once persecution is
over and hearts can be freely raised to heaven. The monastery is the prophetic
place where creation becomes praise of God and the precept of concretely lived
charity becomes the ideal of human coexistence; it is where the human being seeks
God without limitation or impediment, becoming a reference point for all
people, bearing them in his heart and helping them to seek God.
I would also like
to mention the splendid witness of nuns in the Christian East. This witness has
offered an example of giving full value in the Church to what is specifically
feminine, even breaking through the mentality of the time. During recent
persecutions, especially in Eastern European countries, when many male
monasteries were forcibly closed, female monasticism kept the torch of the
monastic life burning. The nun's charism, with its own specific
characteristics, is a visible sign of that motherhood of God to which Sacred
Scripture often refers.
Therefore I will
look to monasticism in order to identify those values which I feel are very
important today for expressing the contribution of the Christian East to the
journey of Christ's Church towards the Kingdom. While these aspects are at
times neither exclusive to monasticism nor to the Eastern heritage, they have frequently
acquired a particular connotation in themselves. Besides, we are not seeking to
make the most of exclusivity, but of the mutual enrichment in what the one
Spirit has inspired in the one Church of Christ.
Monasticism has
always been the very soul of the Eastern Churches: the first Christian monks
were born in the East and the monastic life was an integral part of the Eastern
lumen passed on to the West by the great Fathers of the undivided
Church.(26)
The strong common
traits uniting the monastic experience of the East and the West make it a
wonderful bridge of fellowship, where unity as it is lived shines even more
brightly than may appear in the dialogue between the Churches.
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