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| Chapter I. Of the training of those who renounce this world, and of the way in which those are taught among the monks of Tabenna and the Egyptians who are received into the monasteries. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter I.
Of the training of those who renounce this world, and of
the way in which those are taught among the monks of Tabenna and the
Egyptians who are received into the monasteries.
From the canonical system
of Psalms and prayers which ought to be observed in the daily services
throughout the monasteries, we pass, in the due course of our
narrative, to the training of one who renounces this world;
endeavouring first, as well as we can, to embrace, in a short account,
the terms on which those who desire to turn to the Lord can be received
in the monasteries; adding some things from the rule of the Egyptians,
some from that of the monks of Tabenna,757
757 Tabenna, or
Tabennæ, was an island in the Nile, where was founded a
flourishing monastery by Pachomius c. 330 a.d.
Of Pachomius there is a notice in Sozomen H. E. Book III. c. xiv., and
his Rule was translated into Latin, with a preface by S. Jerome who
mentions his fame in Ep. cxxvii. There is a Life of Pachomius
given by Rosweyde (Vitæ Patrum), which is said to be
a translation of a work by a contemporary of his. |
whose monastery in the Thebaid is better filled as regards numbers, as
it is stricter in the rigour of its system, than all others, for there
are in it more than five thousand brethren under the rule of one Abbot;
and the obedience with which the whole number of monks is at all times
subject to one Elder is what no one among us would render to another
even for a short time, or would demand from him.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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