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| Chapter XXIV. How in Egypt we saw that the daily fast was broken without scruple on our arrival. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXIV.
How in Egypt we saw that the daily fast was broken
without scruple on our arrival.
When we had come from the
region of Syria and had sought the province of Egypt, in our desire to
learn the rules of the Elders, we were astonished at the alacrity of
heart with which we were there received so that no rule forbidding
refreshment till the appointed hour of the fast was over was observed,
such as we had been brought up to observe in the monasteries of
Palestine; but except in the case of the regular days, Wednesdays and
Fridays,
wherever we went the
daily fast864 was
broken:865
865 The allusion is here
to the sparing diet and voluntary fasts of the monks, among whom but
one meal a day was usual (see the note on III. xiii.), and though this
was ordinarily taken at midday, yet many of the more celebrated
anchorites never broke their fast till the evening; e.g. S. Antony is
said never to have eaten till sunset (Vita Anton.) and S. Jerome gives
a similar account of Hilarion (Vita Hil. § 4), while other
instances of voluntary fasts are given by Cassian in the following
chapters, xxv.–xxvii. The “station” days, however,
viz., Wednesday and Friday, being of ecclesiastical authority, were
strictly observed as a matter of rule, but these other voluntary fasts
at other times were to be freely broken through on account of the
arrival of visitors. See the Conferences II. xxvi., XXI. xiv., XXIV.
xxi., and cf. Rufinus, History of the Monks II. vii., Palladius, the
Lausiac History, c. lii. So the Rule of S. Benedict (c. liii.) orders
that on the arrival of visitors the Superior is to sit at table with
them and break his fast, unless it be a special fast day which may not
be broken; but the brethren are to observe the regular fasts. | and when we asked why the daily fast was
thus ignored by them without scruple one of the elders replied:
“The opportunity for fasting is always with me. But as I am going
to conduct you on your way, I cannot always keep you with me. And a
fast, although it is useful and advisable, is yet a free-will offering.
But the exigencies of a command require the fulfilment of a work of
charity. And so receiving Christ in you I ought to refresh Him but when
I have sent you on your way I shall be able to balance the hospitality
offered for His sake by a stricter fast on my own account. For
‘the children of the bridegroom cannot fast while the bridegroom
is with them:’866 but when he has
departed, then they will rightly fast.”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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