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Preface.
The obligation, which was
promised to the blessed Pope Castor in the preface to those volumes
which with God’s help I composed in twelve books on the
Institutes of the Cœnobia, and the remedies for the eight
principal faults, has now been, as far as my feeble ability permitted,
satisfied. I should certainly like to see what was the opinion fairly
arrived at on this work both by his judgment and yours, whether, on a
matter so profound and so lofty, and one which has never yet been made
the subject of a treatise, we have produced anything worthy of your
notice, and of the eager desire of all the holy brethren. But now as
the aforesaid Bishop has left us and departed to Christ, meanwhile
these ten Conferences of the grandest of the fathers, viz., the
Anchorites who dwelt in the desert of Scete, which he, fired with an
incomparable desire for saintliness, had bidden me write for him in the
same style (not considering in the greatness of his affection, what a
burden he placed on shoulders too weak to bear it)—these
Conferences I have thought good to dedicate to you in particular, O
blessed Pope,1083
1083 Papa. See
note on the Preface to the Institutes. |
Leontius,1084
1084 The see of which
Leontius was Bishop is uncertain, possibly Fréjus. | and holy brother
Helladius.1085
1085 Helladius was
afterwards raised to the Episcopate, but of what see is unknown. See
the Preface to Conf. XVIII. | For one of you
was united to him whom I have mentioned, by the ties of brotherhood,
and the rank of the priesthood, and (what is more to the point) by
fervour in sacred study, and so has an hereditary right to demand the
debt due to his brother: while the other has ventured to follow the
sublime customs of the Anchorites, not like some others, presumptuously
on his own account, but seizing, at the inspiration of the Holy Ghost,
on the right path of doctrine almost before he had been taught and
choosing to learn not so much from his own ideas as from their
traditions. Wherein just as I had anchored in the harbour of Silence, a
wide sea opens out before me, so that I must venture to hand down for
posterity some of the Institutes and teaching of these great men. For
the bark of my slender abilities will be exposed to the dangers of a
longer voyage on the deep, in proportion as the Anchorite’s life
is grander than that of the Cœnobium, and the contemplation
of God, to which those inestimable men ever devoted themselves, more
sublime than ordinary practical life. It is yours therefore to assist
our efforts by your pious prayers for fear lest so sacred a subject
that is to be treated in an untried but faithful manner, should be
imperilled by us, or lest our simplicity should lose itself in the
depths of the subject matter. Let us therefore pass from what is
visible to the eye and the external mode of life of the monks, of which
we treated in the former books, to the life of the inner man, which is
hidden from view; and from the system of the canonical prayers, let our
discourse mount to that continuance in unceasing prayer, which the
Apostle enjoins, that whoever has through reading our former work
already spiritually gained the name of Jacob by ousting his carnal
faults, may now by the reception of the Institutes which are not mine
but the fathers’, mount by a pure insight to the merits and (so
to speak) the dignity of Israel, and in the
same way be taught what it is that he
should observe on these lofty heights of perfection.1086
1086 The allusion is
rather forced and strained. But Cassian means to say that those who
have got the better of their carnal sins by perusing his former work,
are already fit to be named Jacob (the supplanter), who got the better
of his brother: and he hopes that this new work of his will give them
such a view of God and insight into His dealings that they may be
worthy to have their name changed, as Jacob’s was, to Israel,
which he takes to mean the man seeing God. Cf. the note on Against
Nestorius, VII. ix. (intelligibilis here = spiritualis, cf.
intellectualis. Conf. XII. xi., and elsewhere). | And so may your prayers gain from Him,
Who has deemed us worthy both to see them and to learn from them and to
dwell with them, that He will vouchsafe to grant us a perfect
recollection of their teaching, and a ready tongue to tell it, that we
may explain them as beautifully and as exactly as we received them from
them and may succeed in setting before you the men themselves
incorporated, as it were, in their own Institutes, and what is more to
the point, speaking in the Latin tongue. Of this however we wish above
all to advertise the reader of these conferences as well as of our
earlier works, that if there chances to be anything herein which by
reason of his condition and the character of his profession, or owing
to custom and the common mode of life seems to him either impossible or
very difficult, he should measure it not by the limits of his own
powers but by the worth and perfection of the speakers, whose zeal and
purpose he should first consider, as they were truly dead to this
worldly life, and so hampered by no feelings for their kinsmen
according to the flesh, and by no ties of worldly occupations. Next let
him bear in mind the character of the country in which they dwelt, how
they lived in a vast desert, and were cut off from intercourse with all
their fellow-men, and thus were able to have their minds enlightened,
and to contemplate, and utter those things which perhaps will seem
impossibilities to the uninitiated and uninstructed, because of their
way of life and the commonplace character of their habits. But if any
one wants to give a true opinion on this matter, and is anxious to try
whether such perfection can be attained, let him first endeavour to
make their purpose his own, with the same zeal and the same mode of
life, and then in the end he will find that those things which used to
seem beyond the powers of men, are not only possible, but really
delightful. But now let us proceed at once to their Conferences and
Institutes.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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