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Spiritual Direction as a Medical Art in Early Christian Monasticism

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Spiritual Direction as a Medical Art in Early Christian Monasticism Synopsis

What expectations did the women and men living in early monastic communities carry into relationships of obedience and advice? What did they hope to achieve through confession and discipline? To explore these questions, this study shows how several early Christian writers applied the logic, knowledge, and practices of Galenic medicine to develop their own practices of spiritual direction. Evagrius reads dream images as diagnostic indicators of the soul's state. John Cassian crafts a nosology of the soul using lists of passions while diagnosing the causes of wet dreams. Basil of Caesarea pits the spiritual director against the physician in a competition over diagnostic expertise. John Climacus crafts pathologies of passions through demonic family trees, while equipping his spiritual director with a physician's toolkit and imagining the monastic space as a vast clinic. These different appropriations of medical logic and metaphors not only show us the thought-world of late antique monasticism, but they would also have decisive consequences for generations of Christian subjects who would learn to see themselves as sick or well, patients or healers, within monastic communities.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780198854135
Publication date:
Author: Jonathan L Senior Research Fellow, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry at the Austral Zecher
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 400 pages
Series: Oxford Early Christian Studies
Genres: Christianity
History of religion
Religious communities and monasticism
History of medicine