A
hermit (from the
Greek ēremos, signifying "
desert", "uninhabited", hence "desert-dweller";
adjective: "eremitic") is a person who lives to some greater or
lesser degree in
seclusion from
society.
In
Christianity, the term was
originally applied to a Christian who lives the eremitic life out
of a religious conviction, namely the
Desert Theology of
the
Old Testament (i.e., the forty
years wandering in the
desert that
was meant to bring about a change of heart).
In the Christian tradition the eremitic life is an early form of
monastic living that preceded the monastic life
in the
cenobium. The
Rule of St Benedict (ch. 1) lists
hermits among four kinds of
monks. In
addition to hermits that are members of
religious orders, modern
Roman Catholic Church law (canon 603)
recognizes also
consecrated
hermits under the direction of their diocesan
bishop as members of the
Consecrated
Life.
Often, both in religious and secular literature, the term "hermit"
is used loosely for anyone living a
solitary life-style, including the
misanthrope, and in religious contexts is
sometimes assumed to be interchangeable with
anchorite /
anchoress (from the
Greek anachōreō, signifying "to
withdraw", "to depart into the country outside the circumvallate
city"),
recluse and
solitary.
However, it is important to retain a clear distinction between the
vocation of hermits and that of anchorites.
The Christian eremitic life
Because the life of the
Christian hermit,
both in ancient and in modern times, is rooted in the
Desert Theology of
the
Old Testament, it is a life
entirely given to the praise of God and the love and, through the
hermit's penance and prayers, also the service of all humanity. The
latter is crucial to the correct understanding of the eremitic
vocation, since the
Judeo-Christian
tradition holds that God created man (i.e., the individual human
being) relational, which means that solitude can never be the
purpose of any Christian vocation but only a conducive environment
for striving after a particular spiritual purpose that forms part
of our common human vocation.
History
The eremitic tradition
In the common Christian tradition the first known Christian hermit
in Egypt was
Paul of Thebes (fl. 3rd
century), hence also called "St Paul the first hermit". His
disciple
Antony of Egypt (fl. 4th
century), often referred to as "Antony the Great", is perhaps the
most renowned of all the very early Christian hermits owing to the
biography by his friend
Athanasius of Alexandria. An
antecedent for Egyptian eremitism may have been the Syrian solitary
or "son of the covenant" (
Aramaic bar
qəyāmā) who undertook special disciplines as a Christian. In
the Middle Ages some
Carmelite hermits
claimed to trace their origin to Jewish hermits organized by
Elijah.
Christian hermits in the past have often
lived in isolated cells or
hermitages, whether a natural
cave or a constructed dwelling, situated in the
desert or the
forest.
They tended to be sought out for spiritual advice and counsel; and
some eventually acquired so many
disciples
that they had no physical solitude at all.
The early Christian
Desert Fathers
wove baskets to exchange for bread. In medieval times hermits were
also found within or near cities where they might earn a living as
a gate keeper or ferryman.
From the Middle Ages and down to modern times eremitical
monasticism has also been practiced within the context of
religious orders in the
Christian West. For example in the
Roman Catholic Church the
Carthusians and
Camaldolese arrange their monasteries as
clusters of hermitages where the monks live most of their day and
most of their lives in solitary prayer and work, gathering only
relatively briefly for communal prayer and only occasionally for
community meals and recreation. The
Cistercian,
Trappist and
Carmelite orders, which are essentially
communal in nature, allow members who feel a
calling to the eremitic life, after years living in
the
cenobium or community of the monastery,
to move to a cell suitable as a hermitage on monastery grounds.
This applies to both their monks and their nuns.
Anchorites and anchoresses
The term "anchorite" is often used as a
synonym for hermit, not only in the earliest written
sources but throughout the centuries. Yet the anchoritic life,
while similar to the eremitic life, can also be distinct from it.
In the Middle Ages anchorite was a common vocation.
Anchorites and anchoresses lived the religious
life in the solitude of an "anchorhold" (or "anchorage"), usually a
small hut or "cell" built against a church. The door of anchorages
tended to be bricked up in a special ceremony conducted by the
local
bishop after the anchorite had moved
in. Medieval churches survive that have a tiny window ("squint")
built into the shared wall near the
sanctuary to allow the anchorite to
participate in the
liturgy by listening to
the service and to receive
Holy
communion. Another window led out into the street, enabling
charitable neighbours to deliver food and other necessities. In our
times the anchoritic life as a distinct form of vocation is almost
unheard of.
Contemporary eremitic life
In the Roman Catholic Church
Today's Catholics feeling called to eremitic
monasticism may live that
vocation either
As a member of a religious order
of Consecrated Life|institutes of consecrated life]] have their own
regulations concerning those of their members who feel called by
God to move from the
life in community to
the eremitic life, and have the permission of their religious
superior to do so. The
Code
of Canon Law contains no special provisions for them. They
technically remain a member of their
religious order and thus under
obedience to their religious superior.
As mentioned above, the
Carthusian and
Camaldolese orders of monks and nuns
preserve their original way of life as essentially eremitical
within a cenobitical context: that is, the monasteries of these
orders are in fact clusters of individual hermitages where monks
and nuns spend their days alone with relatively short periods of
prayer in common daily and weekly.
Also as mentioned above, other orders which are essentially
cenobitical, most notably the
Trappists,
maintain a tradition that allows individual monks or nuns, when
they have reached a certain level of maturity within the community,
to pursue the life of the hermit on monastery grounds under the
supervision of the abbot or abbess.
Thomas
Merton was among those Trappists who undertook this way of
life.
Under the direction of the diocesan bishop (canon 603)
The earliest form of Christian eremitic or anchoritic living
preceded that as a member of a religious order, since
monastic communities and religious orders are later
developments of the
monastic life. Today an
increasing number of Christian faithful feel again a
vocation to live the eremitic life, whether in the
remote country side or in a city in stricter separation from the
world, without having passed through
life in a
monastic community first.
Bearing in mind that the meaning of the
eremitic vocation is the Desert Theology of
the Old Testament (i.e., the 40 years
wandering in the desert
that was
meant to bring about a change of heart), it may be said that the
desert of the urban hermit is that of
their heart, purged through kenosis to be
the dwelling place of God alone.
So as to provide for men and women who feel a
calling to the eremitic or anchoritic life without
being or becoming a member of an
institute of consecrated life,
but desire its recognition by the Church as a form of
consecrated
life nonetheless, the
Code of
Canon Law 1983 legislates in the Section on
Consecrated Life (canon 603) as follows:
§1 Besides institutes of consecrated life
the Church recognizes the eremitic or anchoritic life by which the
Christian faithful devote their life to the praise of God and
salvation of the world through a stricter separation from the
world, the silence of solitude and assiduous prayer
and penance.
§2 A hermit is recognized in the law as one dedicated
to God in a consecrated life if he
or she publicly professes the
three evangelical counsels"
(i.e. chastity, religious poverty and obedience),
"confirmed by a vow or other sacred
bond, in the hands of the diocesan
bishop and observes his or her own plan of life under his
direction.
Canon 603 §2 therefore lays down certain requirements for those who
feel a
vocation to the kind of eremitic
life that is recognized by the Church as one of the "other forms of
consecrated life". They usually are
referred to as "consecrated hermits".
The norms of canon 603 do not apply to the many other Christian
faithful who live alone and devote themselves to fervent prayer for
the love of God without however feeling
called
by God to seek recognition of their prayerful solitary life
from the Church by entering the
consecrated life.
The
Catechism of the
Catholic Church of 11 October
1992 (§§918-921)
comments on the eremitic life as follows:
From the very beginning of the Church there were men
and women who set out to follow Christ with greater liberty, and to
imitate him more closely, by practicing the evangelical counsels. They led lives
dedicated to God, each in his own way. Many of them, under the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, became
hermits or founded religious families. These the Church, by virtue
of her authority, gladly accepted and approved.
Bishops will always strive to discern new gifts of
consecrated life granted to the Church by the Holy Spirit; the
approval of new forms of consecrated life is reserved to the
Apostolic See. (Footnote: Cf. CIC,
can. 605).
The Eremitic Life
Without always professing the three evangelical counsels publicly,
hermits "devote their life to the praise of God and salvation of
the world through a stricter separation from the world, the silence
of solitude and assiduous prayer and penance". (Footnote: CIC, can.
603 §1)
They manifest to everyone the interior aspect of the
mystery of the Church, that is, personal intimacy with Christ.
Hidden from the eyes of men, the life of the hermit is a silent
preaching of the Lord, to whom he has surrendered his life simply
because he is everything to him. Here is a particular call to find
in the desert, in the thick of spiritual battle, the glory of the
Crucified One.
The norms of the Roman Catholic
Church for the consecrated eremitic and anchoritic life (cf. canon 603) do not include
corporal works of mercy.
Nevertheless, every consecrated hermit, like every Christian, is
bound by the law of charity and therefore ought to respond
generously, as his or her own circumstances permit, when faced with
a specific need for corporal works of
mercy. However, since consecrated hermits, like every
Christian, are also bound by the law of work, and therefore have to
earn their living, they have to do so by any means locally
available that is compatible with Christian teaching. Therefore
(self-)employment in the care sector may be a work option for
consecrated hermits so qualified, providing they can convince their
bishop that this will not keep them from observing their
obligations of the eremitic vocation in accordance with canon 603,
under which they have made their vow.
Whilst canon 603 makes no provison for associations of hermits,
these do exist (for example the "Hermits of Bethlehem" in Chester
NJ and the "Hermits of Saint Bruno" in the U.S.A.; see also
lavra, skete).
Eremitic-style Catholic living that is not a form of
consecrated life
Not all the Catholic faithful that feel that it is their vocation to dedicate themselves to God in a
prayerful solitary life perceive it as a vocation to some form of
consecrated life. An example of
this is life in a Poustinia, an Eastern
Catholic expression of eremitic religious living that is finding
adherents also in the West.
Eastern Christian Eremiticism
In the Orthodox Church and
Eastern Rite Catholic
Churches, however, hermits live a life not only of prayer but
also of service to their community in the traditional Eastern Christian manner of the poustinik. The poustinik is a hermit available to
all in need and at all times.
In the
Eastern Christian churches one traditional variation of the
Christian eremitic life is the semi-eremitic life in a lavra or skete, exemplified
historically in Scetes
, a place in
the Egyptian desert, and continued in various sketes today, such as
in the St Isaac of Syria Skete and several regions on Mount Athos.
Some noted Christian hermits
Early and Medieval Church
- Anthony of Egypt, 4th cent.,
Egypt, a Desert Father, regarded as
the founder of Monasticism
- Macarius of Egypt, 4th cent.,
founder of the Monastery of Saint
Macarius the Great, presumed author of "Spiritual
Homilies"
- St. Jerome, 4th cent., Mediterranean region, Doctor of the Church, considered the
spiritual father of the Hieronymite
eremitic order
- Syncletica of
Alexandria, 4th cent., Egypt, her maxims are included in the
sayings of the Desert Fathers
- Gregory
the Illuminator, 4th cent., brought the Christian faith to
Armenia

- Mary of Egypt, 4/5th cent., Egypt
and Transjordan, penitent
- Simeon Stylites
, 4/5th cent., Syria, "pillar hermit"/"pillar
saint"
- Sarah of the Desert, 5th
cent., Egypt, her maxims are recorded in the sayings of the Desert
Fathers
- St Benedict of Nursia, 6th
cent., Italy, author of the so-called Rule of St Benedict, regarded as the
founder of western monasticism
- St. Romuald, 10/11th cent., Italy,
founder of the Camaldolese order
- St. Bruno of Cologne, 11th
cent., France, the founder of the Carthusian order
- Peter the Hermit, 11th cent.,
France, leader of the People's
Crusade
- Richard Rolle de
Hampole, 13th cent., England, religious writer
- Julian of Norwich, 15th cent.,
England, anchoress
Modern times – Roman Catholic Church
- Colonies, sketes, lavras of Consecrated Hermits (canon 603):
- Hermits of Bethlehem, Chester, NJ (modern lavra)
- Christian faithful living an eremitic form of life without
belonging to a religious
order or being a Consecrated Hermit (canon 603):
- Sister Wendy Beckett, formerly of
the Sisters of Notre Dame
de Namur, since 1970 Consecrated
virgin, lives in "monastic solitude"; art historian
- Catherine de
Hueck Doherty, poustinik, foundress of
the Madonna House
Apostolate

- Charles de Foucauld, 19/20th
cent., formerly Trappist monk, inspired the
founding of the Little Brothers
of Jesus
- Jan Tyranowski, spiritual mentor
to the young Karol Wojtyla, who would eventually become Pope John Paul II
Modern times – Orthodox Church
Modern Times - Protestant Churches
Hermits in other religions
From a religious point of view, the
solitary life is a form of asceticism,
wherein the hermit renounces worldly concerns and pleasures in
order to come closer to the deity or deities
they worship or revere. This practice appears also in Hinduism, Buddhism, and
Sufism. Taoism also has
a long history of ascetic and eremetical figures. In the ascetic
eremitic life, the hermit seeks solitude for meditation, contemplation, and prayer without the distractions of contact with human
society, sex, or the need to maintain socially
acceptable standards of cleanliness or
dress. The ascetic discipline can also include a simplified diet and/or manual
labor as a means of support.
Some noted hermits in other religions
Other hermits
In philosophy and fiction
In medieval romances, the knight errant frequently encountered hermits
on his quest; such a figure, generally a
wise old man, would advise him. Knights
searching for the Holy Grail, in
particular, would learn the errors they had to repent of, and have
the significance of their encounters explained to them. Evil
wizards would sometimes pose as
hermits, to explain their presence in the wilds, and to lure heroes
into a false sense of security. In Edmund
Spenser's The Faerie
Queene, both occurred: the knight on a quest met a good
hermit, and the sorcerer Archimago took on
such a pose.
Hermits can appear in fairy tales in the
character of the donor, as in
Făt-Frumos with
the Golden Hair.
Friedrich Nietzsche, in his
influential work Thus Spoke
Zarathustra, created the character of the hermit Zarathustra (named after
the Zoroastrian prophet Zarathushtra), who
emerges from seclusion to extol his philosophy to the rest of
humanity.
In Star
Wars, Ben Kenobi, was first introduced to the audience as
an old hermit, often seen by most of the in-universe characters at
their surroundings as a very dangerous, crazy wizard. Later in the
story it was to be revealed that he went into exile for political
reasons, although it also served him for spiritual training since
he was a warrior monk in his youth, and that his first name was
actually Obi-Wan Kenobi.
In the Friday the
13th series, the character Jason
Voorhees was believed to have died after he drowned as a child.
However, this later changed when it was revealed that he survived
and lived life as a hermit- only to enter a murderous rage when he
witnesses the death of his mother seemingly years later (which was
during the events of the original film).
In the series Yogi Bear, we see a
character Herman the Hermit, who
ends up teaming up with a lonely boy to ruin Yogi, Boo Boo and the rest of the characters,
Christmas. However, at the end, they're shown the error of their
ways.
In the popular anime Dragon
Ball, a martial-arts master named Muten Roshi is often referred to as a Turtle
Hermit, despite the fact that over the course of the series
characters are often visiting or even living in his island
home.
Non-spiritual motivations
In modern parlance the term "hermit" tends to be applied to anyone
living a life apart from the rest of society, regardless of their
motivation.
During the Romantic period of the 19th century some wealthy estate
owners would pay imitation "hermits" to inhabit their properties,
as living garden decorations.
See also
References
- ,
- cf. e.g. Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI), "In the
Beginning", Edinburgh 1995, pp. 47, 72, ISBN 0-567-29296-7.
- Re: the Syrian "son of the covenant"
- St Isaac of Syria
Skete
- Penelope Reed Doob, The Idea of the Labyrinth: from
Classical Antiquity through the Middle Ages, p 179-81, ISBN
0-8014-8000-0
- C. S. Lewis,
Spenser's Images of Life, p 87, Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, 1967
External links
Hermits in the East as well as the West and related
subjects
- The Roman Catholic eremitic life
- Chapter 1 of The Rule of Saint Benedict re: the
hermit as one of the kinds of monks
- Text of canon 603 of The Code of Canon Law (1983,
Latin edition) re: Hermits as members of the Consecrated Life in
the Catholic Church
- Text of canon 603 of The Code of Canon Law
(1983, English translation) re: Hermits as members of the
Consecrated Life in the Catholic Church
- Catechism of the Catholic Church on Consectrated
and Eremitic Life
- Chart showing the place of the Consecrated Hermit
(canon 603) among the People of God
- Catholic Encyclopedia Entry on hermits
- Rotha Mary Clay, Full Text + Illustrations, The
Hermits and Anchorites of England.
- Immaculate
Heart of Mary's Hermitage Catholic, hermit, solitude, silence,
contemplation
- The Hermits of Bethlehem, Chester, NJ. (a
modern laura)
- anchorite?
- Hermits of the Carmelite Order
- Contemplative spirituality in the tradition of the
medieval hermits who settled on Mount Carmel.
- Raven's Bread is a quarterly newsletter for hermits and
those interested in the eremitical life
- Buddhist Lersi hermits
- Non-spiritual motivations
nb:Eremitt