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monasticism

Christianity

Although used by scholars to describe similar institutions and practices in other religions, the terms monk and monastic are historically and etymologically Christian. A sweeping view of Christian monastic history reveals a gradual shift of emphasis from the contemplative to the socially active. Highly meditative orders emerged in the Eastern Orthodox Church and other churches based on the Greek liturgy, the Mount Athos (Greece) complex (founded in the 10th century) being the most famous among them. The large variety of Roman Catholic orders displays eclectic emphases: the Benedictines, Cistercians, Carthusians, Carmelites, and certain orders designated as “minor” (in the Latin sense of humble or modest, rather than lower in a hierarchy or organization) emphasize meditation. The Dominicans should be called “major”—though they are not—because the tasks of preaching, maintaining scholastic continuity, and evangelizing outrank that of contemplation in their order. The Society of Jesus (Jesuits; founded by Ignatius of Loyola between 1534 and 1540) stands at the other end of the contemplative–social-centred continuum. Nearly all the members of the order are priests, and the order regards teaching, social work, and the active life as the quintessence of supererogatory piety.

The Jesuits represented a new kind of order that proliferated in the Roman Catholic Church after 1520, the so-called “clerks regular.” Other orders of clerks regular include the Theatines, founded in 1524 as “Clerks Regular of the Divine Providence,” and the Barnabites, founded in 1530 as the “Clerks Regular of St. Paul.” They and their numerous female equivalents, such as the Daughters of Charity and the Ursulines, constitute the active orders, none of which after 1965 live any longer in enclosure. In the 20th century Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity, which turned away from enclosure and contemplation to pursue a life of service. Some scholars would argue that, because of this outward orientation, such orders should no longer be called monastic.

Certain monastic institutions have existed within the Protestant tradition. In the mid-19th century a number of Anglican religious communities for men and women were founded. The first communities were sisterhoods that combined service (teaching and nursing) with prayer, and male communities appeared not long after. In the late 20th century there were some 50 Protestant religious communities. The Taizé (France) communities of the Reformed Protestant tradition, founded in the Burgundy region of France in the 1940s, initiated an ecumenical movement of contemplative monasticism. The first brothers of Taizé came from French and Swiss Reformed churches and were later joined by members of Lutheran churches; a community of sisters in association with Taizé was later founded at Grandchamp near Neuchâtel, Switz. There are also a few surviving Lutheran monasteries. Monasticism would thus seem to be a viable expression of the Protestant tradition; yet, owing to a set of historical accidents whose ideological summation was described in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism by the German sociologist Max Weber (1864–1920), Protestantism has always emphasized active engagement in the world rather than seclusion. This explains the existence of various part-time Protestant retreats, usually in rural settings, designed as centres for recuperation from overwork.

Monasticism in the 20th century

History

In the second half of the 20th century, worldwide interest in monastics and monasticism increased dramatically. Mount Athos continued to thrive, not least as a centre of pilgrimage (for men only), after suffering a period of decline earlier in the century. After 1945, monastics introduced numerous innovations to their various traditions. Liturgical reform in the Roman Catholic Church, enacted at the Second Vatican Council (1962–65), was anticipated and advocated by several generations of Benedictines in Europe and the United States (notably at Maredsous, Belg.; Maria Laach, Ger.; and Collegeville, Minn.), who continued their role as liturgical reformers in the years following the council. The Dominican theologians Henri de Lubac and Yves Congar prepared the theology that culminated in the Second Vatican Council. The so-called “Engaged Buddhism” of Thich Nhat Hanh brought Buddhist monastics into political protest, initially in Vietnam and Thailand and later around the world. Many Tibetan Buddhist monastics, forced to flee their homeland after the Chinese occupied it in 1959, settled at Dharmsala in northern India under the leadership of the 14th Dalai Lama; they later founded schools and monasteries in Europe, North America, and Australia. So-called “Western Buddhism” evolved among European, North American, and Australian lay and monastic followers. Their controversial practices adapted Chinese, Japanese, Tibetan, and Southeast Asian monastic traditions to the rhythms of Western secular life. To a large degree, Western Buddhism de-monasticized Asian practice, so that meditation was more commonly conducted on retreat and at home rather than in a monastic community.

A number of 20th-century monastics were recognized and admired worldwide. The American Trappist Thomas Merton furthered intermonastic dialogue and pursued imaginative spiritual quests through dozens of writings; he remains the most widely read of recent Christian monastic authors. Brother Roger Schutz, founder of the Taizé communities, developed a style of Protestant and then ecumenical monasticism that appealed above all to young people and attracted hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to France each year. An English Benedictine, Bede Griffiths, introduced Benedictinism into an Indian ashram and explored transcultural theology in books such as A New Vision of Reality: Western Science, Eastern Mysticism, and Christian Faith (1989). In China the monastic reformer Taixu (T’ai-hsü) reorganized and internationalized the sangha, founding dozens of organizations during a period of more than 30 years. The Thai educator Buddhadasa renewed Thai practice while embodying many aspects of Theravada tradition. In worldwide travels, the 14th Dalai Lama personified the quest for peace, interreligious understanding, and spiritual realization. A winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace (1989), the Dalai Lama is the world’s best known monastic.

After 1945 monasticism in India enjoyed a resurgence that took several forms. The models were Christian, particularly Jesuit in the case of neo-Hindu orders such as the eclectic Ramakrishna Mission (founded in the 19th century), which established centres in the United States and Europe as well as in India. A swami—a term that properly means an ordained Hindu monk—presided over each of these centres, often assisted by a younger monk. In theory, the orders trained monks in the sannyasi tradition, but in practice they served European and American laypersons committed in various degrees to the Vedanta theology. In addition to the Ramakrishna Mission, there were some two dozen organizations of this quasi-monastic or semimonastic type. Spreading from India to all parts of the Western world, some of them grew to considerable size and acquired great wealth. Among such groups were the Self-Realization Fellowship, founded by the Swami Yogananda Paramahamsa, and the Hare Krishna movement (officially known as the International Society for Krishna Consciousness), founded by A.C. Bhaktivedanta (also called Swami Prabhupada).

Not surprisingly, intermonastic dialogue was pursued more eagerly by Christians than by Buddhists. The former readily adopted Buddhist meditation as a technique (one that requires no religious conversion), but the latter (notably in Japan) seldom borrowed anything from Christianity. Meanwhile, some Tibetans in the United States interacted with Jewish synagogues in order to learn ways of surviving as a community in diaspora. Bede Griffiths’s model of Hindu-Benedictine interaction exerts appeal in India and among New Age questers.

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