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Monk in the forest Credit: Demian / Adobe Stock

Silence is Golden: Ancient Monks Couldn’t Even Find Peace and Quiet

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In our contemporary world, noise pollution has reached dangerous levels. But even in what many reminisce as “quieter times” in the “more peaceful” past people were still searching out silence and space to reflect. What were the most popular ways to do so? Head to a monastery and/or become a hermit. But many people found that silence wasn’t even guaranteed in the faraway deserts. There is another alternative…

The World Health Organization has argued that “excessive noise” is a serious threat to human health. Studies have shown that excessive exposure to noise not only causes hearing loss but also leads to heart disease, poor sleep and hypertension.

In some parts of the world, a mysterious “droning sound,” similar to a “a diesel engine idling nearby,” has been described as “torture” for the small percent of the population that can hear it.

I’m a scholar of early Christianity and my research shows that monasticism developed in part because people were seeking the solace of quiet places.

But for them, like us, it was a struggle.

Monasticism developed in part because people were seeking the solace of quiet places. (Nomad_Soul /Adobe Stock)

Monasticism developed in part because people were seeking the solace of quiet places. (Nomad_Soul /Adobe Stock)

Ancient Philosophers on Noise

Ancient Greek and Roman philosophers frequently regarded noise as a serious distraction, one that challenged their ability to concentrate.

To give just one example: The Stoic philosopher Seneca described in great detail the noises coming from a bathhouse just below the room where he was writing, expressing his irritation at the distracting “babel” all around him. At the end of his letter, he says he has decided to withdraw to the country for quiet.

Baroque marble imaginary portrait bust of Seneca, by an anonymous sculptor of the 17th century. Museo del Prado. (Jean-Pol GRANDMONT/CC BY 3.0)

Baroque marble imaginary portrait bust of Seneca, by an anonymous sculptor of the 17th century. Museo del Prado. (Jean-Pol GRANDMONT/CC BY 3.0)

Noise and Christian Monasticism

There were many reasons why Christian monasticism developed. Ancient Christian writers, like John Cassian, claimed that the origins of monasticism lay in the examples set by the apostles of Jesus, who gave up everything to follow him.

Some modern scholars have argued that monasticism was a natural development following the early history of persecution of Christians, which shaped a view of suffering as a key way to show one’s dedication to the faith.

While the origins of monasticism are not entirely clear, scholars do know that Christian monks drew upon philosophical views about noise and distraction and, in some cases, chose to leave the cacophony of urban life for the wilderness. Even when they stayed in cities or villages, writings from this time period show that they were seeking a life free from the distractions and burdens of society.

Monks eating in a monastery. (CC0)

Monks eating in a monastery. (CC0)

Take, for example, the story of Paul, a young Christian in third-century Egypt, identified by his biographer, Jerome, as “the first hermit.” Jerome says that Paul “amid thunders of persecution retired to a house at a considerable distance and in a more secluded spot.”

The story of Antony, a contemporary of Paul’s, is written by the Alexandrian bishop Athanasius, who describes how Antony was left burdened by caring for his sister after the death of his parents. Distracted by the crowds of neighbors demanding access to his parents’ wealth and property he chose to leave his village and embark on a life as a hermit.

‘St. Paul the Hermit Fed by the Raven.’ (Public Domain)

‘St. Paul the Hermit Fed by the Raven.’ (Public Domain)

Ancient Monks Still Find Noise in the Desert

Noise came in many forms. In “The Life of Antony,” for example, demons thunder, crash and hiss. Although the descriptions of such sounds might seem to be auditory hallucinations, the texts do regard them as real, not fictional.

Monastic rules and sayings instruct monks about the dangers of human speech, laughter, and even the noise of children in monasteries.

These texts emphasize the importance of silence in two forms: a quiet environment in which monks can concentrate and also refrain from too much speaking. Many of the sayings urge monks to “keep silent.”

Monastery of Saint Anthony, Egypt. (Berthold Werner/CC BY SA 3.0)

Monastery of Saint Anthony, Egypt. (Berthold Werner/CC BY SA 3.0)

The Search for Silence

But even as these stories suggest that Christian monks were choosing solitude by going into the desert, the same stories show that silence was not to be found even in the remotest desert wilds.

As the reputation of Antony and other monks from Egypt spread around the Mediterranean, the stories of Antony complain that “the desert has become a city.” Too many people, it seems, sought the wisdom of the hermits and created a distraction akin to city life by taking pilgrimages to see them.

The challenges of noise and distraction were, in fact, always part of the monastic life.

And so it remains to this day. One of the ways that monks and nuns have dealt with this challenge is by cultivating a sense of inner silence and inner stillness through practices like meditation, prayer and sitting in solitude.

Monk praying in the chapel of the Nativity, Jerusalem. (Wellcome Images/CC BY 4.0)

Monk praying in the chapel of the Nativity, Jerusalem. (Wellcome Images/CC BY 4.0)

In Greek, the language of the earliest Christian monastic texts, the word “hesychia” is used to describe the “interior stillness … that brings forth all the virtues” and over time it comes to be a central goal of Christian monasticism.

The ancient quest for silence can perhaps teach us how to respond to the challenges of our increasingly loud world and find our own silence.

Top Image: Monk in the forest Credit: Demian / Adobe Stock

The article, originally titled ‘The struggle to find silence in the ancient monastic world – and nowby Kim Haines-Eitzen was originally published on The Conversation and has been republished under a Creative Commons license.

 

Comments

Cousin_Jack's picture

When considering about the saints of old, this does explain why the saints hermitages were in remote places. St. Nectan’s Glen, Roche Rock, St La’s Chapel, the hermitages were nearly always in remote places but was this because of the want of solitude or something else?

In Anglia et Cornubia.

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