It is impossible to give in this series all the lives
of the early hermits—even of those contained
in Rosweyde. This volume will contain, therefore,
only the most important and most famous lives of the
Egyptian, Syrian, and Persian hermits, followed, perhaps,
by a few later biographies from Western Europe, as
proofs that the hermit-type, as it spread toward the
Atlantic, remained still the same as in the Egyptian
desert.
Against one modern mistake the reader must be warned;
the theory, namely, that these biographies were written
as religious romances; edifying, but not historical;
to be admired, but not believed. There is not
the slightest evidence that such was the case.
The lives of these, and most other saints (certainly
those in this volume), were written by men who believed
the stories themselves, after such inquiry into the
facts as they deemed necessary; who knew that others
would believe them; and who intended that they should
do so; and the stones were believed accordingly, and
taken as matter of fact for the most practical purposes
by the whole of Christendom. The forging of miracles,
like the forging of charters, for the honour of a
particular shrine, or the advantage of a particular
monastery, belongs to a much later and much worse age;
and, whatsoever we may think of the taste of the authors
of these lives, or of their faculty for judging of
evidence, we must at least give them credit for being
earnest men, incapable of what would have been in
their eyes, and ought to be in ours, not merely falsehood,
but impiety. Let the reader be sure of this—that
these documents would not have exercised their enormous
influence on the human mind, had there not been in
them, under whatever accidents of credulity, and even
absurdity, an element of sincerity, virtue, and nobility.
SAINT ANTONY
The life of Antony, by Athanasius, is perhaps the
most important of all these biographies; because first,
Antony was generally held to be the first great example
and preacher of the hermit life; because next, Athanasius,
his biographer, having by his controversial writings
established the orthodox faith as it is now held alike
by Romanists, Greeks, and Protestants, did, by his
publication of the life of Antony, establish the hermit
life as the ideal (in his opinion) of Christian excellence;
and lastly, because that biography exercised a most
potent influence on the conversion of St. Augustine,
the greatest thinker (always excepting St. Paul) whom
the world had seen since Plato, whom the world was
to see again till Lord Bacon; the theologian and philosopher
(for he was the latter, as well as the former, in
the strictest sense) to whom the world owes, not only
the formulizing of the whole scheme of the universe
for a thousand years after his death, but Calvinism
(wrongly so called) in all its forms, whether held
by the Augustinian party in the Church of Rome, or
the “Reformed” Churches of Geneva, France,
and Scotland.
Copyrights
The Hermits from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.