eremitic การใช้
- This order was dedicated to a more eremitic lifestyle befitting this rural site.
- Here, they founded an eremitic cell.
- Among these groups were the eremitic life.
- Cenobitic monks were also different from their eremitic predecessors and counterparts in their actual living arrangements.
- Romuald's reforms provided a structural context to accommodate both the eremitic and cenobitic aspects of monastic life.
- Such language indicates how she and Rolle were pioneering a change in the conception of the eremitic vocation ".
- Within the Eastern Orthodox Church, there exist three types of monasticism : eremitic, cenobitic, and the skete.
- But traditional techniques for this realisation depend upon a monastic or eremitic life difficult to attain for the average Westerner.
- Marinus followed a much harsher, asketic hermit lifestyle that was originally of Irish " eremitic " origins.
- The great communal life of a Christian monastery is called cenobitic, as opposed to the eremitic life of a hermit.
- Though the eremitic life would eventually be overshadowed by the far more numerous vocations to the cenobitic life, it did survive.
- In the Eastern Orthodox Church, the title eremitic life, and it is equal to the more usual title of " Saint ".
- He believed God had preserved his life and out of this experience he decided to take up the ascetic and eremitic life of a stylite.
- Whereas the eremitic monks ( " hermits " ) lived alone in a monastery consisting of merely a hut or cave ( " St . Pachomius.
- The Greek Orthodox and the Russian Orthodox Churches have their own eremitic traditions, of which Mount Athos is perhaps the most widely heard of today.
- The building was erected between 13th and 14th centuries, although it may have served to house eremitic Basilian monks as early as the 8th century.
- As a young adult, he and his friend Germanus entered a monastery in Palestine but then journeyed to Egypt to visit the eremitic groups in Nitria.
- It is one of four early monastic orders along with the eremitic, lavritic and coenobitic that became popular during the early formation of the Christian Church.
- The Middle Ages saw the emergence of a variant of the hermit, the anchorite; and life in Carthusian and Camaldolese monasteries has an eremitic emphasis.
- In this Eastern Christian expression of the eremitic vocation the poustinik is not solitary, but is a part of the local community to which they are called.
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