Ascetical WorksCatholic University of America Press St. Basil ISBN: 0813209668 price: $39.95 paperback
His zealous and intrepid defense of the orthodox faith and his
contribution to handling the external affairs of the Eastern
Church were by no means the whole service to which St. Basil the
Great devoted his considerable talents. His life both exemplified
and shaped the ascetical movement of his time. After renouncing a
brilliant career as rhetorician, he traveled widely, studying the
various forms of asceticism practiced in Eastern Christendom. On
his return, he retired in the year 358 to a place near
Neocaesarea to put into practice the best of what he had seen,
and there disciples soon joined him. When his friend Gregory of
Nazianzus visited him there in 358, he began to write his Rules
and other works that have had great importance in promoting and
regulating the common life of monasticism. This life, regulated
and freed from excesses, as an expression of the law of charity
was to be the monk's path to union with God. Basil's concept of
the monastic ideal, socially directed and moderate without being
lax, became the fundamental concept of Greek and Slavonic
monasticism, and it influenced St. Benedict in legislating for
Western monasticism.
The ascetical writings of St. Basil contained in this volume are
of prime importance for understanding the role their author
played in the Church of the fourth century and, through his
influence, still plays today.
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