receiving the monastic rules from an angel In strong contrast with the individualism of the eremitical life was the rigid discipline which prevailed in the cenobitical monasteries founded by
St. Pachomius. When, in 313,
Constantine I was at war with
Maxentius, Pachomius, still a pagan, was forcibly enlisted together with a number of other young men, and placed on board a ship to be carried down the
Nile to
Alexandria. At some town at which the ship touched, the recruits were overwhelmed with the kindness of the
Christians. Pachomius at once resolved to be a Christian and carried out his resolution as soon as he was dismissed from military service. He began as an ascetic in a small village, taking up his abode in a deserted temple of
Serapis and cultivating a garden on the produce of which he lived and gave alms. The fact that Pachomius made an old temple of Serapis his abode was enough for an ingenious theory that he was originally a pagan monk. Pachomius next embraced the eremitical life and prevailed upon an old hermit named Palemon to take him as his disciple and share his cell with him. He later left Palemon and founded his first monastery at
Tabennisi near
Denderah. Before he died, in 346, he had under him eight or nine large monasteries of men, and two of women. From a secular point of view, a
Pachomian monastery was an industrial community in which almost every kind of trade was practised. Monks had ships of their own on the Nile, which conveyed their agricultural produce and manufactured goods to the market and brought back what the monasteries required. From the spiritual point of view, the Pachomian monk was a severe way of religious living. A Pachomian monastery was a collection of buildings surrounded by a wall. The monks were distributed in houses, each house containing about forty monks. Three or four houses constituted a tribe. There would be thirty to forty houses in a monastery. There was an abbot over each monastery, and provosts with subordinate officials over each house. The monks were divided into houses according to the work they were employed in or what area (or language) they were from. On Saturdays and Sundays all the monks assembled in the church for Mass; on other days the Office and other spiritual exercises were celebrated in the houses. Abbot Edward Joseph Aloysius Butler, wrote that “The fundamental idea of St Pachomius’s rule was to establish a moderate level of observance (moderate in comparison with the life led by the hermits) which might be obligatory on all; and then to leave it open to each - and to indeed encourage each - to go beyond the fixed minimum, according as he was prompted by his strength, his courage, and his zeal". This is strikingly illustrated in the rules concerning food. According to
St. Jerome, in the preface to his translation of the
Rule of Pachomius, the tables were laid twice a day except on Wednesdays and Fridays, which, outside the seasons of
Easter and
Pentecost were fast days. Some only took very little at the second meal; some at one or other of the meals confined themselves to a single food; others took just a morsel of bread. Some abstained altogether from the community meal; for these bread, water, and salt were placed in their cell. Pachomius appointed his successor a monk named Petronius, who died within a few months, having likewise named his successor,
Horsiesi. In Horsiesi's time the order was threatened with a schism. The abbot of one of the houses wished to sell his produce for the sole benefit of his own monastery. Horsiesi appointed
Theodore, a favourite disciple of Pachomius, his coadjutor. When Theodore died, in 368, Horsiesi was able to resume the government of the order. This threatened schism reveals a feature connected with Pachomius' foundation which is never again seen in the East, and only appeared in the West many centuries later. "Like
Cîteaux in a later age", writes Abbot Butler, "it almost at once assumed the shape of a fully organized congregation or order, with a superior general and a system of visitation and general chapters - in short, all the machinery of a centralized government, such as does not appear again in the monastic world until the
Cistercian and the
Mendicant Orders arose in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries" (op. cit., I,235). ==The White Monastery==