Catholicism Catholics who wish to live in eremitic monasticism may live that
vocation as a hermit: • in an eremitic order, for example
Carthusian or
Camaldolese (in the latter one affiliate
oblates may also live as hermits) • as a diocesan hermit under the canonical direction of their
bishop (canon 603, see below) There are also lay people who informally follow an eremitic lifestyle and live mostly as solitaries. Not all the Catholic lay members that feel that it is their vocation to dedicate themselves to God in a prayerful solitary life perceive it as a vocation to some form of consecrated life. An example of this is life as a
Poustinik, an Eastern Catholic expression of eremitic living that is finding adherents also in the West.
Eremitic members of religious institutes in
Warfhuizen, Netherlands In the
Catholic Church, the
institutes of consecrated life have their own regulations concerning those of their members who feel called by God to move from the
life in community to the eremitic life, and have the permission of their religious superior to do so. The
Code of Canon Law contains no special provisions for them. They technically remain a member of their
institute of consecrated life and thus under obedience to their religious superior. The
Carthusian and
Camaldolese orders of monks and nuns preserve their original way of life as essentially eremitic within a cenobitical context, that is, the monasteries of these orders are in fact clusters of individual hermitages where monks and nuns spend their days alone with relatively short periods of prayer in common. Other orders that are essentially cenobitical, notably the
Trappists, maintain a tradition under which individual monks or nuns who have reached a certain level of maturity within the community may pursue a hermit lifestyle on monastery grounds under the supervision of the abbot or abbess.
Thomas Merton was among the Trappists who undertook this way of life.
Diocesan hermits The earliest form of Christian eremitic or anchoritic living preceded that of being a member of a religious institute, since
monastic communities and religious institutes are later developments of the
monastic life. Bearing in mind that the meaning of the eremitic vocation is the Desert Theology of the Old Testament, it may be said that the desert of the urban hermit is that of their heart, purged through
kenosis to be the dwelling place of God alone. So as to provide for men and women who feel a
vocation to the eremitic or anchoritic life without being or becoming a member of an institute of consecrated life, but desire its recognition by the Roman Catholic Church as a form of
consecrated life nonetheless, the 1983 Code of Canon Law legislates in the Section on Consecrated Life (canon 603) as follows: Canon 603 §2 lays down the requirements for diocesan hermits. The
Catechism of the Catholic Church of 11 October 1992 (§§918–921), comments on the eremitic life as follows: Catholic Church norms for the consecrated eremitic and anchoritic life do not include corporal works of mercy. Nevertheless, every hermit, like every Christian, is bound by the law of charity and therefore ought to respond generously, as their own circumstances permit, when faced with a specific need for corporal works of mercy. Hermits are also bound by the law of work. If they are not financially independent, they may engage in cottage industries or be employed part-time in jobs that respect the call for them to live in solitude and silence with extremely limited or no contact with other persons. Such outside jobs may not keep them from observing their obligations of the eremitic vocation of stricter separation from the world and the silence of solitude in accordance with canon 603, under which they have made their
vow. Although canon 603 makes no provision for associations of hermits, these do exist (for example the Hermits of Bethlehem in Chester, NJ, and the Hermits of Saint Bruno in the United States; see also
lavra,
skete).
Lutheranism The
Lutheran Churches have had a tradition of hermits. In the United States, the Lutheran hermit
Arthur Carl Kreinheder, was lauded for his efforts for
ecumenism.
Anglicanism Many of the recognised religious communities and orders in the
Anglican Communion make provision for certain members to live as hermits, more commonly referred to as solitaries. One
Church of England community, the
Society of St. John the Evangelist, now has only solitaries in its British congregation. Anglicanism also makes provision for men and women who seek to live a single consecrated life, after taking vows before their local bishop; many who do so live as solitaries. The
Handbook of Religious Life, published by the Advisory Council of Relations between Bishops and Religious Communities, contains an appendix governing the selection, consecration, and management of solitaries living outside recognised religious communities. In the Canon Law of the
Episcopal Church (United States), those who make application to their diocesan bishop and who persevere in whatever preparatory program the bishop requires, take vows that include lifelong celibacy. They are referred to as solitaries rather than hermits. Each selects a bishop other than their diocesan as an additional spiritual resource and, if necessary, an intermediary. At the start of the twenty-first century, the Church of England reported a notable increase in the number of applications from people seeking to live the single consecrated life as Anglican hermits or solitaries. A religious community known as the Solitaries of DeKoven, who make
Anglican prayer beads and
Pater Noster cords to support themselves, are an example of an Anglican
hermitage. sharing his meal with a bear
Eastern Orthodoxy In the
Eastern Orthodox Church (as with the
Eastern Lutheran Churches and
Eastern Rite Catholic Churches), hermits live a life of prayer as well as service to their community in the traditional Eastern Christian manner of the poustinik. The poustinik is a hermit available to all in need and at all times. In the Eastern Christian churches, one traditional variation of the Christian eremitic life is the semi-eremitic life in a
lavra or
skete, exemplified historically in
Scetes, a place in the Egyptian desert, and continued in various sketes today, including several regions on
Mount Athos. ==Notable Christian hermits==