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Article

Christian Perfection in Basilian Monastic Hospitals from the Fourth to Sixth Centuries

by
Sung Hyun Nam
Department of Theology, Seoul Hanyoung University, Seoul 08274, Republic of Korea
Religions 2024, 15(7), 793; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070793
Submission received: 30 April 2024 / Revised: 11 June 2024 / Accepted: 20 June 2024 / Published: 29 June 2024

Abstract

:
The purpose of Byzantine hospitals—whether primarily curative facilities or caring hospices—has long intrigued scholars. This paper proposes a third perspective on Byzantine hospitals, suggesting that the Basilian monastic hospitals of the fourth to sixth centuries were not merely philanthropic facilities for the sick and destitute but also centers for ascetics’ spiritual growth. Basil of Caesarea incorporated charitable actions by ascetics as essential to achieving Christian perfection within the coenobitic community, developing a theology of compassion that advocated for the purification of harmful passions like anger and pride through the virtue of compassion. In the fifth and sixth centuries, Theodosius the Cenobiarch, who founded a coenobium and hospitals in the Judean Desert, upheld Basil’s idea of the purification of the soul through compassion for the sick. Additionally, the nosokomeion (hospital) of the sixth-century Monastery of Seridos in Gaza emphasized the healing of spiritual diseases through compassion for the sick, as reflected in various epistles. Thus, Basil of Caesarea’s theology of compassion in pursuit of Christian perfection was a foundational element in the emergence and development of hospital spirituality in Christian Late Antiquity.

1. Introduction

Basil, archbishop of Caesarea (330–377 C. E.), established a multi-functional philanthropic institution in 372 on the outskirts of Caesarea, the capital of Cappadocia.1 This institution, so vast in scale that Gregory of Nazianzus referred to it as a “new city” in honor of his friend Basil2, was later known as the Basileias (Religions 15 00793 i001) after its founder.3 According to a 19th-century archaeological survey, the Basileias was situated approximately one to two miles from the capital and contributed to the formation of a new city around it, replacing the older Greco-Roman settlement (Ramsay 1892, p. 464).
The exact nature of the Basileias has been debated among scholars. Hospital–medical history specialists like P. Horden view it as primarily a medical facility, describing it as “the first clearly medicalized Byzantine hospital”. (Horden 2006, p. 69). Similarly, J. Constantelos and T. Miller, while acknowledging its multi-purpose nature, classify it as a hospital or “medical hostel” rather than a hospice (Constantelos 1991, p. 119; Miller 1984, p. 56; 1997, p. 88). In contrast, historians of Late Antiquity, such as Gain, Pouchet, Rousseau, and Holman, regard it as a caring hospice. Gain, for instance, states that “la première fonction de la Basiliade est donc d’offrir l’hospitalité aux voyageurs”, (Gain 1985, p. 279), and others refer to it as a hospice for the poor and sick (Pouchet 1992, pp. 411–12; Rousseau 1994, pp. 139–40; Holman 2001, pp. 74–76).
However, the debate over whether the Basileias was a curative facility or a caring hospice overlooks a crucial aspect: Basil of Caesarea designed this institution within the framework of Christian perfection for ascetics, a spirituality that his successors developed over the next two centuries. Basil considered charitable activities integral to the spiritual progress of ascetics, not merely a separate aspect of monastic life. This spirituality was continued by figures such as Theodosius the Cenobiarch (leader of the coenobitics), John the Prophet, and his disciple Dorotheos of the Monastery of Seridos. This study focuses on this aspect.
First, I explore how Basil of Caesarea related philanthropy to the spiritual progress of ascetics, emphasizing that acts of mercy were essential for achieving Christian perfection. He taught that compassion was a paramount virtue to be cultivated. Our main argument draws on Basil’s Asketikon (Ascetical Works), which provides biblically grounded principles and guidelines for organized community life. The Asketikon, edited at least twice—first as the Small Asketikon (henceforth SA) during his priesthood, and later during his episcopate (370–377)—is central to our analysis.4 Additionally, I examine various features of the Basileias, which served as a hostel for travelers, an almshouse for the poor, and a shelter for the sick.
In the following sections, I investigate the development and transmission of Basil’s hospital spirituality by the monks of fifth- and sixth-century Palestine who embraced the Basilian ethos. Theodosius the Cenobiarch established several hospitals in the Judean Desert in the fifth century, building on Basil’s coenobitic life and the concept of soul purification through compassion for the sick. In the sixth century, at the monastery of Seridos in Gaza, the virtue of compassion continued to be a key aspect of the spiritual progress of ascetics. Although there have been several studies on the hospitals of Theodosius and the monastery of Seridos, the connection between Basil’s “theology of compassion” and “spirituality of hospital” and the monastic hospitals of Palestine has not been thoroughly examined (Constantelos 1991, pp. 120–21; Miller 1997, pp. 132–34; Choi 2020, pp. 185–86).

2. Divine Commandments as Christian Perfection According to Basil of Caesarea

In his Asketikon, Basil of Caesarea presents philanthropic activities as both a preliminary condition for Christian perfection and a common good that a community of ascetics must ensure.5 However, many studies focused on his ascetical ideals have not emphasized this point clearly. For example, Humbertclaude and Amand barely recognized philanthropy or charitable activities as foundational in their analyses of Basil’s ascetical life (Humbertclaude 1932, pp. 64–108; Amand 1949, pp. 86–349).6 Similarly, Morison and Gain ranked hospitality or “charité fraternelle” last compared to other primary monastic virtues, such as poverty, celibacy, prayer, and labor, even though they acknowledged its integration into the monastic vocation (Morison 1912, pp. 22–130; Gain 1985, pp. 123–62). Only recently did M. Dunn appropriately indicate that in Basil’s Asketikon, “the renunciation of wealth for charitable purposes is fundamental to his vision of monasticism” (Dunn 2003, p. 37), though without providing a detailed analysis.
Basil develops the biblical and foundational principles of the coenobium in the Prologue of the Asketikon and its first series of the Longer Responses (henceforth LR).7 Those who desire the Kingdom of Heaven must be “perfect” (Prologue 2 of LR), and Christian perfection depends on adhering to two supreme commandments (entolai): love for God and love for one’s neighbor, according to Matt. 22: 37–40 (LR 1–3; Gribomont 1984, pp. 301–2; Rousseau 1994, pp. 205–6). These two supreme commandments are directly linked with Matthew’s last judgment scene (Matt. 25: 35–45). The legislator of coenobitic life does not separate these two commandments or replace them simply with prayer (theoria) and practice (praxis), as Miller suggests (Miller 1997, p. 120). Instead, Basil views them as so interwoven and indivisible that they cannot be fulfilled independently of each other.
“And he (the Lord) has so joined”, declares Basil, “together these two commandments in every way that the kindness shown our neighbor he refers to himself, I was hungry, he says, and you gave me to eat (Matt. 25: 35), and so on, to which he adds: insofar as you did it even to the least of these brothers of mine, you did it to me (Matt. 25: 40). Consequently, through the first commandment the second is also accomplished, but again, through the second there is (an ascent and a) return to the first, such that if anyone loves the Lord (without doubt) it follows that he also loves his neighbor. For Whoever loves me, says the Lord, will keep my commandments (John 14: 15)”.
(LR 3; Silvas 2005, pp. 172–73)
The connection of the two commandments with Matthew’s last judgment might seem banal, as it seems like a cliché in several later Byzantine typika (charters of monasteries).8 However, this perspective is crucial to Basil’s notion of perfection. It led Basilian communities to be indivisibly united with benevolent works beyond the convent walls, fostering a sense of brotherhood.
The Christological elevation of the poor to Christ and its connection to the two commandments distinguish Basil’s coenobium from the Pachomian monasteries of Egypt. The Pachomian Coptic Lives cite Matthew 25: 35–40 five times, but none of these citations connect the needy and sick with Christ.9 Consequently, the Pachomian Koinonia did not establish charitable institutions like the Basileias throughout its history despite having about 24 monasteries by the end of the 6th century (Nam 2004, pp. 433–61; Nam 2010b). The Pachomian Confederation operated an infirmary solely for its residents and had a separate area for visitors, intended to protect its monks from worldly contamination (Crislip 2005, pp. 11–17).10 Additionally, the Pachomian monks were heavily involved in fluvial transportation and economic activities, which limited their capacity for charitable deeds.11
Second, Basil of Caesarea was convinced of the superiority of communal life over individual asceticism in terms of philanthropic work, as well as in meeting physical needs and fostering self-awareness (LR 7; Gribomont 1984, p. 303). A Christian is “an athlete of Christ’s commandments” and must observe all the commandments given by Christ (Matt. 28: 19–20). Basil asserted, “if they were not all necessary for us to attain the goal, all the commandments would not have been written down, and it would not have been declared necessary that they all be kept” (LR 17.2; Prologue 2). Furthermore, “the commandments are so interdependent that if one is broken, the others are of necessity broken too” (Prologue 2; LR 16.3; Amand 1949, p. 272). In this respect, communal life is superior to solitary life, as “many commandments are more easily fulfilled by many living together, but not at all by one alone” (LR 7.1). A hermit, “in fulfilling one commandment”, usually neglects another; for example, “in visiting the sick” (Matt. 25: 36), he cannot “welcome the stranger” (Matt. 25: 35). In cases involving the distribution of necessities over distances, “the greatest commandment is bypassed, for neither are the hungry fed nor the naked clothed” (LR 7.1; cf. Matt. 25: 35–36). Thus, Basil’s doctrine of observing all commandments, as reflected in the last judgment scene, makes philanthropy a preliminary condition preceding monastic virtues, such as poverty, chastity, labor, and prayer, at least theoretically, in his Asketikon. This vision of Christian perfection explains why the poor relief complex in Caesarea of the fourth century operated with various functions. It is no coincidence that Theodore the Studite emphasized Basil of Caesarea’s teachings on the observation of all commandments in one of his sermons when he revived the tradition of the monastic hospital in the ninth century.12
This perspective of Basil of Caesarea emphasizes religious strictness, suggesting that the degree of perfection may be proportional to the number of commandments accomplished.13 In his teachings on commandments, Basil minimizes any ontological disparity between intention and action, unlike Augustine of Hippo, who grappled with this issue in Book X of Confessiones.14 Basil attempts to resolve this by introducing the notion of the memory of God (Religions 15 00793 i002) (LR 5.3). The memory of God entails a religious and psychological attitude wherein one keeps God’s intention in mind while obeying the commandments, ensuring the purity of action (Amand 1949, pp. 273–74; Gribomont 1984, pp. 302–3; Rousseau 1994, pp. 225–28). It is through the doctrine of the memory of God that Basil provides his ascetics with a religious and psychological basis that can guarantee their purity of action.
Finally, Basil’s concept of Christian perfection encompasses the spiritual progress of nursing monks by restraining harmful passions (pathe). According to Basil’s anthropological framework, passions are categorized into the following three types: natural impulses (e.g., hunger and weariness), forbidden passions (e.g., anger, pride, and avarice), and virtuous passions indicative of virtues, such as compassion, compunction, and humility (LR 8, 17, Shorter Responses = henceforth SR 16, 28, 75). Among these, the second type—destructive to the soul—is synonymous with pleasures, vices, spiritual diseases, and sins (LR 8, 18, 19; SR 28, 160, 229). As the spiritual progress of Christians is proportional to fulfilling more commandments, one has to remove destructive passions to reach perfection.
The founder of Basileias instructed his ascetics to manage the vices of anger or pride and nurture the virtues of compassion and humility by showing kindness to those in need. When questioned about avoiding anger, Basil emphasized that correcting a violation of the Lord’s commandments required not anger, but pity (Religions 15 00793 i003) and compassion (Religions 15 00793 i004), referencing 2 Cor. 11:29: “Who is made weak, and I am not weak?” (SR 29 = SA 46, SR 182 = SA 191, SR 296, Moralia 70.20). Nursing monks, guided by the bishop of Caesarea, applied these teachings in their acts of charity, enabling them to address their own spiritual ailments while caring for the sick. Philip Rousseau identified this theological inclination as “a theology of compassion” (Rousseau 1994, p. 220, n. 158; Silvas 2005, p. 437, n. 780; Amand 1949, pp. 161–63). Basil of Caesarea’s theology of compassion influenced the monastic hospitals of Theodosius the Cenobiarch and Seridos of Gaza, shaping the core of what we now term the “spirituality of hospital”, a concept further examined below.

3. Functions of the Hospital of Caesarea

Basil employed three distinct terms to denote the Basileias in his Letters (henceforth Ep.) and ascetical works: Religions 15 00793 i005 (Ep. 94), Religions 15 00793 i006 (Ep. 142) or Religions 15 00793 i007 (Ep. 143; 176), and Religions 15 00793 i008 (SR 155, 286).15 These terms were not novel in the 370s. Katagogion, with its literal meaning of “a place of bringing down baggage”, had traditionally denoted an inn since classical Greek periods. Similarly, ptochotropheion was used to signify an inn in the second-century work Oneirocritica of Artemidorus, where it referred to “a shelter for the distribution of food to the poor”.16 Emperor Julian (361–363) utilized the term xenodocheia (hostels) in a letter, urging a pagan priest of Galatia to establish numerous hostels for travelers to counter “the religion of the Galileans” (xenodocheia in this context means “a shelter for strangers”).17 Hence, these terms do not introduce anything groundbreaking regarding the facility’s nature.
Chronologically, prior to the Basileias’s establishment, several shelters must have existed in metropoles and major cities across provinces. Basil of Caesarea sent, around 373, a petition to an accountant of the prefects with the purpose of tax reduction or exemption in favor of a ptochotropheion administered by a monk and chorbishop (chorepiscopus) (Ep. 143). The accountant, presumably a sincere Christian, had supported “one of several ptochotropheia in the city of Amaseia” using his own resources (Ep. 143). Basil also reminded the accountant of his colleague who had promised to favor the ptochotropheia. In another letter from the same period, Basil requested another accountant to visit the ptochotrophia of the region managed by a brother (Ep. 142). Additionally, at various times in the same year, he arranged for the chief of a hospice for the needy to visit an official of prefects in support of the poor (Religions 15 00793 i009, Ep. 144).18 A monk and chorbishop named Timothy oversaw a monastery and one or several ptochotropheia (Ep. 291).19 These indications led Robert Pouchet to conclude that “les hospices doivent, pour une bonne part, avoir prééxisté à la Basiliade (Basileias)” (Pouchet 1992, p. 305). Benoît Gain shared the opinion that the institution of ptochotropheion was already widespread in the region (Gain 1985, p. 284). Considering these references, several hospices existed in Caesarea, but they were probably overshadowed by the new “shelters” or “inns” (katagogia, plural, Ep. 94) established around 373.20
One of these shelters catered to the hospitality of strangers, travelers, and caravans.21 Basil mentioned in letter 94 that he had the complex constructed for “the strangers and the travelers”.22 Another vital function of the hospice complex was to serve as an almshouse to nourish the poor. When Heraklides visited the ptochotropheion of the “new city” around 373 to obtain spiritual lessons from the archbishop, Basil advised him on the importance of distinguishing genuine paupers from those feigning poverty due to greed (Ep. 150.3.1-31).23 Alongside these functions, the charitable complex of Caesarea included a leprosarium, as implied by Gregory of Nazianzus in his eulogy for Basil.24 This leprosarium was undoubtedly influenced by the example of Eustathius, Basil’s spiritual mentor, who had established one in the 350s as a xenodocheion for those afflicted with leprosy and disabilities.25
References to medical or nursing care have garnered significant attention in modern studies. In letter 94, Basil briefly mentioned “those who need a certain cure because of illness” and the presence of doctors (Religions 15 00793 i010) and nurses (Religions 15 00793 i011) for them in the hospital of Caesarea.26 Basil, who considered medicine as a celestial gift, did not hesitate to utilize it for treating illnesses, as indicated in LR 55. According to Pouchet, a certain Pasinikios, mentioned in Basil’s letter 324, was a young physician who had recently entered into service at a ptochotropheion somewhere within the ecclesiastical territory of the bishop of Caesarea. Gregory of Nazianzus briefly expressed that “disease is the object of study” (Religions 15 00793 i012) concerning the medicine practiced at the hospital of Caesarea.27 The nurses were not salaried employees, as SR 155 suggests that monk nurses served as nursing attendants for the sick inpatients28. This corresponds well to Basil’s teaching that caring for the ill or those in need is considered a prerequisite for Christian perfection, preceding the monastic vocation. Additionally, SR 286 indicates that monks “suffering from bodily illness”, referring to chronically ill members of the brotherhood, could be transferred to a hospice in the region.29 SR 155 and 286 undoubtedly refer to long-term inmates in need of ongoing care and support.
These aspects provide valuable insights into the nursing and medical care provided at the hospice of Caesarea. While the facility offered beds, meals, and nursing care by monk attendants, as well as medical treatment by physicians, the absence of statistical data prevents it from being classified as a hospital in the modern sense. Unlike later examples, such as the seventh-century Sampson xenon or the twelfth-century Pantokrator xenon, which featured surgical facilities and outpatient services, the hospice of Caesarea primarily focused on providing basic care and support to the needy and sick within its walls.30
Nevertheless, medical treatment is not considered an innovation envisioned by the archbishop of Caesarea. According to SR 155, a recalcitrant clientele could be expelled from a hospice by the chief (Religions 15 00793 i013) of xenodocheion.31 There were likely internal (probably religious) regulations in the hospices that patients had to follow. It is possible that the hospices of the region functioned similarly to the “Hôpital Général de Paris” of the seventeenth century. The distribution and sharing of necessities at a distance, as mentioned in LR 7.1, had to concern both the poor and the sick, as illness often led to poverty during those periods. Around 376, in a letter to the bishops of the West (Ep. 243), Basil summarized the activities of ascetics (“the little children” of the church) committed to “visiting of the sick”, consoling the afflicted, aiding those in distress, and supporting various needs, emphasizing their devotion as a means of fostering unity among people.32
In LR 37, Basil once again regulated, not omitting reference to Matt. 25:34–35, that through the corporal labor of ascetics, God may provide sufficiently “for the sick among the brothers (in the world)”.33 In the early 360s, when Basil was asked about the corporal work of monks, his response was that one must labor for the needs of neighbors in the context of Matt. 25: 34–40 (SA 127 = SR 207). In the 370s, he supplemented the rule that one’s own needs are not the goal of one’s work, again referring to the same verse (LR 42.1). One of the indispensable tasks of the hospice of Caesarea was to visit the sick and deliver provisions and necessities. This reorients Miller’s position, which mainly accentuated its medical function (Miller 1984, pp. 55–58; 1997, pp. 85–88).
Basil’s coenobitic movement was designed to serve the paupers based on the last judgment scene (Matt. 25: 35–40) and fulfill as many commandments as possible. After Basil’s death, Gregory of Nazianzus praised his merciful deeds, stating that “he persuaded not to dishonor Christ, the unique head of all people, through inhumanity to the afflicted”.34 However, the Christological connotation of identifying the pauper with Christ was not explicitly emphasized by the archbishop of Caesarea. This hermeneutic was shared by “poor euergetai” of the early Byzantine era, such as Gregory of Nyssa, John Chrysostom, and Severus of Antioch, on the biblical exegesis of the paradox of the Incarnation recapitulated with 2 Corinthians 8:9, as elucidated by P. Brown in Poverty and Leadership in the Later Roman Empire (Brown 2002, pp. 93–110).35 If Basil contributed more to later Byzantine monasticism in this regard than other leaders, it was because he could combine the paradox of the Incarnation with the Christian perfection of ascetics and his theology of compassion through his Asketikon, transmitting them to later generations as an authentic seal of Byzantine coenobitic life.

4. Basilian Hospitals in the Judean Desert of the Fifth and Sixth Centuries

The rise of Palestinian coenobitism was driven by increasing pilgrimage to the Holy Land, which captivated many devout individuals. Some pilgrims from Cappadocia sought to establish themselves in the Holy Places instead of returning home, bringing with them the communal life oriented towards philanthropic spirituality taught by Basil of Caesarea. Representative figures of this movement included Theodosius and possibly Martyrius.
Theodosius the Cenobiarch (423–529) was hailed from Mogariassus in the diocese of Caesarea of Cappadocia. Around 479, he founded a coenobium in the Kidron Valley in the Judean Desert36, which became the largest community in the region and epitomized its coenobitic life. According to Theodore of Petra, the author of Vita Theodosii, Theodosius deeply embraced Basil of Caesarea’s spirituality and relied on his ascetical works to instruct his monks.37 Theodosius took delight in remembering the sayings of Basil, and he constantly had them on his lips.38 The author even portrays Theodosius citing at length some lines from the Prologue of the Asketikon of Basil.39 Theodosius embraced Basil’s concept of fulfilling commandments and linked caring for the sick with his instruction on passions. Theodore encapsulates Theodosius’ theory of perfection and the theology of compassion, both originating from the Asketikon of Basil, as follows:
The care for the sick is the sovereign proof of the love for neighbor. In particular, through it, the passionate part (Religions 15 00793 i014) of our soul is purified.40 For the perfection (Religions 15 00793 i015), it is not sufficient to nourish the starved, to drink the thirsty, to invite strangers and clothe the naked, but it is necessary to be compassionate (Religions 15 00793 i016) to those people so that one acts not simply a good thing but becomes to be good, and one shows the compassion (Religions 15 00793 i017) not only by hands but also by the soul, manifestly according to the disposition (Religions 15 00793 i018) of the soul. The one who sets forth the love for God not saying “Lord, Lord” but accomplishing the will of the Father in Heavens makes this aspect of the charity visible. He (Theodosius) recognized that the accurate fulfillment of the commandments was the clear sign of the love for God, according to the Lord saying “whoever loves me will keep my commandments”.
(John 14: 15)41
This quotation embodies the fundamental principles of the Basilian coenobium: the concept of perfection, the association of perfection with compassion and disposition, and the assimilation of love for neighbors with caring for the afflicted, and love for God with the fulfillment of commandments. As previously discussed, Basil of Caesarea dissolved the ontological disparity between intention and action through the notion of the disposition (diathesis) of the soul with the memory of God. Undoubtedly, Theodosius was familiar with this teaching, as evidenced by his disciple’s recapitulation of his lessons emphasizing that one’s goodness hinges on the disposition of the soul, not merely on actions. Additionally, Theodosius taught his disciples that the passionate part of the soul could be purified through “being in the state of feeling with the sick” (sympaschein42), echoing Basil of Caesarea’s theory that compassion or humility can temper the vices of anger or pride.
In faithful adherence to the spirituality of Basil of Caesarea, Theodosius established three hospices specializing in healthcare.43 Primarily, he constructed a dwelling (Religions 15 00793 i019) to care for sick monks, likely intended for hermits. He also founded two hospitals for individuals from the secular world: one for the “more learned and august”,44 requiring “medical assistance” (Religions 15 00793 i020) (Usener 1890, p. 40), and the other is reserved “for both the poor and sick”. While the latter was free, the former charged a fee. Notably, the former hospital for the elite reveals an innovative aspect of Theodosius’ charitable endeavors. Theodore reported that his master built an old-age home (Religions 15 00793 i021) within the monastery for elderly or infirm monks. Additionally, Theodosius’ monastery operated a nosokomeion (hospital) in Jericho, essential for pilgrims, donated by a pious and wealthy woman moved by Theodosius’ charitable works (Hirschfeld 1992, p. 199). Furthermore, Theodosius added a wing and church for mentally ill monks, akin to a second monastery within the monastery.45
Within these diverse philanthropic institutions, Theodosius’ monks tended to the sick, needy, and infirm. The author of Vita Theodosii briefly mentioned “different orders of monk-officials” (Religions 15 00793 i022) working in the medical shelters. This led Hirschfeld to suggest that “many monks were employed there as physicians, orderlies, and apothecaries, with full-time jobs, often requiring night duty”. (Hirschfeld 1992, pp. 198–99) In contrast, the author of Life noted that “each order of officials restored the bodies afflicted with diseases by appropriate measures prescribed by Theodosius”.46 Thus, the author portrays Theodosius as a physician. Regardless, monks’ assistance as medical personnel was crucial, given the operation of three hospitals by the monastery, whether laymen also contributed to staffing or not.47 Consequently, Theodosius’ monastery staunchly upheld the Basilian tradition48 of aiding the poor. At its heyday during the Byzantine era, Theodosius’ monastery housed 400 monks across a surface area of 70 m × 100 m (7000 m2).49 The hospice, located outside the southeastern corner of the monastery, approximately measured 30 m × 68 m (2040 m2) and could accommodate a maximum of 100–110 sick and impoverished individuals, as well as pilgrims.
It is probable that the fifth-century coenobitic monastery of Martyrius in the Judean Desert also housed a Basilian hospital. The monastery, fully excavated in the 1980s along with its hospice, predates Martyrius’ appointment to a clerical position in the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem in 474 (Hirschfeld 1992, pp. 42–45). The main complex, covering 67 m × 78 m (5226 m2) in an orthogonal structure, is estimated to have housed a community of 150 to 200 individuals. Adjacent to the main complex, a hospice with a surface area of 1204 m2 (28 m × 43 m) was constructed outside the northeast corner (Hirschfeld 1992, pp. 48–49, 78; Magen and Hizmi 1985, pp. 63–64), offering living quarters of approximately 320 m2 and accommodating 60–70 travelers and the sick (Hirschfeld 1992, p. 197). A bathing facility was discovered during the excavation of the monastery of Martyrius, which was primarily intended as a medical treatment for ailing monks and pilgrims.50 The attachment of the hospice to the main complex was very similar to the structure of the monastery of Theodosius. Another common characteristic is that the two monasteries were located in proximity to Jerusalem, about 6–7 km from the Holy City, which allowed them to operate hospices and hospitals. Unfortunately, no written sources regarding the hospice of Martyrius have survived.

5. The Hospital of the Monastery of Seridos of Gaza

The sixth-century monastery of Seridos of Gaza vividly shows the active monk-medical staff working in the nosokomeion equipped with outpatient services. Seridos founded a coenobium around 520 in the village of Thabatha, located in the southern part of the city of Gaza (Hirschfeld 2004, p. 76; Bitton-Ashkelony and Kofsky 2000, pp. 51–57). This monastery was surrounded by hermitages and had two spiritual masters who lived in cells isolated from the world, demonstrating that the coenobium incorporated the dual influence of communal life and the Egyptian anchoritic way of life (Bitton-Ashkelony and Kofsky 2000, pp. 52–53). Barsanuphius, one of the two recluses, gave his messages in the form of letters for questions asked through the mediation of Seridos. John the Prophet, the other recluse, joined the community around 525–527 and was soon promoted to recluse but kept in contact with the world, like Barsanuphius, through Dorotheos. A collection of more than 800 epistles of the two hermits, edited in the form of questions and answers following the example of the Asketikon of Basil of Caesarea, comprises a thesaurus of Gazan monasticism (Choi 2020; Barsanuphius and John, Letters—henceforth Letter). As a result of the successful leadership of Seridos and the spiritual cooperation of the two masters, the monastery rapidly grew and was able to establish a xenodocheion, nosokomeion, and church (Letter 570). Over ten epistles, among others that were transmitted to us, are directly related to our theme (Choi 2020, pp. 184–209).
According to the Life of Dositheos, a nursing monk, due to the quantitative growth of the monastery, the two masters decided to construct a nosokomeion to care for ill monks.51 The expenses of the construction were provided by Dorotheos’ younger brother, a native of Antioch, and Dorotheos cared for the sick with several monks.52 The monastery of Seridos was located in the heart of the village of Thabatha (Hirschfeld 2004, p. 77). This geographical feature led the community to open an outpatient service in the nosokomeion for its inhabitants and nearby villagers (Letter 313; 333). The coenobium of Seridos was equipped with a bathing facility for ailing monks and outpatients (Letter 770; Hirschfeld 2004, p. 76; Choi 2020, pp. 190–94). However, the hospital could not afford to supply separate rooms for long-term patients. If necessary, in the case of a foreigner who had fallen ill, a monk’s cell had to be shared with the patient under the consent of the resident (Letter 548).
In addition to the hospital, the monastery operated a xenodocheion that functioned as a hostel for visiting people and caravans.53 The needy could ask for necessities and financial aid (Letter 313, 587). Dorotheos was assigned to serve travelers and caravans as the responsible person (xenodochos) of the hostel.54 Written sources clearly distinguish the xenodocheion welcoming strangers and the nosokomeion caring for the sick.55 It is likely that Dorotheos was simultaneously occupied with the service of xenodochos and nosokomos.56 Thus, as for the overall functions of the nosokomeion and xenodocheion in the Gazan monastery, it looks like “several hospices” (katagogia) administered in the Basileias of Caesarea. According to the archaeological review, the size and splendor of the monastery of Seridos paralleled the monastery of Martyrius, which was one of the largest monasteries in the Judean Desert and could accommodate 60–70 travelers in its living quarters of about 320 m2 (Hirschfeld 2004, pp. 48–49, 77–78, 197; Magen and Hizmi 1985, pp. 63–64).
In terms of medical personnel, Dorotheos worked as a physician and head of the hospital.57 He transferred to the coenobitic community his library that contained medical books, which permitted him to increase his knowledge of medicine (Letter 327). Some of his fellow monks labored as hospital staff, while some were even capable of prescribing medications to patients instead of Dorotheos (Letter 316; 334). Dorotheos was frequently consulted by laymen staff (kosmikoi), even during prayers in his cell with regard to hospital matters (Letter 316). Nonetheless, there is no accurate information about the staff of nursing monks, besides ambiguous indications in the Life of Dositheos that Dorotheos cared for the sick with “some other brothers” or “other servants” (Religions 15 00793 i023).58
The existence of both the medicalized hospice and medical monk staff in the monastery of Seridos shows that it followed the tradition of the monastic hospital of Basil of Caesarea and Theodosius the Cenobiarch. More significantly, John the Prophet regarded the hospital as a place of spiritual battle where Dorotheos could cultivate the virtue of compassion and remove passion. When John was asked by Dorotheos whether silence (hesykia) was more important than merciful workings, John’s reply was clear: silence brings arrogance if one does not reach perfection (Letter 314). John’s position was close to Basil’s view, who defined solitary life as self-pleasing, which is the first and paramount danger to ascetics.59 John the Prophet, citing Matt. 9: 13, “I desire mercy and not sacrifice”, declared firmly that mercy is greater than sacrifice and that Dorotheos would find assistance when he was compassionate (Religions 15 00793 i024) toward someone (Letter 314). However, two extremes must be avoided, and a journey along the middle way should be pursued. Such teachings dominated Dorotheos’ successive inquiries into how to avoid two extremes to journey in the middle way (Letter 315). The response was to preserve “humility in stillness and vigilance in distraction (contact with world)”. Nonetheless, the master did not forget to supplement it with the same precept about compassion offered in the previous response: “It is a good thing to suffer with those who are ill and to contribute to their healing. For, if a doctor receives a reward in caring for the sick, how much more so will someone who suffers as much as possible with one’s neighbor in all things?” Surely, in the reply of John the Prophet, Basil’s doctrine of compassion toward Christian perfection continues to resonate.
In the following letter, the subject of compassion vehemently echoes the virtue of humility. There were different moments when Dorotheos’ prayers were interrupted by his fellow hospital staff knocking on his cell to consult on hospital matters (Letter 316). The recluse replied to Dorotheos’ troubles that “remaining in a cell only renders you useless, for you remain without affliction”, since one can progress to humility only with affliction.60 At the same time, John permitted the petitioner to nominate one monk as a substitute to secure his prayer time; however, this permission was not given without reluctance. When John was closing his letter, he interestingly reiterated the virtue of compassion (Religions 15 00793 i025), the diathesis (disposition) of the soul on which Theodosius the Cenobiarch insisted following SR 29 of the Asketikon of Basil: “So strive”, John wrote, “if you believe the Apostle, who says: ‘Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is made to stumble, and I am not indignant?’ (2 Cor. 11: 29). With those who are tormented, we, too, should be tormented, since we, too, are one body with them”. (Letter 316) Though there was a brother who knew how to diagnose patients and prescribe medications in Dorotheos’ stead, the nosokomos was recommended to “simply visit those who are sick” whenever he was not needed in the hospital (Letter 334). In conclusion, John the Prophet firmly established that the virtue of compassion should be cultivated by the hospital workings of ascetics in the context of Basilian and Theodosian spirituality.
Three consecutive Letters (314–316) converge on the common theme of the theology of compassion, that is, the emblem of the Basilian hospital spirituality. John the Prophet used the noun “compassion” (sympatheia) in Letters 315 and 316. In turn, Dorotheos, in Instructions 14.153, written after having later founded his own community, said that a monk who was struggling with concupiscence (epithymia) was cured by sympatheia with which he cared for one suffering from dysentery.61 The term sympatheia, which does not occur in the New Testament, is unfamiliar to the anchorite milieu.62 It must be borne in mind that Basil of Caesarea used the exact term in SR 29, 182, and 296. Moreover, when John gave advice on condescension in the last part of Letter 316 that “with those who are tormented we should be tormented (Religions 15 00793 i026)”, the rare expression “Religions 15 00793 i027” which he chose is almost the same as the locution “Religions 15 00793 i028” (those who are tormented) which Basil of Caesarea used in Moralia 70.20, and on which the issue rests on compassion. These terminological coincidences can be explained by the fact that the library of the monastery of Seridos had a manuscript of the Asketikon of Basil of Caesarea, because Letter 319 states that Dorotheos asked his master about Moralia 2.3; it is known that, according to the manuscript tradition of the Vulgata, the Asketikon was generally transmitted bound, among others, with Moralia and Longer and Shorter Responses (Gribomont 1953, pp. 13–59).
Some letters show Dorotheos struggling strenuously against passion through minute self-examinations. When he found himself falling into vainglory while reading some medical books, he asked for a prescription to get rid of this disease of the soul (Letter 327). John offered this ordinance: “we should not place all our hope in these (medical arts), but only in God who grants death and life”. About 150 years earlier, Basil of Caesarea likewise expressed that “it follows that we must neither avoid the (medical) art completely nor place all our hopes in it”. (LR 55.5) Regarding the vainglory, “the art of medicine”, the recluse said, “does not prevent one from practicing piety; you should regard the practice of medicine in the same manner as the brothers’ manual labor”. This is a brief recall of Basil’s LR 55.1 that compared medical remedies to the arts of agriculture “bestowed on us by God to supply for the infirmity of nature”. (Silvas 2005, p. 265) Once again, John should be recognized as a disciple of the archbishop of Caesarea (cf. Choi 2020, pp. 185–86; Rousseau 1994, p. 220, n. 164).
Nevertheless, Dorotheos was so self-conscious that he found himself enslaved by vainglory because his authority as the head of the nosokomeion unwillingly led him to it (Letter 330). Sometimes, he spoke “with irritation” to the hospital staff or one of the patients when they made mistakes (Letter 331; 333). Even when he apologized to them for his anger, vainglory still followed (Letter 333).63 The confession of Dorotheos overlaps with that of Saint Augustine, who cried that “we can make our very contempt for vainglory (vana gloria) for preening ourselves more vainly still, which proves that what we are congratulating ourselves on is certainly not contempt for vainglory”.64 This is what is lacking in Basil of Caesarea, owing to the theory of the memory of God. Concerning haunting vainglory, Barsanuphius consoled him in his despondency and encouraged him to persevere, saying, “the hand of God is with you… Do not be afraid, and do not concern yourself with anything having to do with the hospital… You only need to pay attention to yourself as much as you can, and God will come to your assistance”. (Letter 330). For the same obsession, Augustine stated that “our hearts are purified by faith”,65 and the consolation of Barsanuphius which stated that “God will come to your assistance” is an Eastern version of Augustine’s maxim.
As for anger, John warned him to “never say anything with irritation” (Letter 333) “but just enough for you to be heard” (Letter 331) “for pride and ‘the pretense to rights’ (Religions 15 00793 i029) hinder our repentance” (Letter 333).66 The spiritual battle against anger continued in Dositheos, a disciple of Dorotheos. Dositheos worked for five years as a full-time orderly (Religions 15 00793 i030), whose duty was, among others, to make the sick’s beds.67 One day, he became angry with one of the patients, but he was soon aware of what he did and entered the cellar to weep for his sin. The nosokomos, Dorotheos, admonished him to identify the patient with Christ based on Matt. 25:40: “Do not you know that he (the patient) is Christ?”68 Whenever similar incidents occurred, and Dositheos found himself lamenting his own deviations, his master led him to correct them, scolding him for saddening Christ again. These anecdotes reflect a literal interpretation of the bishop of Caesarea in Matt. 25:40, with his teaching on the cure of anger through the virtue of compassion, was inherited by Dorotheos.

6. Conclusions

Basil of Caesarea combined love for God and love for neighbors with the last judgment scene (Matt. 25: 35–40) in his Asketikon. In that scene, the poor and sick are identified with Christ. By doing this, he made caring for the needy and sick a monastic vocation and integrated the charitable workings of ascetics as an essential condition for Christian perfection in monastic life. Therefore, it does not really matter whether their engagements were characterized by poor relief, care for travelers, or medical treatment. However, Basil of Caesarea could not exclude any of them since, in his thoughts, the measure of perfection consisted of performing as many commandments as possible.
In addition, the hospital was a place where nursing monks exercised for their spiritual progress. Referring to 2 Cor. 11: 29, Basil of Caesarea taught in his Asketikon the concept of spiritual therapy: harmful passions such as anger, pride, and avarice could be purified by the virtues of compassion and humility and cultivated by means of condescension to those who were tormented. The theology of compassion of Basil of Caesarea was inherited by Theodosius the Cenobiarch, who erected several hospitals in his coenobium in the Judean Desert in the fifth century.
In the sixth century, the nosokomeion of the monastery of Seridos of Gaza proved to be the successor to the spirituality of Basil of Caesarea. Some questions and answers exchanged between John the Prophet and Dorotheos in the form of letters impressively present the idea of the healing of spiritual diseases through compassion for the sick. The anecdotes of a nursing monk, Dositheos, reflect vivid examples of how Basil of Caesarea’s theology of compassion was applied to the nosokomeion of Gaza. The theology of compassion of Basil of Caesarea in pursuit of Christian perfection is a pivotal point on which the spirituality of hospital emerged and developed in Christian Late Antiquity.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

No new data were created or analyzed in this study. Data sharing is not applicable to this article.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

Notes

1
Regarding the date of Basil of Caesarea’s death, I rely on the research conducted by Pierre Maraval, who argues that it occurred around September 377 (Maraval 1988). The construction of the charitable institution in Caesarea seems to have been finished around 373. R. Pouchet suggested that the dedication of the church for the charitable facilities might have taken place in September 373 instead of September 372 (Pouchet 1992, pp. 303–4). For further discussions on this topic, please refer to the secondary studies cited in note 3.
2
Gregory of Nazianzus, Oratio 43, 63.1.
3
Firmus of Caesarea, Letter 43. Sozomenus, Historia Ecclesiastica VI.34.9. For information on Basileias, refer to (Allard 1903, pp. 109–12; Clarke 1913, pp. 61–62; Gain 1985, pp. 277–89; Pouchet 1992, pp. 299–304; Rousseau 1994, pp. 139–42; Holman 2001, p. 75).
4
The Small Asketikon that is preserved in both Latin and Syriac versions has 203 questions in one series. The number of questions of the Asketikon edited in 370s differs from the manuscript tradition (Gribomont 1953).
5
Even though his audience consisted of ascetics, the term “Christian perfection” is not inappropriate, as he consistently employs the terms (Religions 15 00793 i031) or “brother” (Religions 15 00793 i032), to reference it, rather than “monk” (Religions 15 00793 i033 or Religions 15 00793 i034). In contrast, Basil of Caesarea frequently used the expression Religions 15 00793 i035 to denote ascetics in his letters and sermons. See (Gain 1985, p. 128, n. 23; Rousseau 1994, pp. 198, 204–5; Nam 2004, p. 194, n. 82).
6
The “charity” referred to by Humbertclaude and Amand in their studies denotes internal fraternity within the monastic community. See (Humbertclaude 1932, pp. 64–65; Amand 1949, pp. 295–309).
7
According to the manuscript tradition of the Vulgate, which serves as the basis of most modern translations, the Asketikon is divided into two parts: the 55 Longer Responses and over 300 Shorter Responses (Gribomont 1953, pp. 13–25).
8
An appeal to the last judgment scene is characteristic of Byzantine monastic charters of the eleventh and twelfth centuries, which regulated the operation of hospices or hospitals for the poor and sick. For example, the Typikon of Nikon of the Black Mountain, dating from the twelfth century, follows this tradition closely in chapters A2, B15, and B19 (See Thomas et al. 2000, pp. 430, 435–37). In the Pantokrator Typikon, promulgated in 1136, Emperor John II Komnenos cites Matt. 25: 40 (“as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it for me”), identifying Christ with sick monks (ch. 10, 42), and uses the typical expression “our brothers in Christ” in the same context (ch. 45, 51, 63, see Thomas et al. 2000, pp. 760, 762, 767). Similarly, the Kosmosoteira Typikon written in 1152 by Isaac Komnenos (ch. 2, 6, 70, 87, 91), the Typikon of Timothy for the Monastery of the Mother of God Evergetis (ch. 38, 41), the Typikon of Gregory Pakourianos (ch. 10, 21), the Rule of Michael Attaleiates (ch. 2, 3, 5, 6), and the Typikon of Empress Irene Doukaina Komnene (ch. 64) all exhibit this theme (Thomas et al. 2000, pp. 799, 801, 830, 837–38, 495–97, 535, 544–46, 334–36, 698). It is noteworthy that the Typika of this period relate the last judgment scene to the notion of merit, specifically the remission of sin for benefactors, a concept entirely absent in Basil’s Asketikon.
9
Lefort, Les Vies coptes de saint Pachôme et de ses premiers successeurs, pp. 32, 350, 355 (twice), 358.
10
Life of Pachomius, The First Greek Life, ch. 28 and Bohairic Life, ch. 26 (Lefort, Les Vies coptes de saint Pachôme et de ses premiers successeurs, 1943, pp. 96–97). Also, refer to Praecepta 40–43 and its introduction 5 added by Jerome when he translated the Pachomian Rule into Latin in 404. The infirmary of the Pachomian Koinonia was closed to the outside world, much like the Roman valetudinaria of the first and second centuries, which were typically operated to preserve slave labor or military power. For the valetudinaria, see (Webster 1985, pp. 193 (figure 38b), 211; Risse 1999, pp. 47–56). According to Palladius’ report around 410, the monastery of Panopolis belonging to the Koinonia had an old custom where monks raised swine with vegetable leftovers to sell meat and provide its feet to the sick and old (Palladius, The Lausiac History, ch. 32.9–10). Nevertheless, the Pachomian monasteries had not established any special institution for merciful work.
11
The monastery of Metanoia, located at Canope around Alexandria, was established as a colony of Pachomian monks between 391 and 404. It owned a fleet for the Nilotic transportation of the Annona civilis (Gascou 1991; Gascou and Fournet 2002; Nam 2004, pp. 403–4, 453–55). Fluvial transportation of the Annona civilis by Pachomian monks dates back to at least 367–368 (Gascou 1976, p. 184; Nam 2004, pp. 416–18). Biographers of the Pachomian Lives express varying degrees of criticism regarding the shipbuilding activities of their monasteries (Life of Pachomius, First Greek Life, ch. 146, and Bohairic Life, ch. 197 and 204). The monastery of Tsmine, belonging to the Pachomian Koinonia, owned land in remote areas, and Pachomian monks of Poinikoreos were involved in wine production and fluvial transportation (Gascou and MacCoull 1987; Gascou 1994, p. 85; Nam 2004, pp. 445–48, 460).
12
Theodore the Studite reiterated the teachings of Basil of Caesarea in his catechesis I.55 (Leroy 1979, p. 504): “J’espère que nous gardons les commandements, que nous ne serons ni condamnés ni à l’écart d’un seul. Il ne faut pas que je me montre transgresseur de la loi sur un seul commandement en ne recevant le vieillard, en n’accueillant pas l’espropié. La garde des commandements est un cercle; elle est une ronde. L’un maintient l’autre. Si nous délaissons un seul commandement, on nous dira très petits dans le royaume des cieux. Le mot «très petits» ne veut rien exprimer d’autre, d’après le grand et divin Chrysostome, que la condamnation au châtiment. Recevons donc et les enfants et les vieillards et les estropiés”. (Leroy 1979, p. 504). Theodore mentioned that among his audience were several nursing monks (Leroy 1958, p. 193, n. 123, p. 198, n. 129). He also dedicated some poems to his various xenodocheia, as seen in his poems 29, 104, 105, 107, and 108 (Theodore the Studite, Iambi de Variis Argumentis, Patrologia Graeca 99, col. 1792 A–B; col. 1085 A–D). Leclercq suggested that poem 29 might have been inscribed on the lintel of the xenodocheion (Leclercq 1925, col. 2760).
13
Basil’s teaching on the observance of all commandments is linked to his concept of the so-called “equality of sins”, as evidenced in SR 4 and SR 293, among others (see Amand’s discussion on “le regorisme de Basile” in Amand 1949, pp. 152–75). However, E. Baudry acknowledges a distinction among sins in Basil’s Rosponses (Baudry 1977, pp. 162–66), while J. Gribomont argues that the concept of the equality of sins extends beyond Basil’s formulation (Gribomont 1984, pp. 300–1).
14
Augustine of Hippo, Confessions, Book X, sections 28.39 to 43.70. In this passage, he engages in profound self-analysis, confessing ten incurable passions based on his interpretation of 1 John 2: 16.
15
Basil of Caesarea, Ep. (=Letters) 94.36 (mentioning katagogia); 142.10–11 (referring to ptochotrophia); 143.8–9, 11, and 15 (referring to ptochotropheion, mentioned three times); 150.3 (mentioning ptochotropheion); 176.20 (mentioning ptochotropheion). SR 155 (mentioning xenodocheion) and SR 286 (mentioning xenodocheion). For the Greek texts of SR 155 and SR 286 and their modern translations, see Patrologia Graeca (henceforth PG) 31, col. 1184 B and 1284 B; (Silvas 2005, pp. 356, 430).
16
Artemidorus, Oneirocritica, I.4
17
Sozomenus, Historia Ecclesiastica, 5.16. (Sources Chrétiennes 495, 2005, pp. 173–75).
18
See, (Pouchet 1992, pp. 303–6) for the letters 142–144.
19
(Pouchet 1992, pp. 304, 411, 561–62). A certain Elpidios was from this monastery; see Palladius, The Lausiac History, ch. 48.
20
Concerning the completion of the Basileias, see note 1.
21
See p. 1. “La première fonction de la Basiliade est donc d’offrir l’hospitalité aux voyageurs”. (Gain 1985, p. 279).
22
Basil of Caesarea, Ep. 94.37–38. Gregory of Nazianzus mentions Basil’s ptochotrophiai (food for the poor) and xenodochiai (hospitality for strangers) (Gregory of Nazianzus, Oratio 43.9.1)
23
Basil encouraged Heraklides to follow the ideal of evangelical poverty according to Matt. 19: 21, and to distribute his own property through someone qualified for it. In contrast, in LR 9, he regulated that one should distribute either by oneself or through others qualified for such tasks. By contrast, Gregory of Nazianzus designated three ptochotrophoi in his testament to distribute his own property. See Gregory of Nazianzus, Testament (Beaucamp 2010, pp. 208–9).
24
Gregory of Nazianzus, Oratio 43.63.3. See also (Gain 1985, p. 279, n. 36).
25
Epiphanios, Panarion (Adversus Haereses), 75.1 (PG 42, col. 504 B-C). Epiphanios referred to “those stricken by leprosy” using the term Religions 15 00793 i036, akin to Religions 15 00793 i037. See (Gascou 1994, p. 78, n. 162).
26
Basil of Caesarea, Ep. 94.37–39.
27
Gregory of Nazianzus, Oratio 43. 63.1
28
PG 31, col. 1184 B. Miller’s opinion that Basil hired nurses for the sick is weakly supported (Miller 1984, p. 54; Miller 1997, p. 86).
29
PG 31, col. 1284 B; (Silvas 2005, p. 430, n. 759). Communities had an infirmary for their residents who were ill.
30
The Miracles of St. Artemios, 21 (Miller 1997, pp. 116–17).
31
The word Religions 15 00793 i038 generally refers to the “superior” of a monastery in the Asketikon of Basil, while in SR 155, it indicates the chief who heads the xenodocheion. Cf. (Fedwick 1981, p. 10; Nam 2004, pp. 263–65).
32
Basil of Caesarea, Ep. 243.32–36.
33
PG 31, 1010 C.
34
Gregory of Nazianzus, Oratio 43. 63.4.
35
2 Corinthians 8:9 reads, “Though he (Jesus Christ) was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich”. This verse can be interpreted within the conception of “the King of all who became a beggar”, a concept Peter Brown labeled “the paradox of the Incarnation”. (Brown 2002, pp. 93–94) A number of Christian leaders of these periods can be called “poor euergetai” in the sense that they chose voluntary poverty while devoting themselves to poor relief (cf. Nam 2010a).
36
Cyril of Scythopolis, Life of Theodosius, ch. 1: (Hirschfeld 1992, p. 15).
37
Theodore of Petra, Life of Theodosius, ch. 20 (Festugière 1962, pp. 130–31).
38
Theodore of Petra, Life of Theodosius, ch. 20 (Festugière 1962, p. 130).
39
The cited passage is from PG 31, 890 col. B–892 C (Binns 1994, p. 45). This indicates that the monastery of Theodosius preserved a manuscript of the Asketikon of Basil of Caesarea.
40
“The passionate part of the soul” is an Evagrian notion. For the tripartite division of the soul of Plato and its Christian adaptation of Evagrius Ponticus, see (Nam 2016).
41
Theodore of Petra, Life of Theodosius 8, PG 114, col. 500 D–501 A and (Usener 1890, p. 40, lines 5–12). I adopted the edition of PG 114 col. 500 D–501 A and then the edition of (Usener 1890, p. 40, lines 5–12), because this choice corresponds more faithfully to Basil’s thoughts.
42
One can point out a similarity of such spiritual cure with the chapter 91 of the Praktikos of Evagrius Ponticus. Evagrius recommends the caring for the sick as a treatment of the irascible part of the soul. See Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos ch. 91.
43
I synthesize the editions of Usener and PG 114, as they complement each other. See Theodore of Petra, Life of Theodosius, ch. 16 (Festugière 1962, p. 124; Usener 1890, pp. 40.12–41.12; PG 114, col. 501, A 11–C 21). See also (Hirschfeld 1992, pp. 15, 77, 264 (n. 35)).
44
PG 114, col. 501 B1.
45
Theodore of Petra, Life of Theodosius, ch. 17–18 (Festugière 1962, pp. 125–29). (Hirschfeld 1992, p. 33).
46
Theodore of Petra, Life of Theodosius, (Usener 1890, p. 40).
47
48
Miller wrote that “Theodosius provided a model of cloistered monastery which nevertheless continued the hospital tradition of Saint Basil”. (Miller 1997, p. 133).
49
(Hirschfeld 1992, pp. 48–49, 78). For the number of monks, see (Festugière 1962, pp. 127–28; Usener 1890, pp. 46.9–12). Hirschfeld (1992, p. 265, n. 41).
50
Cf (Grégoire 1938) for bath staff of the hospital operated by the church of Alexandria.
51
Life of Dositheos 1.
52
Life of Dositheos 1; Letter 316 and 334.
53
Letter 570; Dorotheos, Instructions XI.119.
54
Dorotheos, Instrucctions, XI.119; Letter 570.
55
Xenodochos (Dorotheos, Instrucctions, XI.119), xenodocheion (Letter 570), nosokomeion (Letter 313, 316, 330, 334; Life of Dositheos 1, 4, 6. (Bitton-Ashkelony and Kofsky 2000, p. 58; Hirschfeld 2004, p. 77).
56
Dorotheos, Instrucctions, XI.119; XI.121.
57
Letter 316, 327; Life of Dositheos 1.
58
Life of Dositheos 1; 6.
59
LR 7.3; PG 31, col. 932 C.
60
Sayings of Desert Fathers, 17.22.
61
Dorotheos, Instructions, 14.153 (pp. 428–31). Cf. Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos, ch. 91.
62
The noun of “eleos”(mercy), one of its synonyms, was used very often in the Sayings of Desert Fathers and the writings of Evagrius Ponticus. The word occurs twenty-three times in the Sayings of Desert Fathers and five times in Praktikos and Scholia on Proverbs of Evagrius. See Sayings of Desert Fathers, Sources Chrétiennes 498, p. 314 (index); Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos, Sources Chrétiennes 171, p. 750 (index) and Scholia on Proverbs, Sources Chrétiennes 340, p. 517 (index). Nevertheless, the exact form of “sympatheia” has only one occurrence in the Apophthegmata and it is beyond the context of care for the sick. See Sayings of Desert Fathers, 18.48 (Sources Chrétiennes 498, p. 128, line 170).
63
Cf. Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos, ch. 30. Dorotheos may have been influenced by Evagrius Ponticus. See Letter 326; (Bitton-Ashkelony and Kofsky 2000, p. 93; Choi 2020, p. 56).
64
Augustine of Hippo, Confessions, X.38.63.
65
Augustine of Hippo, On The Trinity, I.8.17.
66
This teaching that anger and its related passions are obstacles to repentance and prayer (Letter 333) appears to be a dim reminiscence of the sayings of Evagrius Ponticus (Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos, ch. 24; 93). See also Sayings of the Desert Fathers, 8.2.
67
Life of Dositheos 6; 7; 9.
68
Life of Dositheos 6.

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Nam, S.H. Christian Perfection in Basilian Monastic Hospitals from the Fourth to Sixth Centuries. Religions 2024, 15, 793. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070793

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Nam SH. Christian Perfection in Basilian Monastic Hospitals from the Fourth to Sixth Centuries. Religions. 2024; 15(7):793. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070793

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Nam, Sung Hyun. 2024. "Christian Perfection in Basilian Monastic Hospitals from the Fourth to Sixth Centuries" Religions 15, no. 7: 793. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070793

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Nam, S. H. (2024). Christian Perfection in Basilian Monastic Hospitals from the Fourth to Sixth Centuries. Religions, 15(7), 793. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070793

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