Saint Anthony of the Desert
Patriarch of Monastic Life
(251-356)
Saint
Anthony was born in the year 251, in Upper Egypt. Hearing at Mass the
words, If you would be perfect, go, sell what you have and give to the
poor, he gave away all his vast possessions — staying only to see that
his sister's education was completed — and retired into the desert. He
then begged an aged hermit to teach him the spiritual life, and he also
visited various solitaries, undertaking to copy the principal virtue of
each.
To
serve God more perfectly, Anthony immured himself in a ruin, building
up the door so that none could enter. Here the devils assaulted him
furiously, appearing as various monsters, and even wounding him
severely; but his courage never failed, and he overcame them all by
confidence in God and by the sign of the cross. One night, while Anthony
was in his solitude, many devils scourged him so terribly that he lay
as if dead. A friend found him in this condition, and believing him dead
carried him home. But when Anthony came to himself he persuaded his
friend to take him back, in spite of his wounds, to his solitude. Here,
prostrate from weakness, he defied the devils, saying, I fear you not;
you cannot separate me from the love of Christ. After more vain assaults
the devils fled, and Christ appeared to Anthony in His glory.
Saint
Anthony's only food was bread and water, which he never tasted before
sunset, and sometimes only once in two, three, or four days. He wore
sackcloth and sheepskin, and he often knelt in prayer from sunset to
sunrise.
His
admirers became so many and so insistent that he was eventually
persuaded to found two monasteries for them and to give them a rule of
life. These were the first monasteries ever to be founded, and Saint
Anthony is, therefore, the father of cenobites of monks. In 311 he went
to Alexandria to take part in the Arian controversy and to comfort those
who were being persecuted by Maximinus. This visit lasted for a few
days only, after which he retired into a solitude even more remote so
that he might cut himself off completely from his admirers. When he was
over ninety, he was commanded by God in a vision to search the desert
for Saint Paul the Hermit. He is said to have survived until the age of a
hundred and five, when he died peacefully in a cave on Mount Kolzim
near the Red Sea. Saint Athanasius, his biographer, says that the mere
knowledge of how Saint Anthony lived is a good guide to virtue.
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