Hilarion

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Hilarion
Hilarion the Great, by Basil II, c.1000 (Vatican Library)
Abbot
BornAD 291
Thabatha, south of Gaza in Syria Palaestina, Roman Empire
DiedAD 371
Province of Cyprus, Roman Empire
Venerated inOriental Orthodox Church
Eastern Orthodox Church
Roman Catholic Church
CanonizedPre-congregation
FeastOctober 21

Hilarion the Great (291–371) was an anchorite who spent most of his life in the desert according to the example of Anthony the Great (c. 251–356). While Anthony is considered to have established Christian monasticism in the Egyptian Desert, Hilarion is considered by some to be the founder of Palestinian monasticism[1] (see also Chariton the Confessor) and venerated as a saint by the Orthodox and the Roman Catholic Church.

Early life[edit]

The chief source of information regarding Hilarion is the biography written by St. Jerome.[2] "The life of Hilarion was written by Jerome in 390 at Bethlehem. Its object was to further the ascetic life to which he was devoted. It contains, amidst much that is legendary, some statements which attach it to genuine history, and is in any case a record of the state of the human mind in the 4th century." [3]

Hilarion was born in Thabatha, south of Gaza in Syria Palaestina of pagan parents. He successfully studied rhetoric with a grammarian in Alexandria.[4] It seems that he was converted to Christianity in Alexandria. After that, he shunned the pleasures of his day—theatre, circus and arena—and spent his time attending church. According to St. Jerome, he was a thin and delicate youth of fragile health.

Beginnings of monastic life[edit]

After hearing of Anthony, whose name, according to Jerome, "was in the mouth of all the races of Egypt", Hilarion, at the age of fifteen, went to live with him in the desert for two months. As Anthony's hermitage in the Nitrian Desert was busy with visitors seeking cures for diseases or demonic affliction, Hilarion returned home along with some monks. At Thabatha, his parents having died in the meantime, he gave his inheritance to his brothers and the poor and left for the wilderness.[2]

Time at Majoma[edit]

"The Temptation of Saint Hilarion", by Octave Tassaert, c.1857 (Montreal Museum of Fine Arts)

Hilarion went to the area southwest of Majoma,[dubious ] the port of Gaza, that was limited by the sea at one side and marshland on the other. Because the district was notorious for brigandage, and his relatives and friends warned him of the danger he was incurring, it was his practice never to abide long in the same place.[3] With him he took only a shirt of coarse linen, a cloak of skins given to him by St. Anthony, and a coarse blanket. He led a nomadic life, and he fasted rigorously, not partaking of his frugal meal until after sunset. He supported himself by weaving baskets.[2]

Hilarion lived a life of hardship and simplicity in the desert, where he also experienced spiritual dryness that included temptations to despair.[5] Beset by carnal thoughts, he fasted even more. He was "so wasted that his bones scarcely held together" (Jerome). According to St. Jerome:

So many were his temptations and so various the snares of demons night and day, that if I wished to relate them, a volume would not suffice. How often when he lay down did naked women appear to him, how often sumptuous feasts when he was hungry! (Jerome, Life of St Hilarion, 7)

He finally built a hut of reeds and sedges at the site of modern-day Deir al-Balah, in which he lived for four years. Afterwards, he constructed a tiny low-ceilinged cell, "a tomb rather than a house",[3] where he slept on a bed of rushes, and recited the Bible or sang hymns. He never washed his clothes, changed them only when they fell apart, and shaved his hair only once a year. He was once visited by robbers, but they left him alone when they learned that he did not fear death (and had nothing worth stealing, anyway).[4]

Saint Jerome described Hilarion's diet as a half a pint of lentils moistened with cold water, and after three years he switched to dry bread with salt and water. Eventually, perceiving his sight to grow dim and his body to be subject to an itching with an unnatural roughness, he added a little oil to this diet.[6]

After Hilarion had lived in the wilderness for 22 years, he became quite famous in Syria Palaestina. Visitors started to come, begging for his help. The parade of petitioners and would-be disciples drove Hilarion to retire to more remote locations, but they followed him everywhere. First he visited Anthony's retreat in Egypt before withdrawing to Sicily, later to Dalmatia, and finally to Cyprus. He died there in 371[7] and was first buried there, but his disciple Hesychas stole the body and buried it in the monastery.[8] His relics continued to be venerated and are also mentioned by the anonymous Piacenza Pilgrim around the year 570.[9]

Miracles[edit]

Miracles were attributed to him.[5] His first miracle was when he cured a woman from Eleutheropolis (a Roman city in Syria Palaestina) who had been barren for 15 years.[7] Later, he cured three children of a fatal illness, healed a paralysed charioteer, and expelled demons.[7]

Monastery[edit]

In time, the Saint Hilarion Monastery grew around his cell, which was so beset by visitors, especially women, that Hilarion fled. Hilarion was buried in the monastery where a big 5th century mosaic and a Greek inscription points to a specific installation of his relics.[citation needed]

Novelization[edit]

Hermann Hesse adapted a biography of St. Hilarion as one of the three Lives of Joseph Knecht, making up his Nobel Prize–winning novel The Glass Bead Game (also known as Magister Ludi).

See also[edit]

  • Chariton the Confessor (end of 3rd century - c. 350), also considered to be the founder of Palestinian monasticism
  • Euthymius the Great (377–473), founder of monasteries in Palestine and saint
  • Paul of Thebes (c. 226/7-c. 341), known as "Paul, the First Hermit", who preceded both Anthony and Chariton
  • Sabbas the Sanctified (439–532), monk and saint, founded several monasteries in Palestine
  • Saint Hilarion Castle in Templos, Cyprus. Known in Turkish as "101 houses" (legends of Cyprus). Named for unconnected obscure saint.
  • Theodosius the Cenobiarch (c. 423–529), a founder of cenobitic monastic life in the Judaean desert

References[edit]

  1. ^ Butler, Edward Cuthbert (1911). "Hilarion, St" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 458.
  2. ^ a b c Kirsch, Johann Peter. "St. Hilarion." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 28 Jan. 2013
  3. ^ a b c Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 6. Edited by Philip Schaff and Henry Wace, translated by W.H. Fremantle, G. Lewis and W.G. Martley. (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1893.) Revised and edited by Kevin Knight
  4. ^ a b Butler, Rev. Alban, The Lives or the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saints, Vol.III
  5. ^ a b Foley O.F.M., Leonard, Saint of the Day: Lives, Lessons, and Feasts, (rev. Pat McCloskey O.F.M.), Franciscan Media
  6. ^ Butler, Alban. (1846). The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs, and Other Principal Saints, Volume 10. Derby. p. 553
  7. ^ a b c "Saint Hilarion", Saint Stories For All Ages, Loyola Press
  8. ^ Erizos (12 September 2017). "E04018: Sozomen in his Ecclesiastical History mentions veneration and miracles at the tombs of *Hilarion (anchorite in Palestine and Cyprus, ob. 371, S00099) in Cyprus and Palestine. Originally buried in Cyprus, his body was stolen and reburied in his monastery in Palestine. Sozomen describes the posthumous veneration of ascetics as common in Palestine, mentioning the 4th c. monks and missionaries *Aurelios (S01700), *Alexion (S01701), and *Alaphion (S01702). Written in Greek at Constantinople, 439/450". figshare. University of Oxford. doi:10.25446/oxford.13841888.v1.
  9. ^ Robert (15 May 2015). "E00506: The Piacenza Pilgrim, in his account of his visit to Gaza (Palestine), mentions the tomb close by of *Hilarion (anchorite in Palestine and Cyprus, ob. 371, S00099). Account of an anonymous pilgrim, written in Latin, probably in Placentia (northern Italy), c. 570". figshare. doi:10.25446/oxford.13748317.v1. Retrieved 5 January 2024.

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