Synopses & Reviews
In his Ascetics, Authority, and the Church in the Age of Jerome and Cassian, first published in 1978, Philip Rousseau presents a survey of asceticism in the western church until about 400, including a selective study of Jerome, and then, moving into the fifth century, a reading of Sulpicius and Cassian. Rousseau explores such societal changes as the eventual triumph of the coenobitic movement and its growing effect within the church, not least on the episcopate. He focuses primarily on the development among ascetics of a certain concept of spiritual authority; on the attraction of that concept for a wider audience; and on its enduring formulation within a literary tradition of great influence.
For this second edition, Rousseau has supplied a new introduction, with extensive bibliographical references, that charts the ways in which scholarship on early Christian asceticism has developed since his compelling and influential original argument.
Review
Selected reviews of the first edition:
"A scholarly, well-documented and extremely interesting work . . . [A] most valuable contribution towards understanding the ascetic movement in late antiquity." -- Journal of Theological Studies
Review
"[A]n exceptionally penetrating exploration of the deeper waters of monasticism: specifically, ideals of ascetic authority circulating in Egypt (the Desert Fathers) and Gaul (Martin, Sulpicius Severus, John Cassian) in the century after Constantine. . . . Ascetics, Authority, and the Church is preeminently a book about literature in its historical setting; a skillful demonstration of how the creation of a written tradition . . . was central to the process of bridging the gap between the charismatic power of the holy man and the settled monastic community, of preserving the essential tradition of spiritual authority through changing patterns of ascetic life." -- Journal of Roman Studies
Review
". . . Rousseau captures an essential turning point in the history of western spirituality and shows how the influence of eastern ideas made the crucial difference." --Classical World
Review
"[T]his work . . . opens new vistas for the study of the ascetics. . . . This is a book that should not only be read; it should be experienced." --Historian
About the Author
Selected reviews of the first edition:
"A scholarly, well-documented and extremely interesting work . . . [A] most valuable contribution towards understanding the ascetic movement in late antiquity." -- Journal of Theological Studies
"[A]n exceptionally penetrating exploration of the deeper waters of monasticism: specifically, ideals of ascetic authority circulating in Egypt (the Desert Fathers) and Gaul (Martin, Sulpicius Severus, John Cassian) in the century after Constantine. . . . Ascetics, Authority, and the Church is preeminently a book about literature in its historical setting; a skillful demonstration of how the creation of a written tradition . . . was central to the process of bridging the gap between the charismatic power of the holy man and the settled monastic community, of preserving the essential tradition of spiritual authority through changing patterns of ascetic life." -- Journal of Roman Studies
". . . Rousseau captures an essential turning point in the history of western spirituality and shows how the influence of eastern ideas made the crucial difference." --Classical World
"[T]his work . . . opens new vistas for the study of the ascetics. . . . This is a book that should not only be read; it should be experienced." --Historian