Ascetism: an endangered value? Mutations of ascetism in contemporary monasticism

Authors

  • Isabelle Jonveaux University of Graz

Keywords:

Asceticism, Body, Human, Monasticism and religious orders, Self-actualization, Christianity, Food, Fasting, Monks, Salvation, Suffering, Religious change

Abstract

This article seeks to understand the shifts which are affecting monastic asceticism in modern society. Is monastic asceticism really changing and in which terms? Why has the place of the body in religious virtuosity changed? As religious virtuosity is based on ascetic practices, we cannot consider that monastic life nowadays has totally eschewed asceticism. So we have to understand the new sense given to this traditional religious practice. It seems that both asceticism and the place of the body in monastic life are changing. Rather than a decline of asceticism, it is more accurate to say that its meaning is being redefined and it becomes more intellectual than physical. At the same time, the body acquires a new position: from mortification to self-fulfilment, it becomes a new ally—and no longer an enemy—of monastic life. So, is asceticism an endangered value? Yes, in the sense that it is no longer a religious value, as was proved by monks who said they are not ascetics, or the nun who said that her community lives a ‘non-ascetic asceticism’. However this does not mean that it has disappeared. The practice of asceticism is necessary to religious virtuosity, but the way to practise it and to define it has been changing, and this is contingent on other evolutions of the religious system and of society. The new kind of asceticism which monks are living nowadays is mainly intellectual asceticism. 
Section
Articles

Published

2011-01-01

How to Cite

Jonveaux, I. (2011). Ascetism: an endangered value? Mutations of ascetism in contemporary monasticism. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 23, 186–196. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67386