8. Monasteries and religious orders

Introduction
Monks and nuns belong to the regular clergy: they‘re clerics who vowed to follow a particular rule governing their lives. Regular clergy is made up of religious orders and congregations that are differentiated by the rules they follow, or by interpretations of the said rules. This matches the Catholic view of this specific way of life. Indeed the Orthodox and Oriental Churches are only familiar with monasticism, which is set in a different framework. As for the Protestant Reformation, it attempted to abolish monastic and religious orders resulting in their near-disappearance from this form of Christianity. Still some monastic communities remain, Lutheran and Anglican ones for instance, and since the nineteenth century, Protestant monastic life monasticism seen a revival, of which the Taizé Community is an example (see module Christianity I p. 8).
Source 1

Plan of Saint-Gall



The plan of Saint Gall (Abbey of Saint Gall, Switzerland) is one of a kind. It was drawn in the scriptorium of Reichenau Abbey (Germany) during the 9th century, and was dedicated to the Abbot of the Saint Gall monastery, where the document has remained ever since.

This plan is an ideal vision: the monastery it depicts was never built. Nonetheless, it provides invaluable information on everyday life in the Middle Ages and on the role of a monastery in those times.

Legend:

Abbey church:
A. Great altar
B. Altar of Saint Paul
C. Altar of Saint Peter
D. Nave
E. Paradise
F. Towers

Monastic buildings:
G. Cloister
H. Warming room, with the dormitory upstairs
I. Necessarium
J. House of the abbot
K. Refectory
L. Kitchen
M. Bakery and brewery
N. Cellar
O. Parlor

P1. Scriptorium and library
P2. Sacristy
Q. House of the Novices:
1. chapel;
2. refectory;
3. warming room;
4. dormitory;
5. Bedroom of the master;
6. bedrooms.
R. Infirmary: 1-6 see above, as in “House of the novices”
S. House of the physician
T. Medicinal garden
U. House of bloodletting
V. School
W. Rooms of the schoolmaster
X1. Mansion for the distinguished guests
X2. Mansion for the poor
Y. Mansion for the visiting monks

Work area:
Z. Factory
a. Threshing floor
b. Workshop
c. Mills
d. Kiln
e. Stable for the horses
f. Stable for the oxen
g. Stable for the goats
h. Pigsty
i. Sheepfold
k. Dormitories of the lay brothers (workers and servants)
l. House of the gardener
m. Henhouse
n. House of the poultry keeper
o. Garden
q. Bakery for the sacramental
s. Kitchens
t. Bath

Modern copy of the original plan. Wikimedia Commons.
Usable under the conditions of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
Public domain Image under URL: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:St_gall_plan.jpg (08/12/2014)

Source 2

Bull Solet annuere (Regula bullata)

The bull Solet annuere is the confirmation by Pope Honorius III (1216-1227) of Francis of Assisi's rule, known because of this as Regula bullata (rule approved by a bull). Such a confirmation was necessary since this rule has been created ex nihilo and does not lean on a reworked or adapted preexisting rule. The insistence on hierarchical control, the allegiance to Rome, and the non-intrusive nature of the Franciscans’ work has to do with the desire to avoid accusations of heresy. This rule outlines the order's main characteristics: absolute poverty and preaching.

1. The Rule and life of the Friars Minor is this, namely, to observe the Holy Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ, by living in obedience, without anything of one's own, and in chastity.
Friar Francis promises obedience and reverence to the Lord Pope Honorius and his canonically elected successors, and to the Roman Church; and the other friars are bound to obey Friar Francis and his successors.
2. If any would desire to adopt this life and would come to our brothers, let them send them to their Ministers provincial, to whom alone, and not to others, is the permission to receive friars conceded. Let the ministers indeed examine them diligently concerning the Catholic Faith and the sacraments of the Church […]. And let all the friars wear cheep clothing and be able to patch these with sack-cloth and other pieces with the blessing of God. I warn and exhort them, not to despise nor judge men, whom they see clothed with soft and colored clothes, using danty food and drink, but rather let each one judge and despise his very self […].
6. Let the Friars appropriate nothing for themselves, neither house nor place, nor any thing. And as pilgrims and exiles in this age let them go about for alms confidently, as ones serving the Lord in poverty and humility, nor is it proper that they be ashamed [to do so], since the Lord made Himself poor in this world for us. This is that loftiness of most high poverty, which has established you, my most dear Friars, as heirs and kings of the Kingdom of Heaven, making you poor in things, it has raised you high in virtues. Let this be your "portion", which leads you "into the land of the living". Cleaving totally to this, most beloved Friars, may you want to have nothing other under heaven in perpetuity, for the [sake of] the Name of Our Lord Jesus Christ […].
9. Let the friars not preach in the diocese of any bishop, when he has spoken against their [preaching]. And let no friar at all dare preach to the people, unless he will have been examined by the minister general of this fraternity and approved, and there be conceded to him by the same the office of preaching.
I also warn and exhort these same friars, that in preaching, that they do, their expressions be considered and chaste, for [sake of] the utility and edification of the people, by announcing to them vices and virtues, punishment and glory with brevity of speech […].
12. Let whoever of the friars who by divine inspiration wants to go among the saracens and other infidels seek permission for that reason from thier minister provincial. Indeed the ministers are to grant permission to go to none, except those whom seems to be fit to be sent.
For which sake I enjoin the ministers by obedience, to seek from the Lord Pope one of the cardinals of the Roman Church, who is to be the govenor, protector, and corrector of this fraternity, so that always subject and prostrate at the feet of this same Holy Church, stable in the Catholic Faith we may observe, what we have firmly promised: the poverty and humility and the Holy Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Bull Solet Annuere (Regula bullata) (1223)
https://franciscan-archive.org/patriarcha/opera/regula-e.html (08/12/2014)

Source 3

The foundation of Lavra

The document is an hagiography excerpt, i.e. a book that intents on showing the holiness of the person whose life story is being told. It’s here about Athanasius the Athonite, founder of the Great Lavra monastery. Before the founding of this monastery, Mount Athos was mainly a place where hermits lived: Athanasius indeed first goes there to pursue this kind of life. The founding of Great Lavra completely changes the face of what has since been known as the "holy mountain." Athanasius follows the example of the Lavra. So he builds a monastery where the monks will be able to lead a cenobitic life. It’s also complemented with monastic cells placed some way away from the monastery, and meant for those who are deemed worthy of leading a hermit's life. Athanasius' work extends beyond self-sufficiency: the idea is to clear trade surpluses and sell them to income generate the revenue necessary for the monastery to function. The construction early on of dependencies: the metochia (singular: metochion) is evidence of the monastery’s influence.

24. [Many disciples join Athanasius who has started to build a monastery]
25. With their assistance and their work, and with the help of the heavenly strength called by the prayers of Athanasius, a church was built, the finest that is, arranged in a cross shape and dedicated to our Most Holy Lady, the Mother of the Lord; it was flanked on either side by two small domed churches adapted to what suits oratories, one being dedicated to the Holy Forty Martyrs, the other one to Nicholas the Wonder-Worker [...]. After that, he began the constructions which he first had in mind: he built cells that were arranged in square around the church — in the middle of the cells placed side by side stood the church, like a overseeing eye. Then he prepared a refectory with twenty white marble tables for twelve guests each. He then founded an infirmary, a hotel and a bath for the sick.
The Lavra lacked water [...]. He undertook the digging of the ground and pierced the high and steep places, put pipes in ditches and brought a torrent of water from various locations to the monastery; he distributed it to the needs of different diaconiai [= services in the monasteries], made it flow to the cells and provided water to the different parts of the Lavra. Through pipes, he brought water to two mills with a reach, so fruit trees were well watered, the gardens irrigated, laundries for the brothers’ clothes filled and we could draw water for the animals.
It is not possible to speak in detail of all that concerns the other service buildings and churches, the planting of vines and trees, the construction of places of eremitism and cells for those living in the metochia of the mountain, making berthing areas in the port and all his other works [...].
26. After that, he began to establish rules and ecclesiastical arrangements for the proper ordering of the service of the soul, and how hymns to God should be sung following the passing of the hours of day and night.

Life of Saint Athanasius the Athonite, ed. L. Petit, Analecta Bollandiana 25 (1906), p. 31 sq..