User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A female anchorite.
Extensive Definition
Anchorite (male)/anchoress (female), (adj.
anchoritic; from the Greek
anachōreō, signifying "to withdraw", "to depart into the rural
countryside"), denotes someone who, for religious reasons,
withdraws from secular society so as to be able to lead an
intensely prayer-oriented, ascetic and, circumstances permitting,
Eucharist-focused
life. As a result, anchorites are usually considered to be a type
of religious hermit,
although there are distinctions in their historical development and
theology.
The anchoritic life is one of the earliest forms
of Christian
monastic living. Popularly it is perhaps best-known from the
surviving archeological and literary evidence of its existence in
medieval England.
In the Roman
Catholic Church today it is one of the "Other
Forms of Consecrated Life" and governed by the same norms as
the consecrated eremitic life (The
Code of Canon Law 1983, canon 603).
Historical development
In medieval times
The anchoritic life became widespread during the early and high Middle Ages. Examples of the dwellings of anchorites and anchoresses survive. They tended to be a simple cell (also called "anchorhold"), built against one of the walls of the local village church. Once the inhabitant had taken up residence, the bishop permanently bricked up the door in a special ceremony.Hearing Mass and
receiving Holy
Communion was possible through a small, shuttered window
("squint") in the common wall facing the sanctuary. There was also
a small window facing the outside world, through which the
inhabitant would receive food and other necessities and, in turn,
could provide spiritual advice and counsel to visitors, as these
men and women gained a reputation for
wisdom. Some anchoresses, however, by knowing everything that
was going on in the village, either by being told or observing it,
gained reputations as being particularly prone to gossip, a perception that was in
keeping with a more general view of women at the time.
Anchorites never left their cell, ate frugal
meals, and spent their days in contemplative prayer. An idea of
their daily routine can be gleaned from an anchoritic Rule known as
Ancrene
Riwle.
One very well known medieval anchoress is
Julian
of Norwich whose writings have left a lasting impression on
Christian spirituality. A church in Norfolk, All Saints'
Church in King's Lynn, still has its original 12th century
Anchorhold, intact and still very much used in the daily worship of
the church.
In Christianity today
In the Roman Catholic Church
When Pope John Paul II revised The Code of Canon Law in 1983 — incorporating changes brought about by the Second Vatican Council — he laid down in canon 603 the norms for the anchoritic life as a form of consecrated life. Thus anchorites who "devote their life to the praise of God and salvation of the world through a stricter separation from the world, the silence of solitude and assiduous prayer and penance", after making a public profession of the three Evangelical counsels (chastity, poverty and obedience) – confirmed by a vow or other sacred bond – in the hands of their diocesan bishop and while observing their plan of life under his direction, as stipulated in canon 603, are now officially recognised by the Catholic Church as living a consecrated life. Concerning the profession of the Evangelical counsels and vows anchorites are therefore in the same position as those monks and nuns that are members of religious orders.Canon 603 speaks of the "eremitic or anchoritic
life" and thereby indicates that, for Church law purposes, it
considers the two terms freely interchangeable; and since Canon law
typically does not discuss the theological aspects of the various
forms of consecrated life, the theological distinction between the
eremitic and anchoritic vocations needs to be deduced from their
respective names and different historical development and, under
the direction of the bishop,
validly re-interpreted in the individual anchorite's own
circumstances.
At the beginning of the 21st century, the
anchoritic life as a distinct vocation has not yet undergone a
revival to the same extent as the
consecrated eremitic life.
Notable Anchorites
Notes
External links
- Historical development
- The Anchorhold at All Saints Church, King's Lynn, Norfolk
- Chapter 1 of The Rule of Saint Benedict re: Anchorites
- The History of Mount Athos During the Byzantine Age
- The Way of an Anchoress
- The Case for an Anchorhold at the Church of St Mary & All Saints in Willingham, Cambridgeshire
- Anchorite Cell at St Luke's Church in Duston
- Marsha, Anchoritic Spirituality in Medieval England: The Form, the Substance, the Rule
- Rotha Mary Clay, The Hermits and Anchorites of England, Chapter VII: Anchorites in Church and Cloister
- Note on the Ancrene Riwle
- Select reading list
- Ancrene Wisse ("eets e-editions")
- Ancrene Wisse, Introduction
- anchorite?
- In the Roman Catholic Church today
- Text of canon 603 of The Code of Canon Law (1983, Latin edition) re: Anchorites as members of the Consecrated Life in the Catholic Church
- Text of canon 603 of The Code of Canon Law (1983, English translation) re: Anchorites as members of the Consecrated Life in the Catholic Church
- Immaculate Heart of Mary's Hermitage
anchoress in Afrikaans: Anachoreet
anchoress in Asturian: Anacoreta
anchoress in Catalan: Anacoreta
anchoress in Czech: Anachoreta
anchoress in German: Anachoret
anchoress in Estonian: Anahoreedid
anchoress in Spanish: Anacoreta
anchoress in Italian: Anacoreta
anchoress in Portuguese: Anacoreta
anchoress in Russian: Анахорет
anchoress in Swedish: Anakoret