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Asceticism

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asceticism (əsĕt`ĭsĭzəm), rejection of bodily pleasures through sustained self-denial and self-mortification, with the objective of strengthening spiritual life. Asceticism has been common in most major world religions, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and Christianity: all of these have special ascetic cults or ascetic ideals. The most common ascetic practice is fasting fasting, partial or temporary abstinence from food, a widely used form of asceticism . Among the stricter Jews the principal fast is the Day of Atonement, or Yom Kippur ; in Islam the faithful fast all the daytime hours of the month of Ramadan .
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, which is used for many purposes—to produce visions, as among the Crow; to mourn the dead, as among various African peoples; and to sharpen spiritual awareness, as among the early Christian saints. More extreme forms have been flagellation (see flagellants flagellants (flăj`ələnts, fləjĕl`ənts)
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) and self-mutilation, usually intended to propitiate or reach accord with a god. Asceticism has been associated with taboo in many non-Western societies and in such well-developed religions as Zoroastrianism and Manichaeism. See Essenes Essenes (ĕs`ēnz), members of a small Jewish religious order, originating in the 2d cent. B.C.
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; fakir fakir (fäkēr`, fā`kər), [Arab.,=poverty], in Islam, usually an initiate in a Sufi order.
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; hermit hermit [Gr.,=desert], one who lives in solitude, especially from ascetic motives. Hermits are known in many cultures. Permanent solitude was common in ancient Christian asceticism ; St. Anthony of Egypt and St. Simeon Stylites were noted hermits.
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; Rechabites Rechabites (rē`kəbīts), in the Bible, a family that practiced asceticism.
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.

Bibliography

See W. J. Sheils, ed., Monks, Hermits and the Ascetic Tradition (1985).


asceticism

Practice of the denial of physical or psychological desires in order to attain a spiritual ideal or goal. Most religions have some features of asceticism. The desire for ritual purity in order to come in contact with the divine, the need for atonement, and the wish to earn merit or gain access to supernatural powers all are reasons for ascetic practice. Christian hermits and monks, wandering Hindu ascetics, and Buddhist monks all reject worldly goods and practice various forms of self-denial, including celibacy, abstinence, and fasting. Members of the Digambara sect of Jainism practice an extreme form of asceticism that includes the rejection of wearing clothes. Though monasticism is rejected in the Qur'an, ascetic movements such as zuhd have arisen in Islam. Zoroastrianism forbids fasting and mortification.


Asceticism
Albigenses
heretical and ascetic Christian sect in France in 12th and 13th centuries. [Christian Hist.: EB, I: 201]
Alexis, St.
patron saint of beggars and hermits. [Christian Hagiog.: Brewer Dictionary, 22]
Anthony, St.
founder of monasticism. [Christian Hagiog.: Attwater, 49]
Béguines
12th-century French mendicant order. [Fr. Hist.: Espy, 98–99]
Cathari
heretical and ascetic Christian sect in Europe in 12th and 13th centuries. [Christian Hist.: EB, II: 639]
Cistercians
Roman Catholic monastic order observing strict asceticism, founded in 1098. [Christian Hist.: EB, II: 948]
Clare, St.
founder of mendicant Order of Poor Glares. [Christian Hagiog.: Hall, 69]
Crazy Ivar
lived in hole on side of river bed. [Am. Lit.: O Pioneers!, Magill I, 663–665]
Diogenes
(412–323 B. C.) despised worldly possessions; made his home in a tub. [Gk. Hist.: Hall, 104]
Fakirs
fanatical mendicant sects found primarily in India. [Asian Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 310]
Franciscans
13th-century religious order whose members lived in poverty. [Christian Hist.: EB, IV: 273]
Gandhi, Mohandas K.
(1869–1948) Indian spiritual leader; embodied Hindu abstemiousness. [Indian Hist.: NCE, 1042]
Jerome, St
. Christian monastic leader who searched for peace as hermit in desert. [Christian Hist.: EB, V: 545]
Manichaean Sabbath
Manichaean observance of Sunday, demanding abstinence from food and sex. [Christian Hist.: EB, VIII: 746]
Paul of Thebes, St
. first Christian hermit; cave-dweller most of life. [Christian Hagiog.: Attwater, 268]
Priscillianism
rigorously ascetic Christian sect found in Europe until the 6th century. [Christian Hist.: EB, VIII: 219]
Stoicism
philosophical school in Greco-Roman antiquity advocating rationality and austerity. [Gk. Hist.: EB, VIII: 746]
Stylites, St. Simeon
Christian monk whose philosophy was so ascetic that he dwelt atop a column to meditate. [Christian Hist.: EB, IX: 216]
Timon of Athens
lost wealth, lived frugally; became misanthropic when deserted by friends. [Br. Lit.: Timon of Athens]
Trappist monks
order with austere lifestyle. [Rom. Cath. Hist.: NCE, 2779]
Waldenses
members of 12th-century French religious movement living in poverty. [Christian Hist.: EB, X: 519]
Xenocrates
temperate philosopher, noted for contempt of wealth. [Gk. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 1169]


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Nothing is easier than to give Christian asceticism a Socialist tinge.
But there is in my nature a strain of asceticism, and I have subjected my flesh each week to a more severe mortification.
But do not think that by praising these I am disparaging the others; all I mean to say is that the penances of those of the present day do not come up to the asceticism and austerity of former times; but it does not follow from this that they are not all worthy; at least I think them so; and at the worst the hypocrite who pretends to be good does less harm than the open sinner.
 
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