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  • Stylites - The Pillar Saints

    • 29 Nov 2011
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      "St. Simon Stylites" and  "Pillars of Heaven" by Vaclav Vaca

     

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    Illustration to Tennyson's "St. Simeon Stylites" by W. E. F. Britten
    "And yet I know not well,
    For that the evil ones come here, and say,
    'Fall down, O Simeon; thou hast suffered long
    For ages and for ages!'"

     

    "Stylites (from Greek stylos, "pillar") or Pillar-Saints are a type of Christian ascetic who in the early days of the Byzantine Empire stood on pillars preaching, fasting and praying. They believed that the mortification of their bodies would help ensure the salvation of their souls. The first stylite was probably Simeon Stylites the Elder who climbed on a pillar in Syria in 423 and remained there until his death 37 years later.   via en.wikipedia.org

    Simeon was a shepherd until he was 13, when he began to work as a servant at a monastery. Well-loved, he entered a stricter monastery, where he outfasted his brothers. Simeon was expelled from the monastery for excesses. He lived on Mt. Teleanissæ until 423, when he set up his first 9-foot pillar. His ascetical feat drew such attention that he later erected pillars of 12 and 20 feets to escape the crowds who came, twice daily, to hear him preach. At the end of his life (495), he lived on a pillar 60 feet high and 6 feet wide."   The Ecole Glossary

     

     

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  • Katskhi Pillar – Stairway to Heaven

    • 29 Nov 2011
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    "In central Georgia’s Imereti region about 7 miles from the mining town of Chiatura there is an imposing 130 foot rock pillar called Katskhi that has been venerated since ancient times.  

    In pagan times Katskhi Pillar was thought to represent a local god of fertility. With the arrival of Christianity in the 4th century, it became a place of seclusion and asceticism.

    A church was first built atop the rock between the 6th and 8th centuries — no one knows exactly how or why.

    It is not known how the pagans who built the temple carried the materials up the steep pillar without large cranes that are used today.

    The church is currently being restored with the help of brave volunteers who carry vital materials up the steep ladder.

    Father Maxim, 55, who has lived in the church for 18 years, says he dreamed of living there as a child.

    ‘Since I was a child I dreamed of settling on the top of this pillar as other hermits did in ancient times,’ ...  ‘When I came here with my friends I envied the monk who had lived there long ago – now I am here too I am happy.’

    via dailypicksandflicks.com

     

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