Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Desert Fathers as Spiritual Explorers
The Desert Fathers as Spiritual Explorers
Feb 11, 2026 8:42 AM

Coptic icon of St. Anthony the Great and St. Paul of Thebes

Earlier today, Dwight Gibson, Acton’s Director of Program Outreach, gave a presentation for the Acton Lecture Series on “The New Explorers.” While in the nineteenth century being an explorer was a vocation, the twentieth century saw a certain stagnation; geographically, at least, most of the exploring was finished. Furthermore, mon mindset was changed from the hope of what could be discovered, on all frontiers, to the idea that now we know so much—to the point that today it can sometimes be politically incorrect to admit one’s ignorance about anything.

This is not to say that there was no exploration in the twentieth century or, furthermore, that there is none today. Rather, being an explorer—with a broader definition of that word—is still a valuable vocation. As distinct from a consultant, explorers are people who help others get from point A to point B when there is no known and established process for doing so. They are rare people and naturally gifted to take the risks necessary to blaze new trails for others to follow with ease. Listening to the lecture today, it occurred to me, as a student of Church history, that while this is a needed perspective for the future, it is also a helpful hermeneutic for the past.

Specifically, I thought of the desert fathers (and mothers). In the late third and early fourth century, there was a bizarre and fascinating movement in the Church where people would abandon all that they had and go to the most uninhabitable place on Earth (the desert) in order to dedicate their lives to what I would call spiritual exploration. (I doubt I’m the first to think of them in this way.)

As someone who loves early Christian literature, I often find (to my naive surprise) that not everyone else is as excited about reading ancient texts as I am. The Sayings of the Desert Fathers are no exception. They can be disheartening if read from the wrong perspective. Many of the monks and nuns seem rather extreme (to put it lightly): sleeping only a few hours a night, fasting for days, acting like fools so as to attract the scorn of others and teach themselves humility, and so on. What is there about this that has any relevance for the average, twenty-first century Christian?

Answering that question, in my opinion, requires viewing the desert fathers in the same way Dwight Gibson characterizes explorers. For example, one might ask the question, “How can people who struggle with anger e it?” If point A is struggling with anger and point B is ing anger, the desert fathers basically conducted experiments to determine how to get from point A to point B when the path was often unknown at the time. It is not always the specifics of what is said or done that is the most important piece of wisdom to be gleaned. Indeed, St. John Cassian is known for observing that, while there was no constant of the fathers regarding what to fast from, when to fast, or how long to fast, the one consistent rule was to try to always leave a little bit of hunger after every meal. Is this a realistic rule for Christian fasting today? I think so. Through taking exploratory risks, the desert fathers were able to discover a very practical way to fast. Or, to put it another way, through setting out into the unknown, they blazed a trail that others can follow parative ease.

With this sort of mindset (the same, I might add, of St. John Cassian)—always looking to find the trail that was blazed, rather than idealizing every effort that went into blazing it—the Sayings of Desert Fathers e, in my opinion, a much less intimidating and more spiritually enriching reading experience.

Be on the lookout for video of Dwight Gibson’s Acton Lecture Series presentation and for ways in which the vocation of exploration has (and has had) a vital place in our world.

For an excellent introduction to the Sayings of the Desert Fathers, I highly mend Desert Wisdom: Sayings from the Desert Fathers by Yushi Nomura (with an introduction by Henri Nouwen).

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The consuming self as tyrant
“Consumerism is, quite precisely, the consuming of life by the things consumed. It is living in a manner that is measured by having rather than being.” -Richard John Neuhaus In a free economy, we each serve distinct roles as both producers and consumers. As producers, we create and serve, leveraging the work of our hands to meet the needs of our neighbors. As consumers, however, we look to ourselves and our own needs. Consumption is good and necessary thing, but...
5 Facts about the 9/11 aftermath
Today marks the 16th anniversary of the worst terrorist attack ever on American soil. Here are five facts you should know about what happened in the aftermath of the events on September 11, 2001: 1. It took 99 days—until December 19, 2001—for thefires at Ground Zeroto be extinguished.Cleanup at Ground Zero wasn’t pleted until May 30, 2002. It took 3.1 million hours of labor to clean up 1.8 million tons of debris at a total cost of cleanup of $750...
Acton economist: Too much grandstanding on price gouging issue
In the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey, which made its initial landfall on the Texas Gulf Coast in late August, many are questioning whether price-gougers acted immorally when ratcheting up the prices of their goods. Now that Hurricane Irma is tearing through Florida and the Southeast, people are once again questioning the motivations behind heightened prices. Acton affiliate scholar Victor Claar, who teaches economics at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers, points out in a Detroit News opinion piece that...
7 Figures: Income and poverty in the U.S.
The U.S. Census Bureau released its latest report on e and poverty in the United States today. Here are seven figures from the report you should know about: 1. Real median household e increased 3.2 percent between 2015 and 2016—from $ 57,230 to $59,039. (This figure surpasses the previous high reached in 1999.) 2. Real median es in 2016 for family households ($75,062) and nonfamily households ($35,761) increased 2.7 percent and 4.5 percent, respectively, from their 2015 medians. (This is...
The monopoly markup
Note: This is post #48 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. Ever wonder why pharmaceuticals are so expensive? In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Alex Tabarrok shows how low elasticity of demand results in monopoly markups. This is especially the case with goods that involve the “you can’t take it with you” effect (for example, people with serious medical conditions are relatively insensitive to the price of life-saving drugs) and the “other people’s money” effect (if third...
The archbishop of Canterbury eyes a ‘broken’ economy
Defending the free market and advocating for ever-greater access to capital is of paramount importance during uneven economic patches. That is how Christians should ments from Justin Welby, the archbishop of Canterbury, who recently said that the economy is “broken.” The archbishop cited familiar economic data of unequal economic growth, youth hopelessness, and questions about wage stagnation. Many of these are part of a ing report from the IPPR’s Commission on Economic Justice, of which he is a member. But...
A holistic view of Christian vocation
In a society where personal identity is conveyed by one’s job title, it is of little wonder that the nation’s youth are so anxious about career choice. But what if your identity is found in Christ? What if living vocationally has nothing to do with finding the “perfect” career? ...
Missiles, threats and sanctions: How should the United States respond to North Korea?
The North Korean people are not the same as the North Korean regime. Photo: “Pyongyang, North Korea” by (stephan) (CC BY-SA 2.0) Today the United Nations Security Council will meet and vote on a resolution to impose new restrictions on North Korea. This resolution is a direct response to recent North Korean missile activity and threats from Kim Jong Un. On July 4, North Korea tested an intercontinental ballistic missile and claimed it could hit any nation on Earth and...
Upstream: A Conversation on Artist Renee Radell
On the Upstream segment of this week’s Radio Free Acton podcast, I discuss the visual art of Renee Radell with Gregory Wolfe. Radell’s work is the subject of Renee Radell: Web of Circumstance (Predmore Press, 2016, 220 pages, $80), a book presenting a career overview of her artistic efforts. In his review of Web of Circumstance for The University Bookman, Wolfe – founder and editor of Image magazine – determines the panying text by Eleanor Heartney superficial in contrast to...
Erasing the cross: Public vs. private sector
The European discount grocery chain Lidl stirred controversy by removing the cross from its products’ labels, so as not to give offense. Eagle-eyed consumers noticed that Eirdanous, its Greek food line, featured a picture of a blue-domed Greek Orthodox Church by the sea – but unlike every other such church, its cupola was not topped by a cross. pany Photoshopped the symbol of Christ’s victory over death and Hell off of the Anastasi(in Greek, literally, “resurrection”) Church inSantorini. Perhaps to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved