In furtherance to the above, one of the later Desert Fathers named Abba Evagrius Ponticus (345-399) systematized and harmonized the disparate teachings, sayings and practices of his predecessors into a clear 'system' that became highly influential with later contemplatives. His disciple St. John Cassian was instrumental in the foundation of Western monasticism through his book
The Conferences.
Abba Evagrius' structure of the contemplative life as beginning with the "
purgative", proceeding to the "
illuminative" stage and then concluding with the "
contemplative" proper is the same basic tripartite structure that has been employed by all subsequent contemplatives till the present day.
His system is intriguing for our purposes given that it may have affinities with Buddhist thought.
Consider his teachings on
watchfulness:
"...If there is any monk who wishes to take the measure of some of the more fierce passions so as to gain experience in his monastic art, then let him keep careful watch over his thoughts. Let him observe their intensity, their periods of decline and follow them as they rise and fall. Let him note well the complexity of his thoughts, their periodicity, with the order of their succession and the nature of their associations. Then let him ask from Christ the explanations of these data he has observed..."
Abba Evagrius Ponticus (345-399 AD), Early Christian contemplative & monk, The Praktikos & Chapters on Prayer
A modern Benedictine priest and contemplative explains this practice as follows:
"...After seasons of practice, the fruit is the stillness, inner focus, and recollection of that dimension of human awareness that thinks, chatters, obsesses, and swarms like a plague of gnats...
Saint Augustine speaks of a higher part of the mind reserved for the contemplation of God and a lower part of the mind that reasons. Evagrius Ponticus, a fourth-century monk, is one of a host of contemplative writers to make an important distinction between the calculating, reasoning mind that makes use of concepts in a process we call ratiocination or discursive thought, and that dimension of mind that comes to knowledge directly, without the mediation of concepts. This he later called nous, an intuitive spiritual intelligence. And so when he defines prayer as 'communion of the mind with God,' he means a dimension of our conciousness that runs deeper than the discursive process of ratiocination..."
- Fr Martin Laird, modern Catholic contemplative writer & priest
Could this be similar to "mindfulness"? And were the early Christian monks in the Egyptian desert practising it, partially at least, under indirect influence from Buddhism filtered through the
Therapeutae?