Anastasius of Sinai is an indispensable witness to the shifting fortunes of Christians in Syria-Palestine and the greater Levant during the second half of the seventh century. His assumptions concerning the place of Chalcedonian Christian communities under Islamic rule mark a distinct change. In the 630s, for example, Jerusalem's patriarch Sophronius could assure his audience that the Arab armies were God's temporary chastisement, and that repentance would shortly bear the fruit of political liberation.Footnote 1 Anastasius tells a different story. His was a world in which early Islam was not simply a matter of armies but a matter of neighbours as well.Footnote 2 He would encourage prayers for the Islamic caliphate, however begrudging.Footnote 3 This was not the first time, he reminded his audience, that the faithful had been called to learn how to live under such uncomfortable arrangements.Footnote 4 Indeed, Anastasius was keenly concerned to adjudicate this transition, serving as privileged midwife for a nascent Umayyad Christianity.Footnote 5
Anastasius lived a busy life.Footnote 6 Born on Cyprus in the 630s,Footnote 7 his name would become associated with his residency at the Mount Sinai monastery now known as St Catherine's. He enjoyed travel. His stories offer a tour of the eastern Mediterranean from Egypt to Palestine and Syria, and at times beyond.Footnote 8 Anastasius's interests were not confined to the monastery, however; he showed a compassionate (if at times self-important) enthusiasm for the concerns of lay people, particularly evident in his Questions and Answers. He was shrewd in his advice, combining his own biblical exegesis with the rich patristic tradition as well as a substantial amount of medical and scientific speculation.Footnote 9 His anti-Miaphysite writings, moreover, may have served as a how-to guide for middle-brow Chalcedonian Christians who lived as minorities in Syria and Egypt and who showed interest in theological disputation.Footnote 10
Two of Anastasius's collections seem particularly directed to a popular audience: the Questions and Answers and two sets of pious stories, the so-called Tales of the Sinai Fathers and the Edifying Tales.Footnote 11 The Sinai Fathers is an account of monastic life written for monastics and those lay Christians with a special enthusiasm for monks and miracles; the Edifying Tales serves as a sort of rousing pamphlet, promoting and reinforcing Christian religious superiority while tarring the competition. These texts are a treasure trove for the social historian, offering a precious glimpse into the socio-historical world of Levantine Christians under the early Umayyad caliphate. Questions of religious competition and religious neighbourliness are to the fore, combined with matter-of-fact discussions of sex, slavery, plague and money.Footnote 12
Anastasius died around the year 700. The work he left behind, especially his Edifying Tales and Questions and Answers, bears witness to the extraordinary effort he put into a fundamental pastoral project. For Anastasius, in the novel and at times disheartening Umayyad world, Christian identity needed certain simplifications. In these works, Anastasius, quite a capable theologian, downplays sophisticated theology, arguing that Christian identity was a more basic affair, determined by baptism, the eucharist and the sign of the cross.Footnote 13 For Anastasius, these three actions not only warded off the demonic, but they also drew a clear boundary between Muslim and Christian. This was important, as he considered it his pastoral duty to offer uneducated Christians a tangible sense of their own identity (and superiority), in spite of recent political and economic misfortune.Footnote 14
This pastoral concern led Anastasius to search for a discreet and streamlined piety, tacitly acknowledging the relative theological illiteracy of much of his flock. Anastasius expressed caution over what he understood to be the relative ‘weakness of the majority’ of his audience when it came to speculative theology.Footnote 15 Certainly he was willing to address the learned among his fellow Christians, not least in his Hodegos.Footnote 16 However, a late antique pastor needed to use more than one approach.Footnote 17 This demand for pastoral flexibility when it came to a largely uneducated flock was nothing new. As Jack Tannous has shown, many Christian leaders between the fourth and the seventh centuries realized that circumstances required them to make accommodations for the ‘simple believers’ in their congregations.Footnote 18 Moreover, that much of Anastasius's teaching was directed towards lay Christians by means of written questions and answers likewise reflected a venerable Christian practice.Footnote 19 The letter collections of sixth-century figures such as the Gazan monks Barsanuphius and John or the patriarch Severus offer precious glimpses into the religious concerns of lay Christians, both Chalcedonian and non-Chalcedonian.Footnote 20 While Anastasius's Questions and Answers and Edifying Tales owe much to this tradition, he nevertheless radicalized and reshaped this emphasis in response to the pressing concerns which Islam presented to Christian audiences.
Anastasius's ‘ritualistic simplification’ bears witness to an important shift for Umayyad Christians. While he was clearly competent in (and enthusiastic about) intra-Christian Christological disputes, Questions and Answers and Edifying Tales downplay these in an attempt to create and fortify a ritual boundary between Christian and non-Christian. He was concerned with keeping Christians Christian, with the maintenance of Christian identity. Indeed, he laid particular stress on what I call ‘rites of maintenance’, simple actions accessible to the widest variety of lay people, regardless of their theological literacy.
Rites of Passage or Rites of Maintenance?
I have chosen this somewhat clumsy term ‘rites of maintenance’, calling to mind ‘rites of passage’ while at the same time making a key distinction. We associate ‘rites of passage’ with the ground-breaking work of Arnold van Gennep, although his well-known Les Rites de passage (1909) largely failed to attract scholarly attention in the English-speaking world until its elaboration and amplification in the work of Victor Turner.Footnote 21 Both authors emphasize the threefold structure, or three stages, of all rites of passage: the pre-liminal, the liminal and the post-liminal. We might also call these the break, the transition and the final incorporation.Footnote 22
In this line of thinking, the pre-liminal demands a break with the past. Here, for example, we may think of the exorcism preceding baptism. The liminal is a stage marked by openness to transition and contains within itself an inherent and necessary vulnerability. The neophyte is naked, a tabula rasa for the ensuing ritual (van Gennep and Turner both draw our attention to the nakedness of early Christian baptism).Footnote 23 As the final stage, the post-liminal is an incorporation or welcoming into the new community. Here it makes sense to think of rites such as confirmation or chrismation and first communion.
The phrase ‘rites of passage’ presumes a movement from beginning to end; its connotations are those of completion. I wish to contrast this sense of completion with ‘rites of maintenance’ in the thinking of Anastasius.Footnote 24 For him, such rites were key to maintaining differentiation between one community and the other. As Catherine Bell has argued in her discussion of the nature and purpose of ritual, these rites are, among other things, ‘a strategic way of acting’ which effect differentiation between those who perform the rite and those who do not.Footnote 25 She notes that ‘ritualization is the production of this differentiation’ between a host of binaries, marking the body with one identity while denying (or at least ignoring) another.Footnote 26 For Anastasius, ritual not only created difference, it constantly sustained it.
Indeed, in reading Tales and Questions and Answers, it becomes clear that Anastasius was especially concerned with keeping his audience in something akin to van Gennep's notion of the post-liminal, serving as what Turner would call a ‘ritual elder’.Footnote 27 Anastasius was well aware that religious competition in the form of Islam, sorcery or Judaism held the potential to pull Christians away from their post-liminal state back into the ambiguous arena of liminality, making these Christians potential blank slates for alien rites and rituals.Footnote 28 It was ritual, therefore, which Anastasius decided was essential for Christian identity in the Chalcedonian Levant, a distinct shift from his emphasis elsewhere on intra-Christian credal competition.Footnote 29
Ritual as Synecdoche: Basic Christian Actions
Throughout Anastasius's writings, but especially in his Edifying Tales, Christian ritual served as a synecdoche for the faith as a whole. Anastasius tells us, for example, of a certain Theodore the sailor who had renounced the Christian faith. What did such a renunciation entail? Theodore left the faith, Anastasius writes, by ‘renouncing both the cross and baptism’.Footnote 30 We find a more explicit link between ritual and Christian identity, however, in Anastasius's descriptions of Christian interaction with the demonic.Footnote 31 Thus Anastasius tells of one Moses, an on-again, off-again Christian: at times apostate, at times pious. Moses explained the troubles he had when a Christian, namely, demonic harassment. In fact, his demon was looking for a deal; the harassment would cease, the demon told Moses, if he would cease acting like a Christian.
The demon's instructions were straightforward, telling Moses: ‘Do not bow down to Christ and I will let you be. Do not confess him as God and son of God, and I will not hinder you. Do not take communion, and I will not bother you; do not seal yourself [i.e., with the sign of the cross], and I shall be kind to you.’Footnote 32 The stark simplicity of the credal content of Christianity in this story is striking, especially if we compare it to Anastasius's Christological polemics. A basic confession of the deity and sonship of Christ is thus here more concerned with nascent Islam than it was with Miaphysites. The emphasis on the practices of Christianity, that is, the sign of the cross and the eucharist, merits even more attention.
This ritual simplification is quite conspicuous when Anastasius takes his readers into a prison which housed, among others, several sorcerers awaiting trial. He tells us that one particularly forthright sorcerer gave friendly advice to his Christian interlocutor: the would-be interrogator of sorcerers should ‘never do so without having first taken communion and without wearing a cross around your neck [ἐάν μὴ πρότερον κοινωνήσῃς καὶ φορέσῃς σταυρὸν ἐπὶ τοῦ τραχήλου σου]. For indeed my companions are wicked men and wish to do you harm. But if you do as I have told you, neither they nor others will be able to harm you.’Footnote 33 Anastasius later returns his audience to prison, introducing us to another sorcerer who made this confession before his looming execution: ‘My spells never worked against a Christian who had received communion that same day; for the demonic power of sorcery is rendered useless by communion.’Footnote 34
A final example is the most explicit endorsement of the apotropaic power of Christian praxis. Anastasius writes of a certain holy John from Bostra in southern Syria.Footnote 35A local official recruited John to confront four young women, each demonically possessed. Before the exorcism itself, Anastasius describes an idiosyncratic (if not bewildering) interrogation,Footnote 36 including this exchange:
Then the blessed one ended the conversation by asking [the demons] the following: ‘What Christian things do you fear?’ They answered him: ‘Truly there are three important things. One is that which you wear around your necks. Another is that place in which you bathe in the church. Then there is that which you eat in your gathering.’ The slave of God John perceived that they had spoken of the honourable cross and of holy baptism and of holy communion. And then he asked them another question, saying: ‘Which one of these three things do you fear the most?’ They answered him and said: ‘If you guard well that with which you commune among yourselves, it is not possible to harm even one of you Christians.’Footnote 37
These examples, though representative and not exhaustive, lay the foundation for understanding Anastasius's promotion of the very basics of Christian ritual. This notion of ‘ritual maintenance’, however, was part of a larger project which touched on Christian identity in the Umayyad Caliphate (especially Palestine) and centred on frequent lay communion with an eye toward religious competition, in the form of Islam or otherwise.
A Renaissance of Lay Piety: Anastasius and the Eucharist
Anastasius's concern with frequent communion comes at the end of a hundred-year reform movement to that end. As Phil Booth has shown, seventh-century Palestine bears witness to a sustained pastoral effort to redefine ecclesiastical community and to encourage lay participation.Footnote 38 John Moschus and his companion, Sophronius (later patriarch of Jerusalem) began this pastoral effort, constructing a new Chalcedonian literary republic, one notably inclusive of lay piety and optimistic about the potential of Christian society.Footnote 39 Maximus the Confessor worked toward the same end, providing a dense metaphysical coherence to what he argued was a symphony of church, world and sacrament.Footnote 40 This reform movement, in Booth's words, was one primarily of ‘sacramental reorientation’ – a firm emphasis on participation in the church's rites – which marked ‘a seminal shift in emphasis within the Roman East’, one centred now more than ever on ‘sacramental mediation’.Footnote 41 From Moschus to Anastasius, authors centred this vision of the church on lay piety. It was, furthermore, inclusive of monastics who were willing to commune and submit to episcopal authority;Footnote 42 and conspicuously ambiguous about (if not implicitly hostile to) the spiritual relevance of the Roman Empire.Footnote 43 It was a heady and delicate reorientation.
Yet we cannot include Anastasius in this ‘reform movement’ without noticing a striking discontinuity. Booth rightly places the eucharistic focus of Sophronius and John Moschus's Miracles of Cyrus and John, for example, into the context of intra-Christian disputes.Footnote 44 Proper eucharistic piety (and consequent eucharistic miracles) codified boundaries between Chalcedonian and non-Chalcedonian Christians.Footnote 45 This was, in short, a eucharistic practice that bore the weight of continual Christological competition. Anastasius, however, directs his audience to the power of eucharistic piety over against non-Christian communities. Thus, for Anastasius, the power of the eucharist was not simply that it clarified Chalcedonian orthodoxy, but rather that it codified Christian supremacy.
Fundamental to all this was frequent communion, and Anastasius is exemplary in this regard. As for monks, a cohort which included many great teachers often ambiguous about the need for communion, he tells his audience in his Sinai Tales that even severe ascetics who had achieved a sort of bodiless invisibility in this life still sneaked into the church to communicate.Footnote 46 But the Questions and Answers best reveal Anastasius's ardent endorsement of frequent lay communion, along with the disquieting concerns that could keep a lay person from communicating. Two examples are particularly salient:
Question 38: Is it a good thing for somebody who has been in bed with his own wife or who has had nocturnal emission of seed, to wash himself with water and then go straight to church?Footnote 47
Question 40: If somebody involuntarily drinks water when washing out one's mouth or when in the bath, should such a person go to communion or not?Footnote 48
These two examples have corollaries elsewhere in Anastasius's collection.Footnote 49 His pastoral instincts and visceral grasp of the nature of lay piety allow him to address these concerns with creativity (and some degree of playfulness). As for sexual activity and the need to bathe, Anastasius admits that it would be far better for the questioner to bathe himself in tears on account of his wicked capitulation. Yet, given that this rarely occurs, Anastasius suggests that a simple bath will suffice, ‘and then certainly partake of the holy mysteries’.Footnote 50 Moreover, whilst getting water into one's mouth was a technical violation of a pre-eucharistic fast, Anastasius still urges his audience to take communion under these circumstances. Otherwise, he writes, Satan will make it his aim to get a little water into a Christian's mouth on a regular basis, having ‘found the occasion for preventing such a person from taking communion’.Footnote 51 Elsewhere Anastasius allows for the fact that some may communicate daily while others may be wise to abstain for a while on account of their sins.Footnote 52 He proposes, however, that a sinner can bridge the cavern between his own failings and the need to receive communion with acts of almsgiving.Footnote 53
Anastasius's Edifying Tales offer further insight into his thinking on lay concerns and the eucharist. The collection begins with an account which assures his readers that the eucharist remains the eucharist even in the hands of an unholy and tainted priest.Footnote 54 Anastasius recounts a surprising story, moreover, concerning a pious woman who kept a bit of eucharistic bread in her hand after communicating and took it home to ward off a demon, who straight away ran off and disappeared.Footnote 55 What is surprising about this story is not the woman's impulse, for the eucharist's purported apotropaic powers are evident in other late antique Christian texts. Rather, what is surprising is Anastasius's tacit endorsement of her actions; other Christian authorities of late antiquity condemn similar expressions of lay piety without reserve. Jacob of Edessa (c.640–708), for example, provides an exhaustive list of dos and don'ts concerning the eucharist.Footnote 56 His Canons and Questions allow that the eucharist be taken home only for the sick and then only with permission.Footnote 57 Anastasius, however, lets the story stand, prefacing it with the simple observation that this woman's boldness stemmed from an intimate relationship with the divine.Footnote 58
‘Great is the God of the Christians’: Ritual Maintenance and Polemic
We have thus far approached Anastasius in his Tales and Questions and Answers as a man concerned with describing Christians as those who take communion (as well as using other signs and rituals), rather than relying on dense Christological formulae. As such, he was not simply a theologian or exegete, but played the role of what Turner called the ‘ritual elder’, overseeing the communion and community of those who practice the rites he endorsed.Footnote 59 But to what end? If ‘rites of maintenance’ served to differentiate Christians, then clearly there was an ‘other’ from which Christians (in Anastasius's eyes) needed strict differentiation. As we have seen, he was certainly concerned with assuring his audience that these rites offered protection from the demonic.Footnote 60 But his demonology goes further, highlighting the alliance of demons with two distinct groups: ‘Arabs’ or ‘Saracens’ (he does not use ‘Muslim’)Footnote 61 and sorcerers or magicians. In doing so, he betrays his own concern with the state of religious competition in the late seventh-century Levant. For Anastasius, Christianity was, in spite of its veracity, one option among others.Footnote 62
This comes across most clearly in his Edifying Tales, a text with two primary goals.Footnote 63 The first, clearly, was to encourage Christians who found themselves discouraged by their novel status in an Umayyad world. The second was simply to slander the opposition in tabloid-like hit pieces. The target of this slander was very often Islam. In fact, Anastasius ends several Tales with series of exclamations expressing a similar sentiment: the superiority of the Christian faith. These exclamations include: ‘Great is the faith of the Christians’,Footnote 64 ‘Great is the God of the faith of the Christians’Footnote 65 and, simply, ‘Great is the God of the Christians’.Footnote 66 They conclude some of Anastasius's stories like a catchy political slogan or a rhythmic chant or mantra. Acclamations as such, whether political or theological (if we dare distinguish these), were certainly commonplace in the late antique world.Footnote 67 Yet given the context and purpose of Anastasius's Edifying Tales, it seems quite possible that such acclamations were meant to hold a special meaning for an audience probably familiar with another very similar confession: Allāh Akbar, the Islamic Takbir, ‘God is great!’
If so, Anastasius was giving his audience a pithy riposte, something of a Christian shahada.Footnote 68 Ritualization of the tongue and voice would therefore go hand in hand with physical action in tracing the sign of the cross or approaching with hands open to receive the sacred communion meal. To Mary Douglas's assertion that ‘ritual is preeminently a form of communication’Footnote 69 we might respond that many forms of (spoken) communication are likewise pre-eminently a form of ritual. In this light, it is no surprise that the so-called Pact of Umar, however far back we date it, should seek to regulate the ritual soundscape of the Levant, implicitly acknowledging that ritual contagion is not only tangible and visible, but aural as well.Footnote 70 Elsewhere Anastasius describes Christian psalmody as an effective riposte to demonic cacophony.Footnote 71
Returning to the Edifying Tales, we catch Anastasius also emphasizing the thinly veiled alliance between Islam and the demonic.Footnote 72 After describing demonic aversion to the image of the cross, for example, he makes an obvious allusion to other contemporary ‘enemies of the cross’ who seem to pose a pressing problem for his audience.Footnote 73 Such allusions are completely unveiled when we return to John of Bostra, and to his exchange with the demons. John, Anastasius tells us, followed up his first set of questions with a question which served as a complementary opposite: if demons hated the cross, baptism and the eucharist, what sort of religion did they prefer? ‘“That of our companions”, they answered. “And who are they?” John asked. They answered: “Those who have none of what we have just spoken [i.e., the three Christian things – BH]. Those who do not recognize the son of Mary as God or as the Son of God.”’Footnote 74
For Anastasius, then, Islamic identity is something completely negative. ‘Islam’, by this definition, is to be without the cross, baptism and the eucharist, and thus a Muslim is one who lives outside the order of Christian ritual. Likewise, Anastasius presents the credal content of Islam in a completely pessimistic light. Islam, in this account, is a series of negations, a nihilistic un-belief. Of course, Anastasius may have also had in mind the very concrete inscriptions of the Dome of the Rock; he was aware of ‘Abd al-Malik's monumental shrine and very conscious of the anxiety it caused some of the Christian faithful.Footnote 75 But regardless of the role of this architectural novelty in the crafting of such a story, the sharp rhetorical critique remains. Anastasius's demons emphasize simple Christian ritual in contrast to simple Islamic belief (or disbelief, as it were).Footnote 76
Yet Islam was not the only temptation Anastasius's audience faced. We conclude with a brief observation on the place of sorcery or magic in his thinking. The vocabulary in the Edifying Tales includes roles such as φάρμακος (sorcerer / poisoner / magician) or even φάρμακος πρεσβυτέρος (priest-turned-sorcerer), as well as terms relating to the content of their craft such as φαρμακεία (drugs, medicine, poison or witchcraft).Footnote 77 It is beyond the scope of this article to explore concepts of magic and sorcery in the late antique world.Footnote 78 For our purposes, it is sufficient to point out that for Anastasius, to practise sorcery was to engage in an illicit rite, one which risked compromising Christian identity at its very core. Thus his ritual-based approach to maintaining communal boundaries over against Islam paralleled a venerable tradition of Christian polemic against a host of magical practices.Footnote 79
The problem of what we would call sorcery is present in the Edifying Tales and the Questions and Answers.Footnote 80 Other Christian texts from seventh-century Palestine share this concern.Footnote 81 Illicit rites were very much a live option for Anastasius's Christian audience, an old problem which continued alongside novel forms of Islamic piety. His community, like so many others, was very much willing to mix and match rituals, preferring what was effective to that which was strictly canonical. Even his ‘sorcerer-priest’ appears notably creative in his synthesis of disparate rituals.Footnote 82
However, this attraction to non-Christian ritual would have presented an existential problem for someone like Anastasius. If Christian ritual maintained Christian identity, alien rituals would, practically speaking, be tantamount to apostasy. Using van Gennep's categories, we might say that non-Christian rites snatched the participant from their post-liminal state back into the relative fluidity (and vulnerability) of religious liminality. Here one risked becoming again a cultic tabula rasa and a potential candidate for inclusion into some other form of ritual community. As Turner noted, unsanctioned liminal activity is ‘almost everywhere attributed with magico-religious properties’, and is thus ‘regarded as dangerous, inauspicious, or polluting to persons, objects, events and relationships’.Footnote 83 Paradoxically, this blurring of boundaries which Anastasius was so concerned to prevent may well have been the very source of magic's appeal. To combine diverse rites, as Vicky Foskolou has suggested, appeared sophisticated and also held out the promise of being more effective (like visiting several doctors and taking several treatments for the same set of symptoms).Footnote 84
Anastasius of Sinai and the Christians of the Umayyad Levant
Anastasius of Sinai was many things to many people. To the Chalcedonian minorities in Syria and Egypt, he was a fierce promoter of Christological orthodoxy and a thoughtful, if idiosyncratic, theological polemicist. To the monks of Mount Sinai, he was especially a storyteller, a man steeped in the tradition of monastic travelogues and apophthegmata, providing a sort of literary charter for the monks who walked in Moses's footprints. His three homilies on the creation and nature of human beings betray Anastasius as a sophisticated theological communicator, trained to offer an elaborate and nuanced anthropology for those with learned interests.Footnote 85 For many, however, especially perhaps for the Christians of the largely Chalcedonian lands of Palestine, he had another project in mind.Footnote 86
As a ‘ritual elder’ or ‘ritual specialist’, Anastasius sought to offer his audience a simple and coherent form of Christianity consisting of basic credal content combined with familiar rituals which he invested with special significance for their pressing contemporary concerns. As Bell has argued, ritual power, although often tailored by literate specialists, is not primarily concerned with the power and prestige of the specialists themselves. Rather, rituals empower communities as communities.Footnote 87 Here, in Bell's words, ‘ritual does not control; rather, it constitutes a particular dynamic of social empowerment’.Footnote 88 To put it another way, Anastasius was giving his audience tools with which they could build and sustain their own Christian identity as a ritually coherent community. As such, he was surprisingly open to certain charismatic impulses, which were evident, although often condemned, in other pastoral authors.Footnote 89 Certainly his work furthers our understanding of laity in late antique Christian contexts, not as passive recipients of theology, but rather, as Georgia Frank has argued, as ‘religious agents’.Footnote 90
Anastasius's primary concern, then, was to contrast the effective and licit rituals of Christians with the (purportedly) nihilistic confession of Islam and the illicit ritualization of sorcery. In doing so, he provided a straightforward way of being Christian for an audience which included very few theological connoisseurs. In this literature (and in contrast to his other works), Christological formulations – debates on natures, persons, wills and energies – all took a back seat to public, practical and physical acts: truth codified in a democratic simplicity. This is how Anastasius went about making and maintaining Christians in the Umayyad Levant.