eremitic in English

adjective

of a hermit, of a recluse

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "eremitic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "eremitic", or refer to the context using the word "eremitic" in the English Dictionary.

1. 4 synonyms for Anchoritic: hermitic, hermitical, eremitic, eremitical

2. Anchoritic: 1 adj characterized by ascetic solitude Synonyms: eremitic , eremitical , hermitic , hermitical unworldly not concerned with the temporal world or swayed by mundane considerations

3. Whereas the eremitic monks ("hermits") lived alone in a monastery consisting of merely a hut or cave ("cell"), the Cenobitic monks ("cenobites") lived together in monasteries comprising one …

4. The Anchoritic life is one of the earliest forms of Christian monasticism.In the Catholic Church today, it is one of the "Other Forms of Consecrated Life" and governed by the same norms as the consecrated eremitic life

5. Cenobitic (also spelled coenobitic) is the name associated with the monastic tradition that emphases regulated community life, that is, in which the monks live together under a set of rules established by the ruling abbot. The opposite style of monasticism is called eremitic, in …

6. Often in the West, the community belongs to a religious order and the life of the Cenobitic monk is regulated by a religious rule, a collection of precepts.The older style of monasticism, to live as a hermit, is called eremitic; and a third form of monasticism, found primarily in the East, is the skete.

7. Cenobitic (also spelled coenobitic) is the name associated with the monastic tradition that emphases regulated community life, that is, in which the monks live together under a set of rules established by the ruling abbot. The opposite style of monasticism is called eremitic, in which monks live in isolation as hermits.

8. The Second Vatican Council acknowledged and affirmed this ancient form of consecrated life and it is described in the 1983 Code of Canon Law in this way: ‘In addition to the institutes of consecrated life, the Church recognizes the eremitic or Anchoritic life by which the Christian faithful devote their life to the praise of God and the

9. Thus we find throughout the whole of the ancient Christian East a universal cenobitic tradition, distinct from the eremitic tradition; cenobitism has its own raison d'�tre without further eremitical implications, and this due to the very reality of the fraternal communion which it incarnates and realizes. Seen in this light the abbatial function is necessary for fostering and preserving this communion.

10. Thus we find throughout the whole of the ancient Christian East a universal cenobitic tradition, distinct from the eremitic tradition; cenobitism has its own raison d'être without further eremitical implications, and this due to the very reality of the fraternal communion which it incarnates and realizes. Seen in this light the abbatial function is necessary for fostering and preserving this communion.