Evagrius Ponticus
345 CE–399 CE · Kellia (Cellia)
Evagrius Ponticus (c. 345–399) was a Greek-speaking monk, theologian, and spiritual writer who became one of the most systematic thinkers of early Christian monasticism. Born in Ibora in the province of Helenopontus, he was ordained lector by Basil the Great and deacon by Gregory of Nazianzus, and served as archdeacon under Gregory of Nazianzus in Constantinople before withdrawing to the Egyptian desert around 382–383. Settling first at Nitria and then at the more remote Kellia (Cellia), he spent the last sixteen years of his life writing and directing disciples, producing a remarkable body of work that mapped the ascetic and contemplative life into the stages of praktike (practical discipline of the passions) and theoria (contemplative knowledge of God). His enumeration of eight principal troubled thoughts — the direct ancestor of the Western Seven Deadly Sins via John Cassian — and his treatise On Prayer shaped the entire subsequent tradition of Christian spirituality, East and West. Evagrius was posthumously condemned at the Second Council of Constantinople (553 CE) for cosmological speculations tied to Origenism, causing many of his works to circulate pseudonymously, though modern scholarship has fully recovered and reassessed his corpus.
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Born c. 345 in Ibora (modern İverönü, Erbaa), a small town in the Roman province of Helenopontus, into a Christian family; his father was a country bishop (chorepiskopos).
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