I haven’t dug so deep as to find the thesis, but I did get a copy of the book, “The Naked Hermit.”
I found it interesting and vindicating.
He goes deeply into literature about naked monks and hermits, living and doing things naked alright. He found about 50 of them, starting with accounts of a naked hermit on the slopes of Mt. Sinai. It seems to have started with the influence of the ancient desert hermits. He did mention figures in the bible and biblical naked practices. The accounts of the desert naked monks, influenced the Celtic monks, which evidenced a whole naked monk culture.
He spent some time each in a huge number of sacred sites, where these guys AND gals used to hang out. For the most part, he just spent a short time at each. He did immerse himself into the naked hermit’s environment, sometimes plunging into a cold ocean, or lake, or spending the night in a cave. I thought too short of an experiment, but he testifies that he had mind blowing experiences, just the same.
These Celtic monks were on a missionary’s duty, to convert the locals and especially the Picts, who most often wandered nude, but for a layer of woad. They all had fearful ideas of nature and the demons interlaced in it. One ploy to conversion was to demonstrate some control over nature by their bad ass God, who would exorcise, for lack of a better word, the problems that the old religion didn’t.
Even so, these people were sitting on a liminal space between the world and the spirit, or divine. Some were waiting for angels to visit with, staying away from speaking to people.
There is abandonment to faith in getting naked in nature, a heightened awareness, a sense of the nature. This falls into fears and being natural and getting in touch with a spiritual sense and compunction and manner. Not everybody does, but to a degree, the experience of nudity in nature, or plunging into wild waters is stimulating and pleasurable. It may not be like being reborn for all, but there is enough to it that baptism started out as a ritualized form of the experience.
These people were living naked to get closer to God. To be of God.To be with God and know of it all.
I mentioned in the “Body Rights/Spiritual Rights” thread how I see my naturism often in the realm of spiritual practice and should be protected under the 1st Amendment. Dang if this book didn’t drive me homer! These monks would be arrested for what they did, if they tried it today. There is much about what they have been doing, that I have been doing for the last dozen years, or so. I’m vindicated by this well researched book. There were varying degrees of practice among the monks and the author discovered his own validation.
So, history has many examples of these practices. There is now a whole different concept of early Christian conversion in the British Isles. I should add that this didn’t happen in the rest of Europe, for reasons that he addresses.
Good read. Nudity has been happening for a very long time, it is good , wholesome, useful AND even sacred.
P.S. Bob has presented an article in the “Clothing can be Unhealthy” thread, about Paganism using a similar tact as these monks to discover spirituality.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9NMXmJ6i0U is an interview with the author in-which he explains what he has done with a goode clarity.
Jbee