. "Asceticism in Judaism"@en . . . . "Asceticism is a term derived from the Greek verb \u1F00\u03C3\u03BA\u03AD\u03C9, meaning \"to practise strenuously,\" \"to exercise.\" Athletes were therefore said to go through ascetic training, and to be ascetics. In this usage the twofold application\u2014to the mode of living and the results attained\u2014which marks the later theological implication of the term is clearly discernible. From the arena of physical contests the word easily passed over to that of spiritual struggles, and pre-Christian writers speak of the \"askesis\" of the soul or of virtue\u2014the discipline of the soul, or the exercise in virtue. But the physical idea, no less than the moral, underlies the meaning of the term in medieval Christian parlance. The monastery, as the place where the required life of abstemiousness is lived under rigorous regulation and"@en . . "Asceticism is a term derived from the Greek verb \u1F00\u03C3\u03BA\u03AD\u03C9, meaning \"to practise strenuously,\" \"to exercise.\" Athletes were therefore said to go through ascetic training, and to be ascetics. In this usage the twofold application\u2014to the mode of living and the results attained\u2014which marks the later theological implication of the term is clearly discernible. From the arena of physical contests the word easily passed over to that of spiritual struggles, and pre-Christian writers speak of the \"askesis\" of the soul or of virtue\u2014the discipline of the soul, or the exercise in virtue. But the physical idea, no less than the moral, underlies the meaning of the term in medieval Christian parlance. The monastery, as the place where the required life of abstemiousness is lived under rigorous regulation and discipline, becomes the \"asketerion,\" a word which to the classical Greek conveyed only the notion of a place reserved for physical exercise; while the monks were the \"ascetikoi,\" the ascetics, under discipline attaining unto the perfect practise."@en .