Showing posts with label Cistercians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cistercians. Show all posts

Tuesday 22 April 2014

Glencairn Abbey - RTE player

Cistercians,

A year in the life of the inhabitants of St Mary's Abbey, Glencairn, Co Waterford, which is Ireland's only women's Cistercian Monastery.
http://www.rte.ie/player/gb/show/10275320/ 

 Would You Believe? Special: School Of Love



Would You Believe? Special: ... 

Fw: St. Mary's Abbey Glencairn News         

On Saturday, 12 April 2014, 
Andy ...> wrote:
Hi Donald,...
I presume that you get a copy of this newsletter sent to you - but in case you don't I thought I should copy it to you.
I have managed to download the RTE in player and will be able to view this programme. 
 Hope you can.
God bless
Andy
On Friday, 11 April 2014, 
St Mary's Abbey Glencairn - News <www.frequency.ie@gmail.com> wrote:

St Mary's Abbey Glencairn News

Posted: 10 Apr 2014 07:12 AM PDT
This Easter Sunday RTÉ’s Would You Believe? School of Love goes behind the scenes into Ireland’s only women’s Cistercian Monastery.  For the past year, RTE’s Would You Believe? team have been given special access to monastic life at Glencairn in order to produce this one hour special documentary to be broadcast on Easter Sunday.  With unique footage of the early steps and special moments in the monastic journey of Dublin woman Angela Finegan and other members, together with interviews with some of the professed sisters of the community against the backdrop of the seasonal changes of the Abbey’s beautiful natural surroundings, School of Love gives unprecedented television coverage of contemporary Cistercian life for women at St Mary’s Abbey, Glencairn. We hope that viewers will enjoy this opportunity to gain insights into a life that brings us such joy and challenge, as we Cistercians endeavour to learn, in this School of Love, the paths of the Lord together as a monastic community.  RTE Press Release: On Easter Sunday, in School of Love, RTÉ’s Would You Believe? spends a year behind the scenes in Ireland’s only women’s Cistercian Monastery. Nestled in the lush valley of the Blackwater, in Co Waterford, the nuns of St Mary’s Abbey, Glencairn, dedicate themselves to a way of life first laid down by St Benedict in the 6th Century. It is a life of silence, solitude and prayer. Each day of their monastic life, they rise at 3.45am and gather to sing the Lord’s praises and to keep vigil with all those who wake during the night in fear, or sadness or pain. It is the first of seven prayer ceremonies which end after sunset and Sr Fiachra, a former horticulturalist, says of the early start, ‘it is in the darkest hour of the night, at 4am, that people wake and worry about their troubles. So, that’s why I’m on my feet praying for all the people that are suffering, whatever it is that they are suffering, so that they will feel God s presence and comfort in that trauma.’ Sr Sarah, Director of Vocations, is in charge of promoting vocations. She also runs the Abbey’s website and organises regular ‘Monastic Experience Weekends.’ They are well attended and have led to a number of new postulants. One Dublin woman, Angela, an IT specialist with qualifications in science and social work, came for a weekend, stayed and is now thinking of taking her vows and joining the order. The film follows her journey throughout the year as she faces a life-changing decision. It would be a unique television experience to witness a postulant receiving the veil in a ‘Monastic Initiation Ceremony,’ but that is the choice that Angela will make during the course of the documentary. St Mary’s Abbey is a busy and happy place. The nuns work as a community, surviving by their own labour and running a number of businesses: Communion host production, greetings card printing, farming and cleaning, maintaining and restoring their large and demanding collection of buildings. They possess a wide range of skills and are hugely self-sufficient. Most of all, though, they are a happy and caring community. They live a monastic life in a monastery which, in St Bernard’s phrase, is a ‘school of love’. The women, who include a former Central Banker, an IT specialist, a radio producer, a farmer and a midwife, are committed to a way of life that is counter-cultural in the contemporary world. And yet, they believe their chosen life is the best contribution they can make to that world. Join us for a unique insight into their challenging, but uplifting, way of life. You can watch this programme on RTE 1 on Easter Sunday, 20th April 2014 at 10:30pm.  You can also watch Would You Believe?  School of Love online at: http://www.rte.ie/player/ie/ Photo: RTE’s Would You Believe? Camera-woman Úna Farrelly filming the sisters in choir  

============
 RTE News 
Fw: from Anne Marie    
On Monday, 21 April 2014, 8
Anne Marie ...> wrote:
This is the link to the programme about Glencairn.

http://www.rte.ie/player/gb/live/7/

We were able to watch this on the IPad with an app for watching the Irish television.
I presume someone would have recorded it for you but if you know someone nearby with an IPad asked them to come and visit so that you can watch it.
They need to download the RTE app they would find it on the App Store or just google it.
and they would find it.
Without the App you cannot see it.
It is a lovely programme.

Anne Marie

Sunday 26 January 2014

Saints Robert, Alberic and Stephen - Fathers of Cistercian Monks and Nuns


Saints Robert, Alberic and Stephen, Cistercian Founders 
PictureSolemnity:  
Gospel Matthew 4:12-23.
Homily by Fr. Aelred.

Robert, Alberic, Stephen (A)
1. Today’s  Gospel (Third Sunday in Ordinary Time) gives us an account at the calling of Christ’s first four disciples. They were called and they immediately followed Jesus, leaving behind nets, boats, and parents. These are models for disciples of all times. For the genuine disciple does not merely say. ‘Lord, Lord’, but also does the will of the Father as taught by Jesus.

2. Today we honour these other disciples who also let all when they heard the call of Christ. Sts Robert, Alberic and Stephen, the Founders of the Cistercian Order. Monastic history shows that periodic reforms are normal and necessary. This happened in the French Benedictine abbey of Molesme in 1098 when Abbot Robert  and a group of followers seceded from Molesme. They were looking to distance themselves from the many entanglements and comforts of feudal society and live in greater seclusion and poverty. Above all they were seeking to live according to the Rule of St. Benedict with greater fidelity, as they had promised when they made their monastic vows. They founded the new monastery of Citeaux.

3. Pressure was soon put upon Abbot Robert to return to his former monastery of Molesme. After his departure the community elected Alberic. Alberic was Abbot for ten years and maintained a tranquil atmosphere at the new monastery. But the community lived in considerable material poverty and recruits were slow in coming.

4. After the death of Alberic the monks elected Stephen Harding, an Englishman, as Abbot. Stephen had many gifts of scholarship and practical organisation. His engaging personality attracted numerous disciples. Among them, in 1113, was the future Saint Bernard, accompanied by a large retinue of relations and friends. The new monastic order now rapidly expanded throughout Europe and beyond fostering a spiritual renewal of the Church.

5. This brief sketch of Cistercian origins shows how three men heard the call of Christ to follow Him in a particular monastic way of life, in a more intense life of prayer. But it would be wrong to see monks as having a different aim in life to other Christians. The aim of all, lay and monastic, is to arrive at that fullness of charity St Paul speaks of in 1st Corinthians 13, ‘Love is patient’ and so on. 

6. Speaking about this primacy of love, a monk of the Eastern Church gave this advice to his fellow monks: ‘Console the distressed, and do not make you longing for prayer a pretext for turning away from anyone who asks for your help, for love is greater than prayer.’ So the desire for prayer and closer union with God in our lives should never be used as an excuse to sever contact with those in need, ‘for love is greater than prayer’.




Saturday 26 October 2013

Monastic life at Nunraw Abbey 2 - Abbot Mark


FRIDAY OCTOBER 4 2013
SCOTTISH CATHOLIC OBSERVER
REFLECTION
Roots are the firm foundation for our lives,
and for our Faith.
ABBOT MARK CAIRA of NUNRAW writes
in this week’s SCO spirituality
section.

The New Abbey, construction 1952-1970

Roots
It’s common enough nowadays to want to go back to our family roots, to see where we came from.  We need to feel that we belong to someone or we like to become identified with something.   We want to get to the truth of our history.  So much of what we believe about ourselves and our past may have become oversimplified and maybe distorted.  The truth can often be more interesting than what we first believed.  It would be surprising if some of our personal history or anything that we are associated with did not have a degree of fiction about it.  However, we are told that the truth will set us free.  To be someone we don’t have to be larger than life, like some of the mega stars in today’s world.

Beginnings
Like all religious Orders, Cistercians have been looking at their early history.  Contrary to a popular belief, St Bernard was not their founder.  That popular assumption may have arisen because Bernard wrote so much about the life and times of the Order, or perhaps from the influence he undoubtedly had in his own lifetime.  Before he appeared on the scene, it was a small group of monks who founded the monastery of Cîteaux in 1098 in northern France. This was the seed that grew into the Cistercian Order.

This little band of monks was led by Sts Robert, Alberic and Stephen Harding, an Englishman.  Each one of them no doubt had their own strengths and weaknesses of personality.  But together they put down their roots in the wooded area of Cîteaux.  There they set about creating a suitable environment in which they could continue their search for God.  There are different reasons given as to why they left their monastery to make this new foundation.  The one that lies nearest the truth is that they wanted to live the Rule of St Benedict more strictly according to what they believed St Benedict intended when he wrote his rule for monks in the sixth century.
It used to be claimed that these first Cistercians were reacting against a decadent monasticism.  That is far from the truth.  The eleventh and twelfth centuries were periods of enormous change in Church and society.  People were being challenged with new ideas and ways of doing things.  There were obvious risks involved but peoples’ lives did become more meaningful.
In the Church itself at this time, men and women were being drawn by charismatic and holy figures who were setting up new forms of community life.  What they were offering was different from what went before. This upsurge of interest threw up new forms of monastic life some of which still exist today.  Perhaps the best known of these are the Carthusians under the inspiration of St Bruno.
The Benedictine monks of this period were themselves far from decadent.  One accusation against them was that they were lax or had lost their vision.  But it wasn’t entirely a case of White Monks (Cistercians) rejecting the loose living of Black Monks (Benedictines).  Around this time, for example, there were the Benedictine monks of Cluny who lived edifying lives.   These were headed by a number of very holy abbots over a period of 200 years.  The feast day of these Holy Abbots of Cluny is kept on 11 May.

Then and Now
Robert, Alberic and Stephen and their companions left their original monastery because they sought to live more simply and strictly than their monastery allowed.  They didn’t leave to follow some charismatic figure.  With St Robert and his companions it was a matter of doing things together.  When Robert was asked to return to his previous monastery, Alberic was elected Cîteaux’s next abbot and when he died Stephen was chosen to replace him.
It was only later that the first monks of Cîteaux began to develop and organise their lifestyle so that their first spirit would be protected for the future.  They adapted to the times.  Because of that they became the most influential and popular of the new monastic groups of the twelfth century.
These early Cistercians were responding to changed times in which uncertainty and experiment were part of the spirit of the time.  God was still calling people to leave their ordinary ways of life but the manner was different.  The characteristics of the Cistercian way were the call to simplicity and authenticity, without giving up beauty in their liturgy or pleasing forms to their buildings. 
Religious communities today are facing reduced numbers.  This does not necessarily mean that the days of religious communities are over.  But we do need to be more alert in today’s world to what God is asking of us.  People are still searching for God, seeking how to tune into his wavelength.  It is the vocation of everyone to make time and space in their lives to receive the message God is sending out.  Not all of us are good at this but we can all pray that those who do have this gift from God may help us become more attuned to it.
The men and women of the eleventh and twelfth centuries were called to serve God in the new ways that their society both offered and needed.  God didn’t stop calling them to give themselves to the needs of the Church and society then.  It’s not likely that he has stopped doing that now. 
Through the ages every religious order has had to take stock of itself.  Everyone in fact needs to do that.  Those who do this well will find peace in their lives.  Those who do not are likely to wither.  It is the old call of the Gospel for renewal and transformation.  When we let God into our lives we get to know what the love of God is.  If we don’t make an effort to do this or simply ignore God, it doesn’t mean that he will leave us alone – just that it will take God a little longer to show us what is best for us.
 
South Cloister, sunset window reflections  

Monastic life at Nunraw Abbey - Abbot Mark


FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6 2013
SCOTTISH CATHOLIC OBSERVER
REFLECTION
Jesus lies at the heart of spiritual life and prayer
In the first article of a new series on spirituality, ABBOT MARK CAIRA from Nunraw Abbey explains the many benefits of monastic life.

Nunraw Abbey - community

The general reader may be forgiven for wondering what the monastic life has to offer them.  They probably see that there is a place for the monastic life in the Church and that monasteries may even be somewhere they may want to go to visit and perhaps even stay for a few days to unwind and recharge their batteries. But monasteries seem to have no immediate link with ordinary life in the world.  Monks and nuns, after all, are people who ‘leave the world’ to follow their vocation.  They live a life that is totally different from the rest of mankind and they should be left alone to get on with it.  - Is it as simple as that?

The Church is, in the main, immersed in ordinary society.  Christians are meant to live out their calling from God and to make the world a better place for their being a part of it.  It is true that we all don’t always live up to our calling. but Christ’s call is not to give up.  When we do fall down we need to see ourselves as we are, get up after each failure and walk more humbly before God.  Whatever befalls us we are called to continue anew following the Gospel through all the twists and turns of our lives.  That applies to monks and nuns as well as the rest of the Church and society.

We are all human.  We all receive the gift of life in Christ through our baptism.  Monks and nuns have a great deal in common with the rest of the Church for they bleed like the rest of mankind.  They get tired and hungry like everyone else.  And, as with everyone else, they have a need to know and love God.  It is good to remember these basic truths in this time of renewal in the Church as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of Vatican II.  Pope Francis has also been encouraging us in these months after his election to take up the challenge offered us by Christ and to joyfully engage in the life he offers us.


What is the point then of going to live in a monastery when God can be loved and served in ordinary everyday life in the Church and society?
One way of answering that question, perhaps, is take a closer look at the makeup of society in general.  In everyday life people choose to live in different ways.  They take different jobs, they make different choices in how and where they live.  They choose to marry one person and not another or they may decide to live singly.  We who believe that God is present in all of our lives know that he actively helps us to decide where our greater happiness in life lies.  
Everyone has a vocation be it to marriage or the single life.  Within either state of life they may feel called to other things as well, like nursing or teaching.  The monastic life in its various forms is one such option that some feel God is calling them to follow.  As in other vocations it needs prayer and enough time and space to discover if that is what God is really asking of them.
Being a priest or a religious has often been described as being a ‘higher’, or ‘better’, vocation than others.  The natural temptation was to seek this ‘higher’ vocation, according to that way of thinking, rather than what it was that God was offering. 
The understanding of Martha and Mary in the gospel gives a good insight into the question of vocation.  We are often told quite clearly that, to quote the Gospel, ‘Mary had chosen the better part’.  That seems to put Martha in her place.  But, it is interesting to note that in the calendar of saints, on the 29 July, the feast of St Martha, the Cistercian Order celebrates not just Martha but also that of her sister, Mary, and Lazarus her brother.  In a commentary on this feast, St Bernard tells us that a monastic community can profitably learn from all three of these saints and not just from the ‘contemplative’ Mary.  In a monastery monks need to work and they suffer illness, as much as to pray and to do other things that are necessary for the normal organising of life lived together..
There are many God-given vocations in the Church.  The only perfect one for us is the one that God calls us to live.  Often we find it difficult to find out what that means for ourselves. 

Life in a monastery is different from what most would regard as normal.  And yet, when you put aside the fact that monks live mostly within the confines of the monastery and with a set pattern to their life, what they do from day to day is what most people already do outside the monastery.   Besides their time for prayer, they work and rest.  There is the daily upkeep and cleaning of the abbey to be seen to; there are meals to be prepared.  Newcomers to the community need training into the spirit and understanding of this life they have chosen and to be shown when necessary the practical day to day organising of the community life.  There are also the physical needs of those who are unwell and the elderly to be taken care of.  So, monks may be ‘out of the world’ in one sense but they are very much grounded in the needs and realities of everyday life. 
The early Cistercians, in the twelfth century used their energies and talents to build their monasteries and set about reclaiming the uncultivated land around them.  Their ingenuity was put to good use in all of this.  Their lives were very much rooted in the world that God created.  Their minds and hearts were centred on God.  But it was Jesus, the Word made man, that lay at the heart of their lives and prayer.  That is the lifestyle that has been handed down to the present day Cistercians.  Perhaps we can consider that in some detail at a future date.
Nunraw New Abbey - South Cloister sunset window reflections



Friday 14 June 2013

News Mount Saint Bernard Abbey

Thanks to the OCSO grapevine, and confirmed by Facebook, we are thrilled  by Mount Saint Bernard news.
In this community Saturday Lady Mass, our heartfelt prayer accompanies each and everyone of the brethren at Mount Saint Bernard. In mind, we remember especially Dom Joseph and Fr. Erik knowing  new fires of the Holy Spirit.

  
Home http://www.ocso.org/images/M_images/arrow.png News http://www.ocso.org/images/M_images/arrow.png General News http://www.ocso.org/images/M_images/arrow.png Mount St Bernard

Mount St Bernard

On June 11, 2013 Dom Joseph Delargy completed a second six year term as abbot of Mount Saint Bernard Abbey.  On that same day an election was held which was inconclusive.  After following the required procedures the Father Immediate, Dom Brendan Freeman, appointed Fr. Erik Varden as Superior ad nutum
Dom Erik, born in Norway in 1974, entered the monastery in 2002, made solemn profession in 2007 and was ordained priest in 2011.  At the time of his appointment he was Prior.

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The community after the election of Fr Erik as superior ad nutum. The abbatial election on Tuesday did not result in the choice of an abbot because the votes were inconclusive. Fr Erik is now our superior for a temporary term of about 18 months, after which we hope to hold another election. Please pray for him.

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G van der Weegen As we thank Dom Joseph for his 12-year abbacy, so we pray for Fr Erik as he begins the next chapter in the life of the community at MStB.


Thursday 3 May 2012

COMMENTS: Furness Abbey skeleton ring and crozier

Dear Trevor,
Thank you for keeping on the trail of the Furness mysteries.
I see that Alice Leach intends "to update my web-site",
Will you kindly send me the Link.
It will great if you add to the file on the Furness mysteries!
Yours ...
Donald


----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Trevor ...
To: Donald ...
Sent: Thursday, 3 May 2012, 10:29
Subject: Fw: Fw: furness abbey carbon dating

I sent your note on to Alice Leach and her reply is below. I'll add my thoughts/ideas later.  
regards,   
trevor.

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: A Leach ....
To: Trevor ....
Sent: Thursday, 3 May 2012, 10:13
Subject: Re: Fw: furness abbey carbon dating

Hi Trevor, an interesting response from Nunraw. The images I sent you
were from Helen Bowman, Communications Manager with EH. I intend to
update my web-site with them when all the investigations have been
completed. Helen has requested that I should acknowledge Tony
Barhtholomew from EH. I did not take any photos.
I have written to the Oxford Archaeological Unit in Lancaster where
the 4 sets of human remains are being examined. I have requested an
image of the skeleton of the abbot who could be a bishop. 
Regards,
Alice.

On 5/3/12, From Donald - - -
> this email came from nunraw this morning. could you comment any ideas and
> send to me please?
> thanks.
> trevor.
>
> ----- Forwarded Message -----
> From: Donald ...
> To: Trevor ...
> Sent: Wednesday, 2 May 2012, 21:09
> Subject: Fw: furness abbey carbon dating

> Dear Trevor,
> Thank you - this morning I received the letter with more Press cuttings on
> the Treasures of Furness Abbey.
> Scanning pictures would not have the standard for the Blog.
> I went the English Heritage and happily the graphics and text have the good
> coverage - see below.
>
> Excavation, Carbon Dating and etc given, it leaves a mass of questions about
> the actual person.
> Do you remember from your insight into Cistercian Abbeys?
> Monks, presumably also Abbots, were buried not in the presbytery but in the
> cemetery directly outside the door to the north.  Only the nobility, patrons
> benefactors were buried in the nave or presbytery.
> Did the Abbots have very ornate crozier and rich  ring? Is it possible that
> a Bishop was buried there?
>
> Oxford Archaeology North research is obviously very specialised in its own
> terms.
> History of the details of the identifying of the person and the actual
> dating the person from lists of the Abbots.
>
> I will be delighted if you may be able to give me more light on Furness
> itself.
>
> See below the Blogspot.
>
> God bless.
>
> Donald

>
>


Wednesday 2 May 2012

FURNESS ABBEY - RARE MEDIEVAL TREASURES FOUND



---- Forwarded Message -----
From: Trevor . . .
To: Donald. . . . 
Sent: Monday, 23 April 2012, 8:47
Subject: Furness Abbey crozier

Attach an image of the abbot's crozier discovered last week at furness abbey, cumbria. alice leach has taken some phots of the crozier which i'll forward when i receive them.
  [Edit: high-light]
the next issue will be what english heritage may decide to do with the skeletal remains of the abbot (and others????). will they be re-interred at furness or would a "live" cistercian abbey take the remains?
should the remains be re-interred at furness would nunraw and msb be interseted in sending representatives to sucha service?
will keep you updated as english heritage investigations continue.
regards.
trevor.
_____________________________________________________________


http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/about/news/rare-medieval-treasures-found-at-furness-abbey/

19 APRIL 2012

RARE MEDIEVAL TREASURES FOUND AT FURNESS ABBEY

An extremely rare medieval silver-gilt crozier and bejewelled ring discovered during emergency repairs to the ruins of Furness Abbey in Cumbria – one of the great monasteries of England and in the care of English Heritage – will go on display at the Abbey over the May bank holiday weekend (Friday 4 - Monday 7 May 2012). The head of the crozier or staff is particularly beautiful and is decorated with gilded silver medallions showing the Archangel Michael defeating a dragon.
Curator Susan Harrison with the Furness Abbey crozier
Curator Susan Harrison with the Furness Abbey crozier
Founded in 1124 by Stephen, later King of England, the monastery was originally located at Tulketh, near Preston but the monks moved to Furness in 1127. Furness Abbey was one of the richest and most powerful Cistercian Abbeys in the country. By 2010, the “antique walls” which had once inspired poet William Wordsworth and painter J M W Turner, had started to crack as their rotting medieval wooden foundations gave way.

EXCAVATION AND DISCOVERY

During excavations, led by Oxford Archaeology North, to investigate the seriousness of the problem, the undisturbed grave of an abbot – one of the heads of the monastery – was uncovered. An initial examination of his skeleton, which is currently in the care of Oxford Archaeology North, indicated that he was probably between 40 and 50 years old when he died.  Like many monastic burials of middle-aged and older men, he had a pathological condition of the spine often considered to be associated with obesity and mature-onset (Type II) diabetes. The grave – which could date to as early as the 1150’s – also included the decorated crozier and a gemstone ring. The grave was situated in the presbytery, the most prestigious position in the church and generally reserved for the richest benefactors.  Most Cistercian abbots were buried in the chapter house.
Kevin Booth, Senior Curator at English Heritage, said: “This is a very rare find which underlines the Abbey’s status as one of the great power bases of the Middle Ages.While we don’t yet know the identity of the abbot, he was clearly someone important and respected by the monastic community. Given that the crozier and ring have been buried for over 500 years, they are in remarkable condition. Further research is required but before that, we are inviting the public to come to Furness Abbey on the early May bank holiday and see these wonderful finds.”
The head of the crozier is made of gilded copper and decorated with gilded silver medallions showing the Archangel Michael defeating a dragon. The crozier’s crook or end is decorated with a serpent’s head.  It may have been the Abbot’s own crozier or commissioned specially for his burial. An abbot or bishop usually held a crozier with his left hand, leaving his right hand free to bestow blessings. Remarkably a small section of the painted wooden staff survives as do remains of the cloth designed to prevent the abbot from touching the crozier with his bare hands. The ring is gilded silver and set with a gemstone of a white rock crystal or white sapphire. It is possible that a hollow behind the gemstone contains a relic, part of the body of a saint or a venerated person.
The Abbot’s Ring is set with a gemstone of a white rock crystal or white sapphire
The Abbot’s Ring is set with a gemstone of a white rock crystal or white sapphire
Set in the “vale of nightshade”, the red sandstone ruins of Furness Abbey were celebrated by Wordsworth in his Prelude of 1805 and Turner produced several etchings of the site. Wordsworth described the Abbey as a “mouldering pile with fractured arch” and was so charmed by the song of a single wren that he professed, “I could have made my dwelling-place and lived for ever there.”
To prevent further fractures from the sinking foundations and ensure that the abbey continues to inspire future poets, artists and visitors, English Heritage installed a temporary steel frame to support the cracking walls. Over the next few years, the Abbey will be underpinned and stabilised so that its future will be secured for generations to come. 
Furness Abbey
Furness Abbey
The crozier and ring will be on display at Furness Abbey from Friday 4 until Monday 7 May 2012, 10am-5pm
Also of Interest:



Wednesday 31 August 2011

September Menology Nunraw Abbey

Pope's Month Prayer Intentions September 2012

General Intention: That politicians may always act with honesty, integrity, and love for the truth.
Missionary Intention: Help for the Poorest Churches. That Christian communities may have a growing willingness to send missionaries, priests, and lay people, along with concrete resources, to the poorest Churches.    
OCSO
Menology
for the
Month
of September

September 28th.
Nunraw: Joseph Denis O’Dea
 1930 - 1980

born 1930
entered 1946
professed 1951
ordained 1953
died 1980


++++++++++++++++++++++++


SEPTEMBER 1

Aleth, mother of St Bernard
This day in 1106 she went to her death surrounded by her sorrowing family and the neighboring clergy who had come to Fontaines to celebrate the feast of St Ambrosian, patron saint of Dijon. 
Aleth had instilled into the minds and hearts of her children true values which found fulfillment in the religious vocation of them all. Frequently, as they came to the decision to follow Christ, each experienced the presence of her guidance and inspiration. This happened especially with Bernard and later with Andrew.
MBS, p. 153                 

William Moennet + 1640
As a monk of Hauterive, Switzerland, he was appointed confessor of the nuns of La Maigrauge and later of La Fille Dieu. In 1616, elected abbot of Hauterive, Dom William labored to effect reform within his community. Seeing the aspirations of the Sisters at the abbeys where he was formerly chaplain to live their monastic consecration more deeply, he guided both communities to reform with the help of his sister, Marie, abbess of La Fille Dieu (December 17). He restored enclosure and perpetual abstinence.
Les Moniales, p. 105

SEPTEMBER 2

Adeline                     
Niece of St Bernard, daughter of his brother, Guido (November 1), she entered a Benedictine convent with her mother after Guido had entered Citeaux with Bernard. She later transferred to Tart and subsequently was sent to the Abbey of Poulangy where the Benedictines wished to embrace the Cistercian reform. The community of Poulangy elected Adeline abbess and, under the guidance of St Bernard, she inspired her sisters to an ever deeper interior life of prayer.

Clement Gimenez +  c. 1600
Monk of Valparaiso, Spain.

SEPTEMBER 3

Nicolas Fitzgerald
A monk perhaps of Mellifont or St Mary's Abbey in Ireland, he was martyred in 1581. When his monastery was confiscated, he escaped but was captured and condemned to be hanged and quartered. Loyal to the Catholic faith until death, he was regarded as a true martyr and his Cistercian habit was divided into small pieces to provide relics for the faithful.

Moses Chapelliere + 1849
A lay-brother of Port du Salut in France, he was uneducated, unable even to read, but learned in the science of the saints. His humility and unaffected love endeared him to all his brothers.

SEPTEMBER 4

David  13th century
A monk of San Salvatore di Settimo in Italy, he was asked by the monks of Camaldoli to be their superior. Appealing to Pope Boniface VIII for guidance in his decision-making, he was encouraged to accept. The Pope felt that David's life of virtue and love of the desert eminently suited him to the task. He was a true superior, inspiring the Camaldolese monks until his death.

SEPTEMBER 5

Mark de Porras
A monk of Nogales in Spain, he had a great love for the Divine Office and while singing it often experienced God's majesty and grandeur. Elected abbot, he determined to put himself at the service of each of his brothers and succeeded so well that he was universally loved. At his death his community witnessed the tremendous joy of their abbot reflected in the light and happiness on his face and in his eyes.

SEPTEMBER 6

Madeleine Therese Baudet de Beauregard + 1688

She was sent as superior of a Paris foundation of the Bernadines in Grenoble. Here she dedicated the new monastery to the Precious Blood of Jesus and inspired her sisters with her own spirit of reparation. With the approval of the bishop, they drew up constitutions more in conformity with the Rule of St Benedict, and the Congregation of the Bernadines of the Most Precious Blood was born. Mother Madeleine remained superior until her death at eighty-four years of age.
Les Moniales, p. 91

SEPTEMBER 7

Thomas Madde + 1583
A monk of Jervaulx during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, he was captured while offering Mass in the home of Sir Thomas Percy, Earl of Northumberland. Defending the Real Presence in the Blessed Sacrament, he was imprisoned, and died while awaiting sentence. 
On the dissolution of Jervaulx, see Lekai, p. 122

Sebastian Gaudin + 1914
A monk of Port du Salut, he wholeheartedly embraced his monastic life which was interrupted twice by the call to military service. While in the army, he endeavored to live a life of deep interior prayer. Offering himself completely to God's will, he entered into the fullness of the monastic profession he was to have made September 8, l914 by his death on the battlefield the evening before.

`             SEPTEMBER 8

Bl William of St Thierry + 1148
Born in Liege,Blegium, and educated perhaps at Laon, he entered the monastery of St Nicaise at a time of its spiritual renewal. In 1119 he became abbot of the Benedictine monastery of St Thierry near Rheims and became a leading figure in a gradual reform of monastic life. 
At this time he visited Clairvaux and thus began the famous friendship with St Bernard. It was at William's urging that Bernard wrote his Apologia and the two treatises, On Grace and Free Will and On the Errors of Abelard. Longing for the silence and simplicity of the Cistercian life, although persistently dissuaded by St Bernard, William finally resigned his abbacy and entered Signy in the diocese of Rheims. During the ensuing years as a simple monk, his ardent contemplative spirit and firm Catholic faith were expressed in remarakable and very beautiful monastic and theological works.
CS 10, 78; CS 94

"The soul in its happiness finds itself standing midway in the embrace and kiss of the Father and the Son. In a manner which exceeds description and thought, the man of God is found worthy to become not God, but what God is; that is, man becomes by grace what God is by nature." The Golden Epistle 

"When I love anything for your sake, I love not it, but you for whose sake I love that which I love. For you only are truly the Lord." On Contemplating God

"Those unsearchable riches of your glory, Lord, were hidden in your secret place in heaven until the soldier's spear opened the side of your Son on the cross, and through that open door we may enter whole, O Jesu, even into your Heart, the sure seat of mercy, even into your holy soul that is filled with the fullness of God, full of grace and truth, full of our salvation and our consolation." Meditations

Stephen of Sawley + 1252
He was born in Yorkshire toward the end of the 12th century and became a monk at Fountains, where he was cellarer. In 1223 he was elected abbot of Sawley. Later he became abbot first of Newminster and then of Fountains.
We know him chiefly from his four treatises (CF 36) which offer practical advice to young Cistercians about the basic elements of the monastic life, prayer and devotion to the Blessed Virgin.

"Employ the Scriptures as a substitute for a mirror wherein the soul finds a reflection of its own image. It sees those things that are corrupt and corrects them; and things that are beautiful which contribute to its radiance."

Odette Clause + 1632
Named by the king in 1597 to be abbess of Villers-Canivet, she received her abbatial blessing from her brother, Bishop Henry. She was a true spiritual mother, filled with humility and a deep love for her sisters. She took special care of the poor and sick, and had an ardent zeal for the divine office.

Les Moniales , p. 102

SEPTEMBER 9

Martin von Kollenberg + 1653
Elected abbot of Engelszell, Austria in 1645, although he governed during eight years of the Thirty Years War, he was able to foster both spiritual and temporal growth in his community, as well as preserve the Catholic Faith among the neighbors in the surrounding district.

SEPTEMBER 10

Bl Ogler + 1214

Abbot of Our Lady of Locedio in Italy, he was devoted to Mary and in his writings praised her prerogatives, especially the Immaculate Conception. Not only a man of learning, but of humility as well, he was found by Pope Innocent III to be an "instrument of peace" in settling quarrels among warring factions in Italy.

Bl Serlon + 1158
Abbot of Savigny, in 1147 he persuaded the General Chapter and St Bernard in the presence of Pope Eugene, to accept his abbey and its thirty-one daughterhouses as part of the Cistercian Order with Clairvaux as their motherhouse. Five years later he resigned and entered Clairvaux where he was encouraged by Abbot Robert, St Bernard's successor, to help in the monastic training of the younger monks.
CF 48

SEPTEMBER 11

Luke Gotz + 1546
In 1534 when the abbey of Herrenalb in Wurttemberg was confiscated and the monks dispersed, he refused to embrace the Lutheran heresy. False charges were brought against him and he was tortured and imprisoned. Twelve years later, still in chains, he was called by God to the reward for his fidelity.

Lawrence  12th century
Lay-brother of Clairvaux, he was often sent on errands by St Bernard. Feeling confident of his abbot's protecting intercession, Lawrence was successful in the undertakings entrusted to him. After St Bernard's death, he continued to negotiate business and then return to Clairvaux to resume monastic living with great joy. He always attributed his success to St Bernard.

MBS, p. 230

SEPTEMBER 12

Peter of Tarentaise 1102-1174

Born of peasant stock, he became a monk at Bonnevaux, and in 1132 was sent as founding abbot of Tamié. He was appointed bishop of Tarentaise, a diocese in the Alps of Savoy, in 1141. He gave himself unsparingly to the needs of his diocese, preaching the word of God, caring for the poor and providing for the upkeep of churches. He also had the gift of healing the sick. He actively supported Pope Alexander III against Fredrick Barbarossa. Already ill a year before his death, Peter journeyed to Normandy to negotiate peace between Henry II of England and Louis VII of France, and it was on another peace-making mission from the Pope that he died at the monastery of Bellevaux.

Anne De Vieupont + 1636
Nun of Parc aux Dames, she was appointed novice mistress and later elected prioress. She inspired others by the total gift of herself to Jesus.

SEPTEMBER 13

John Labarthe + 1678
Lay-brother of Sept-Fons, his outstanding virtue was faith especially in his relations with his abbot in whose person he saw Christ.

SEPTEMBER 14

Joseph Hayes + 1913
He entered Mount Melleray Abbey in Ireland and soon after his profession was stricken with tuberculosis throughout his body. During the remaining six years of his life he was a joy and inspiration to his confreres. He died as the community was celebrating the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.

Magdalen of Jesus + 1666
After the death of her husband, she determined to give herself to Christ and embarked on a life of virtue and asceticism. At fifty-eight she entered the convent at Valladolid, Spain, where a few years later she was stricken with paralysis and blindness. Despite her infirmities, her faith and joy were always evident, and at her death, her sisters and all who knew her venerated her as a saint.

Maxime Carlier  1891-1917
Born in France, he entered Chimay in 1911 and made his simple profession two years later. When World War I broke out, he had to leave the monastery to serve in the army; he passed through some of the hardest fighting in the war, receiving the Croix de Guerre for his bravery, ever remaining a monk at heart. Having postponed a leave in order to remain with his men, he was killed in action.

SEPTEMBER 15

Elizabeth Piette + 1851
Born in Liege, Belgium, she entered Our Lady of Eternity in Westphalia where the community endured many privations. She was appointed superior at St Catherine's Convent at Laval. Elected abbess, she was a real spiritual mother to her sisters, serving them in humility and love.

Godefroid Belorgey 1880 - 1964
Born in France, he was a lieutenant in the army when thanks to what he called "an extraordinary grace and an exceptional disposition of divine Providence", he became a monk at Scourmont in Belgium at the age of 30. He was successively novice master and prior; then, from 1932 to 1952, auxiliary abbot of Citeaux. Having resigned, he spent two years at Caldey, then was chaplain at Our Lady of Peace, Chimay. He returned to Scourmont in April 1964, and died there six months later.
He was one of the pioneers of the Order's renewal in the first half of the 20th century, and led many monks and nuns by the paths of obedience and humility to a deep interior life. His books include The Practice of Mental Prayer, Benedictine Humility, and God Loves Us. These lines in which he describes a person with a deep inner life are an unconscious self-portrait: "One feels that such a soul is in possession of the truth. It radiates peace and joy, for it possesses God."

SEPTEMBER 16

Jean Eustache de Mons + 1478
An Augustinian, he entered the monastery of Moulins and later in conjunction with monks from Aulne and Cambron, he established Cistercian life at the abbey of Jardinet, formerly occupied by nuns.
Not only a great ascetic, but also a charismatic leader, Dom Jean attracted to Jardinet forty-six monks and thirty-five lay-brothers as zealous as their abbot in living monastic life to the full. Much against the wishes of his community, he resigned in 1474, and four years later died in great peace and joy.
Lekai, p. 115

SEPTEMBER 17

Anne Biena + 1617
She entered the monastery of Felipre, Belgium, and during the fifty-three years of her monastic journey she grew in her devotion to Christ's Passion which found expression in charity, profound humility and a spirit of poverty.

SEPTEMBER 18

Albin O'Molloy + 1222
He was in his mid-thirties when the monks of Baltinglass chose him as their abbot. Leading his brethren in the ways of holiness, he also influenced many beyond the enclosure. Especially devoted to the liturgy, he used his musical talents to enhance the Divine Office.

Appointed bishop of Ferns, Dom Albin took an active part in the reform of the clergy. After thirty years of devoted service to his people, he died.
MBS, p. 250

Patrick Plunket + 1679
After study at Louvain, he returned to Ireland and became a Cistercian. Later he was appointed abbot of St Mary's, Dublin. After the accession of King Charles I of England in 1625, expectations for a basic change in the status of Catholics in Ireland ran high, and in anticipation of a greater leniency, Pope Urban VIII authorized the formation of the Irish Cistercian Congregation of St Malachy and St Bernard. Patrick was elected the first president. However, Cromwell's bloody invasion of Ireland in 1650 ended the precarious existence of Irish Cistercians. No further record exists of the Congregation's survival.
Meanwhile, in 1647 Patrick was appointed bishop of Ardagh. Although harassed on all sides, he continued his duties as bishop often in hiding. The Pope later made him head of the See of Meath, and he died while governing this diocese.
Lekai, p. 135

SEPTEMBER 19

Marguerite de Forbin de Solliers + 1652
At an early age she entered the monastery of St Bernard d'Hyeres, France. She was elected abbess, and in this office for the following fifty years she endeavored with all the gifts of nature and grace at her command to establish and maintain monastic discipline.
Les Moniales, p. 105

              SEPTEMBER 20

Eustache de Beaufort
In 1656 at the age of twenty, through royal favor, he received the abbey of Sept-Fons in Bourbonnais, France. At the encouragement of his brother who was a priest, he decided to become a monk and completed his novitiate at Clairvaux. In 1664 he joined Sept-Fons to the Strict Observance and the community became a center of fervent monastic life. At his death, Dom Eustache left a community of one hundred monks and fifty lay-brothers.

Aloysius Van Rijsenburg + 1892

A lay-brother of Villa Regia, Netherlands, he was inspired to offer his life for the union of the three Trappist Congregations. He asked and obtained permission from his abbot to make the offering, which bore fruit shortly after his death, when Leo XIII convoked an extraordinary chapter of the representatives of the Trappist Congregations in Rome for the expressed purpose of union. There was near unanimity and the united Trappists assumed a new title: Order of Reformed Cistercians.

SEPTEMBER 21

Octave Arnolfini  1579-1641
A cleric of noble Italian ancestry. When nineteen years old, he was appointed by King Henry IV to be commendatory abbot of La Charmoye, a Cistercian house in Champagne, France. Realizing he could not initiate reforms unless he himself became a Cistercian, he entered Clairvaux and under Denis Largentier completed his novitiate and made monastic profession in 1603. Largentier, pleased with his desire for reform, entrusted to him the abbey of Chatillon where he became regular abbot in 1608.
At the College of St Bernard in Paris, Dom Octave and Etienne Maugier, his successor at La Charmoye, met a nephew of the abbot of Clairvaux, Abraham Largentier. The three signed a document in which they renewed their monastic profession and their determination to press for reform which included perpetual abstinence. Through many visiccitudes and trials, this pact bore fruit in the new Congregation of the Strict Observance. Failing in health, but seeing his reform take root, Dom Octave died.
Lekai, p. 131

SEPTEMBER 22

Bl Otto 1113-1158
Son of Leopold III of Austria and Agnes, daughter of Emperor Henry IV, he studied at Paris under Abelard, Gilbert de la Poree and Hugh of St Victor. Returning home after his studies, he spent a night at the abbey of Morimond and was moved by grace to enter the community. In 1137 he was elected abbot and, shortly after, was made bishop of Freising. With his stepbrother, Emperor Conrad III, he joined the Second Crusade. He was counselor to both Conrad and his nephew, Frederick Barbarossa. Through all his activities, he remained devoted to the monastic life which he furthered in his diocese.
Otto's great interest in intellectual pursuits bore fruit in his historical works: The Chronicle of Two Cities and The Deeds of Emperor Frederick. His Chronicle was the first medieval attempt to write a "philosophical" history. Suffering from physical infirmity, he died at Morimond.
Lekai, p. 235; NCE, vol. 10, p. 821
SEPTEMBER 23

Louis de Gonzaga Moirant + 1905
He entered Aiguebelle and while still a novice was chosen to be among the founders of Les Dombes. Appointed prior, his aim was complete obedience to his abbot and a gentle service of his confreres. In 1882 he was elected abbot and his talents came to full flower in his chapter conferences to his community and in the celebration of the monastic liturgy. He died on a Saturday as he had desired.

SEPTEMBER 24

Maria Vela y Cueto + 1617
Born in Cardenosa, Avila, Spain, she entered the Cistercian monastery of Santa Ana in February 1576. Though not physically strong, she was heroic in her practice of humility and patience in continual illness, ever showing a faithful obedience coupled with absolute confidence in God. Her spiritual nourishment was Scripture as it unfolded in the liturgy and Christ, the Word, central point of creation and redemption was the nucleus of her doctrine. Her autobiography, written under obedience, and another work telling of the mercy and favor of God shown to her, are preserved in manuscript at Santa Ana de Avila and have been translated into English by Frances Parkinson Keyes. Her body was found incorrupt in 1623, 1664, 1812 and 1981.

"The surest indication that we are ignorant of our faults is to make evident the faults of others."

Mary Berchmans Piguet  1876-1915
She entered the monastery of the Immaculate Conception at Laval on the feast of the Sacred Heart 1899. In 1902 she was sent to the new foundation, Our Lady of the Angels, in Hakodata, Japan. Separation from her country and the Laval community caused her intense suffering but gradually she was able to make the complete sacrifice. The trials of the early years in Japan deepened her capacity for compassion and discernment and eminently prepared her for her work as mistress of novices. Although never fluent in the language, by her own ardent monastic living she inspired in her Japanese novices the same love for Jesus that was the center of her life. By her total dedication even to death, she became a fit instrument of the Holy Spirit in forming a generation of fervent nuns.
Thomas Merton, Exile Ends in Glory

SEPTEMBER 25

Caesar of Heisterbach + 1245

Novice master and prior, he is best remembered as author of a large collection of edifying stories about monks and nuns known as Dialogus Miraculorum. Although the historical accuracy of many of these episodes remains questionable, the work must be recornized as an inexhaustible source for the study of 13th century monastic customs and religious folklore.

CS 65; Lekai, p. 234

Malachy Bertrand + 1798
Procurator of Orval, Belgium, after the suppression of his monastery, he remained in hiding exercising his priestly ministry. Arrested in November 1797, he was imprisoned and eventually sent to the penal colony in Guiana where he died six weeks later. Calm through incredible trials, he born witness to the power of Christ's love over suffering and death.

Anselm le Bail 1878-1956
Born in France, at the age of twenty he entered the Congregation of the Holy Spirit, but feeling his vocation was to the contemplative life, he, six years later, began his novitiate at the abbey of Scourmont in Belgium. He was succesively novice master, sub-prior and prior, and in 1913 was elected abbot. In 1928 he sent a group of monks to the Island of Caldey off Wales, Scourmont's first foundation.  He also dreamed of making a foundation in India, but the Second World War put an end to the project. Seven years before his death he suffered a stroke, and from then on was unable to walk or speak.
As abbot he was much concerned that his monks, and indeed all the members of the Order, should have a solid monastic foundation, based on the Rule of St Benedict, the liturgy and the Cistercian heritage. He wrote a great many articles on these subjects, most of which remain in manuscript. He furthered the intellectual and human development of his monks, while never losing sight of their essential vocation to seek God. He also helped found Collectanea.             
     His labors bore fruit in the renewed interest in our Cistercian Fathers and in the spiritual development of the Order in the second half of the 20th century. 

SEPTEMBER 26

Anne de Villaroel + 1600
Nun of St Anne's Convent, Avila, Spain.
Bruno Le Digne + 1691
While living a somewhat tepid religious life in the Benedictine monastery of Val-des-Chaux, Burgundy, France, he heard a conference on the monastic life by Abbot de Rance, and was so inspired he asked to be received at La Trappe. His conversion was tested during the following eight years by illness and aridity, but, by God's grace, he grew in an intense love for Christ and a deep humility.

SEPTEMBER 27

Guichard + 1181
A monk of Citeaux, he was elected abbot of Pontigny and held that office for thirty years. It was during this time that he welcomed St Thomas Becket to Pontigny and a close friendship united the two men. Through the influence of St Thomas, Guichard was named archbishop of Lyons and later legate of the Holy See. He governed his diocese for fifteen years giving his flock an example of "incomparable holiness."

Joanna
Abbess of Clairefontaine, Luxemburg.

SEPTEMBER 28

Nunraw: Joseph O’Dea 1930 - 1980 see above.

Bl John of Montmirail + 1217
Prince of royal blood and a descendant of Charlemagne, he once saved the life of King Philip Augustus when they were surrounded by the soldiers of Richard the Lionhearted. His entire horizon during this time was dominated by a love of power, ambition and vanity, but moved by the advice of a holy priest, he turned away from the world and turned completely to God. He converted his castle into a hospice for the poor and sick, and served them himself. Finally, over fifty years old, with his wife's consent, he entered the monastery of Longpont in 1210. With the same enthusiasm of his early conversion he gave himself to monastic life until his death seven years later.   

MBS, p. 254

SEPTEMBER 29

Conrad + 1227
A young man of nobility, he entered the monastery of Villers. In 1209 he was elected abbot and soon after abbot of Clairvaux, and, in 1217, of Citeaux. We owe to him the tradition of our singing the Salve Regina daily. He proposed this to the General Chapter while abbot of Citeaux.
Appointed cardinal in 1219, he served the Holy See in many ways: preaching the Crusade in Germany, cooperating with and supporting St Dominic's infant Order, reforming the clergy. The great grace of concentration on the matter at hand, whether prayer or wordly affairs, sustained Conrad and deepened his contemplative mindfulness of God.

Jean-Baptiste Chautard 1858-1935     
He entered Aiguebelle at the age of nineteen. In 1897 he was elected abbot of Chambarand, and two years later of Sept-Fons, a position he held until his death. He was also responsible for the direction and control of several other monasteries of the Order. In 1903 he successfully pleaded the cause of the Trappists before the French senate and averted their threatened dissolution. His book, The Soul of the Apostolate, written in 1910 and filled with the fire of his ardent and energetic spirit, became immensely popular and had a great influence on many. In it he insisted on the necessity of a profound interior life for a fruitful ministry.

Among other great figures in Church history who had a special devotion to Our Lady of Laus were . . . Dom Jean Baptiste Chautard (1858-1935), Abbot of Sept-Fons, and author of the enormously successful classic, The Soul of the Apostolate. 

SEPTEMBER 30
 Gerard de Beausart + 1529
Abbot of Aulne, Belgium, and Vicar-General of the Order in Belgium, he led his monks to reform by his own fidelity to the monastic life.

Benedict of Salamanca  15th century
Monk and priest of Moreruela in Spain, he declined his election as abbot of Melon so as not to be deprived of the joy and peace of obedience. Faithful to the common life, he was an inspiration to his confreres. Because his poor health prevented his offering daily Mass, he served the Masses of his brother-priests. It was while serving the prior's Mass that he died.