Showing posts with label Cistercian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cistercian. Show all posts

Monday, 12 January 2015

SAINT AELRED January 12th. Patronal Feast of Nunraw Abbey - Independent Catholic News

This painting of St. Aelred reminds me of the former late Abbot of Pluscarden, Dom Alfred Spencer OSB(Subiaco)...
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12 January - Saint Ailred of Rievaulx - Independent Catholic News 

12 January - Saint Ailred of Rievaulx
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 12 January - Saint Ailred of Rievaulx | 12 January,  Saint Ailred of Rievaulx, Saint of the Day
Abbot and writer. St Ailred was the son of a priest, born in Hexham in 1110. After being educated at Durham he joined the household of David I, king of Scotland as a steward. In 1134 he joined the newly-founded abbey at Rievaulx. In spite of delicate health, he followed the austere Cistercian regime and became so respected in the community that he was sent to Rome as an envoy in 1142, over the disputed election of William of York. Later he became master of novices and in 1143 he became abbot of Revesby in Lincolnshire. Four years later he was recalled to be abbot of Rievaulx.
He was much loved as an abbot and under his rule the community thrived, with 500 lay brothers and 150 choir monks, making it the largest in England.
Ailred was known for his sensitivity and gentle holiness, with a strong emphasis on charity. It was said that he humanised the strict Cistercian monasticism. He had many friends and became a figure of national importance through his writing and preaching. Among his work is a treatise on friendship, lives of the saints of Hexham and sermons on Isaiah.
He died at Rievaulx in 1067 and, though never formally canonised, has been revered ever since. The Cistercians approved of his cult in 1476.  
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Saturday, 12 January 2008
SAINT AELRED Nunraw Patron
SAINT AELRED January 12th. Patronal Feast of Nunraw Abbey
SAINT AELRED (The more familiar form of the name Aelred is Alfred. We are in changed days from the time St. Aelred had 500 monks at HIS MONASTERY OF Rievaulx - DAYS FOR PRAYER FOR VOCATIONS TO THIS SMALL COMMUNITY OF NUNRAW UNDER AELRED'S PATRONAGE).
This painting of St. Aelred reminds me of the former late Abbot of Pluscarden, Dom Alfred Spencer OSB(Subiaco).
He had this picture in the windowsill of his room when I was visiting him during his last illness. He recalled that as a Novice in Prinknash Abbey he wished to take the name of Aelred. Another monk already had that name so his Abbot suggested he take the name of Alfred as a substitute. Before parting Dom Alfred kindly gave me this picture which is now with Fr. Aelred at Nunraw.
Saint Aelred was born at Hexham in 1110. After studies at Hexham, Durham and perhaps Roxburgh, and further sound education at the Scottish Court where he was the steward and the confidant of King David, he entered the newly founded abbey of Rievaulx in Yorkshire. Aelred became novicemaster and afterwards abbot of Revesby, a daughter house of Rievaulx. He was then thirty-three years old, a normal age at which to become abbot in this fresh and flourishing period of a new order.
About 1147 Aelred was chosen abbot of Rievaulx. He died there on the twelfth of January 1167. Walter Daniel, Aelred's enthusiastic biographer, various friends together with Aelred's own writings bear witness that he was a good father, always setting a good example and a source of peace. He could see beneath men's foolish or thoughtless actions, he never seemed to have a grievance against anyone. Aelred used to say: 'It is the singular and supreme glory of the house of Rievaulx that above all else it teaches tolerance of the infirm and compassion with others in their necessities. All whether weak or strong should find in Rievaulx a haunt of peace, and there, like the fish in the broad seas, possess the welcome, happy, spacious peace of charity.'
At first sight a strange theory for an abbot who stood at the head of a severe Cistercian House. But it sheds light on Aelred's character and his affection for everyone of the brothers who lived within the cloister.
No wonder that Aelred's high estimation of love and affection in an ideal spiritual friendship was not always followed or rightly interpreted; by the older and infirm monks. He himself tells of monks being zealous in their malice, whispering in corners, murmuring against their abbot and spreading false reports about him. But the saintly abbot was indifferent to the opinions of these murmurers and indulgent to the feebleness of everyone. He demanded the same attitude of mind from his monks. 'My sons, say what you will, only let no vile word, no detraction of a brother proceed from your mouth.'
Aelred survived in the memory of Rievaulx's monks as the fine and prudent shepherd, as the abbot who loved peace and the salvation of the brethren and inward quiet.
The Mirror of Charity
The essence of St. Aelred's teaching is contained in his book The Mirror of Charity. This was written at the request or St. Bernard. Aelred was slow to comply saying that "he had not come from the schools but from the kitchens where subsisting peasant-like and, rustic amid cliffs and mountains you sweat with axe and maul for your daily bread..."
The following extract from the beginning of the Mirror of Charity illustrates the main theme of the book.
"Let your voice sound in my ears, good Jesus, so that my heart may learn how to love you, my mind how to know you the inmost being of my soul how to love you. Let the inmost core of my heart embrace you, my one and only true good, my dear and delightful joy. But, my God, what is love? Unless I am mistaken, love is a wonderful delight of the spirit: all the more attractive because more chaste; all the more gentle, because more guileless; and all the more enjoyable because more ample. It is the heart's palate which tastes that you are sweet, the heart's eye which sees that you are good. And it is the place capable of receiving you, great as you are. Someone who loves you grasps you. The more one loves the more one grasps, because you yourself are love, for you are charity."
"Meanwhile I shall seek you, O Lord:, seek you by loving you. Someone who advances on this way of love surely seeks you, and someone who loves you perfectly, O Lord, has already found you. And what is more equitable than that your creature should love you, since it is from you it received the ability to love? Creatures without reason or without sensation cannot love you; that is not their nature. Of course they also have their own nature, their beauty and their order, not that thereby they are or can be happy by loving you, but that thereby, thanks to you, by their own qualities they may help us to love you."

In his introduction St. Aelred gives us an interesting tip. He says that if the length of this book puts you off, look through the chapter headings and see which you would like to read, and which leave out. But the main thrust is easy to spot. The art of arts is the art of love.
"Those who love you, rest in you. There is true rest, true tranquility , true peace, true Sabbath for the mind."

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Aelred of Rievaulx

  
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Uploaded on 12 Oct 2009
http://www.loyolapress.com/voices-of-... Bert Ghezzi, author of "Voices of the Saints," shares a reflection about Aelred of Rievaulx. 


Monday, 5 September 2011

Nunraw Television 1967 A Hard Bed to Lie (Br. Oliver)


Jesus Recovered 
by Malcolm Muggeridge,   
A HARD BED TO LIE ON
Chap. 6, pp. 59-65, 1967.
Nothing, I suppose, could be more alien to the spirit of this age than monasticism. Just for that reason, it has always had a particular fascination for me. The quiet, the order, the essential simplicity of a monk's way of life, all seemed alluring in a world increasingly given over to noise, violence and the avid pursuit of what passes for happiness. My own life, I should in honesty add, has been far from monkish, and it is only latterly that the positive aspects of monasticism, as distinct from just turning away from one's own vomit, have become comprehensible to me.
Abbot Columban with Malcolm Muggeridge
An opportunity to pursue this interest further arose when the B.B.C. asked me to take part in the filming of an enclosed religious order for a television programme. This involved spending three weeks in a Cistercian abbey—at Nunraw in Scotland. It might be supposed that it would be impossible for an outsider to get to know Cistercians, who follow the strict Trappist rule of silence. In fact the rule as now applied does not preclude necessary conversation. The monks no longer need to practise their weird sign-language, and anyway they were given a special dispensation to speak to me. I have rarely been thrown with such talkative and agreeable men. I grew very fond of them, and think of them still with the utmost affection.
My first acquaintance with them, however, was rather forbidding. I went up to Nunraw some months before the filming began, to explain the project, first to the Abbot, and then to the assembled community. They were gathered in an assembly hall which, as I subsequently discovered, they use for their chapters: their faces seemed very remote, almost forbidding, as I looked anxiously around at them. Their identical costume (nowadays priests and lay-brothers wear the same habit) and cropped heads added to the sombre effect.
I could not but recall prison audiences to whom I have occasionally given lectures. The difference was that, whereas prisoners' faces mostly look brutalised and angry, or just withdrawn into a sullen vacuity, the monks' faces, as I noted on closer examination, were serene; some of them, as it seemed to me, actually shining with inward sanctity. Goodness, of course, does shine, whereas evil casts a physical, as well as moral, shadow where it falls. At the Transfiguration the disciples present were positively dazzled by the shining ecstasy in Christ's face; when poor Judas picked up his thirty pieces of silver a cold and terrible gloom, I am sure, hung like a cloud over the scene.
I explained to the monks that I had always been interested in monasticism and hoped it would prove possible to show on the television screen what life in an enclosed order like theirs was really like: also to provide an explanation out of their own mouths of what induced them to forgo things like marriage, pleasure, success, money; all that in a materialist society like ours is considered to make life worth living.
The commonest judgment to be heard in the outside world, I said, was that they were fugitives from reality rather than seekers after a reality of their own. They were thought of as selfish, cowardly men who sought the attainment of their own serenity by cutting themselves off from the conflicts and dilemmas which amicted their fellows. Preoccupied exclusively with their own salvation, they left the world to its fate.  

Saturday, 3 September 2011

COMMENT Archive OCSO General Chapter 2002, Br. Stephen

Hi, William,
Thank you for appreciating the Posts on Br. Stephen and 2002 MGM.
So that was swan-song farewell of the General Chapter 2002.
Since then Dom Raymond were at the next two MGMs. 2005, 2008.
Abbot Mark will be setting off next week to Assisi for the 2011 General Chapter.
Pray for the Holy Spirit to be with him.
Yours,
Donald
+ + + 
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: WILLIAM WARDLE ...
To: Fr Donald .....
Sent: Sat, 3 September, 2011 9:14:26
Subject: Re: [Blog] Br.Stephen

Dear Father Donald,
 
It is lovely to remember, and I have such dear memories of Br. Stephen greeting me - I too received his wink like Richard North! whose talks with Br. Stephen described in his book 'Fools for God' delighted me, and I carry in my pocket book THE white piece of card he gave me with the eternal words which he had written, "Lord Jesus, teach us to love you more and more". When he caused me to talk about my life in the world, which was rather demanding at that time, he always left me feeling that my feet were more firmly on the ground and my head settle back on my shoulders. And when next we met, he carried a knowing look!
 
Good memories of a deeply spiritual and loving man. I keep remembrance of him, and of his passing in my anniversaries.
 
... in Our Lord,
William.

From: Fr Donald
To: williamwardle2bp@btinternet.com
Sent: Friday, 2 September 2011, 21:06
Subject: [Dom Donald's Blog] Br.Stephen (John) died 14 Feb 2008 NEWS Archive
Brother Stephen Heenan OCSO Cistercian Monk, Nunraw.
Brother Stephen removes a bundle of paper from his habit, On one small square of card he has written: "Lord Jesus teach us to love you more and more". "I just think the words. If I walked about saying it they’d think I was a crackpot.
"You've got to try and get a personal relationship with Jesus. You've got to ask him to help you,  

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----- Forwarded Message ----
From: WILLIAM WARDLE ...
Sent: Fri, 2 September, 2011 18:42:44
Subject: Re: [Blog] Archive OCSO General Chapter 2002

Dear Father Donald,
 
I am delighting in the memory of the MGM of 2002 which you so kindly shared with me - I am still overawed as I view the photographs - and I am wondering if I might enquire as to whether this September's MGM will be publishing on the OCSO website the unfolding events in Assisi. Goodness - I remember my excitement when you first gave me a secret 'live' link to the MGM at Lourdes!
 
...  in Our Lord,
William


Thursday, 1 September 2011

Archive OCSO General Chapter 2002

ARCHIVE unearthed from Liam Tripod extant. 

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Abbots Meet at Cistercian General Chapter in Rome

September 2002

Dom Jude and Dom Joseph of Mt St Bernard, taken as they crossed the white line from Italy to Vatican City at the entrance to the Pope’s summer home, Castel Gandolfo in the Alban Hills. 

Sunday, 28 August 2011

For what is our cross other than Jesus himself? To accept this cross is to accept him.


 
SUNDAY 28th Aug. 2011
MAGNIFICAT Monthly

Taking Up Our Cross and Following Jesus 

When our hour has really arrived, God's grace will also be there, and very small things may suffice to help in our simple acceptance of and co-operation with grace.  What counts is the recognition of our real cross. Often it is much more difficult to recognise the cross Jesus intends for us personally than to accept it once we have recognised it. We are inclined to think, furthermore, that our crosses would not be so pain­ful if we could immediately see them. There lies the rub which usually disturbs those who have opted for a life of detachment. Their temptation consists in imagining that they already know beforehand what their cross or time of testing will be. Unfortunately, a cross one knows in advance, even if it is fairly heavy, is no longer the cross of Jesus. Our real cross is always to some degree unanticipated and always seems to far surpass our strength. As a rule, we would never have chosen it. Passionately to cling to a cross of our own choosing and perhaps unconsciously but equally pas­sionately to reject the cross that Jesus intends for us is perhaps the heaviest and most discouraging cross. It could keep us forever from taking up our real cross if Jesus did not at some time intervene.
For what is our cross other than Jesus himself? To accept this cross is to accept him. It is simultaneously "to take up our cross" and to follow him. Undoubtedly, if we could know God's gift, if we could see and recognise it, we would have an easier time of it.
FATHER ANDRE Louf. o.c.s.o. (+ 2010) served for thirty-five years as abbot of the Cistercian monastery of Mont-des-Cats. France, and was an esteemed spiritual guide and author.

Friday, 26 August 2011

Cistercian winner of the Ratzinger Prize for Theology

Heiligenkreuz Abbey
The first three winners of the Ratzinger Prize for Theology are an Italian layman, Manlio Simonetti; a Spanish priest, Olegario González de Cardedal; and a German Cistercian, Father Maximilian Heim, all chosen because their theology is anchored in reality.
Father Maximilian Heim, 50, is the abbot of the Cistercian Abbey of Heiligenkreuz in Austria. He is a professor of fundamental and dogmatic theology. He is a member of the new circle of Ratzinger students and oversees the publication of his complete works.


----- Forwarded Message ----
Abbot  Maximilian Heim OC Heiigenkreuz
From: ZENIT
To: dailyhtml@list.zenit.org
Sent: Fri, 26 August, 2011 4:43:12
Subject: [ZE110825] The World Seen From Rome

ZENIT

The World Seen From Rome

Daily dispatch - August 25, 2011


VATICAN DOSSIER


Ratzinger Students Discuss New Evangelization
Pontiff Expected to Give a Conference to Study Session
CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy, AUG. 25, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI today gathered with a group of his former students to discuss the new evangelization.
The students, known as the Ratzinger Schulerkreis, are having their annual meeting at Castel Gandolfo through Sunday.
Some 40 individuals are taking part in the meeting, among them Cardinal Christoph Schönborn, archbishop of Vienna; Auxiliary Bishop Hans-Jochen Jaschke of Hamburg; and Monsignor Barthelemy Adoukonou, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Culture.
The discussions are taking place, as usual, behind closed doors. L'Osservatore Romano reported today that the Pope will give a conference.
There will also be conferences from Hanna Barbara Geri-Falkowitz, a lay theologian who will focus on the difficulties and resistance the Christian proclamation meets today; and Otto Neubauer, an Austrian lay member of the Emmanuel Community, who will speak on the "importance of poverty" when it comes to approaching modern man.
The theme of the new evangelization is in line with the Oct. 15-16 meeting the Holy Father will have with Church representatives of the West who are leading the new evangelization, as well as the October synod on this topic.
Ratzinger's first meeting with his former pupils took place in March of 1977, when Pope Paul VI appointed him archbishop of Munich-Freising. The annual appointment was kept thereafter, though students were surprised in 2005 to receive a letter from the new Pope a few months after his election, to call them to Castel Gandolfo to continue the custom.
That year they reflected on Islam, in 2006 and 2007 on evolution and evolutionary theories, in 2008 on the historical Jesus and his passion, in 2009 on the mission and on dialogue with religions and cultures, and in 2010 on the appropriate interpretation of the Second Vatican Council.
A few years ago a new circle was added to the original group: people who were not Ratzinger's students but who have been formed by studying his theology. Among this group is Cistercian Father Maximilian Heim, one of the recipients of the new.  \

ZE11061503 - 2011-06-15
Permalink: http://www.zenit.org/article-32861?l=english

WINNERS OF RATZINGER PRIZE ANNOUNCED


New Honor to Promote Theological Studies

VATICAN CITY, JUNE 15, 2011 (Zenit.org).- The first three winners of the Ratzinger Prize for Theology are an Italian layman, Manlio Simonetti; a Spanish priest, Olegario González de Cardedal; and a German Cistercian, Father Maximilian Heim, all chosen because their theology is anchored in reality.
The Ratzinger Prize was inaugurated by the new Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI Vatican Foundation, founded last March.
These first three winners will get their prize -- €50,000 ($70,000) -- from the Holy Father on June 30. The ceremony will include an address from Father Heim and from the Pontiff.
The winners were presented Tuesday by Cardinal Camillo Ruini, president of the Ratzinger Prize committee.
The foundation and the Ratzinger Prize are funded in part by revenues from the Pope's books. But Monsignor Giuseppe Antonio Scotti, president of the Joseph Ratzinger-Benedict XVI Foundation, noted how one of the first private donors -- a French woman -- sent a €500 check with a note saying the foundation is "something new and full of future." 
Cardinal Ruini indicated that prize winners are evaluated on theological excellence, regardless of fame. The award also hopes to recognize up-and-coming scholars. Furthermore, the cardinal explained, the criteria do not dictate that the candidate be Catholic.
Simonetti, 85, is an expert of ancient Christian literature and patristics. He is "one of the principal authorities in the matter of research on primitive Christianity," Cardinal Ruini said.
Father González de Cardedal, 76, is a systematic theologian. He is a member of the International Theological Commission, and has worked primarily on the Trinity and Christology, on the relations between theology and anthropology, and in particular on the confrontation between faith and unbelief.
Father Maximilian Heim, 50, is the abbot of the Cistercian Abbey of Heiligenkreuz in Austria. He is a professor of fundamental and dogmatic theology. He is a member of the new circle of Ratzinger students and oversees the publication of his complete works.
[Reporting by Anita Bourdin]
Link:
http://www.hochschule-heiligenkreuz.at/Prof-P-Dr-Maximilian-Heim-OCist.90.0.html
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximilian_Heim#Ehrungen_und_Auszeichnungen

Monday, 6 December 2010

Of Gods and Men (Des Hommes et des Dieux)

Of Gods and Men (Des Hommes et des Dieux)
Sold by: Amazon EU S.a.r.L.   


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Delivery Estimate:  1 Dec 2010

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Hi, Andy,
You and Anne Marie are amazing by being among the first to attend the showing of the Film about the Atlas Monks
Our DVD is on the way but Amazon has apologised of the Courier delay by the snow hold up.
...
Thank you Andy for your 12-34-37 mid night Emailing.
God bless.

fr. Donald.




----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Andy M ...
To: Donald ...
Sent: Mon, 6 December, 2010 0:34:37
Subject: Of Gods and Men
Dear Donald
Anne Marie and I have just returned from seeing the film of Gods and Men.  What a movie.  Very sensitive to the spirituality of the life within the monastery.  The setting depicted the very simplistic way of life of these monks and actors in no way detracted from the sensitive nature of the build up to the kidnapping of the seven martyrs. 
 
The movie was very spiritual, prayerful and at parts very emotional especially after the community had decided to remain in the monastery and during the community meal one of the monks opened bottles of wine and played a recording from Swan Lake - a very moving part of the story as each member of the community realised what lay ahead of them
 
The sensitivity of the Cistercian way of life was very evident in the singing of the psalms, in the celebration of the Eucharist and in the Salve Regina. Onlooking a some of the photographs of the Atlas Martyrs it is amazing how the actors chosen to portray the monks resembled them. A film well worth seeing.
 
I have tracked down a supplier of the DVD, but unfortunately they do not have any stock at the moment.  I have arranged for a copy to be sent to you when they com into stock.
 
God bless
Andy

Friday, 3 December 2010

Sr. Kevin OCSO Glencairn



November 28, 2010 : Sister Kevin O'Farrell. Born in 1921 in Shanballymore (Ireland), she entered Glencairn in 1939 and made her solemn profession in 1944. She held the office of Prioress for some years. Sister was 89 years old and had been in monastic vows for 69 years when the Lord called her.

Death of Sister Kevin O’Farrell OCSO
29 November 2010  
News Story Image
Sr. Kevin OCSO Glencairn Abbey
Our dear Sister Kevin died very peacefully last night at 11pm, 28 November, 2010.  Sister Kevin had been professed as a Cistercian Nun for 69 years, having entered the community in 1939 at the age of 18, just 7 years after Glencairn’s foundation in 1932.
  

Mary Teresa Patricia O’Farrell was born on 16 March, 1921, in Shanballymore, Co. Cork, where her family had farming and retail interests.  Her father, having been twice widowed, had married three times, and she was born into a large, close-knit, caring and devoted family with whom she always remained in close contact.  One of her brothers joined the Cistercians in Roscrea, taking the name of Kevin; he eventually became Abbot in a daughter house of Roscrea, Tarrawarra Abbey in Australia.  On leaving school, Sister Kevin entered Glencairn on 29 October, 1939, taking the name Sister Mary Kevin.  She made Temporary Profession on 5 November, 1941, and Final Profession on 5 November, 1944.
  

During her long life in Glencairn, this much loved Sister worked generously and faithfully in the many duties assigned to her, including working in the garden and the wardrope, milking the cows, working on the poultry farm, taking a great interest in all her work.  She also held the office of Junior Directress, and was Prioress for many years.  Her gentleness, accessibility, kindness and compassion endeared her to all in the community and during the last few years of her life, when she was confined largely to her room, she warmly welcomed all who came to her to confide their difficulties, request prayers or have a chat.  She lived through the inevitable ups and downs of community life with great patience and without complaint.
She was a woman of deep prayer with a great trust in the goodness of God, devoted to the Divine Office and also very careful always about her daily Lectio Divina.
 

She will be greatly missed by her community, family and friends and we continue to rely on her prayers for us now that she is with the Lord, as we relied on them during her lifetime here in Glencairn. 
May she rest in God’s eternal embrace.