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THEMES IN BENEDICTINE LIFE
Our Lady Queen Monastery is a Benedictine contemplative community of nuns. The structure and orientation of our life flows from the rule St. Benedict wrote in the 6th Century.
All over the world the Rule of St. Benedict continues to be followed all
these centuries for
St. Benedict stresses the way of humility. Chapter Seven of the Rule is titled: The Steps of Humility. Even a surface reading of this chapter could not result in thinking Benedict was promoting an obsequious, timid approach to life. Humility flows out of one’s deep and personal relationship to the Lord. Trust in the Lord’s care about every hair on one’s head and a forthright self-knowledge go hand in hand. It is lived out in the monastery concretely in service to one another. He asks us to go against the prevailing culture and ask ourselves what is better for another in a particular circumstance and choose that rather than what is best for oneself. Humility in the monastery includes living a life of obedience to the Church, one’s superior and the other members of the community. It is embracing and living as one’s own all that it entails to be one of the nuns. This covers the gamut from the schedule, activities, food and even clothing, wearing a habit.
Another keynote in a Benedictine monastery is obedience. In the very first lines of the Prologue of the Rule St. Benedict calls the out to one he describes as “drifting away” from Christ, to take up “the strong bright weapons of obedience to follow Christ the true King.” The obedience St. Benedict teaches is not a blind, unthinking reflex. Rather, it is a response, an answer to a voice one is taught to listen for. St. Benedict’s insight is to listen, listen with the ear of your heart, for the voice of the Lord. The bell that is rung to call the community to rise from sleep, to the Church, or the refectory is described as “the voice of the Lord”. In the words of the superior, is heard the voice of the Lord. In the request of a member of the community is the voice of the Lord.
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The community is not made out of carbon copies. St. Benedict speaks about all the varied characters that will be found in the cloister. He provides for weak and strong, healthy and ill, old and young, docile and stubborn and on and on. Each member is treated as unique and therefore challenged as only that single person can be to grow in the way the Lord’s knows. One of the irreducible elements of a nun’s day is prayer. Benedictine prayer is lived out in several different ways which are so interlinked that there is no way to list them in a matter of importance, all are essential and flow from the other. Personal prayer is part of daily horarium. St. Benedict, wisely, does not teach how, but simply to do it. As a 20th Century Benedictine Abbot, Dom John Chapman, wrote, “Pray as you can, not as you can’t.” Liturgical prayer forms the skeleton of a Benedictine’s day. The bell gathers the community together seven times throughout the day to sanctify the hours. Here, commonly, the nuns are saturated in the Word of God through the Psalms and Scripture. It is the prayer of the Church. There the needs of the world are gathered before God through the hearts, minds and bodies of the community praying. Here St. Benedict gives great detail to bring about an ordered, reverent and common prayer to be the heart beat of the monastic day. Then there is Lectio Divina. This is the blood of monastic life. It is the daily immersion of each individual into the reading of the bible. From the ancient monks and nuns comes the practice of this method of “method-less” reading, reflecting, praying and contemplating the Word of God in the secret of one’s own heart. All these ways of praying are as necessary and regular as the meals are every day.
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