Modern Monastic Life
at St. John's Abby

Benedictine monks seek God through prayer and work in community. In the Rule of Saint Benedict there is an insistence that nothing be preferred to community prayer. Therefore, in addition to the communal daily celebration of the Mass, the monks gather three times each day for prayer.
Essential to the practice of community life is the recognition that all are obedient to an Abbot, who is the spiritual father and the leader of the community. Under his guidance and through the "help of many brothers" the monks attempt to lead more perfectly the Christian way of life. Through their common work and prayer, their obedience to a common superior, they assist each other in the primary task of seeking God.
Monks share their lives and goods in common. Through their community of goods they support the apostolates of the community, provide for the sick and retired of the community, and help others in need. Though the nature of their work may keep them for long periods of time outside the abbey itself, they recognize the bonds of brotherhood and support each other in a variety of ways; communications from the abbot, a monthly newsletter, and similar means of correspondence keep everyone abreast of what is happening and help all share in what each is doing.
At Saint John's Abbey about 160 men aged 22-92 live, study, pray and work. They are part of the more than 300 men who comprise Saint John's monastic community. They have come for the most part from the midwest, but many are from the east and west coasts as well, and even from foreign countries. Recently many, but not all, have come with a college degree or intend to continue academic or vocational studies.
Monks engage in a great variety of work. The president of Saint John's University and several vice-presidents are monks; dozens of monks teach in a variety of academic fields; some program computers and staff offices. Twenty monks staff the small, but unique, college preparatory school on campus. Others are plumbers, carpenters, electricians, garners, counsellors, nurses, chaplains, artists, students. Several have earned international recognition for their work in liturgy, ecumenics and the human life movement.
Monks staff some 35 parishes in Minnesota. About 20 men serve as chaplains to religious communities, military personnel, the sick, the elderly, the physically and mentally handicapped, and prisoners. Some 50 staff missions in Puerto Rico, Japan and the Bahama Islands. A dozen are pursuing graduate studies in American and foreign universities.
Saint John's Abbey is located among more than 2,000 acres of water, woods and hills in south-central Minnesota, ten miles west of Saint Cloud. Around the abbey has grown up an educational comples that includes a university with a graduate school and a seminary, a college preparatory school, a printing press and publishing house, a center for Ecumenical and Cultural Research, the Hill Monastic Microfilm Library, a human life center, and a state-wide network of cultural and educational FM radio stations.

Stimler
Last modified: August 31, 1999
Copyright © 1999 Holy Mountain Trading Company. All rights reserved.


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