• Author Archive

    Three Lifegiving Priniciples (Monastic Vows)

    PatMay 14, 2008

    As folks who’ve been reading here for a few months have noticed, my spiritual journey has taken me down a bit more structured path, and I’ve been talking a lot about religious orders, neo-monasticism, vows and Rules of Life. This post continues that trend and introduces monastic vows and what I’m thinking about them in the context of my own life. In particular, as I continue to explore the possibility of joining the Community of Aidan and Hilda, understanding how their Way of Life would help me to grow spiritually is a huge topic.

    So, some background to the idea of vows:

    If you were to be thinking about entering a traditional monastery anytime soon, you’d be thinking about vows that, over the course of time, you would explore and live into, and at some point you and the community would decide together if you were called to live faithfully pursuing.

    In many monasteries, you would vow to pursue Poverty, Chastity, Obedience. These three vows form the basis of the disciplined spiritual life for those in religious orders. (Wikipedia on Religious vows)

    In a monastery influenced by the Benedictine Rule (and most are heavily influenced by this), your vows would likely be a similar, earlier form of these three: Stability, ‘Conversatio’, and Obedience. Why are these vows different? Let’s let the Benedictine Sisters answer:

    [Q]: Why don’t you vow poverty, chastity and obedience?

    [A]: Our Benedictine vows come from the Rule of Saint Benedict which was written centuries before poverty, chastity and obedience became the standard vows.

    Saint Benedict’s vows (or promises as he called them) are stability, ‘conversatio’ and obedience. Stability is a commitment of lifelong fidelity to God and our Congregation. ‘Conversatio’ is a commitment to embrace all of monastic life as a path to holiness and conversion. This includes poverty or simplicity of life and chastity. Obedience is a vow of listening, responsive love to the voice of God as it comes to us through prayer, the Rule of Saint Benedict, Scripture, our prioress and our sisters. (Source: Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration)

    In more contemporary communities these topics for vows may take different shapes. In communities which include people who are engaged in family or contemporary work, these vows take that reality into account. Any neo-monastic or intentional community likely has written or unwritten vows.

    OK for a starting point?

    The Community of Aidan and Hilda in the US as a religious order in this form, welcoming singles and marrieds, young and old, families and houses and churches, etc., expresses their community Way of Life in a similar form. They speak of three Live-Giving Principles Simplicity, Purity, Obedience.

    In common with many communities within Christianity we have three vows. These are SIMPLICITY, CHASTITY, and OBEDIENCE which we understand as principles, not rules. SIMPLICITY means the willingness to be poor or rich for God according to his direction. We resist the temptations to be greedy or possessive, and we will not manipulate people or creation for our own ends. We are bold to use all we have for God without fear of possible poverty. CHASTITY means accepting and giving to God our whole being including our sexuality. We love all people as Christ commands, but the specific emotions and intimacy of sexual relations are expressed only in married life. Some will be given a gift of marriage, others a gift of celibacy. Both are to be equally respected and rejoiced in. We respect every other person as belonging to God, and we are available to them with generosity and openness. OBEDIENCE is the joyful abandonment of ourselves to God. The root of obedience is in attentive listening to God, because the longing of our hearts is to obey him. We honor those whom God has placed in authority over us, and we seek to recognize and respect the gifts, roles and authority of those who work alongside us in the community of the church. (Source: The Ten Elements of the Aidan Way of Life)

    Over the next while, I’m going to be journaling (at least partly via this blog) my thoughts about committing to vows of simplicity, chastity (purity) and obedience. I’m thinking of it as something of a commentary and journal on those topics, mostly written to myself, but you’re welcome to join the ride.

    After I feel that I have a handle on those 3 principles, then I’m planning to work through the 10 elements of the Community’s rule.

    Posted in Celtic, Faith |
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    Updated blog design

    PatMay 13, 2008

    Thanks to Wordpress design whiz Todd Hiestand, I’ve made some big changes around here to make this blog easier to read. I’m now using Todd’s theme called Lean and Clean, which is a 3-column, widget-ready theme done with Todd’s usual knack for very clean, visually appealing design. Todd plans to sell this theme for the low, low price of $5, and my experience with it so far is very positive.

    In addition to the theme update, I’ve done a few other updates:

    • Linked to last four photos from my Flickr stream
    • Linked to the last four photos I’ve faved from others
    • Updated my RSS feeds to Feedburner, which also gives me a subscribe-by-email option
    • Added a twitter widget
    • Added a way to more easily bookmark posts on your bookmark app
    • Updated a few links

    More to come:

    • A page for social networks I’m hanging out on
    • Another links scrub
    • A hard scrub of categories and tags
    • etc

    Enjoy, (especially those of you who read via a feed reader), and go give Todd some feedback or give him some money to get your very own lean and clean theme.

    Posted in Technology |
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    Rose Madrid-Swetman over at Jesus Creed

    PatMay 12, 2008

    My friend and mentor Rose write today on JesusCreed.org’s ongoing series of pastoral wisdom about “if you could begin all over again, what would you do differently?”

    Rose co-pastors a church that I highly respect, and her post is well worth reading.

    An excerpt:

    Scot: If you could begin all over again, what one thing would you have focused on more? Or, put differently, what wisdom would you give to a new pastor if you were asked this question: What should I focus on?

    Rose: I am going to make a couple of assumptions. First, I have a core team that is organized around a common mission. Second, that we agree that our faith community is to be a sign, agent, and witness to the Kingdom of God.

    With those two assumptions in my pocket, I would focus on “growing a church big rather than growing a big church.” [...]

    The whole article is here. Rose blogs here.

    This interview would be a really nice complement to what those of you coming over from today’s link to my post to church planters from ChurchMarketingSucks are responding to.