Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Chapter 52: The oratory of the monastery


The oratory must be simply a place of prayer, as the name itself implies, and it must not be used for any other activities at all nor as a place for storage of any kind. (From Ch. 52 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

The mantra is a way of poverty; it leads to purity of heart.  It's a way of letting go of the emotional baggage that can cram my own inner room.

2 comments:

  1. “It is not that monks are supermen but that they have organized their lives with an utterly clear priority.” (John Main, “Letters from the Heart”) I want to, also, organize my life around you, Abba, my utterly clear priority. My oratory is the sacred space I make in my day exclusively for love, for re-centering myself with you in my twice-daily meditation.

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  2. Where is my "oratory"?. Esther de Waal in A Life-Giving Way describes a physical space in the corner of a house where there can be "uncluttered space and silence." Barring that which is of course helpful, the other "place" is my heart. When I sit to meditate I have every intention to strip away clutter, to be in silence, and to "intend" my heart and very being towards God. I need to let go of forceful effort because I take solace in the words of one of the Easter readings, "Jesus met them on their way."(Matt.28:9) I do not know the time that He will meet me. I just need to be on the way every day, twice a day with openness of heart and know with faith that He will meet me where I am.

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