Monastics
in the World
Laurence Freeman OSB
Visitors have inquired about
Oblation in the Benedictine Tradition.
The following is a "Guide" explaining the Tradition in the past and
in the present.
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MONASTICS IN THE
WORLD
The
Tradition of the Benedictine Oblate Today
Laurence Freeman, O.S.B.
Introduction
(Gregory J. Ryan)
Laurence Freeman is a monk of the Olivetan Benedictine Congregation of
Monte Oliveto Maggiore and Director of The World Community for Christian Meditation. He has written this present guide for modern people who
are interested in living their lives not at the surface, but from the depths.
As a monk, he has found a way to those depths within the framework of the Holy
Rule of Saint Benedict. As a teacher, he is committed to sharing that way with
others.
Unlike other religious leaders, Benedict wrote only one rule of life, not one for men, one for women, and another for lay people. He wrote one rule that can be lived by men and women inside and outside the monastery as monks, nuns, and lay people.
Benedict's Rule is eminently flexible, allowing each
monastery to find its own charism. In "MONASTICS IN THE WORLD" Father Laurence recalls his
friend and teacher, Dom. John Main O.S.B., who placed the tradition of
Christian Meditation at the center of the monastic life of the contemplative
community he founded. Before his death in 1982, John Main spent his years as a
mature Benedictine monk teaching the practice of meditation to anyone who
wanted to learn.
John Main's conviction was that
This
guide presents Father Laurence's thoughts on: the Oblate tradition, discerning
a calling to Benedictine Oblation, the process for becoming an Oblate, and the
hallmarks of the commitment an Oblate makes to his/her community.
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MONASTICS IN THE
WORLD
The Tradition of the Benedictine Oblate Today
"The Oblate community
is an exploration, made in the vision of the Benedictine Tradition, of an
integrated, spiritual form of life appropriate for men and women today."
1. THE TRADITION OF MONASTICISM
Monasticism is one of the oldest human institutions. It
testifies to the unquenchable thirst of the human soul to awaken to its origin.
The first Christian monks appeared early in the Church's history as an attempt
to recover the primary experience of faith. They began as hermits in the
2. THE RULE OF ST. BENEDICT
Benedict
began his monastic life as a young man as a hermit. Later he became the
spiritual father of a number of monasteries for which he wrote a short Rule,
which he described as a "little rule for beginners". It is about 9000
words and is mostly concerned with the practical details of community life. But
the way it deals with these details allows it to transcend its time and
culture. His essential question for entry into the community is "does the
monk truly seek God?" The vows of stability, obedience and conversion of
life are supplemented by disciplines of mindfulness and self-harmony aimed to
bring the monk to the experience of the love of God. Prayer is central to the
daily life and provides the framework in which the other two essential elements;
work and Lectio Divina (sacred reading) are integrated. The spirit of the Rule
is one of moderation, tolerance, respect, discipline and the liberty of love,
it is not a theological treatise - he recommends Cassian and earlier monastic
teachers for that. But Benedict testifies to a truly incarnate and daily
spiritual life, which has a universal and timeless relevance.
3.
OBLATES
Originally
oblates (from the Latin "oblatus" - offered) referred to children
placed in the monastery by their parents, They would choose whether to remain
as monks once they reached the age of reason. Later, as the monastic
institution became more formalised under church law, oblates were resident
members of the community who for various reasons did not take officially
binding vows. In time, the term oblates also covered people who lived outside
the monastery but who had a special relationship with it.
4. JOHN MAIN OSB
John
Main founded a new kind of Benedictine community based on the Rule and on the
practice of meditation as taught in the Desert Tradition. From its beginning he
gave equal value to the forms of commitment made by monks or oblates. Oblates
in his vision were not merely "attached" to a monastic family; they
were fully participatory and contributing members. This represented both a
return to an ancient tradition and an important new development.
Today the community formed around the world through
meditation testifies to John Main's belief that the "contemplative
experience creates community". Meditation takes us to the essence of the
monastic identity: the single-minded search for God. Then it naturally awakens
our sense of sharing this search with others.
Of course not all meditators become oblates. The
World Community for Christian Meditation represents, along with diverse other
inspired groups, today, a contemporary form of Christian contemplative life.
John Main believed that meditation offered a path for all people into the
deepest faith-mystery of Christian experience. His great contribution was
"the way of the mantra"; a simple discipline that could be practiced
daily by people in any walk of life. For
some meditators the monastic roots of this tradition offers them in a
particular personal way a context and vision for their pilgrimage.
5. WHY PEOPLE
BECOME OBLATES
Practicing meditation every day does not mean one has to become an oblate. Why then do some meditators do so? Because they feel the value of expressing in a visible, human way the sense of community they feel with others seeking God on this path. Because we all need support, encouragement, inspiration and the challenge of others to deepen our commitment. Because the sense of tradition needs to be made real in a living community and the Benedictine tradition is deep and wide enough to give hospitality to a very broad spectrum of people.
Also because they see that modern life can lack
meaning, spiritual focus, and balance. In the Benedictine vision as developed
for 1500 years they see the elements of a healthy style of life: a balance and
harmony of body mind and spirit. A context for the study of scripture and
spiritual thought which the way of meditation naturally encourages and makes a
source of delight.
The
oblate vision integrates the twin forms of monastic life, solitude and
community. Basic to this vision is the centrality of prayer - the different
forms of prayer, which lead us into the "pure prayer" of simplicity
and oneness as taught by the Desert Tradition. It offers a liberating sense of
spiritual discipline appropriate to one's temperament and state of life.
6. THE
COMMITMENT
Being an oblate is not a legalistic undertaking. The
Rule of St Benedict itself is a highly flexible document that demands to be
interpreted and has received very diverse interpretations throughout its history.
In the same way the life of an oblate is not bound to a set of rules and
regulations. The Rule is a yardstick, a way of seeing the straight in the
crooked. It is not in the Benedictine spirit to have a book of rigid rules.
The three basic vows of the Benedictine Rule are
principles of life to which the oblate makes a commitment of heart and mind:
STABILITY: This does not mean merely
physical stability but an inner fidelity to the community one has joined. But
this stability is given meaning by the commitment to the deeper stability of
one's inner being, calmness and peace of mind, an ever-growing rootedness in
the Spirit.
OBEDIENCE: All groups require a
structure of obedience however informal. Benedict emphasises the importance of
mutual obedience and consultation. But the essential obedience here is that of
the spiritual ear attuned to the Word of God, which resonates in all peoples
and all situations, and a quick responsiveness to this Word.
CONVERSION: Dramatic experiences of
conversion may have their value but their meaning is in opening a new phase of
life. This vow is a commitment to be always a pilgrim, living an ongoing
conversion of one's way of life by an ever-fuller harmony with the principles
of peace, tolerance, selflessness and generosity and the courage to say the
truth about injustice.
These general principles are lived out in personal
ways. There are, however some particular elements of the oblate commitment
which also highlight its meaning:
i.
A commitment to the twice daily practice of meditation each day in the
tradition which John Main osb handed
on.
ii.
Some form/part of the Divine Office/Liturgy of the Hours as morning and
evening prayer.
iii.
A short reading/reflection of the Rule of St Benedict each day.
iv.
Frequent reading of Scripture; Lectio Divina.
v.
A sharing in some way in the work of the community to pass on the
Christian tradition of Meditation.
7. COMMUNITY
There are many different forms of monastic life and community. Today’s "Monastic" - another possible term for "Oblate" - may live singly, in marriage or in one of several forms of shared life with others. All these ways of life are livable in the Oblate Community. We recognise today both the need for a pluralism of forms and for a spirit of adventurous experimentation as this ancient tradition evolves.
The
basic element of the Oblate Community, however, is the "cell". This
word has a long monastic tradition referring originally to the monk's cave or
room. With us it is used to describe presence, not only physical space. Therefore
an oblate cell can exist where there is even one oblate living alone with rare
contact with other oblates. It also refers, more usually, to a group of oblates
living close to each other. This cell will agree and arrange to meet with
regularity, to meditate, to share the Word and to consider their ways of
sharing in the work of the wider community.
There is also a newsletter and occasions like
retreats, the John Main seminar and other events in the meditating community at
which oblates can meet and share the strength of their common bond.
8. ENTERING
THE COMMUNITY
As the Rule describes, entering a community is a
process and requires discernment. This is not because the community is any kind
of elite. But because the full benefit of entering demands the clearest
possible understanding of one's reasons and of the call to which one is
responding.
The first step is to make contact with an oblate or
cell and make an expression of interest. Then a period of Postulancy can
begin for which there is the simplest of ceremonies. During this period, of
about six months, the postulant would benefit from attending the meetings of
the cell and other events in which meditators meet. (The meetings of the cells
are never "closed"). One can also use this period to develop a clear
understanding of what the oblate community is about and what it is not. A
reading of John Main's "Community of Love" would be helpful at this
stage, along with an initial reading of The Rule of St Benedict.
Secondly, the Oblate Novitiate begins, where
possible, with a short ceremony of welcoming and prayer for the fruitfulness of
this step. The oblate novitiate lasts a year and may be extended. During this
time the oblate novice begins a study of the Rule, the Benedictine tradition
and the teaching of John Main and other teachers of the Christian contemplative
tradition. Although this formative year is not primarily about reading, it is
important to set aside time for this work. The real formation is in the
deepening of awareness that takes place as one continues to meditate day by day
with a quiet sense of the community of meditators near and far.
The third stage is the Final Oblation which
is made at the expressive moment in one's spiritual journey as a step into a
community and the living tradition it embodies. It is not a step that should be
rushed and there should be a period of discernment, such as a retreat, during
which one can reflect upon the meaning of the Benedictine "vows" as
they apply in one's own particular circumstances.
9. THE FORM
OF OBLATION
Oblation is made to and within The World Community for Christian Meditation. The community is spiritually associated with the Benedictine Order through the Congregation of Monte Oliveto.
Meditation is about the journey to the Centre - one's own Centre and the Centre, which is God. Christian Meditation is the spiritual journey into this centre by becoming centred in the heart and mind of Christ by a way of silence, simplicity and stillness.
Becoming an oblate in this community is an assent
and a commitment to the recentring of one's life and of one's awareness in this
mystery of Christ and of God. It is one way, among others, in which this
universal human journey is given meaning and focus and is enriched, no less for
the good of others as for our own, by joy and peace.
Laurence
Freeman, OSB
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