I really love these reflections, but this one I'm going to push back on. It is a common fallacy that monastic life is an escape from the world and that those who seek out monastic life are seeking that escape. It is exactly the opposite. In monastic life there is no place to hide, not from one's self, not from your fellow monastics, not from one's interior "demons," and, most of all, not from God. If anything, monastic life is an intensification of all those things that can make life "in the world" a struggle. It's moving from the gently simmering pot to the pressure cooker. I haven't moved into the pressure cooker, exactly. As part of a dispersed community, the form of monasticism I experience is more of a tea kettle, and yet much of what is true of life in a residential monastic community is part of ours as well. Ours is a life devoted to love of God and one's neighbor in prayer, work and study, a gradual stripping away of those things we use to insulate ourselves from ourselves and one another, and of course, time to focus on those imperishable things Jesus counsels us to value above all.
Robin!! I'm so sorry this hit you the way it did. (See, this is the problem with these short daily notes... No room for context or the bigger picture. I may need to rethink things. Anyhow...) Please know that I'm painting in VERY BIG brushstrokes here. This is why I said 'some, not all' monastics escape the world. I should've said the same about wealthy/powerful people. Not all of them do this. I'm more talking about an impulse we all have to run away from the strife of the world. Or to run away from the mundane. Please don't see this as me bashing monastics. What you're doing is beautiful and so needed. Carry on and Godspeed, Robin!
I love this so much. Your timing seems to always be spot on for me. I've been using "weekends away" as a coping mechanism lately. (a coping mechanism I definitely cannot afford). Thank you for this reminder of the importance of the need to be present in ordinary life. Now that I've drove myself broke, I am officially in the "return" season of my life and was looking for hope on how to handle it. I appreciate you Jonas!!
The poetic beauty of your last sentence is so true. Yes, life can be messy and sometimes feel broken and at the SAME MOMENT we can express the beautiful heart of everyday life. It is healing to act from the heart in those messy moments. Thank you for reminder JE-S-US
I really love these reflections, but this one I'm going to push back on. It is a common fallacy that monastic life is an escape from the world and that those who seek out monastic life are seeking that escape. It is exactly the opposite. In monastic life there is no place to hide, not from one's self, not from your fellow monastics, not from one's interior "demons," and, most of all, not from God. If anything, monastic life is an intensification of all those things that can make life "in the world" a struggle. It's moving from the gently simmering pot to the pressure cooker. I haven't moved into the pressure cooker, exactly. As part of a dispersed community, the form of monasticism I experience is more of a tea kettle, and yet much of what is true of life in a residential monastic community is part of ours as well. Ours is a life devoted to love of God and one's neighbor in prayer, work and study, a gradual stripping away of those things we use to insulate ourselves from ourselves and one another, and of course, time to focus on those imperishable things Jesus counsels us to value above all.
Robin!! I'm so sorry this hit you the way it did. (See, this is the problem with these short daily notes... No room for context or the bigger picture. I may need to rethink things. Anyhow...) Please know that I'm painting in VERY BIG brushstrokes here. This is why I said 'some, not all' monastics escape the world. I should've said the same about wealthy/powerful people. Not all of them do this. I'm more talking about an impulse we all have to run away from the strife of the world. Or to run away from the mundane. Please don't see this as me bashing monastics. What you're doing is beautiful and so needed. Carry on and Godspeed, Robin!
I love this so much. Your timing seems to always be spot on for me. I've been using "weekends away" as a coping mechanism lately. (a coping mechanism I definitely cannot afford). Thank you for this reminder of the importance of the need to be present in ordinary life. Now that I've drove myself broke, I am officially in the "return" season of my life and was looking for hope on how to handle it. I appreciate you Jonas!!
The poetic beauty of your last sentence is so true. Yes, life can be messy and sometimes feel broken and at the SAME MOMENT we can express the beautiful heart of everyday life. It is healing to act from the heart in those messy moments. Thank you for reminder JE-S-US