IN THE NEWS
Read how Unity and Green Innovation mix at the monastery in an article by Sustainable Times.
PRAYER/WORSHIP
Monastic Community
Prayer ScheduleAll are welcome to pray in the monastery each day at morning, midday and evening, according to the monastic pattern of worship using hymns, psalms, scripture, and prayer. Click here for prayer schedule.
Sunday Worship
Join our Sunday Assembly at 9 a.m. each Sunday in the Assembly Room at Holy Wisdom Monastery. Our liturgy is ecumenical and all are welcome. Centering Prayer
A group of Sunday Assembly members and Oblates hold Centering Prayer gatherings on the first and third Wednesdays of the month at 7 p.m. in the Community of Benedict room (lower level) of the retreat and guest house. All are welcome.
Taizé Prayer
A rich contrast of silence and song held monthly October-May at 7:30 p.m.
Nov. 27 | Dec. 18
Jan. 22 | Feb. 26 | March 26
April 23 | May 28
For more information about prayer and worship contact Lynn at llemberger@benedictinewomen.org or 608-836-1631, ext. 138. RETREATS/EVENTS
Milestones on the JourneyThe November 14, 2009 "Milestones on the Journey" event with Sister Joan Chittister, OSB is full. Open HouseTour our new sustainable monastery during the Open House on November 15, 2009 from 12-2 p.m. Questions? Call 608-836-1631, ext. 149 or email info@benedictinewomen.org. RESOURCESBecome a fan of Benedictine Women of Madison on Facebook
Visit Holy Wisdom Monastery and walk the grounds to see the beauty of the changing seasons. If you can't get here, visit through the Nature Notes on our website. REFLECTIONSSeptember Oblate Retreat: Faith, Music and Benedictine Spirituality Fifty-five Oblates met in September for a weekend retreat focused on the role of music in our personal faith journey and its connection to Benedictine spirituality. Fr. Robert Koopmann led the retreat weekend. He is a monk of St. John's Abbey, is active as a concert pianist in both the U.S. and abroad, and was recently named the 12th president of St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota. Fr. Koopmann began with a reminder of St. Benedict's opening words in his prologue to the Rule of Benedict, "Listen carefully, my child . . . with the ear of your heart." Building from there, he interspersed his insights on the connection of music and spirituality with portions of compositions by Mozart, Bach, Brahms and others. more
Reflection by Fr. Robert Koopmann, OSBI have been coming to St. Benedict Center, now Holy Wisdom Monastery, since 1993, when I spent nearly a full year sabbatical learning new piano repertoire, playing some concerts at St. Benedict Center and other places, and helping with organ playing, preaching and presiding. I have come back at least a couple of times every year since then, including another half year sabbatical in 2000. My times living in Courtenay House, praying with the Benedictine Women of Madison community, reading, practicing piano, being in silence and just relaxing have always refreshed and rejuvenated me. I returned this summer for a mini sabbatical before I began my new position as President of St. John's University in Collegeville, Minnesota. I always return to St. John's refreshed and wiser because I learn something new about myself and our world during my stay. I am deeply grateful to my good friends, the sisters, for allowing me this wonderful time of renewal. Holy Wisdom Monastery is a very special place! Fr. Koopmann will delight us with his piano music at the Milestones on the Journey event in November. |
|
|
|
Silence: A Monastic Value
It
is in silence God dwells.
I
enter into silence.
I
listen for my name.
For
centuries, monastic traditions and spiritual paths of the world's religions have
valued silence. The constant noise of today's world is reflected in amplified
decibels of sound and in its increased quantity. Our
busyness, the brightness of city lights and the never ending din of
television, cell phones and iPods all bombard us with stimuli to which our
bodies and souls must respond. These things lead us out of our lives and into
the façade that exists as the world around us.
Silence offers us the possibility of quieting
ourselves and attending to the depths of our beings. more
Photo by Martine Debaisieux
|
A Stay in the Hermitage
During one of my first visits to
the monastery, the sisters read from Nan C. Merrill's Psalms for Praying. In
it, she refers to God as "my Beloved." That phrase was such an eye opener! I
realized that was how I felt; I just hadn't been able to put it into words.
Staying at the hermitage is not a matter of being alone, or in silence, or away
from the world. It is a matter of being alone with my Beloved, being quiet
enough to hear God speak, being away from the distractions and busy-ness of the
world so I can spend time in God's world. more
|
Centering Prayer: Getting to the Heart of the Matter
We are all novices on a spiritual journey.
Every step in this journey is no more or less important
than any other.
Centering prayer is a form of meditation in
which the mind and the heart open to the wisdom and grace of God. There are
many instances in the mystical tradition where an experience of communion with
God is described. In 1974, Father William Menninger, a Trappist monk, discovered
a little book in the Abbey library, The
Cloud of Unknowing. This book from the fourteenth century was written in
Middle English, not Latin, which meant that it was intended primarily for lay
persons rather than clergy. The book presented contemplative meditation as a
teachable spiritual process enabling the ordinary person to enter and receive a
direct experience of union with God. more
|
Groundskeeping and Interior Landscaping
"I am grateful for a summer that has opened me up emotionally, worked me
hard physically, and helped me to grow spiritually. I think I will always be
able to look back on the summer of 2009 as an important turning point in my
life." - 2009 Volunteer in Community
"Learning
how to tend the prairie or to garden or to landscape while learning so much
about myself and developing my spirituality... all in a gorgeous setting with an
incredible community - what a unique and
privileged education this has been!" - 2009
Volunteer in Community

Fifteen Volunteers in Community
lived, prayed, worked and shared meals with sisters, co-workers and retreatants
at the monastery this summer. Many of the women attended centering prayer and
the Liturgy of the Hours. During their work time, they weeded the garden and
brought in produce, split and stacked fire wood, pruned apple and pear trees,
laid down straw matting for erosion control around the new monastery building,
helped prepare meals, cleared invasive species from the prairie and pruned
bushes. In total, the women contributed 1,223 volunteer hours of work
throughout their time with us. moreWatch a video about the Volunteer in Community program created by participant Jenn Lindsay: Part OnePart TwoPhotos by Jenn Lindsay. Top: Elizabeth Marsh (left) and Jessie Gutgsell water plants in the garden. Bottom: Sister Lynne Smith, OSB (left) prays with volunteers, Debbie Oaks, Carolyn Hames and Bethany Johnson before eating a meal together.
|
Silence is for Everyone
A quick check of the card catalog
in the monastery library produced eleven entries under "silence" and
"solitude." That makes sense. It is a monastic library. I, like many others, assumed that silence and
solitude is something monks, sisters, and hermits experience and cherish, but I
realized after reading these books that silence is for everyone.
Those eleven entries span over
fifty years of "silence." From Thomas
Merton's Thoughts in Solitude (New
York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, 1958) to Peter-Damian Belisle's The Language of Silence (Maryknoll,
NY: Orbis Books, 2003). All these books stress silence not as a way
to escape life and its problems, but of confronting those problems and renewing
oneself. And the decade they were
published makes little difference beyond a few dated terms. The meaning remains the same.
Ambrose G. Wathen's Silence: the Meaning of Silence in the Rule
of St. Benedict (Washington, D.C.: Cistercian Publications, 1973) talks
about silence as a method of communication, as prayer, as a form of
self-discipline, and as part of daily life. Nicolas Caballero's Silence and
the Liberation of Consciousness (Quezon City, Philippines: Claretian
Publications, 1985) and Anselm Grun's The
Challenge of Silence (Schuyler, Neb.: BMH Publications, 1993) are how-to-do
books on silence, with chapters devoted to using silence as a way of letting go
and opening up. And Peter-Damian Belisle's
book, while providing a historical background for silence, also discusses contemporary
"hermits" and the place of solitude within today's family structure. Visit our library or purchase these books through Good Shop,
Choose Benedictine Women of Madison, then Amazon or Barnes and Noble
and a donation will go to the monastery just for using Good Shop. print article
|
Recycle or Reuse--What's the Difference?
Recycle and Re-use are synonyms, right? Wrong! They do
not mean the same thing in the world of green buildings, sustainable design and
LEED certification. Recycling involves processing used materials into new products to
prevent the waste of potentially useful materials thereby reducing the
consumption of fresh raw materials and energy. Re-use means using an
item again for the same function, thus saving time, money, energy and resources.
more
| |
|