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Echoes from the Bell Tower, a podcast devoted to stories of wit and wisdom from the monks of Saint Meinrad.
Echoes from the Bell Tower is a blog devoted to observations on Christian faith, spirituality and everyday events, by authors with a connection to the Benedictine values found at Saint Meinrad Archabbey and its Seminary and School of Theology. Contributors include students, permanent deacons, Benedictine oblates and Saint Meinrad monks. Their stories, thoughts and ideas highlight the mission and vision that ring out from the bell towers on this Hill in southern Indiana.
Several times a day we monks go to the Abbey Church to pray together. We sing hymns, we chant and recite psalms, we listen to scripture and the writings of spiritual commentators that help us reflect on the sacred texts of the Bible. This activity, along with our daily celebration of the Mass, is the vital center of our lives as monks. This work is God’s work, and is, for the monk, the most important kind of work we do...
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Chapter 14 is one of the shortest chapters in Saint Benedict’s Rule for monks. It’s about celebrating the monastic liturgy of vigils, but I think the first of the two verses that make up the entirety of this chapter is most telling. Feasts of saints are important to Benedict, to be honored with something like the dignity of a Sunday, the day of the Lord’s resurrection.
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One thing St. Benedict insists on is humility, which goes hand-in-glove with obedience. The Rule’s longest chapter is entitled On Humility (RB 7). In RB 45, from which I quote above (On Mistakes in the Church) we read that the monk must acknowledge his mistakes – even simple errors that negatively impact others or inconvenience the community in some way.
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Americans are living longer. Moreover, people in the United States are enjoying better health further into their elderly years as well. Presently at St. Meinrad, roughly 29% of our 70 monks are in their 80’s or 90’s. As a monastic community, one of the blessings we’ve enjoyed is having a professional caliber infirmary...
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In monastic life, we often hear about “giving up one’s will” or “surrendering to God’s will.” But common sense asks: If I don’t know what I really want, even if it is to surrender to God’s will, how can I expect to attain it? Does what I want not matter? Why would I have ever come to the monastery unless it was what I wanted to do with my life?
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On Saturday, March 9, the Alumni Office at Saint Meinrad hosted the tenth annual Saint Meinrad Day of Service. Since its inaugural year in 2014, the day’s theme has been Ora et Labora (pray and work)...
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On Friday, March 15th, the Office of Hispanic and Latino Ministry hosted their first Via Crucis, or Stations of the Cross, at Saint Meinrad. Staff, seminarians, and the Latino community gathered near the Guest House for the procession...
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Lent is a time for introspection; a special season of preparation leading up to the high point of the whole Christian year, holy Easter, when the disciples of Jesus remember in a profound and solemn way the resurrection of Lord and Savior from the dead...
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Saint Benedict’s Rule says hardly a thing about the holy Eucharist and its celebration in the monastic community. He takes it for granted, I suppose, but he is certainly aware of the need to have priests to celebrate Mass, so he charges the abbot to choose worthy candidates from among the monks (RB 62)...
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It’s Advent again and this year my attention seems to alight on the need to practice patience. Benedict places a lot of emphasis on this virtue. For instance, he seems to frame his entire rule in terms of patience...
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I begin with a verse from chapter 63 of the Rule, "On Community Rank." Establishing a sense of equality in the community - seeing one another as brothers living together under a rule and the authority of an abbot ("father") - has to be supported by the respect we give to one another. St. Benedict gives to tenure in the community - how long we've been living the monastic life - primacy of place.
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Sometimes monks need to travel. At times for personal reasons—visiting family, vacation, taking care of an ailing parent—sometimes for ministry, or for academic and professional reasons. I travel frequently to do retreat work at other locations, to cover parish Masses when a pastor needs to be away, or to promote our school’s formation programs.
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“Stability-in-community” is one of the core values of the Benedictine way of life. By our vows of stability, monks commit to a dynamic association of fellow Christians who take their calling seriously, supporting each other in the Spirit of Christ to become true disciples of Jesus for the sake of his mission to bring God’s Kingdom to earth (cf. Rev 21). I’ve written on “stability” before, but this time I want to reflect on how this quintessential monastic value serves as a counterweight to hypercompetitive individualism, and the loneliness and sense of isolation that are its fruits, so prevalent today, especially among young people...
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In the past, I have directed a retreat for the Sisters of the Divine Redeemer at their motherhouse in Elizabeth, Pennsylvania. This small religious household is made up mostly of elderly sisters in retirement, some of them infirm with age, with a number of younger sisters who take care of them and administer the property...
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We live in an incredibly mobile society. The average young American will change jobs more than three times within their first decade in the workforce...
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The sound of something breaking is not typically pleasant. Rather, it tends to be startling and alarming...
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When I was a seminarian in our school studying for the diocesan priesthood (when I came to the Hill in 1990 I was affiliated with the Archdiocese of Indianapolis), the first thing that made an impression on me was, well, the monks. I had never met a monk before. I had seen the occasional brown-robed Franciscan friar in Indy, but never a black-robed Benedictine monk...
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Scripture offers us numerous reminders of how the Holy Spirit works in the Body of Christ. The message is this: We are never alone. "I will not leave you orphaned," Jesus promises (John 14:15-21). In baptism, we are sanctified - claimed - as God's children and sealed with the Holy Spirit. Through the sacrament of confirmation (cf. Acts 8:5-8, 14-17), we are fortified by the Holy Spirit to live more fully in faith, hope, and love....
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Within the holy Rule of St. Benedict lies a little chapter that has caused me some measure of discomfort over the years...
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At the beginning of the summer, I planned on posting often about what was going on at my summer job...Yeah, that didn’t happen...
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There is a wonderful novel about a monastery of Benedictine nuns in England titled In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden.
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Billions of clips have been watched on YouTube from millions of homemade videos. By now, cyberspace must be clogged with blogs, tweets and twitters available for reading by anyone, anywhere...
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As I write this, the monastic community is on its annual week of retreat. We don’t go anywhere; we remain in the house while, as best we can, refraining from our usual tasks to take more time to pray and reflect. Certain household and church tasks must go on, of course, but otherwise the monks are encouraged to use the time wisely to reset, recenter, and recommit to our monastic life of conversion and service.
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“Whoever needs less should thank God and not be distressed, but whoever needs more should feel humble...not self-important because of the kindness shown to him - in this way all the members will be at peace.” Rule of Saint Benedict 34:3-5
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Here at Saint Meinrad the monastic community gathers in church five times each day for communal prayer – we gather for Vigils and Lauds at 5:30am, Eucharist at 7:30am, Midday Prayer at noon, Vespers at 5:00pm, and Compline at 7:00pm. These services constitute what St. Benedict calls the “Work of God,” the centerpiece of our monastic practice and observance.
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As I look through the 2022 Year in Pictures, the word that comes to mind is “gratitude.” A lot happens in a year, especially at Saint Meinrad...
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Saint Benedict never mentions Advent in his Rule for Monks, at least not directly. Nonetheless, the monastic tradition incorporates the spirit of this holy season by training monastics to stay vigilant for the coming of the Lord, for “we know neither the day nor the hour.” (Mt 25:13).
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For many years, we were fans of “The Antiques Road Show” on PBS...
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Churches are sometimes havens of last resort for people in need, whether that need is spiritual, emotional or physical. This is often true for churches in impoverished areas. We belonged to one such parish some years ago...
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When I felt the call to monastic life, I wanted prayer to be a priority in my life. I loved to pray, but I don’t think I understood it very well when I was younger...
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We have a lovely small farmer’s market in a lot downtown on Wednesday afternoons from May to November...
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The so-called “Benedict Option” has become a term of fascination among Christians in recent years. St. Benedict’s way of spiritually separating oneself from worldly concerns and investing in a community of like-minded others who are committed to living the gospel in a deliberate fashion is still, after 1,500 years, an inspiring aim for many Christians, even those who are not monks and nuns.
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During the Liturgy of the Eucharist, at the Presentation and Preparation of the Gifts, the priest holds the chalice filled with wine and praises God with these words: "Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation, for through your goodness we have received the wine we offer you: fruit of the vine and work of human hands, it will become our spiritual drink." And the People of God respond, "Blessed be God, forever...."
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Previously, I have written of the need to make care for the elderly and infirm a top priority. In this way we are obedient to Christ who comes to us in the vulnerable and the frail, those with whom Christ most identifies (cf. Mt. 25:40). Continuing to reflect on what Pope Francis recently called a magisterium of frailty, I’d like to address St. Benedict’s desire that the monks of his monastery cultivate a natural respect for the elderly members of the community...
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I recently had a conversation with a colleague in the similar line of alumni work. He has been an executive in a small company...
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“Care of the sick must rank above and before all else, so that they may truly be served as Christ…the abbot must take the greatest care that those who serve the sick do not neglect them.” Rule of Saint Benedict 36:1, 10.
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When I entered the Seminary here at Saint Meinrad to study for the priesthood for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis (before I knew anything at all about the monastic community)...
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Mother Teresa died Sept. 5, 1997. On the day she died, we happened to be on a retreat in the small town of New Harmony, Indiana. The retreat was held at a beautiful inn known for its quiet simplicity as well as its wonderful food...
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God desires our joy and completeness--becoming our true selves as created in God's image...
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Prayer is the mainstay of the monastic life. Indeed, without the community's commitment to common prayer (called the "work of God" by St. Benedict), and times for lectio divina, the slow and deliberate pondering of the Word of God in solitude, there would be no basis for monasticism's claim to be a viable way of life for serious Christians - and monks and nuns are meant to be serious Christians.
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Years ago, I volunteered with my wife and a co-worker and his wife at a local ministry for those who are homeless or down on their luck called Jesus Cares at Exit 0...
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While most people know that the monks of Saint Meinrad run a seminary, many are less familiar with the Graduate Theology Programs...
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Many of us who entered religious life did so because, in a certain sense, we were seeking peace...
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Every human life entails some measure of suffering – loss, illness, disappointments, failures, and death. As Christians, our witness to Christ and his gospel demands we make sense of human suffering...
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Recently at table, several of us were remembering what it was like to get our first pair of glasses. Those of you with perfect vision might have to squint or blur your eyes to get a sense of what it’s like not to be able to see clearly, but it’s a hard thing...
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On March 5, 2012, I rolled onto the Saint Meinrad campus to start a new job in the communications department. I was a 28-year-old newspaper photographer who knew very little about Catholicism. Despite the learning curve, I quickly set out to preserve Saint Meinrad’s history through audio, video, photographs, and articles...
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If I were to ask you to quote the Benedictine motto, you might say, "Oh, that's easy, Ora et Labora - prayer and work!" If so, you might be a little taken aback upon hearing me let you down easy by saying, "Well, sort of, but not really!"
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Saint Meinrad has received two grants totaling more than $2 million from Lilly Endowment Inc. for programs that will expand outreach to Catholic youth and young adults...
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We live in divisive times. People are experiencing discord within families, at work, among friends, and even at church! It seems worse than ever, but it’s always been the case that our “need to be right” tends to get in the way of our desire for peace. Benedictines are men and women committed to peace. I’ve mentioned before in this column that, from early times, Pax, the Latin word for peace, had become a sort of Benedictine motto...
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Healthy relationships (community) bring out what’s best in a person as well as support the discovery and transcendence...
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Many people today who are media savvy and attentive to what's going on the realm of politics and society are aware of the catchphrase "fake news." The term seems to be thrown around a lot these days in the media, along with the terms "alternative facts" and "fact-check."
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"Have no anxiety at all, but in everything make your requests to God. Then the peace of God will guard your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus!" - Philippians 4
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What makes a picture good? Certainly, the picture needs to be in focus, properly exposed, with good light and excellent use of composition. It’s even better if the photo can tell a story without words. But there is one thing that trumps all of that – moment. The photograph must have a moment or emotion. In my opinion, a picture can be lacking everything and still be a good picture if there is emotion...
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Several times during the past few weeks, we have spent time watching movies on the Hallmark channel...
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Recently, I came across a piece of sacred music that has proven to be a beautiful tribute and fitting reminder of the themes of the Advent season in which we now find ourselves and in the Christmas season to come...
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I feel that somewhere along the way we've forgotten we belong to each other. But then, I wonder if that has always been the case. I'm not sure there was any period in human history where there was not war, hunger or someone seeking to harm the other. Is it naïve to believe there ever was a golden age of togetherness, respect and love? Is it naïve to believe one could come?
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"How do you know that God answers prayers if you have never seen His face?” asked the man in old jeans and a tattered sweater standing in the food line at the homeless mission...
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When I arrived at Saint Meinrad as a seminarian in 1990, I quickly got to know some of the monks. My first spiritual director was a monk; and my first mentor in the seminary was also a monk. Father Aurelius was our “floor dean,” and he was responsible for watching over me and my classmates as we adapted to our new lives as seminarians – a transition that, for me anyway, was not always easy after just a few years of living as a young man in a very busy world...
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Finding ways to tread more gently on the earth has become an important priority in a time when climate change has disrupted the planet’s ecosystem. At Saint Meinrad Archabbey, initiatives to reduce power consumption and preserve the environment have been underway for some time. While some of the projects, such as institution-wide recycling, have been easy to implement, others have been complex and required significant investment, according to Physical Facilities Director Mark Hoffman...
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Fr. Athanasius, Br. Thaddeus, Fr. Eberhard, Br. Adelgott and Br. Balthasar are deceased monks of Saint Meinrad who, in the 1800s, chose their religious names. While those names may have fallen out of favor in the monastery, monks today still follow the tradition of taking a monastic name that is rooted in scripture...
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Fr. Isidore Hobi was one of the first monks to join the new monastic community in southern Indiana that was founded by Einsiedeln Abbey in Switzerland.
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As we heard in our first reading: The just man, though he die early, shall be at rest. . . . . Having become perfect in a short while, he reached the fullness of a long career; for his soul was pleasing to the Lord, . . . .
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For a monastery to endure for more than 160 years, it must be built on a solid foundation. At Saint Meinrad Archabbey, that is literally true.
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When I served as Archabbey Treasurer and Business Manager just as we were entering the second decade of what still feels to me like a new century, the community was engaged in the largest renovation project we'd ever initiated in our, at that time, almost 160-year-long history...
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Following upon the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council, when each nation’s vernacular language became the standard for use in the liturgy, Catholic liturgical musicians throughout the English-speaking world faced a number of shared challenges...
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There is a tradition of holy men having ravens around them. In the story of St. Meinrad, a pair of ravens chased the robbers who killed the saint back into town and alerted the residents that something was wrong...
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One of the most frequently quoted verses from St. Benedict’s Rule is RB 4:47, which is sometimes rendered more literally as, “Keep death daily before your eyes.” But, as with most quotations, taken out of context it loses something. In this case, It sounds a little morbid standing by itself, and we Christians are supposed to be people of hope...
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Sometimes St. Benedict’s Rule is like an Impressionist painting; one must step back a little and look at the whole picture to “see” what the artist is trying to convey. The quote above is from Benedict’s Rule regarding the kitchen servers of the week, a chapter that seems at first glance to be rather inconsequential...
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There is a small section of the Rule of St. Benedict (RB 44-46) that deals with “satisfaction for faults” committed by monks...
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It was a lovely late-summer morning; the air was relatively dry and cool for early September and the sky was the color of a Caribbean seascape. That morning, after a meeting in the business office, I took a walk to see how the new gazebo on the hill above was progressing...
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As a parish RCIA director, I met with many people interested in learning more about the Catholic faith...
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In his Rule, chapter 58, St. Benedict directs the monastic community’s attention to the reception of new members. The Abbot is to delegate a senior member “chosen for his skill at winning souls”, to look after the novices [new members] “with careful attention”, and to ensure that the novice is motivated by a genuine desire to seek God...
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Ask and you will receive, Jesus tells his disciples. However, he also says that we are to ask in accordance with his will: “If you ask anything of the Father in my name...
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I’ve spent a lot of time and energy writing about spiritual values so important to our Benedictine way of life...
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When people ask what drew me to the monastic life, I usually give a pat answer, something along the lines of the beautiful liturgy, the prayerful chant, the peaceful place, the usual things most people love about Saint Meinrad. But really it is the community itself, the fact of community, that (still) attracts me to the Benedictine way of life...
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“Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” (Luke 12:27)...
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Today my opening quote is from the Church’s “self-definition,” a document from Vatican Council II...
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Love is not a feeling. It certainly involves feelings, but ultimately it must go much, much deeper. More than anything else, love is a decision...
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Mother Teresa believed loneliness was the greatest poverty, especially in Western culture. In Genesis 2:18 God said, “It is not good that man should be alone...”
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In his goodness, Christ has already counted us as his [children], and therefore we should never grieve him by our evil actions ... that he may never become an angry father who disinherits his sons..." Rule of St. Benedict: Prologue 5-6...This is an interesting passage in the Rule because Benedict applies the image of a father to Christ to encourage his monks to obedience as well as gratitude for the good gifts we have been given...
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A friend of ours became a Eucharistic minister. She told us how deeply moved she was the first time she served as a minister of the Blood of Christ...
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As a nation, somewhere along the way, we have lost the art of mending...
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As Christians, we are called to encounter and embrace God's Word to each one of us...
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When I first felt an attraction to monastic life, it was initially the liturgy that drew me in. I loved the reverent way the community prayed together at Mass or at vespers on Sundays. What with the incense and the chant, it was a beautiful and deeply sensual experience of the Church at prayer. I loved that!
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COVID destroyed the tranquility and order of millions of lives. Wars rage and new wars threaten to erupt like the wildfires that destroy forests and property on a yearly basis in several states...
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So important was Lent to Benedict’s monastic outlook that, in his view, the entirety of the monastic life “ought to be a continuous Lent.”...
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Winter can sometimes be a difficult and long weather epic. With all the news and noise about weather and challenges to families and kids in school, I find it appropriate to speak about how this phenomenon can be a beautiful opportunity to reconnect to Benedictine spirituality and prayer...
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It is not “news” to say that Americans are a divided people. We are highly competitive and do not like “not getting our way”! Probably you were like me, still a little child the first time you experienced conflict – having a tiff over a toy, or a meltdown when a parent insisted that you eat your broccoli, share your crayons with your sister or clean up your room...
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Every once in a while, the distinctiveness of the monastic life really hits me. Where else but in a Benedictine monastery might you find a group of 50 or 60 men gathered in a room at 3:00 on an ordinary Wednesday afternoon to apologize to one another for their annoyances, their mistakes and their offenses against one another?
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George Gervase was born in Sussex, England, in 1569. After serving as a soldier in Flanders and with the Spanish army, he entered the English College at Douai, France, to study for the priesthood. Ordained a secular priest at Cambrai in 1603, he was sent to serve as a missionary to England's persecuted Catholic communities the following year...
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My college years and learning to write code are well behind me; I am no techie. However, I do appreciate technology. I even find beauty in a well-designed MacBook Air, sleek phone, or smart washing machine...
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Finding words to sum up 2020 has not been easy. The year was unusual and presented many challenges...
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The top Christmas hit in the subsequent year, 1944, was also from a film, Meet Me in St. Louis. In one scene, the teenaged Esther, played by Judy Garland, lies on her bed with her 7-year-old sister, Tootie, waiting for Santa to arrive on Christmas Eve. Esther is coming of age with a budding romance on the horizon...
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It’s that “most wonderful time of year” again!
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Eutyches. It is pronounced “you-tick-ease.” He sure was a thorn in Pope Leo the Great’s side, but we can learn a lot from their dispute. Their dispute is especially timely as we journey toward Christmas this Advent season where, on Christmas Day, we read the famous Nativity sermon of Pope St. Leo the Great during the Liturgy of the Hours. The line, “Christian, remember your dignity,” might stand out as a famous line from that sermon...
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Last Sunday began the liturgical season of Advent. It's my favorite time of year...
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The COVID-19 pandemic has upended life as we knew it. None of us can shut our eyes to the impact it has had, and still has, on our physical health and economic well-being. Practitioners have warned about its effects on mental health, the loneliness and isolation that accompanies a quarantine that lasts, and lasts, and lasts...
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I have written before on the "fear of the Lord", long before COVID-19 and the present pandemic. Then, I reflected on this spiritual gift as a kind of "mindfulness" of God's presence and how the fear of God is the first of "twelve steps of humility," rungs of a spiritual "ladder" ascending to God and perfect love...
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When Br. Lorenzo started the spring semester in Rome this January to continue his studies in liturgy and church architecture, he had no idea that a few weeks later he would be quarantined because of a worldwide pandemic...
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The COVID-19 pandemic has made an impact on all of our lives this year, so perhaps it’s time to get some advice from people who live together in close quarters – on purpose!
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The Christian monastic tradition spans most of the centuries between that first generation of disciples and the present generation...
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The Saint Meinrad story is about the life of a Benedictine monk who dedicated his life to prayer and compassion; a location...
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Peace is a quintessential Christian virtue; you find it everywhere in the writings of the Apostles: If it be possible, as much as lies in you...
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It’s difficult to say anything nice about living during a pandemic, but this time of canceled events and upended schedules did allow us to complete a project that we’ve been wanting to do for some time...
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The Rule of St. Benedict contains a lengthy chapter that is essentially a list of good works. RB 4 is meant to be an inventory of the "tools of the spiritual craft" (4:75) that monks/nuns utilize in the monastic "workshop," the enclosure of the monastery (4:78), as they shape their lives in the image of Christ...
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Graffiti isn’t hard to find. We see it on the boxcars that roll through our countryside...
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All forms of media are devoted to people in search of power. Countries are at war, politicians wrestle for the upper hand and criminals are caught trying to take what they want while celebrities crowd each other out for the sake of publicity...
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This idea of the spirit of silence caught my attention when I first came to read the Rule of St. Benedict several years ago...
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In Chapter 3 of the Rule of St. Benedict, we read that every monk, from the novices (beginners in monastic life) to the abbot (who holds the place of Christ in the community), is subject to the holy Rule...
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A friend said, 'St. Monica had nothing on me.' I knew she had been praying for the conversion of her husband far longer than the years St. Monica prayed for the salvation of her son St. Augustine...
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There is a story about Duke Godfrey of Bouillon, one of the leaders of the First Crusade. As Duke Godfrey lay dying in Jerusalem, he summoned one of his knights. The story goes that Godfrey gave this knight a small casket and instructed him not to open it until he completed the return journey to Godfrey's Château Bouillon in Belgium...
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A word I associate most with Benedictine life is "patience." St. Benedict did not include a chapter on patience in his Rule, but the term seems to rise and fall throughout the text like the refrain of a song or a hymn...
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As the months of summer wear on, there are many questions that all of us are continuing to ask about how, when, where and what our coming months will be like, particularly as we move toward the fall formation term...
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It’s interesting to hear what family members think when one of their own decides to study for the priesthood. Are the parents disappointed that there will be fewer grandchildren? Are siblings worried that their brother will no longer have time for them?
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As I have watched in horror and sadness the many recent manifestations of the deep-seated racism of our country, I find myself asking what is asked of me at this time. I'm sure I'm not alone in that...
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These are difficult times. Our nation is engulfed (again) with outrage over the unjust use of deadly force on a black man...
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All of us experience periods of spiritual dryness or desolation, times when God seems distant or absent altogether...
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This week’s episode of “Echoes from the Bell Tower” takes you inside a men’s prison, so to speak. One of the state prisons in Indiana is located in the county next door to Saint Meinrad Archabbey...
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The coronavirus pandemic is, at least for the time being, our reality, and it is a real nuisance! One of the tensions that many feel after so many weeks of social distancing is the itch to "reopen," to "return to normal." That's to be expected, but we have to be cautious about scratching that itch too quickly...
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In the Dark Ages following the disintegration of the Roman Empire, people struggled with war, poverty and disease...
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In this week’s episode of the “Echoes from the Bell Tower” podcast, we look at how the monks’ work can have a far-reaching impact. One of those ways is by forming the Church’s ministers. Through their teaching, the monks have made significant contributions to the larger Church – and to the world at large...
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In his chapter on humility (RB 7), St. Benedict acknowledges that as persons we are both physical and spiritual. We have bodies (made of the same stuff as everything else), and we have an interior, psychic landscape of thoughts, emotions, affections, memories and knowledge, understanding and wisdom, all of which make us more than merely material beings, they make us personal beings...
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We start our fifth season of the “Echoes from the Bell Tower” podcast with an episode about a Saint Meinrad monk who is living out his vows away from the monastery.
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Most of us probably are paying a little more attention to the news these days than we ordinarily might. Probably a lot more. I know I am.
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When your mission is focused on prayer and ministry, but you’re living in a “stay-at-home/lockdown” world, you need to reimagine the ways you can pray with and minister to others...
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We’re back – almost! Season 5 of the “Echoes from the Bell Tower” podcast is ready to launch on Thursday, April 9.
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Ordinarily, on this 21st day of March, this church would be packed. Our seminarians would be joining us for the Eucharist. This year most of them have been sent home.
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I’ve been thinking a lot about this passage from the 4th chapter of the Letter of St. James these past few weeks...
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Lent is more than a season for "giving up" sweets and soft drinks; it is a time for Christians to "take stock" of the whole of our lives.
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While searching for some direction for Lent, we read through St. Benedict's Rule. We found much good wisdom for those living the monastic life, but what about the rest of us?
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When guests attend the monastic liturgies that involve the monks processing into the church...
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Looking at the nooks and crannies of the Holy Rule of St. Benedict in an attempt to find little gems of spiritual insight, I find this little verse that I quote above from Chapter 9...
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This winter, I cleared out all the extra “stuff” from my home closets. It’s such a great feeling to have that one area of my life in such order! I was reflecting in my prayer over the weekend about how easy it would be to accomplish all my tasks if my entire life were so organized!
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How quickly things can change. A good day begins, but turns sour before noon...
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Epiphany , like Christmas, is more than just a day in the liturgical calendar. In my view, Epiphany is a time for us to focus our attention in a particular way on the Incarnation of God as Jesus Christ.
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To sum up a whole year in a couple pictures and a handful of words is nearly impossible. It is a challenge we, the Saint Meinrad communications office, accept every year.
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During Advent we like to open the treasure chest of our faith and admire some of the beautiful things inside. Among the many things we view with a deep sense of gratitude are stained glass windows.
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After studying the Rule of St. Benedict for some years now, I find it evident that some of the most critical components of what we call "monastic spirituality" are those items that Benedict spends the most ink on. The liturgical service of vigils, which was referred to as the "night office," is one of them.
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Advent is a time of preparation that involves making room in one’s heart for the coming of Christ. One way of approaching this discipline is by making a retreat. Here are six powerful reasons to make a retreat.
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The Didache is a church order document going back to the first 100 years of the Church’s existence. It’s in our family history and parts of it have come down to us in the familiar Eucharistic liturgy...
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When I was a seminarian, but not yet a monk, I would occasionally attend monastic services in the Archabbey Church. Back then, the community prayed Vespers at 7 p.m., so it was easy for me to take a study break to pray with the monks.
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Deacons are often called upon to be first responders for spiritual reasons. Sometimes a failing marriage, trouble with a teenager, or more serious things that involve addiction and depression might result in a call to a deacon. Ultimately, ministry to those who face death is part of our job description.
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God told Abraham to leave the land of your ancestors and go to a land I will show you. All we are guaranteed in this life is an adventure. It is a wonderful thing to be guaranteed. When you were born, God said I am going to put you in a place where you do not know what is coming and you have the freedom and capacity to make choices to change your community and the world to make them better.
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Back when I was initially considering leaving the business world to pursue studies for the priesthood, I often framed it as deciding to follow Jesus. Of course, one doesn’t have to go off to a seminary to “follow Jesus.” One can do that in whatever circumstances or situation one finds oneself – the business world, family or farm life, serving as a teacher, a medical professional, or a beautician, for that matter.
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Monks are meant to be people of prayer. Prayer is so essential to Christian discipleship that, without it, a serious Christian life isn't really possible. To get to know Christ, we have to "sit at the feet of the Lord" and just listen.
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A shrine honoring the patron of the Archabbey sits in the north niche of the Archabbey Church. Designed as a triptych, the seven-foot-high shrine is constructed of oak, walnut, and purple heart woods. It also contains a relic of the martyr Meinrad.
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"Day by day remind yourself that you are going to die." Rule of St. Benedict 4:47. The above text from the Rule of St. Benedict is sometimes more literally rendered, "Keep death daily before your eyes." Before thinking I've gotten morose and morbid in my middle years, let's think about how this admonition from the saint might be understood in a positive, Christian light.
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Since coming to Saint Meinrad in 1990 to study for the priesthood, I've learned a lot of new vocabulary! Words are important, and certain words are key to understanding the good news of Jesus Christ - his Gospel.
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One of St. Benedict's primary influences was an earlier writer in monastic spirituality and traditions: St. John Cassian (died in 420). In Cassian's conferences, he reminds monks, and by extension all who want to be more deliberate about following Christ "to your heavenly home," that we must do so by the process of conversion.
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It’s interesting how a simple conversation can change lives. Dr. Kimberly Baker has experienced this firsthand.
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The chapter on humility is the lengthiest of all and plays an important role in the Rule as a summary statement of the chief "ingredients" to a monastic spirituality and an attitude to embrace that is truly Christ-like.
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For Victor and Theresa (Parsons) Neff, the summers of 2006 and 2007 were full of memories, spiritual growth and life-long friendships.
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There is no doubt that even a cursory reading of any of the four gospels gives the impression that humility is essential to following Jesus...
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Stacey Winterrowd was not thinking about a religious vocation when she joined a group of youth from her parish to attend the “One Bread, One Cup” (OBOC) conference at Saint Meinrad during the summer of 2007...
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Ora et Labora, it’s not only for Benedictines, but prayer and work is for all of us who are in ministry.
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I remember grabbing a pad and a pen and going to remote areas of the campus that looked up at the Archabbey Church, I was never at a loss for inspiration there...
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By serving in the kitchen, refectory (dining room), church, or anywhere else, we express what Benedict calls "mutual obedience" by striving to address the needs of the community and thus solidify our mutual bond of fellowship...
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Blessed Columba Marmion, an Irish Benedictine monk and abbot of the 19th century, was a prolific writer on what it means to be a monk...
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Easter joy to one and all!
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We have just finished the celebrations of Holy Week and Easter. If you haven't had a chance to listen to the previous episode of our podcast, "Echoes from the Bell Tower," it focuses on the Triduum liturgies celebrated here at Saint Meinrad...
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Today begins the celebration of the three most important days in the Christian faith - the Triduum. Triduum is Latin for "three days," and it refers to Holy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday...
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If you were intrigued by some of the stories behind the new names that monks choose when they take their vows, we have a treat for you - another episode on monastic names!
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In this week's podcast, we return to the topic of monastic names. Our third episode, which aired in 2016, was on how monks choose their religious names when they join the monastery...
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I'd like to reflect a bit on chapter 49 of the Rule of St. Benedict, entitled "On the Observance of Lent." The chapter begins with what many might consider a dreadful thing to say: Benedict writes that we are to live every day of the year as if it was Lent!
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The whole of chapter 15 of St. Benedict's Rule is one verse. That's how short it is. The above excerpt amounts to a quarter of the entire chapter...
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A podcast about peanut butter? Yes, that's the topic of this week's episode of our "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast...
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A couple weeks ago, we celebrated the solemn profession of four of our confreres. Joined by family and friends, the monastic community relished this awesome experience of final dedication to God...
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There is a lot in the Holy Rule of St. Benedict about honoring the dignity of the other...
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Sometimes when we get caught up in the details of a project, or a process, we can miss the overarching goal or purpose...
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In our last episode of the "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast, we introduced you to Br. John Mark Falkenhain and his parents. This week, we continue the family theme with a conversation that Br. Kolbe recorded with his parents and two of his siblings...
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Like so many important decisions in life, joining a monastery has a ripple effect. Family and friends are touched by this life-changing choice...
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What's an oblate? It's the topic of this week's podcast episode on "Echoes from the Bell Tower."
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We're excited to be releasing some new podcast episodes this fall! While many of the previous episodes of "Echoes from the Bell Tower" have focused on monastery life or life in the seminary, these new episodes will take you along as Saint Meinrad reaches out into the world...
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Each summer, hundreds of teens spend five days here at Saint Meinrad as part of the "One Bread, One Cup" (OBOC) conferences...
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In this latest podcast episode from "Echoes from the Bell Tower," we learn about a tradition of the Saint Meinrad monks that few people know about - and even fewer get to see...
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In our newest episode from the "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast, we look at some of the ways that "the Word" is important to life here at Saint Meinrad - both in the monastery and in the Seminary and School of Theology...
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Welcome back to "Echoes from the Bell Tower," the third season of Saint Meinrad's podcast about life in a Benedictine monastery. We begin with an episode called "Keep Death Daily Before Your Eyes..."
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It's time for another season of the "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast! The first episode, "Keep Death Daily Before Your Eyes," will be released on March 22...
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Br. Joel and Br. Kolbe are here to tell you that "Echoes from the Bell Tower" is returning for Season 3! You can listen to our Season 3 trailer above...
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As promised, here is the second episode of our "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast about "What Brought You to Saint Meinrad?"
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When you have a connection to Saint Meinrad - whether as a monk, student, co-worker or oblate - one question often arises: What first brought you here?
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Echoes from the Bell Tower returns with new episodes on November 30! In this brief trailer, Br. Joel and Br. Kolbe get us ready for stories of what has brought people to Saint Meinrad over the years...
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Before we take a break from our podcast schedule this summer, we've released another episode of "Echoes from the Bell Tower" about music...
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This week's episode of our "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast focuses on Gregorian chant - the sung prayers that have been a tradition at Saint Meinrad since our beginning...
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Saint Meinrad Archabbey has been around for more than 160 years, so we tend to hear the same questions again and again...
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This week's episode of the "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast is a brief story from Archabbot Kurt Stasiak, OSB, about his coat of arms...
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"What do you do all day?" That's not an uncommon question of monks and seminarians...
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When we began our podcast, "Echoes from the Bell Tower," last year, the first episode was about the bells in the Archabbey Church...
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Today's episode in the "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast completes a two-part series on community life...
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The podcast staff has been working hard to get the episodes for Season 2 ready...
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Are you ready? Echoes from the Bell Tower is returning for Season 2!
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Gregorian chant has a long and rich history. This "preview" podcast episode, from our upcoming Season Two of Echoes from the Bell Tower, uncovers some of the chant tradition...
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The second season of our podcast, "Echoes from the Bell Tower," will officially kick off in March, but this week we've got a special preview episode to share...
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In a special episode of our podcast, Br. Joel and Novice Tony interview our new archabbot, the Right Reverend Kurt Stasiak, OSB.
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This is the last episode in our first season of the "Echoes from the Bell Tower" podcast...
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Brewing beer. Knitting. Beekeeping. Running. Collecting stamps...
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Most of us don't get the chance to choose our name. Our parents took care of that for us when we were born...
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This week's podcast takes a look at the story behind our patron saint, Meinrad, a man who lived in what is now called Switzerland during the ninth century...
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The first episode of Saint Meinrad's new podcast, "Echoes from the Bell Tower," is now available!
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If you're a regular reader of this blog, this topic will be a digression from our regular writers...
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