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Chapter 8: Occupy your home-pt. 2 (adaptations)

11/11/2016

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Occupy where you live, it is the place that you have been given.
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As with all things in this life, we may begin with the material and physical things, but then move onward to the immaterial and spiritual things.  If you have been given a job to do, or a particular schedule of shifts to work--accept them.  If you have been given certain people as friends and family members--accept them.  If you are out of work and been given time to help others or possibly work on a personal project; certain responsibilities that have been asked of you; inspirations to write, or create, to visit someone or call a long time friend--accept them.  Whatever your situation in life may be--accept what you have been given.  Even to the point if you are given insults and injustice--accept them.

We remember always that the first thing which St. Albert asked of us and that we have done in setting out upon this life is to elect a prior, that we have Christ, or the one he has chosen, as our prior and the One who has given us all that we have been given.  It is from God that all that exists in our life has come and it is He who wishes and longs for the best things for us; that we would not be given anything that is not for our good and the good of others; that even in our sufferings and times of trial and difficulty, it is then that God is seeking to accomplish His best work in us and give us the most sacred, holy and valuable things; that we do not forget the Christ who hangs on the cross and the cup that he was given, the cup that he freely and fully accepted which raised him to Glory and gained salvation for the world.


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Chapter 8: Occupy your home-pt. 1 (adaptations)

11/6/2016

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Occupy where you live, it is the place that you have been given.
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The cell is a center of the Carmelite Way of Life.  While there are many other ways of living in allegiance to Christ: through missions, evangelization, centered in ministry, this particular Way is founded on silence and solitude, on seeking God and discovering intimate moments with Him in the quietness of prayer.  For this, the cell is our center; that it is our daily shelter and retreat where we find God as our close and personal friend.  It will be from here that we venture out each day to go forth to serve, to evangelize and to minister to those in need.  It is not that in choosing this particular way of life, or to be inspired by its model, that we abandon these things--no one can truly live a life in allegiance to Christ without being with Christ who dwells in the people and also lives in the world beyond our cells and homes.  But the cell, silence and solitude from the noise of our daily world, is our center where we pray in intimate conversation with the One we love; our home is our center, silent from the noise and bustle of daily life were we come to be attentive to those we love, to spend significant time with them, and to give ourselves wholly into it.


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Chapter 8: Acceptance--pt. 2 (adaptations)

10/29/2016

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Accept what you have been given.
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As with all things in this life, we may begin with the material and physical things, but then move onward to the immaterial and spiritual things.  If you have been given a job to do, or a particular schedule of shifts to work--accept them.  If you have been given certain people as friends and family members--accept them.  If you are out of work and been given time to help others or possibly work on a personal project; certain responsibilities that have been asked of you; inspirations to write, or create, to visit someone or call a long time friend--accept them.  Whatever your situation in life may be--accept what you have been given.  Even to the point if you are given insults and injustice--accept them.
We remember always that the first thing which St. Albert asked of us and that we have done in setting out upon this life is to elect a prior, that we have Christ, or the one he has chosen, as our prior and the One who has given us all that we have been given.  It is from God that all that exists in our life has come and it is He who wishes and longs for the best things for us; that we would not be given anything that is not for our good and the good of others; that even in our sufferings and times of trial and difficulty, it is then that God is seeking to accomplish His best work in us and give us the most sacred, holy and valuable things; that we do not forget the Christ who hangs on the cross and the cup that he was given, the cup that he freely and fully accepted which raised him to Glory and gained salvation for the world.


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Chapter 8: Acceptance (adaptations) pt. 1

10/21/2016

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Accept what you have been given.
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The Rule tells us that none of the brothers are to accept a cell other than that which has been given to him.  If we take this strictly, then we would consider simply that we are to accept and live happily in whatever room we have been given in our house: children should not argue with their parents over which room they have been assigned; if we share a house with roommates, we should gladly accept even the smallest bedroom in the house; and if we are away at college and living in the dorms, we should carry on without complaint, even if we have a snoring roommate who uses the floor as a laundry basket.  These things may be a part of what the Rule is attempting to teach us--a humble acceptance of whatever living conditions we have been provided, and confidence that God always has us in His care--however, if this were all that it is trying to offer, then that would have little meaning for most of us.

If we recall, however, it can be said that the cell is the one thing and space that that the brothers and sisters have been given as their own.  They do not even claim to own anything inside the cell, but it is the space, the silence, the intimacy and the retreat in the cell that belongs to them.  If they own nothing else, the time they have within their cell is theirs such that when St. Albert tells them to occupy what they have been given, he is saying, Accept what has been given to you and do not exchange it with anyone else, except when given permission by the prior.  Whether it is the meal that is set before you--which the Rule will specifically address later--a car that you have to drive, an apartment which is available to rent, a Christmas gift, a book someone has recommended that you read, or something that you may have been given as an inheritance, accept what has been given to you.

To accept what we have been given means that we are allowing ourselves to enter into the work of God’s Kingdom and to fully participate in the work that is taking place.  This is acceptance: not to surrender our will or hope for the future, but to participate and become a part of the invitation we have received; not to separate ourselves, but to engage with others and the time we have been given; it us not our approval of things, but our acknowledgment of their reality.  It is a movement to find God and bear confidence that in this present moment He has come to me and is asking something of me that I can give.

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Chapter 8: What the Lord has Given (desert reflections)

10/14/2016

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“None of the brothers is to occupy a cell other than that allotted to him
or to exchange cells with another, without leave of whoever is
​Prior at the time.”
--the Rule, Chapter 8
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Is there anything more to this chapter behind what it says straightforward?  “None of the brothers is to occupy a cell. . .”  Sometimes there may really be nothing hidden between the lines, behind the lenses of history, or cloaked in theological mysteries.  We might be able to squeeze out some profundity with regard to the relationship of the individual and the community, but I think this is a chapter that is best taken for what it says on the surface; Sometimes simplicity is truly simple, and practical matters are solved quite practically.

In the correspondence that Albert received from the brothers, there likely were some problems of brothers moving cells, or of taking cells from one another.  In a place like the Wadi of Carith, it is not hard to imagine that there were some cells and caves that were much nicer, roomier, more comfortable, and choicer than others.  Is it hard then to imagine some conflict or maneuvering of the cells?  Is it hard to imagine that this is Albert’s way of saying, “Stop it.  Accept what you are given and do not use it to abuse your brothers, or to play political games with your brothers, or to set yourself up higher than any one of your brothers.  But accept the gifts that God has given to you and live in Peace with one another; and stop bickering over the cell that the Prior has given you.”

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    Carmel's Way...

    is a series of reflections on the Carmelite Rule, the quintessential letter of St. Albert of Jerusalem which has lead Christians to a life in allegiance with Christ and the Perfection of Love for more than 800 years.  The blog brings the tenants of this ancient Way of Life into a contemporary context.
    ​​At the heart is a Way of Life, in the tradition of Elijah, that leads us to stand in the presence of the One who Loved us first and in a most perfect way; and to be transformed into one who loves more perfectly.

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