B
Benedicta_Maria
Guest
I am truly very happy for you. I, too, hope to be able to wear the habit - Benedictine. I shall include you in my rosary intentions every night.
hermitageofstjoseph.org/ – they plan to be Teresian.JMJ
Does anyone know of any hermit laura already up & running or any newly forming ones?
I am new to this forum. I too live in Fl. and have been discerning this call with my SD. I have spent several years as private hermit with a ROL. May I ask which diocese?I cannot contain my great joy!
This is a process that has been approx 7-8 yrs in the making.
My bishop has accepted me as a candidate for diocesan hermit and I will be making my temporay profession of vows later in the fall.
Thanks be to God!
I prefer not to mention which particular diocese.I am new to this forum. I too live in Fl. and have been discerning this call with my SD. I have spent several years as private hermit with a ROL. May I ask which diocese?
I have no inclination towards forming a laura. Maybe others will feel the desire to do so.i hope the floridians will consider a c603 laura.
anyone else, for that matter. the world needs one.
blessings,
cloisters
Catechetical hermits?? Sorry, Cloisters, this is nonsense. First of all canon law does describe the central elements characterizing both lay and diocesan hermits in c 603.1. It is canon 603.2 which refers strictly to diocesan or canonical hermits by adding the requirements which are proper to them. Canonical means that one has standing in law and is professed according to canon law. A canonical hermit is more than mentioned in canon law. She is governed by canon law and so are the elements and relationships which structure her life. The catechism governs no one and certainly no lay hermit.Another purpose of c603 was to permit priests to remain in their religious communities and become recluses without having to leave, which had been happening. Now, under c603, order priests can become hermits and remain part of their community. I think we have a Fathers of Mercy hermit in our diocese.
The lay hermit can, indeed, adapt some kind of distinctive garb, as long as it doesn’t resemble a religious habit. Modest clothing for one’s state in life, and some form of headcover does not usually betray one’s eremitical leanings.
The lay hermit writes a Personal Prayer Rule, and after having lived it for several years, can make petition to the local ordinary for recognition as a “Lay Contemplative.”
Lay eremites can be considered “catechetical hermits” because the catechism covers them, whereas c.603 does not.
Eremitical communities utilizing c603 exist. Some have been “in-diaspora” (living in their own homes).
I am thankful for c603 being put into the code. St. Basil the Great is the one who said cenobitism was better than eremitism, but I think communities like the Camaldolese are showing that both can live together in harmony.
Blessings,
cloisters
However, once you are professed you will have embraced a public vocation with public rights and obligations as well as public expectations; folks will have a right to know what diocese has professed you as a representative of this ecclesial vocation. Just something to consider. Certainly your diocese will make the matter public because it is something which affects the life of the Church and the contemporary eremitical tradition. Besides you have decided to wear a habit if your Bishop allows it (some do not); this too is a public sign of the acceptance of public and ecclesial rights and obligations. If you accept the right you must know it comes with commensurate obligations.I prefer not to mention which particular diocese.
Cloisters, perhaps you have been misled then. I guess if someone believes s/he “needs” a letter telling people s/he is a lay person and a contemplative s/he might find someone to do this, but I honestly doubt it would be a Bishop and, except for its ego-soothing capacity, it seems meaningless. WHY otherwise would anyone want or need such a thing? What would it mean? Remember these persons have no additional standing in law, have embraced no rights or obligations beyond those associated with Baptism as is the case for EVERY lay Christian. Who would need to see such a letter and why? What makes these people different from the gift which is any other lay contemplative in the diocese of in the Church as a whole? It truly makes no sense.lay contemplative with a letter from the bishop is what i was told by two different persons in two different dioceses who were investigating that route for themselves.
personal prayer rule has always been encouraged in lay monastic/eremitic circles.
must have misread regarding religious and canon 603.
blessings,
cloisters