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holy_moly
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Awesome:thumbsup:This site will give you some information about the Secular Discalced Carmelites and the requirments for membership:
helpfellowship.org/secular_carmelite_info.htm
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Awesome:thumbsup:This site will give you some information about the Secular Discalced Carmelites and the requirments for membership:
helpfellowship.org/secular_carmelite_info.htm
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No options for me; only two groups in my whole state & theyāre both OCDS & one is only 25ā from where I live, so my decision is made for me!Hello!
I too have been trying to discern whether I might have a call to be a lay Carmelite.
One primary part of my discernment is which ābranchā of the lay Carmel I should join (both groups exist near within travelling distance of where I live); the Secular Carmelites (OCDS, Secular Order of Discaled Carmelites) or the Third Order Carmelites (O.Carm, Carmelites of the Ancient Observance)
I was wondering whether those of you who have already taken this step could give me some information on the difference between the two, in terms of the implications for daily life. Are the rules different, is there a subtle difference in charism?
What are the reasons for choosing one over the other?
Is it just that the OCDS forcus more (primarily?) on the writings of St, Theresa & St. John of the Cross, than the O.Carm?
Many thanks; it would be a great help to receive any answers
God Bless
Iām not positive on this as I am a Lay Carmelite and not OCDS but much of our statutes are the same so I feel somewhat confident in telling you that part of the call to Carmel is a call to community. One can not live the call to Carmel without community. While there are many great books you could read to learn more about the Carmelite charism you could not discern a call to Carmel without living the community piece. Have you checked to see if there is a Lay Carm community nearby? One of the steps to discerning a vocation is to rule out the impossible! Iāll pray that the Lord lead you on His path!Iām drawn to the O.C.D.S. but there is no receptive community where I live (in South Korea). How can I join then without moving, or at least complete requisite reading and practices of formation prior to finding a community to join? Your thoughts and prayers are appreciated.
God bless and keep you.
Theresa, great Carmelite nameIām not positive on this as I am a Lay Carmelite and not OCDS but much of our statutes are the same so I feel somewhat confident in telling you that part of the call to Carmel is a call to community. One can not live the call to Carmel without community. While there are many great books you could read to learn more about the Carmelite charism you could not discern a call to Carmel without living the community piece. Have you checked to see if there is a Lay Carm community nearby? One of the steps to discerning a vocation is to rule out the impossible! Iāll pray that the Lord lead you on His path!
Theresa
The T.Ocarm., that is the Third Order Carmelites also have rules for solo members within their constitutions but the leadership of the group have decided against using them for the reasons the earlier poster stated.Theresa, great Carmelite name
This thread is kind of old and OPās questions was answered, but I am OCDS and we do have provisions for solo members. It is not regular since part of our call as secular Carmelites is to community and that is also stressed in our rule.
Wonderful!Theresa, great Carmelite name
This thread is kind of old and OPās questions was answered, but I am OCDS and we do have provisions for solo members. It is not regular since part of our call as secular Carmelites is to community and that is also stressed in our rule.
Paul,Wonderful!
We knock in prayer; doors and windows open.
Please let me know how to proceed with formation in your community as a solo member. Formation in English will also be a blessing, as I am an American. Theology is enough to try to comprehend in our native tongue let alone be clouded in another language.
I understand the call to community or I would not have sought a community. I will be in Korea for an undetermined amount of time and will then return to Ukraine to assist in building Catholic education. There is a Carmelite community in Ukraine close enough to visit weekly.
God bless and keep you,
paul
āWith God all things are possible.ā
My friend is entering the Buffalo Carmelites on March 25th, and when she visited, she got to go to the Third Orderās Mass and meeting. Her user id is āForeverHis8827ā on CAF. She might be able to give you more information.I am also discerning the call to be third order in the discalced carmelite order. The one I would go to is Buffalo.
Congrats! My wife & I began w/ a local OCDS group as Aspirants in September 2008. It is awesome & a wonderful spiritual discipline!I am (hopefully) making my first promise a Secular Carmelite this April. There are some slight differences in the Carmelite communites. I think others already mentioned them (OCDS, O Carms, etc). There is a Carmelite community right here in the actual city I live in, but itās not exactly the same as the community I belong to. The community in the city where I live (I believe) has some sort of a potluck and they pray the rosary, etc. The community I belong to is a couple of hours away from where I live. I started āvisitingā a few years ago. If you show an interest in an OCDS community, after contact and the such, you will be allowed to come as a visitor. After a period of time you may be invited to start formation, which would be a year of that, then if you feel called to continue, you will be clothed with the larger scapular. You then would have a 2 year formation leading up to first promises. Then another 3 years of formation leading up to final promises. Secular Discalced carmelites are not nuns, but they are actually āattachedā to the order- not a group that supports the order. The formation is long and intensive, but I love it! If I have any of this mixed up Iām sure thereās an OCDS person who is much wiser than me that can clarify. The community I belong belongs to the OCDS Oklahoma Province. If you do a search on that, the website is REALLY helpful
Daily mass, if possible, is important. As well praying the Liturgy of the Hours in the morning and evening, as well as night if possible. I didnāt know how to pray them, so they showed me how.
Sounds like you might be getting close to the time of first promises as well!Congrats! My wife & I began w/ a local OCDS group as Aspirants in September 2008. It is awesome & a wonderful spiritual discipline!