D
dzheremi
Guest
Hello, Syriac Maronite friends.
A recent thread (I can’t remember which) had a few posts from the more educated of our Maronite posters lamenting the decline and essential ruin of the Syriac Maronite monastic tradition. My question is: When and how did this occur?
I got the sense from those posts (and previous things I have read and watched, like LBC’s episodes on the Maronites for their “Confessions of Lebanon” series) that the Maronite monastic tradition used to be flourishing - a real anchor of Syriac spirituality for the Maronite people. Of course, none of these pro-Maronite sources really went into any sort of discussion on the decline of monasticism or the Church in general (I think the LBC documentary had something about how the “old guard” of Church leadership tried to warn the powerful Maronite families – e.g., the Gemayels, the Geageas, etc. – not to get involved in the civil war; what a lot of good that did!), but coming as I do from outside, and what’s more from a Church that has been scattered recently but has seemed to maintain its monastic traditions even in the lands of immigration (e.g., the Abbey in Texas, the monasteries in California, New York, Italy, etc.), I can’t help but feel a little sad along with you that a Church that was once so steeped in and formed by monastic practice and principles has become unmoored from this source of guidance and stability. Maybe if more people knew the histories of the Maronite monks (and, NO, I don’t mean those Latins pretending to be Maronites who have shown up here a few times…), they could be inspired to revive the traditions that are for now lost, just as there was a great revival of Coptic monasticism in very recent history (if I remember correctly, it was HH Pope Kyrillos VI who oversaw this in the 1960s, renovating or approving the renovation of many monasteries that had fallen into ruins over the years; also Fr. Matta el-Meskeen drew many to the monastery of St. Macarius in Wadi’ el-Natrun; Wiki says it grew from six monks at the time of his arrival in 1969 to 130 at the time of his death in 2006!). I have noticed that there are some Maronite monasteries, such as that of Mar Charbel in Annaya, that even have webpages – does anyone know if they have found new recruits from these modern methods? The only thing I’ve ever found about new Maronite monks that really seemed to follow the pattern of St. Anthony and the early monastics is that one video on Fr. Dario Escobar, who really went to the Qadisha valley from Colombia with nothing beyond a feeling that this is where God has planted him…may God bring a million more like him, and not just in Lebanon…
In the Coptic Church in the West, by the way, we have similar stories; check out, for instance, the story of Fr. Daniel St. Moses, formerly Matthew Rodriguez, who just a little while ago left behind the world to join the monks of the monastery in Texas. Such things can happen…maybe there are more stories like that among the Maronites, too, that for whatever reason go unnoticed in the rush to, uh…“modernize” the Syriac Maronite Church? (or whatever the heck is going on; I dunno…I just try to look for bright spots in everything.)
What say you – How did you get into this spot, and how/can you get out of it?
A recent thread (I can’t remember which) had a few posts from the more educated of our Maronite posters lamenting the decline and essential ruin of the Syriac Maronite monastic tradition. My question is: When and how did this occur?
I got the sense from those posts (and previous things I have read and watched, like LBC’s episodes on the Maronites for their “Confessions of Lebanon” series) that the Maronite monastic tradition used to be flourishing - a real anchor of Syriac spirituality for the Maronite people. Of course, none of these pro-Maronite sources really went into any sort of discussion on the decline of monasticism or the Church in general (I think the LBC documentary had something about how the “old guard” of Church leadership tried to warn the powerful Maronite families – e.g., the Gemayels, the Geageas, etc. – not to get involved in the civil war; what a lot of good that did!), but coming as I do from outside, and what’s more from a Church that has been scattered recently but has seemed to maintain its monastic traditions even in the lands of immigration (e.g., the Abbey in Texas, the monasteries in California, New York, Italy, etc.), I can’t help but feel a little sad along with you that a Church that was once so steeped in and formed by monastic practice and principles has become unmoored from this source of guidance and stability. Maybe if more people knew the histories of the Maronite monks (and, NO, I don’t mean those Latins pretending to be Maronites who have shown up here a few times…), they could be inspired to revive the traditions that are for now lost, just as there was a great revival of Coptic monasticism in very recent history (if I remember correctly, it was HH Pope Kyrillos VI who oversaw this in the 1960s, renovating or approving the renovation of many monasteries that had fallen into ruins over the years; also Fr. Matta el-Meskeen drew many to the monastery of St. Macarius in Wadi’ el-Natrun; Wiki says it grew from six monks at the time of his arrival in 1969 to 130 at the time of his death in 2006!). I have noticed that there are some Maronite monasteries, such as that of Mar Charbel in Annaya, that even have webpages – does anyone know if they have found new recruits from these modern methods? The only thing I’ve ever found about new Maronite monks that really seemed to follow the pattern of St. Anthony and the early monastics is that one video on Fr. Dario Escobar, who really went to the Qadisha valley from Colombia with nothing beyond a feeling that this is where God has planted him…may God bring a million more like him, and not just in Lebanon…
In the Coptic Church in the West, by the way, we have similar stories; check out, for instance, the story of Fr. Daniel St. Moses, formerly Matthew Rodriguez, who just a little while ago left behind the world to join the monks of the monastery in Texas. Such things can happen…maybe there are more stories like that among the Maronites, too, that for whatever reason go unnoticed in the rush to, uh…“modernize” the Syriac Maronite Church? (or whatever the heck is going on; I dunno…I just try to look for bright spots in everything.)
What say you – How did you get into this spot, and how/can you get out of it?