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Jesus withdrew at times to solitary places and
went up alone to the mountain to pray, passing
the night in prayer. (cf. Lk. 5:16, 6:12)
While every Christian is called to unite himself
with the prayer of the Son of God to the Father
in the Holy Spirit, some are called – for the
good of the Church – to follow more closely
Christ praying, suffering and combating Satan in
the wilderness.
The Prophets Elijah and Elisha and St John The
Baptist, who came "in the spirit of Elijah" (Lk.
1:17), were regarded by many Fathers of the
Church as forerunners and models of the monastic
life of solitary prayer and penance.
St. Gregory of Nyssa wrote: "Elijah lives on
Mount Carmel, which was made illustrious and is
celebrated mainly because of the virtue and
reputation of him who live there." (PG XLVI,
594)
It is not surprising that a group of Byzantine
monks lived on Mount Carmel near the "fountain
of Elijah" between the 4th and 7th centuries.
They formed a "laura" – a group of separate
cells around a common oratory. This was a form
of monastic life particularly characteristic of
Palestine. Their laura bore the title of the
prophet Elisha.
"It is to be emphasized that the very centuries
when the monastic ideal took shape are those
also when Mariology knew its fundamental
developments. And we may confidently say that
the same milieu produced both simultaneously.
The fact is not just a coincidence deprived of
meaning. For it is clear that Mary, then and
there, was seen as embodying in advance the
essentials of the monastic ideal." (Louis Bouyer,
"The Blessed Virgin Mary and Christian
Monasticism", Word and Spirit 10, p35).
At the beginning of the 13th century some Latin
hermits settled on the same site "near the
fountain of Elijah". The "formula of life" which
St. Albert, Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, wrote
for them sometime between 1206 and 1214
prescribed substantially the same form of life
as that of their Byzantine predecessors.
"Albert sums up in one lapidary sentence the
central precept, valid for all hermits in all
times: ‘Each of you is to stay in his own cell
or nearby, pondering the Lord’s law day and
night and keeping watch at his prayers, unless
attending to some other duty’". The Latin
Hermits of Mount Carmel, Roma, 1979, p.177
St. Albert instructed the hermits to build an
oratory in the midst of the cells. This,
"beautiful little church", described as such by
a contemporary pilgrim, was dedicated to the
Virgin Mother of God and expressed the hermits
profound devotion to her.
This group of hermits developed into the Order
of the Brothers of the Blessed Virgin Mary of
Mount Carmel.
The "formula of life" given them by St Albert as
explicitly approved by Pope Honorius III in 1226
and by Pope Gregory IX in 1229.
The contemplative and Marian dimensions of the
Order have been enriched through the ages not
only by the Carmelite Doctors of the Church – St
John of the Cross, Teresa of Jesus (Avila) and
Therese – but also by many lesser known Saints,
Blesseds and other exemplary Carmelites.
As life in Palestine became more precarious,
some of the hermits of Mount Carmel, from about
1238 to 1291, when their hermitage was
destroyed, returned to their native lands, e.g.,
Cypress, Sicily, England and France.
In 1247, at the request of the Carmelite
hermits, Pope Innocent IV modified St Albert’s
"formula of life" . He gave it the canonical
status of a Rule which made possible a new form
of religious life, characteristic of the then
new and highly successful Dominican and
Franciscan friars, in addition to the original
eremitical life.
Since then most male Carmelites have been friars
of apostolic life. The original eremitical
dimension has always survived, however, as an
ideal and sometimes as an actuality.
Well before the Second Vatican Council
(1962-65), which urged religious institutes to
return to their original inspiration, the
Carmelite Order was trying to do precisely that.
In 1956 an international hermitage was
inaugurated in Austria.
In 1970 two American Carmelite priests who had
lived in the Austrian hermitage founded Mount
Carmel Hermitage near New Florence in the
Diocese of Greensburg, Pennsylvania. In December
1999 this hermitage was moved to a better site a
few miles away near Bolivar.
Following the Rule of St Albert, our life is one
of prayerful solitude and silence tempered by
certain elements of communal life.
The Mass, Morning Prayer (Lauds) and Evening
Prayer (Vespers) are sung daily in Gregorian
chant, so conducive to contemplative prayer. The
other parts of the Liturgy of the Hours,
including the Vigil (Office of Readings) during
the night or very early in the morning, are
normally prayed by each hermit alone. Meals are
eaten sometimes together and sometimes
privately.
There is no habitual external pastoral ministry.
Those hermits who are priests occasionally give
conferences to cloistered nuns or to secular lay
Carmelites. When necessary, they may offer Mass
and hear confessions in the local parish church.
Duly qualified men, whether clerical or lay, can
receive their religious formation in the
hermitage and can make their profession
exclusively for this form of Carmelite life.
For further information contact:
The Prior Mt. Carmel Hermitage
244 Baileys Rd.
Bolivar PA 15923-9668
Tel & Fax: 724-238-0423
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