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How Did You Become a Sister?, Ft. Sister Denise West

Brooke MoriartyCommunity of Benedict, Monastic Life, Myth busting, Podcast, Rule of Benedict, Women Exploring Community 6 Comments

Want to be the first to hear every new episode? Click here to sign up for email notifications! How do you imagine one becomes a monk? Is it something you plan or something you discover? Do you have to be religious your whole life before joining a monastery? Truth be told, there is no one answer. Our own sister’s community at Holy Wisdom Monastery have an array of unique stories that led them to their lives here in Middleton. In this episode, we sit with Sister Denise West and listen to her journey from a non-secular home in Tennessee to …

Rosy holding poster - Myth - All nuns are Cathollic

Myth #12 – All nuns are Catholic

Holy Wisdom MonasteryHomepage, Living in Community, Myth busting

Not at Holy Wisdom Monastery. Our Benedictine community welcomes single women of any Christian tradition. Here, you can become a Benedictine sister and share the richness of your religious background. We are an ecumenical monastic community, seeking God through a life following the Gospel and the Rule of Benedict. We live, pray and work together and welcome other single Christian women to explore life with us. We honor diversity among our members and in the communities we help create: the sisters’ community (Benedictine Women of Madison), Benedictine Sojourners, Oblates of Holy Wisdom Monastery, coworkers, volunteers and our Sunday worshipping community …

Myth #209 – All nuns prefer black

Holy Wisdom MonasteryCare for the Earth, Living in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

Not necessarily. Benedictine Women of Madison prefer green. On October 15, 2014 we posted a link to an article about the newest solar panels on our “green” monastery building and retreat and guest house, but the story begins much earlier: “Benedictine women in Wisconsin are practicing new (and ancient) ways to save the earth, starting with the home front. New growth has a history of springing to life at Holy Wisdom Monastery in Madison, Wisconsin — and that’s just fine with the Benedictine sisters there.” These lines introduce Sister Act, an article by Betsy Shirley, published in Sojourners Magazine, which details the history …

Myth #233 – All nuns have beautiful voices

Holy Wisdom MonasteryLiving in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

Not necessarily. Music is vital to our prayer and worship. We sing every day, we surround ourselves in music because it is a language of the soul, but we don’t all have perfect voices. Rather, we support and sing with and for each other, knowing that God loves the music in our hearts. Does your heart long for something more? Come work and pray with us for 6 months as a Benedictine Sojourner. Learn more at an Experience Benedictine Life at the Monastery retreat. Contact Lynne at lwsmith@benedictinewomen.org or 608-831-9305. _________________________ Follow the series: Living in Community – Myth busting. What …

Myth #35 – Making a commitment to live in community is scary

Lynne Smith, OSBLiving in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

“Why would anyone want to live in a monastery?” Years ago after I had first visited Holy Wisdom Monastery, someone in a book study group where we were reading The Cloister Walk, by Kathleen Norris, said, “I don’t know why anyone would want to live in a monastery!” Needless to say, I didn’t share the fact that I was considering the possibility of living in a monastery. I had a hard time articulating my desire at that time other than to say that I was drawn to the values I saw lived in the monastery. Seventeen years later, I can …

Myth #391 – Living in a monastery limits who I can be

Holy Wisdom MonasteryLiving in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

In the monastery we become part of one another’s lives, we support and challenge each other to become most fully and freely who God created us to be. Ours is a community of women seeking a deeper awareness of God’s presence in our lives. Living in community is about living life together. In community, everyone works hand in hand, sharing meals, prayer, work and conversation. While Benedictine spirituality is communal, it recognizes the uniqueness of the individual. The monastic value of respect for the person is an essential element of community life. Each member holds a privileged and equal place. …

Myth #468 – Living in a monastery is an escape from the world

Holy Wisdom MonasteryLiving in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

In the monastery we practice living open-heartedly and serving others to make a difference in the world around us. Holy Wisdom Monastery welcomes people into sacred space and our community of communities to pray, study and nourish one another. Compelled by the Gospel and rooted in the Benedictine tradition, we support personal and community growth as we live out our mission and values in a changing world. Can you imagine yourself in this picture? Experience our life in community. Learn more at an Experience Benedictine Life at the Monastery retreat. Come live, work and pray with us for 6-9 months …

Myth #272 – Living in a monastery means being holy all the time

Holy Wisdom MonasteryLiving in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

Only if being holy means becoming extraordinarily human. When an old monk was asked what he did all day long in the monastery, he said, “We fall and get up. We fall and get up.” Life can make us holy when we live it prayerfully, attentively and humbly in communion with others. Are you a single, Christian women, 21-50, interested in an extraordinarily human experience of living in community? Learn more at an Experience Benedictine Life at the Monastery retreat. Come live, work and pray with us for 6 months as a Benedictine Sojourner. Contact us at membership@benedictinewomen.org or 608-831-9305 …

Myth #263 – Smart women don’t live in monasteries

Holy Wisdom MonasteryLiving in Community, Myth busting Leave a Comment

Come and see for yourself. At Holy Wisdom Monastery, we are smart and persistent. We changed the rules about monastic living when we became the first Benedictine community in the US to welcome single women of any Christian tradition. We have built a “green” monastery where we meet most of our energy needs through solar power and geothermal heating and cooling. We are restoring native prairie lands, saving needed green space and protecting our local lakes. We balance our work with prayer. We know how to make change and we know how to weave prayer, hospitality, justice and care for …