Quote of the day, 16 November: St. Albert of Jerusalem

You must give yourselves to work of some kind, so that the devil may always find you busy; no idleness on your part must give him a chance to pierce the defences of your souls. In this respect, you have both the teaching and the example of Saint Paul the Apostle, into whose mouth Christ put his own words. God made him preacher and teacher of faith and truth to the nations: with him as your teacher, you cannot go astray.

We lived among you, he said, labouring and weary, toiling night and day so as not to be a burden to any of you; not because we had no power to do otherwise but so as to give you, in your own selves, as an example you might imitate. For the charge we gave you when we were with you was this: that whoever is not willing to work should not be allowed to eat either. For we have heard that there are certain restless idlers among you. We charge people of this kind, and implore them in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, that they earn their own bread by silent toil [cf. 2 Thess 3:8–12].

This is the way of holiness and goodness: see that you follow it.

Saint Albert of Jerusalem

The Rule of St. Albert, no. 20

Carmelite Order 1999, Rule of Saint Albert, translated by Edwards, B, https://carmelite.org/spirituality/rule-of-saint-albert/

Featured image: Saint John Paul II is seen on a job site as a young adult. Image credit: Vatican Media / Discalced Carmelites (by permission)

#CarmeliteRule #silence #StAlbertOfJerusalem #StPaul #work

Quote of the day, 28 July: Blessed John Soreth

So let the love of Christ kindle your enthusiasm; let His knowledge be your teacher, and His constancy your strength. May your enthusiasm be fervent, balanced in judgment and invincible, and neither lukewarm nor lacking in discretion. Love the Lord your God with all the affection of which your heart is capable; love Him with all the attentiveness and balance of judgement of your soul and reason; love Him with such strength that you will not be afraid to die for love of Him.

Blessed John Soreth

Exhortation on the Carmelite Rule (excerpt)
Office of Readings, Optional Memorial of Blessed John Soreth

Catholic Church 1993, Proper of the Liturgy of the Hours of the Order of the Brothers of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel and the Order of Discalced Carmelites (Rev. and augm.), Institutum Carmelitanum, Rome.

Featured image: 16th century Breton calvaire cross in the church square of Eglise Notre Dame de la Tronchaye, Rochefort en Terre, Morbihan, Brittany, France. Image credit: © David Matthew Lyons (Adobe Stock)

#BlessedJohnSoreth #CarmeliteRule #exhortations #JesusChrist #love

The spirituality of Carmel, which is a life of prayer and of tender devotion to Mary, brought me to the happy decision to embrace this life.

Saint Titus Brandsma

During his novitiate, Frater Titus devoted himself to learning everything he could about his new life as a religious as well as the history and spirituality of Carmel. With the idealism of his eighteen years, he gave himself over not only to studying the foundations of the Order but especially to integrating them into his personal life. 

Under the guidance of the Master of Novices, Fr. Pius Cox, and of the scholarly prior of Boxmeer, Fr. Gabriel Wessels, the young novice was preparing himself in a practical, down-to-earth way for his final step, religious profession.

The Master of Novices provided lessons on religious life, the meaning of the vows, the history and spirituality of the Order, and the life stories of the men and women who had been its bright lights: its saints, literary figures, mystics, theologians, missionaries, martyrs.

The novices were required to learn the Rule of St. Albert by heart and to understand thoroughly each article of the Constitutions, as well as to grasp the significance of the Divine Office, how to pray it correctly and sing it in choir, and how to participate as a community in the celebration of Holy Mass.

In one of the earliest lessons on the history of Carmel, Frater Titus learned that during the religious revival that followed the third crusade (1192), a few pilgrims and crusaders, mostly Franks, withdrew to the biblical Mount Carmel near the place named “The Well of Elijah.” There they sought to follow the example of the holy Prophet by a life of prayer, silence, and labor. 

Around 1209, at the request of the hermits living on the mountain, Saint Albert, Patriarch of Jerusalem, wrote them a Rule integrating the ideals of their own way of life. In 1226, this Rule was approved by Pope Honorius III.

These early hermits had located their cells or hermitages around a church honoring the Virgin Mary, Mother of God. They had a sense of being totally dedicated to her, and it was not long before the people were calling them “Brothers of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel.” 

It was through contemplation of the figures of Mary and Elijah the Prophet that Carmel developed its way of life and described it in the Constitutions of the Order. In Mary, Carmelites saw the ideal of what they felt called to become: people available to God. From Elijah, they inherited a courageous zeal to bear heroic witness to the Presence of the Living God in their world.

Titus Brandsma learned his lesson well. What most drew his youthful attention was the mysterious anonymity with which the Order presented itself to the Church. 

It was the group as a whole [that] had experienced the call and took Elijah as their “spiritual Father” and model. No individual hermit took upon himself the title of founder, nor has that title ever been given to anyone.

Miguel Maria Arribas, O.Carm.

Chapter II, Formation

Pope Innocent III, on the 17th of February 1205, gave St. Albert a pressing invitation to accept his postulation as Patriarch of Jerusalem, made by the canons of the Holy Sepulchre, by the suffragan bishops, and by the King of Jerusalem, Aimaricus II of Lusignan. Image credit: Discalced Carmelites

Note: Can you spot the anachronisms? Click here for the answers. Do you have more to add? Mention them in the comments below!

Arribas O.Carm., M 2021, The Price of Truth: Titus Brandsma, Carmelite, Carmelite Media, Darien, Illinois.

Featured image: St. Titus Brandsma appears in this photo wearing the full habit of the Carmelite Order, including the white mantle. At this moment, he was a seminarian studying theology, aged 22. Image credit: Carmelites (used with permission of the Nederlands Carmelitaans Instituut)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/09/16/titus-memrzrule/

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Albert, Patriarch of Jerusalem Law-Giver of Carmel

Fr. Vincenzo Mosca, O.Carm.Albert of Avogadro, presumably the name of his family, was born in 1150, in “Castro Gualtieri” a locality that today is situated in the diocese of Reggio Emilia and Guastalla. He received an education in the literary arts, the custom for every child of noble origin. To fur...

Each one 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.

Saint Albert of Jerusalem

The Carmelite Rule, no. 10

St. Albert’s Rule offers us timeless wisdom, particularly in his call to “ponder the Lord’s law day and night and keeping watch” at prayer. At first glance, this advice might seem suited only for those living in monastic silence, but it holds deep value for all of us in the modern world.

In a time where distractions abound, St. Albert invites us to carve out moments for quiet reflection. This doesn’t mean escaping to a desert or a cloister—it’s about finding a small space of silence in our everyday lives. Whether it’s a few minutes in the morning for prayer, pausing to reflect during a busy afternoon, or winding down with Scripture at night, there are countless ways to live out St. Albert’s counsel.

The idea of “keeping watch at our prayers” reminds us that God is present in every part of our day. This isn’t limited to moments of formal prayer; it’s about staying connected to Him in all we do. Even our most mundane tasks can become grace-filled moments when we offer them to God, just as Brother Lawrence taught by practicing the presence of God in everything—from scrubbing pots to sweeping floors.

St. Albert’s message challenges us to bring prayer and reflection into the rhythm of our daily lives, no matter how busy or chaotic they may be. By doing so, we align ourselves more closely with God’s will and create space for Him to speak to our hearts.

Be sure to listen to the episode below for a deeper dive into St. Albert’s wisdom and how his Rule continues to shape the Carmelite way of life.

https://youtu.be/V_XroaLm7sE?si=SXAFm5-mBehYmtb3

Featured image: This is a detailed view of an icon depicting the founding of the Carmelites; on the right, we see the Latin Patriarch St. Albert of Jerusalem handing a scroll to Brocard, the Carmelite hermit known as “B.” in St. Albert’s Rule. Over Brocard’s shoulder, we see St. Teresa of Avila, who would reform the Order in Spain in the 16th century. Image credit: © Johan Bergström-Allen, British Province of Carmelites / Flickr (All rights reserved, used with permission)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/09/16/s2ep23-albert/

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Carmelite Rule

A rule of life was given to the early Carmelites by St Albert Avogadro, Patriach of Jerusalem between the years 1206 - 1214. It was finally approved by Pope Innocent in 1247 and later underwent mitiga

“Hail, Cross, our only hope!”—this is what the holy church summoned us to exclaim during the time for contemplating the bitter suffering of our Lord Jesus Christ. The jubilant exclamation of the Easter Alleluia silenced the serious song of the cross. But the sign of our salvation greeted us amid the time of Easter joy, since we were recalling the discovery of the One who had passed from sight.

At the end of the cycle of ecclesiastical feasts, the cross greets us through the heart of the Savior. And now, as the church year draws toward an end, it is raised high before us and is to hold us spellbound until the Easter Alleluia summons us anew to forget the earth for a while and rejoice in the marriage of the Lamb.

Our holy Order has us begin our fast with the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. And it leads us to the foot of the cross to renew our holy vows. The Crucified One looks down on us and asks us whether we are still willing to honor what we promised in an hour of grace. And he certainly has reason to ask.

More than ever the cross is a sign of contradiction. The followers of the Antichrist show it far more dishonor than did the Persians who stole it. They desecrate the images of the cross, and they make every effort to tear the cross out of the hearts of Christians. All too often they have succeeded even with those who, like us, once vowed to bear Christ’s cross after him.

Therefore, the Savior today looks at us, solemnly probing us, and asks each one of us: Will you remain faithful to the Crucified? Consider carefully! The world is in flames, the battle between Christ and the Antichrist has broken into the open.

If you decide for Christ, it could cost you your life. Carefully consider what you promise.

Taking and renewing vows is a dreadfully serious business. You make a promise to the Lord of heaven and earth. If you are not deadly serious about your will to fulfill it, you fall into the hands of the living God…

Ave Crux, Spes unica!

The world is in flames. The conflagration can also reach our house. But high above all flames towers the cross. They cannot consume it. It is the path from earth to heaven. It will lift one who embraces it in faith, love, and hope into the bosom of the Trinity.

The world is in flames. Are you impelled to put them out? Look at the cross. From the open heart gushes the blood of the Savior. This extinguishes the flames of hell.

Saint Edith Stein

Elevation of the Cross, 14 September 1939 (excerpts)

Jesus on the Cross, Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, Denver Colorado.
Image credit: Thomas Hawk / Flickr

We present excerpts from the meditation for the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, a fervorino that Saint Teresa Benedicta wrote for the prioress to deliver to the nuns of the Carmel of Echt, Holland on 14 September 1939, her first opportunity to renew her vows as a Discalced Carmelite in her new community.

Edith mentions that “our holy Order has us begin our fast with the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.” Here she makes a direct reference to the Carmelite Rule of St. Albert of Jerusalem, No. 16:

You are to fast every day, except Sundays, from the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross until Easter Day, unless bodily sickness or feebleness, or some other good reason, demand a dispensation from the fast; for necessity overrides every law.

For centuries, Discalced Carmelite nuns have renewed their vows of obedience, poverty, and chastity—the order in which Edith presented the vows in her meditation—on the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.

Although the Discalced Carmelite friars renew their vows and the Discalced Carmelite Secular Order members renew their Promise at Easter or during the Octave of Easter, the 1991 Constitutions of the Discalced Carmelite nuns indicate that they shall renew their profession twice each year:

In order to give common witness to religious consecration in following Christ, every year the sisters will renew their religious profession during the Easter Vigil or the octave of Easter, and on the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, using the formula given in the Ritual. The communities may repeat this renewal on other occasions in order to strengthen their commitment to this way of life.

No matter what legislation Discalced Carmelites may observe, the essential purpose is clear: “to strengthen their commitment to this way of life.”

Discalced Carmelite nuns of Thicket Priory Carmel celebrate the Tenth Anniversary of their new monastery in 2019. Image credit: © Johan Bergström-Allen, www.carmelite.org / Flickr

Stein, E. 2014, The Hidden Life: hagiographic essays, meditations, spiritual texts, translated from the German by Stein, W, ICS Publications, Washington DC.

Featured image: The Isenheim Altarpiece was executed in oil on panel by Matthias Grünewald and Nikolaus Hagenauer between 1512 and 1516, created for the Antonite order’s monastic complex at Isenheim. It decorated the hospital chapel’s high altar. It now is one of the principal treasures in the collections of the Musée Unterlinden in Colmar, France. Image credit: Musée Unterlinden (Public domain)

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/09/13/edith-14sep39/

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Jesus on the Cross

Flickr

Do you want to get to heaven? Embrace the baseness of poverty and it will be yours….

It is the love of the poor that establishes kings. Blessed are those who do not chase after those goods for which their possession is tiresome, whose love is defiling, and whose loss is torture…

The kingdom of God is given rather than promised to the poor… All those of good will… leaving all for Christ as He left all for them, follow Him wherever He goes.

Blessed John Soreth

Cited by François de Sainte-Marie, OCD
L’Esprit de la Règle du Carmel
Ephemerides Carmeliticae 02 (1948/1) 205-244

Translation from the French text is the blogger’s own work product and may not be reproduced without permission.

Featured image: This detail of a photo by Lili Almog shows a Discalced Carmelite nun revealing her profession cross. The photo was taken during Almog’s work on the Perfect Intimacy project, which highlighted the life of three Discalced Carmelite monasteries: Haifa, Bethlehem, and Port Tobacco (USA). Image credit: Discalced Carmelites

https://carmelitequotes.blog/2024/07/27/soreth-heaven/

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