Thursday, March 31, 2016

A Greek Monastery in Arizona... And You Feel Like You've Been Transported to a Very Different Place!

In 1995 six monks arrived in the southern Arizona desert to establish St. Anthony’s Monastery.  What they built... is so beautiful... peaceful... hard to describe.  Personally, I think they had some big bucks to get this started, as all the plants are well established older plants that just don't grown in the desert.  Regardless, it's is a work of love and quiet dedication.
The next two paragraphs I got from their website...
The monastery is dedicated to St. Anthony the Great, the father of monasticism, the renowned 3rd century anchorite. There are chapels dedicated to Saints Seraphim of Sarov, Demetrios of Thessalonica, John the Baptist, George the Great Martyr, Nicholas the Wonderworker, and Panteleimon the Healer. The main church is dedicated to Saints Anthony and Nectarios the Wonderworker.
The monastery follows the coenobitic rule of monastic life: abrotherhood of monks and novices holding all things in common follow a daily schedule of prayer and work under obedience to the abbot, their spiritual father. The monks’ daily program begins at midnight with personal prayer time and spiritual reading, followed by the cycle of morning prayers and the Divine Liturgy. After a light breakfast and a rest period, the monks begin their work day, attending to prayer and their tasks till evening. Tasks include, among others, construction, grounds keeping, vinedressing, gardening, woodworking, publishing, food preparation, and offering hospitality. The day ends with evening Vespers followed by dinner and Compline.
Being able to see all this... with me wrapped up like a mummy as women are required to do... was a real treat...

























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