With Mary as our Mediatrix, we adore our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament and we unite our prayers with the Nuns in a spirit of reparation for souls. But you are her hands and her feet for the work that she inspires us to do… From carmeliteauxiliary. COM What do Carmelite nuns wear? Can cloistered nuns talk? Since cloistered nuns don't typically interact with the public, I had to … From philosophy-question.
Cebu Gov. Gwendolyn Garcia also yesterday said it was local tradition to offer eggs to the Carmelite Sisters to seek their intercession. If you have a special petition, you go to the Carmelites, she added.
There were a lot of people who offered eggs. We sent them some groceries and goodies fun food to pray. Heavy rains have been pelting Cebu this week, … From pinoyexchange. Carmelite nuns in France developed the original recipe for this lemon balm wine in the later s for King Charles V of France. With the enthusiastic support of the aging king, Carmelite water … From botanyculture. Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients?
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Then we have our main meal at noon and a smaller meal in the evening. In the summer, we also have a snack in the afternoon. We do not eat meat, but do eat fish, so we are not vegans. We also eat dairy products, such as milk, cheese and eggs except on Fridays and during Lent. Do you ever wonder what it is like to be a Carmelite Nun?
Peace reigns here. When you pass through the doors of the monastery, you enter a world apart. The noise and values of the world have no place here. Here, as Carmelite nuns, we live our lives of poverty and silence, of prayer, penance and sacrifice for the world, hoping that the austerity of our lives would be acceptable reparation for the losses and sufferings of the Church and the ills of the world at large.
The scope of our concern, then, is the whole world. Our day begins early; we rise at a. A thinly veiled grille separates our choir, or monastic chapel, from the altar and public chapel. Here the priest celebrates Mass and administers Holy Communion to us through a small door in the grillework.
Our day ends at p. Eight hours of the day are spent in prayer and two hours in recreation, and about five hours are given to manual work, reading and study. Except for the time of recreation, we strive to keep strict silence and recollection so as to make our lives of prayer continuous. During recreation, the Sisters may converse, and it is a joyful time, but our hands are always busy on the many and various works by which we support the community. We depend, also, on the generosity of friends and charitable alms of the faithful.
Meals are simple but nutritious, consisting of such foods as bread, cheese, eggs, fish, vegetables and fruit. We observe the fast and abstinence directed by Our Holy Mother St.
Teresa in the Carmelite Rule and Constitutions. During meals, a Sister provides food for the soul by reading from Holy Scripture or some other spiritual work. The day is long and hard and busy for the Carmelite nun.
From the time she rises in the morning to chant the praises of God until she retires to her austere little cell at night, she is striving to make herself more pleasing to God, and so, more valuable to others. Though she spends those many hours before the Blessed Sacrament, her prayers do not end in the chapel. She prays alone in her cell; she prays as she cheerfully goes about her assigned tasks; she endeavors to make her every action a prayer. And gradually she herself becomes a living prayer.
The Carmelite nuns withdraw completely from the world and dedicate themselves entirely to a life of prayer and penance. Family members and photos-albums. Places they lived. Schooling of the girls. Holy cards given to TH. Family library. First communions. Journey to Rome. Charcoals and paintings. The monastery. The community. Texts read in the refectory. Community library. Little words for Feast Days.
Distribution of the texts of TH. Distribution of the representations of TH. Therese and the First World War. The Process: the holiness of Therese. Correspondence of the family after What do we eat Breakfast Bread with each bite Soup with leeks and potatoes , as was the norm at the time. Noon and evening meal For feasts No meat except for sick sisters At noon we eat fish or eggs but no eggs during Lent with vegetables and fruit. Snack during Lent for supper The refectory Clear broth and fruits left over from noon.
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