Pope Francis

Pope urges Trappists to share their silence, simplicity

Cindy Wooden | Catholic News Service

Pope Francis greets Abbot General Eamon Fitzgerald during an audience with Trappists at the Vatican Sept. 23. The pope met those participating in the Trappists’ general chapter. L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO VIA CNS

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VATICAN CITY — The great simplicity of life embraced by Trappist monks and nuns and their attentive practice of long periods of absolute silence are gifts the world needs today, Pope Francis said.

“Be witnesses of assiduous prayer, of sobriety, of unity in charity,” the pope said Sept. 23 during a meeting at the Vatican with about 230 Trappist abbots, abbesses and other religious attending the order’s general chapter meeting Sept. 6-27 in Assisi.

Nearly a dozen Trappists serve in the Diocese of Arlington at the Abbey of Our Lady of the Holy Cross in Berryville.

The pope said the Trappists’ “great sobriety of life” always was seen by members as a tool to help them focus on what was essential and an aid for “reaching more easily the joy of the spousal encounter with Christ.”

“This element of spiritual and existential simplicity,” he said, “preserves all its worth as a witness in today’s cultural context, which too often leads to the desire for ephemeral goods and illusory artificial paradises.”

The Trappist dedication to prayer, he said, is “an expression of your love for God and a reflection of a love that embraces all of humanity.”

Being contemplatives, he said, is a process or journey in which the monks and nuns become “men and women of prayer, ever more pervaded by love for the Lord and transformed into his friends.”

“It’s not a matter of being ‘professionals’ in the negative sense, but lovers of prayer” for whom fidelity to prayer times and forms is not the goal, but the means for growing in one’s personal relationship with God, Pope Francis told them.

“At the same time,” he said, “your monasteries continue to be privileged places where one finds the true peace and genuine happiness that only God, our safe refuge, can give.”

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