2013 November
Many people probably associate the word “monk” with someone generally confined to a monastery and not leaving it very often. This impression is supported by certain passages of St. Benedict’s Rule. In Chapter 66, St. Benedict recommends that a monastery should include “all necessities” within its grounds so that “there will be no need for the monks to roam outside, because that is not at all good for their souls” (66:7). Nonetheless, monks under St. Benedict did travel, undoubtedly for good reasons, since he makes provision for “brothers sent on a journey” (50:4) in Chapters 50, 51, 55, and 67. What can Oblates (and monks) of today…