Quiet Flirtation: Monasticism and Evangelicals

Breakpoint Worldview Magazine: Quiet Flirtation: Monasticism and Evangelicals

About eight years ago, I found myself in a convent in Bogotá, Colombia. I had not planned to get me to a nunnery. But it just so happened that I had signed up for a women’s retreat with the Baptist church where I was serving with youth that summer, and since the local convent had a bit of extra space, they hosted us for the weekend. My room—quiet, clean, white—lacked only one thing: distractions. It was perfect. It felt like I had entered rehab for the chronically over-stimulated. That weekend, I got a taste of something that hordes of evangelical Christians are flirting with today: monasticism.

Be it Baptists, Presbyterians, or Pentecostals, evangelicals of all stripes can be found flitting around the ancient pathways of the Franciscan, Dominican, and Benedictine orders. What’s the attraction? I decided to investigate. It seems the frenzied and the frenetic are finding stillness and order; the alienated are discovering the richness of belonging; and the non-committal are jumping headlong into the freedom of vows. …


Comments

4 responses to “Quiet Flirtation: Monasticism and Evangelicals”

  1. Yes, I’m afraid this just shows some of the dearth of our evangelical commitment, but more hopefully a broadening and deepening of it in a healthy way.
    I need to get out to one of those places.

  2. This is certainly part of the foundation of CovenantClusters…and the Allelon Missional Order that we contemplated two weeks ago in Seabeck.
    Interesting, indeed.

  3. I have written a small post about this…thought I’d give you the link. I’m not up on all the technical blog stuff…so it’s just simple stuff for me… ;^)
    http://abisomeone.blogspot.com/2007/11/practice-of-purple-martyrdom.html#links

  4. Thanks for the link. I’ve got you linked up as well.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Kruse Kronicle

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading