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The unexpected monks March 6, 2008

Posted by Zack in : Uncategorized , trackback

I just came across this Boston Globe article from the other day: “The unexpected monks.” It’s about the outbreak of Christian communes that’s spreading across the country. The author, Molly Worthen, who’s working on “a book about evangelical intellectual life,” takes a look at the intellectual history and present content of the movement.

In an era in which televangelists and megachurches dominate the face of American evangelicalism, offering a version of Christianity inflected by populist aesthetics and the gospel of prosperity, the rise of the New Monastics suggests that mainstream worship is leaving some people cold. Already, they are transforming evangelical religious life in surprising ways. They are post-Protestants, breaking old liturgical and theological taboos by borrowing liberally from Catholic traditions of monastic prayer, looking to St. Francis instead of Jerry Falwell for their social values, and stocking their bookshelves with the writings of medieval mystics rather than the latest from televangelist Joel Osteen.

…Many New Monastics live and worship together, and their practices sometimes resemble the communes and house churches associated with the Jesus Movement of the 1970s. Like the hippies who were “high on Jesus,” New Monastics tend to favor simple living, left-leaning politics, and social activism. However, they are quick to cite the intellectual seriousness and monastic forms of prayer and study that set them apart. “I doubt most of the Jesus Movement people were reading the philosophers of their day in the way I have friends reading Zizek and Derrida,” said Mark Van Steenwyk, founder of Missio Dei, a New Monastic community in Minneapolis. Van Steenwyk’s group has also compiled its own breviary, a book of scriptural texts that guides the group’s abbreviated version of the divine office sung in monasteries.

…More fundamentally, New Monastics consider themselves “monks in the world.” They are not interested in extreme isolation or asceticism (though there are stories about the occasional Protestant “hermit” living in the Mountain West). Nearly all have regular jobs and social lives. From the traditionalist perspective, many break the most essential monastic rule: they are married. Most groups support those who choose a celibate lifestyle, and a few have a member or two who do so, but it happens rarely.

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