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Cloister and Community: Life within a Carmelite Monastery
 
 
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Cloister and Community: Life within a Carmelite Monastery [Hardcover]

Mary Jo Weaver (Author)
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Indiana August 29, 2002

"For centuries the Spanish mystic Teresa of Avila has fascinated anyone interested in a life lived out of the depths of the human spirit. With warm and lively prose, Mary Jo Weaver tells not only Teresa's story but also how Teresa's ideals are lived by contemporary Carmelite nuns in Indianapolis. You will not want to set down this beautifully crafted tapestry of a saint and her modern daughters until you have turned its final page."
—Keith J. Egan

Cloister and Community is both a history of the Carmelite monastery of Indianapolis and an introduction to the Carmelites, a contemplative order of Roman Catholicism, founded in the 13th century and rededicated as a reform movement for religious women in the 16th century by Teresa of Avila. A key element of the order is that its nuns live an ascetic, cloistered life, but as Mary Jo Weaver demonstrates, the view that one must "leave the world" to find sacred space apart from it has evolved to embrace the notion that the world itself is sacred space.

Weaver focuses on a modern Indianapolis community and describes how the sisters incorporate Carmelite belief and practice into their daily lives. Cloister and Community is a beautifully written and handsomely produced book that offers readers a privileged view of the world of present-day contemplative spirituality.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

"If the book has a plot, it is this one," begins Weaver in this fascinating snapshot of the history of the Carmelite monastery in Indianapolis. "The community that began in 1932 as a group living in a sacred space apart from the world has changed over time into a community that sees the world itself as a sacred space." This branch of Carmelites was founded by Teresa of Avila in the mid-16th century to be small, unendowed and enclosed (literally, cloistered). Weaver's book shows how the nuns in Indianapolis have tried to balance these ideals with the challenges of living in the modern world (e.g., making a living through their typesetting business, or handling the volume of traffic on their popular Web site, www.praythenews.com). The book is imaginatively organized, with each chapter corresponding to some architectural phase of the monastery's construction; the chapter on contemplative prayer, for example, is centered around the building of the new chapel in 1961. Based on written history, in-depth interviews with the monastery's residents and a profound sense of place, Weaver's book raises important questions about change and religious community.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"For centuries the Spanish mystic Teresa of Avila has fascinated anyone interested in a life lived out of the depths of the human spirit. With warm and lively prose, Mary Jo Weaver tells not only Teresa's story but also how Teresa's ideals are lived by contemporary Carmelite nuns in Indianapolis. You will not want to set down this beautifully crafted tapestry of a saint and her modern daughters until you have turned its final page." -Keith J. Egan "This is an exquisite chronicle of seven decades of life at a Carmelite monastery in Indianapolis, a town a few hundred miles south east of Chicago... It is an elegantly written, intimate account of life behind the grille of one of the best-known Carmelite monasteries in the English-speaking world."-The Catholic Herald, 8 August 2003

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 128 pages
  • Publisher: Indiana University Press (August 29, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0253341841
  • ISBN-13: 978-0253341846
  • Product Dimensions: 11.1 x 8.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,527,049 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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19 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Blending of worlds together, May 27, 2005
This review is from: Cloister and Community: Life within a Carmelite Monastery (Hardcover)
I became interested in Mary Jo Weaver's book 'Cloister and Community' for several reasons - I am a solitary follower of spiritual practices derivative of monastic traditions; the idea of communities in transition intrigues me; finally, the fictional account in Mark Salzman's 'Lying Awake' of a Carmelite community in particular made me want to understand a real community's life and dynamic.

Weaver, a professor of religious studies at my old university (Indiana University), is a scholar with particular interests in the American Catholic community and experience. For this particular text, Weaver concentrates on the Carmelite community in Indianapolis, a community that lives in a building that looks more like a medieval castle than a modern community, despite having the relatively recent origins in the 1930s. Using the idea of a tapestry, Weaver explains the ongoing development of the building and the community in both physical and spiritual senses.

Weaver begins the general history of the monastery with Teresa of Avila, whose influence on monastic life in general, and Carmelite experience in particular, continues to be a guiding force to this day. She steps through the ideas that have been strong in the overall development of Carmelite life - poverty, enclosure, small communities, prayerfulness and silence - in succeeding chapters, drawing on the influences of the architecture of the building, interviews with the residents, histories of Carmelites in this and other communities past and present, and spiritual influences, particularly looking at the shift in life and practice since Vatican II.

The community at Indianapolis has revised their practice to no longer include nuns in habits (there is a series of photographs of Miriam Elder as an example - in 1967 she was in full habit; in 1972 in modified habit; finally, in 1983 in ordinary lay clothes), no longer separated from the world by grilles and gates, and no longer living invisibly in the midst of the community. Weaver discusses one of the most recent efforts of the Carmelite community, that of extending outreach toward vocations, as one in which the modern world was welcomed as a partner (which included the establishment of a website and partnership with a local advertising agency to work on public relations and community connection).

Weaver explores throughout the text the theological and spiritual underpinning of the community - this includes Teresa of Avila and John of the Cross, certainly, but also draws on ideas from diverse strands of Catholic tradition, including Meister Eckhart and Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Benedict and Bernard, Julian of Norwich and documents of the Second Vatican Council. Within the various tensions that these sources create, the community lives and moves and finds its being.

This book is a rich visual treat, despite being a grayscale production rather than full-colour. The pages are adorned with architectural highlights (which includes plans, long shots and close-up details), as well as photographs of the community in its daily life and work past and present. The page layout itself is a contemplative treat, with just enough word/image/blank space interplay to give a sense, even without reading, of the pattern of life between work, leisure, contemplation and study.

This is a wonderful book, a rare piece of history and current life blended together.
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34 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Deconstruction of Conventual Life, June 7, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Cloister and Community: Life within a Carmelite Monastery (Hardcover)
This book is about a community of Carmelite Nuns that went from a traditional experience of monastic life to a community with a novel interpretation of religious life. It is a painful read, it is the devolution of religious life. Experimentation into extinction, active and contemplative Roman Catholic communities reevaluated their faith and practice during and after Vatican II. Those who removed the basic reasons for existence; community, common symbols and common ministry and have not attracted a single new vocation for decades. The book is a documentation one such community that removed the distinctives of Carmelite life and now are in a difficult situation. How to leave a legacy without having new entrants to the religious life (at the same time justify all those changes)? Carmels are diverse i.e. Reno no grill, no enclosure, no habit, and no growth verses Carmel of Terra Haute grill, enclosure, habit, and growth. Let the reader remember one thing, there are healthy and growing traditional contemplative communities.
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23 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Traditional Carmelites Flourishing!, May 13, 2006
By 
C. Baran "AMDG-a nun's mom" (Peachtree City, GA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cloister and Community: Life within a Carmelite Monastery (Hardcover)
Just had to add a word to the discussion of this book, to inform anyone considering reading this book: My daughter(19 yr old) recently entered a beautiful Carmel is SD, and they wear full habits, have a double grate, remain cloistered, pray incessantly, are vegetarians, incorporate Latin in their hymns and liturgy, and still follow the ancient traditions set in place by blessed St. Theresa of Avila. This Convent opened in SD with only 4 Sisters from NY in the mid 90's. They now number 13, many of which are young women in their 20's. I've never met a more joyful, holy group of women. The traditional orders are flourishing, while those Ms. Weaver writes about are dying on the vine. Praise God some convents remain uninfected from modernism and all that goes with it.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This chapter sets the foundation for the concept of sacred space, and for an understanding of Carmelite history. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
permanent chapel, strict enclosure, temporary chapel, solitary prayer, first wing
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mother Theresa, Saint Joseph, Divine Office, Teresa of Avila, New Albany, Carmel of the Resurrection, Little Flower, Indianapolis Carmel, Carmelite Rule, Holy Spirit, Middle Ages, New York, Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, Terre Haute, Father Raymond Bosler, Golden Phoenix, Indianapolis Star
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