Yesterday we shared a quote from St Elizabeth of the Trinity including the words: "My horizon grows larger every day."
It was pointed out that this is interesting coming from an enclosed nun! Could we share what this means? We will try...
Enclosure means that we don’t leave the monastery grounds except in cases of serious need, and within the monastery itself there are areas which are off-limits to visitors.
Enclosure helps us to preserve silence & solitude, so that we can be attentive to prayer. It’s not about exclusion or an inward-focus. It keeps our focus on praying for the needs of the world. If we foster this atmosphere of silence, we can then also share it with others.
If you're truly called to this way of life, enclosure doesn't feel restrictive or limiting. It opens your horizons because it opens up an inner space which frees your heart to reach out and embrace everyone in the world, with deep compassion.
This has a lot to do with time spent in contemplative prayer, which is a painful process of growth in self-knowledge but also growth in solidarity with all who struggle.
We also grow through daily community life, living alongside people very different from ourselves who we would probably never normally choose to live with! They bring us face to face with ourselves and challenge us to change for the better.
If you have any further questions about enclosure please feel free to ask!
Sr Katrin of Quidenham Carmel, who died on Monday, had a remarkable life story. In 2014 she shared it in her own words:
"My father was a lawyer, a clever man, in pre-war Germany. Both my parents were German Jews.
(1/21)
The year before war broke out, my father had spoken out publicly against Hitler. Shortly after Hitler seized power my father was taken prisoner and shot. My mother arranged for my sister and I, to spend the years that followed in safety, in England (2/21)
There we were taken in by a family who grew so fond of us that they wanted to adopt us! Of course, my mother would not hear of it! (3/21)
#ThisNunsStory Pt 1. I’m a cradle Catholic & grew up in a lively parish in NW England where I played guitar at Mass from age 7 & attended Catholic schools. My Dad was a Eucharistic Minister & I sometimes went with him to visit the sick. But I never thought about becoming a nun.
As a normal teenager my life was dominated by @takethat (including queuing for 4 hrs in the rain to meet them!), #Britpop, @LFC & @WarringtonRLFC. I still went to weekly Mass but in all honesty prayer & going to church was not top of my agenda during my early-mid teens.
There were no religious communities in my local area & I didn’t have any contact with nuns during childhood. In my late teens I went on a few youth retreats run by the Sacred Heart Fathers & began to develop a personal relationship with Jesus. My faith became my own.