Why Monasteries Saved Europe (and Might Save It Again)
When Rome fell, the world plunged into darkness.
But hidden behind stone walls, a miracle of preservation began, to preserve civilization itself.
This is the forgotten power of the monks, and why we may need them again 🧵
As cities crumbled and warlords rose, monks like the Benedictines didn’t run for power.
They ran for prayer.
In remote forests, swamps, and mountains, they founded monasteries, tiny islands of order in a sea of chaos.
They weren’t just hiding.
They were saving the future.
While warlords burned libraries and kings forgot how to read, monks painstakingly copied the Scriptures, ancient philosophy, science, and medicine by hand.
Monasteries became living libraries, preserving:
>Aristotle
>Augustine
>Roman law
>Agricultural manuals
>Classical poetry
Without them, Europe would have lost almost everything.
Monks didn’t just save books. They founded hospitals for the sick, for free.
They opened schools to teach not only future monks, but eventually the children of peasants and nobles alike.
Charity, education, healing, all powered by the monastic vow of ora et labora (pray and work).
Monks weren’t afraid to get their hands dirty.
>They drained swamps.
>They pioneered crop rotation.
>They introduced new technologies like the heavy plow and water mills.
>The Cistercians alone turned barren wastelands into fertile farmland, feeding entire regions.
Their silent work literally made Europe green again.
The monasteries weren’t just farms and libraries, they were spiritual fortresses.
Monks fought the darkness with:
>The Mass
>The Psalms
>Vigils and fasting
>Education in true doctrine
From Ireland to Poland, they planted the Cross in places where the Gospel had never been heard.
Some fun facts you probably didn’t know:
>Some monks copied books with such artistry that a single Bible could take 30 years to complete.
>Many early monastic communities ran on no money at all, living only on what they could grow and make.
>The motto of the Benedictines — "Ut in omnibus glorificetur Deus" ("That in all things God may be glorified"), shaped the very spirit of Europe.
Why we might need monasteries again?
Today, as our civilization crumbles under secularism, consumerism, and chaos, a return to monastic principles may be our only hope.
Not just literal monasteries, but small, intentional Catholic communities:
>Rooted in prayer
>Centered on work and study
>Shielded by tradition
>Open to the needy
Monasteries rebuilt the world once. They can do it again.
The future belongs to the Faithful.
In a world obsessed with speed, noise, and pleasure, the silent endurance of the monks remains a revolutionary witness.
The Kingdom of God is not built by shouting, but by quiet fidelity.
Ora et labora. And trust that Christ will reign.
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If you think the Swiss Guard are just medieval cosplayers in funny clothes, you know nothing about the Church.
They are warriors. Martyrs-in-waiting. Living symbols of loyalty unto death.
This is the truth about the Pope’s elite army, the Pontifical Swiss Guard - a 🧵✝️
In the past Rome stood as a prize, desired by emperors, threatened by kings, haunted by treachery.
Pope Julius II, the “Fearsome Pontiff,” summoned warriors not of court, but of mountain and iron: the Swiss.
After Swiss forces impressed everyone in the Burgundian Wars (1474–77), Julius II decided: hire the best to protect Peter’s successor.
Men hardened by frost and famine. Men who would never flee. Thus was born the Guard, baptized not by parades, but by peril.
1505-1506 was their official beginning, Pope Julius II formally requested the Swiss Confederation to send 200 soldiers.
On January 22, 1506, 150 Swiss soldiers entered Rome under Captain Kaspar von Silenen.
They marched across the city, up the Apostolic Palace stairs, and received the Pope’s blessing.
This is the date the Guard celebrates its founding.
Their first true trial came with fire.
In 1527, when the German mercenaries and Spanish soldiers stormed Rome like wolves, the Swiss Guard did not surrender.
189 stood before the howling horde.
But they held the line at the foot of the altar of St. Peter’s Basilica, dying one by one to give their Pope a chance to escape into the tombs below.
The survivors (only around 40) formed a human shield and escorted the Pope through the secret Passetto di Borgo to safety in Castel Sant’Angelo. May 6 is now the day of their annual oath ceremony.
Theirs was a martyrdom written not in ink, but in blood.
The year was 1462, and Christendom teetered on the edge of destruction.
The Ottoman Empire, swept across the land like a storm of shadow & fire. A single name stood in defiance against the crescent moon:
Vlad Dracula: The Dragon’s Wrath Against the Crescent - a 🧵✝️
Born of the blood of warriors, Vlad was not merely a prince—he was the son of Vlad Dracul, a knight of the Order of the Dragon, sworn to defend Christendom against the encroaching Islamic forces.
The Order, a brotherhood of steel and fire, was forged by the Holy Roman Emperor to guard the Christian lands against heathen invasions.
As his father bore the name "Dracul" (the Dragon), so too did Vlad inherit the mantle, becoming Dracula, the Son of the Dragon, a name that would be written in the annals of history with both fear and reverence.
It has witches, talking animals, and no mention of “church.”
But it may be one of the clearest depictions of the Gospel ever put to film.
Here’s the truth behind the Christian heart of The Chronicles of Narnia - a 🧵✝️
Narnia was written by C.S. Lewis, one of the 20th century’s greatest Christian writers and apologists.
A former atheist who converted after conversations with J.R.R. Tolkien, Lewis became a devout Anglican, and saw storytelling as a way to baptize the imagination.
He called Narnia a “supposal”, not an allegory, but “suppose Christ came into a world like Narnia…”
Make no mistake: Aslan the Lion is a clear Christ-figure.
>He is the Son of the Emperor Beyond the Sea
>He is prophesied to return and defeat evil
>He gives his life in place of a traitor
>He dies willingly, and rises again
His death on the Stone Table and resurrection mirror the Passion of Christ.
“When a willing victim who had committed no treachery was killed in a traitor’s stead… Death itself would start working backward.”