• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Benedictine Sisters of FL

Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

Donate Now
  • Home
  • About Us
    • History
    • Being Benedictine
    • Benedictine Monasticism
    • Meet Our Community
    • Holy Name Academy-Alumnae
  • What We Do
    • Mission, Vision and Our Partners
    • Retreats
      • Invitation to Retreat
      • Accommodations
    • Volunteer Programs
    • Oblate Program
    • Spiritual Direction
    • Aqua/Hydroponics
    • More of Our Ministries
  • What’s Happening
    • Articles of Interest
    • Events
    • Commemorative Bricks
    • Newsletters
    • Brochures
    • Links
  • Support Us
    • Gifts of Support
    • Wish List
  • Stories Shared
  • Galleries
    • Photos
    • Videos
      • Benedictine Sisters of FL Videos
      • Other Videos
  • Contact Us

Feast of St. Benedict

St. Benedict Feast Day

July 11, 2023 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

Today we Benedictine will celebrate the summer feast of St. Benedict.  Our nearby neighbor, Saint Leo University will be hosting a BBQ lunch for the monks of Saint Leo Abbey, the university staff and us, the Sisters of Holy Name Monastery.  What a grand way to celebrate our legacy and Benedictine values.

Now, those of you who follow the calendar of the saints may question did we not celebrated St. Benedict back in March?  Yes, the very same one, the twin of St. Scholastica.  You see that date usually falls during Lent when the church does not smile on a grandiose celebration with Alleluias and full festivity.  In 1981, reaffirmed in 1989, the Council of Benedictine Abbots decreed that July 11th henceforth be celebrated as the Feast of Benedict, Patriarch of Western Monasticism.

 

~Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB, Prioress

Continue Reading

Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: Feast Day, Feast of St. Benedict, st. benedict, St. Benedict feast day, Summer Feast Day for St. Benedict

Summer Feast Day of Saint Benedict

July 8, 2021 by Holy Name Monastery 1 Comment

Summer Feast of St. Benedict 2021

July 11th we Benedictines normally celebrate the summer feast of St. Benedict.  However, since this year the 11th falls on a Sunday, the 14th Sunday of Ordinary time takes precedence.  So at Holy Name we will celebrate on Monday, July 12th.

A few years ago, in an issue of the journal from the Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration there was a good article by Sister Bede Luetkemeyer.  What follows is an abbreviation of her words:

“Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips.”  Saint Benedict, in the Prologue to his Rule, addresses those who “long for life.  His advice is “Keep your tongue free from vicious talk and your lips from all deceit; turn away from evil and do good; let peace be your quest and aim.  Once you have done this, my eyes will be upon you and my ears will be open to your prayer.”

If we were to abbreviate this quote, we might say: “God will hear our prayers when we put away vicious talk.”  This can be a surprising and disturbing thought: having our prayers heard depends on how we use our tongue.

The gift of speech is one of the most powerful gifts God has given us, but it probably evokes less gratitude than any other.  Habitual use of speech bends to make us unconscious of the many times our speech verges on being critical, or, to use the adjective in the psalm, “vicious” talk.

Not many of us are humble enough to make amends for wounding words.  We depend on time and the good will of others to wipe out what has been said, but the wounds of hurtful words can never be totally erased.  Despite our best efforts to heal relationships, the scars remain.

Perhaps the first step is admitting that we are burdened with the habit of speaking without paying attention to what we say.  Jesus goes literally to the heart of the problem.  He speaks of the words that “come from the heart.”  These are the words that are first formulated in the mind and take on the emotions that issue from them.  Hence, controlling our thoughts is our first task.  Discernment of our thoughts in the manner of the early monks cuts off the evil before it reaches the heart. If our words do not come from a humble heart they will fall on deaf ears.

One of the familiar practices from the past is the daily examination of conscience.  Recalling our conversations and labeling them as hurtful or helpful becomes habitual.  We can train ourselves to think before we speak, to take a prior account of the possible consequences of our speech.  It is better to judge ourselves than to hear Jesus’ warning, “I tell you that every careless word that people speak, they shall give an accounting for it in the day of judgment.” (Mt 12:36)

Another effective way of learning how to use the tongue is learning the virtue of silence.  The recommendations for the practice of silence are frequent in Scripture and in the ancient rules of the Desert Fathers.  Although the Desert Fathers sometimes practiced perpetual silence, we are not called to that extreme.  Rather, Scripture describes moderate speech that flows from wisdom.  Benedict lists four qualities of such speech in his chapter on humility: serious, brief, gentle, reasonable.

The teachings of Benedict are taken from the Scriptures and so are meant for everyone.  One of the reminders Benedict uses in his chapter on silence is taken from the Book of Proverbs: “In the multitude of words, there shall not want sin.”  (Prv 10:19)  One of the Desert Fathers (teaches): “A person may seem to be silent, but if s/he is condemning others, she is babbling ceaselessly.  But there may be another who talks from morning til night and yet she is truly silent, that is, she says nothing that is not profitable.”

External silence is impossible until we learn to control the unending conversation that is going on in our (heads).  A 20th century Russian Orthodox monk wrote about prayer and the Christian life, “When we listen to someone we think we are silent because we do not speak; but our minds continue to work, our emotions react, our will responds for or against what we hear …  The real silence towards which we must aim as a starting point is a complete repose of mind and heart and will.”

We might wonder what happens to spontaneity, to having a chat without having to think about every word we say.  Jesus assures us that out of the contents of our heart our mouth will speak.  If we guard our hearts from evil and our minds from negative thoughts, our words will arise spontaneously without guilt, reflecting the goodness we have stored away.

God alone utters the perfect word, the speech without fault.  By pondering the perfections of Jesus, we come to own the good word of which the Psalmist speaks: “My heart overflows with a good theme; my tongue is ready like the pen of a scribe.” (Ps 45:1)

 

Continue Reading

Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: Benedictine Sisters of FL, Catholic Sisters Week: Virtual Prayer Service, Feast of St. Benedict, God, Jesus, July 11th, July 12th, st. benedict, vicious talk

Feast of St. Benedict

March 29, 2016 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

The Feast of St. Benedict is April 5, 2016

St. Benedict3

HOSPITALITY

Welcoming Christ in each other

 

Benedictine Hospitality helps us focus on Divine Presence in our lives,

in each person we meet and in the circumstances of life.

By acknowledging the mystery of God’s presence in our lives,

we become aware of the needs of others and how we might meet those needs.

This ever deeper trust in God and awareness of God’s presence

creates a climate for Hospitality – welcoming Christ in each other.

 

 

-from Benedictine Health System 2016

Continue Reading

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: awareness, Christ, Divine Presence, Feast of St. Benedict, God, mystery, st. benedict, trust

Footer

Prayer / Newsletter / Info

 Contact Info

Benedictine Sisters of Florida

PO Box 2450
12138 Wichers Road
St. Leo, FL 33574-2450
(352) 588-8320
(352) 588-8443

 Mass Schedule

Related Links

Copyright © 2025 · Benedictine Sisters of FL · Touching Lives Through Prayer and Service

Copyright © 2025 · Bendedictine Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in