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Hermitess professes vows, dedicates life to the praise of God [Catholic Caucus]
cna ^ | July 11, 2009

Posted on 07/11/2009 3:24:29 PM PDT by NYer

Manhattan, Kans., Jul 11, 2009 / 01:50 pm (CNA).- For more than four years, Kathryn Bloomquist has prepared to formalize a life of solitude and prayer. Late last month, she made the final step and was consecrated as a hermitess before Bishop Paul Coakley and a few witnesses.

Now, as Sister Kathryn Ann of the Holy Angels, she will spend her days mostly in solitude, "lived to the praise of God and the salvation of the world," she explains.

It is a path she has walked for much of her life.

She moved to Kansas from Washington, D.C., with her husband, Len, in 1989 when he joined the faculty at Kansas State University. Eventually he became chairman of the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work.

Even then, Sister Kathryn said, she chose a life of prayer and silence.

"He worked in the world, but he so believed in my calling. He protected me," she said of her husband.

"This life came about as we built this chapel. I was practically already a hermit. It just fit. It happened," she said.

Together, they constructed the native stone chapel, hidden even from their residence tucked away in the wooded hills near Manhattan.

She adopted the practice of a Benedictine oblate, focusing on the Rule of St. Benedict written 1,500 years ago. She prayed the Litany of the Hours and learned the Gregorian chants in Latin.

And then Len became ill. A rare cancer took his life just four months after they finished the exterior of the chapel.

She soon knew she wanted a more formal expression of her calling and began researching eremitic life.

She learned that particular calling began shortly after Constantine the Great legalized Christianity in the fourth century, predating even monastic life.

St. Benedict, one of the most well-known hermits, became so upset by the immorality of Roman society in about the year 500 that he left the city and took up residence in a cave. In time, however, he began attracting disciples, and he eventually founded a monastery and is known today as the Father of Western Monasticism.

Eremitic life continues today. Some hermits live alone, others are a part of religious communities.

"There is a resurgence," Sister Kathryn said. "I think it’s a response to the troubles of our times, and they are not small ones."

She contacted Bishop Coakley, who had just come to the Diocese of Salina, to ask that her vocation be formalized.

"I have been working with Sister Kathryn since shortly after my arrival in the Diocese of Salina," Bishop Coakley said. "For over four years, I have been privileged to guide and encourage Sister Kathryn in discerning her response to this very special vocation in the Church."

The Code of Canon Law recognizes a hermit "as one dedicated to God in a consecrated life if he or she publicly professes the three evangelical counsels, confirmed by a vow or other sacred bond, in the hands of the diocesan bishop and observes his or her own plan of life under his direction."

In addition to guidance from the bishop, Sister Kathryn drafted her plan of life, which spells out how she will live her vocation.

"It is one of assiduous prayer, silence, solitude and penance. It’s an ascetic endeavor," she said. "I try to live in the utmost simplicity — the idea of poverty of heart, pureness of life. It means a simplicity of living, to gaze toward God so pure that he can commune with the soul. Nothing is loved like God is loved.

"I’m here alone, but everyone is with me because of my prayers. No one prays alone," she added.

She knows it won’t be an easy life to live.

"I lived a greater life of solitude and silence when I was married than after he passed away," she said of Len. "Then I became so exposed. Nobody had really seen me. Some saw me for the first time at the funeral.

"Now it’s not as complete with solitude. It’s more of a battle," she said.

She does leave her hermitage when necessary, although she relies on a close friend for many necessities. She prefers attending a Latin Mass in Maple Hill, 50 miles to the east, but that also forces her to cut short the time she spends in prayer. Other times she will go to Mass at nearby St. Patrick’s in Ogden because there are fewer people in attendance than her home parish of Seven Dolors in Manhattan.

Although she owns the home that she and Len shared, her income is meager. She accepts small donations and gifts of food or labor.

"I haven’t gone hungry," she said.

She supplements her income by making and selling rosaries via the Internet.

"A hermit with a Web site and e-mail. That’s very strange," she said, laughing. But, adhering to that tenet of simplicity, she has dial-up Internet service, not broadband.

And not unlike St. Benedict, she has been found by people seeking guidance and counsel.

"Some come to join in prayer, others to speak about their spiritual lives. It become a faith sharing," she said.

But she has strict rules, and people first must find her.

"People have to look for me really hard, and those are the only ones I’d permit to come. There’s really nothing out there that says where I am," she said.

They must make an appointment, and no more than two people may visit at a time.

"Most are not Catholic, but they have deep spiritual lives," she said. "There is some counsel. They really are seeking God: ‘What do I do? What does it mean?’ If the Holy Spirit enlightens me, I say something," she said. If not, she prays with them.

She is not looking to attract disciples, however.

"If more people came, it would disrupt my silence of solitude. But it also is charity," she said. "I will not turn them away.

Her advice to people when asked?

"Go to Confession," she said, and focus on what Jesus taught was the greatest and first commandment — "You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind."

"There’s so much attention to the second commandment: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ But the first commandment, that’s what this is," she said of her eremitic life. "You can’t separate the two. If you don’t have the first, the second is rote practice. The first makes the second. That’s what our Lord intended it to be, to become God’s love for us all."

Bishop Coakley sees Sister Kathryn’s life as a gift to the faithful.

"A hermit’s hidden life is a silent witness to the invisible presence and power of God’s grace at work in our midst. Our society highly values human activity and measures success by the results of our efforts. This vocation reminds us of the primacy of grace and the importance of silence in our busy lives," he said.

"Sister Kathryn’s consecrated life is a gift for the whole Church and to our diocese in particular. I am grateful for her generous response to God’s invitation to seek him in solitude and silence while devoting herself to prayer and the chanting of God’s praises," the bishop added.

Now that she has professed her vows, Sister Kathryn says her new life begins in earnest, with her bishop as her superior and her plan of life as her guide.

"Now I have to live it," she said.

Samples of Sister Kathryn’s rosaries can be seen on her Web site, www.wayofroses.com.

Printed with permission from the Diocese of Salina, Kansas.


TOPICS: Catholic; Prayer; Religion & Culture
KEYWORDS: catholic
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1 posted on 07/11/2009 3:24:29 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...

Chapel Courtyard with Angelus Bell

2 posted on 07/11/2009 3:25:40 PM PDT by NYer ("One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
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To: NYer
I lived a greater life of solitude and silence when I was married ...

Ummm, okay. I guess "solitude" why they didn't have any children?

3 posted on 07/11/2009 3:38:15 PM PDT by Tax-chick (In addition to living on the Riviera, the Goths ...)
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To: Tax-chick

Not everybody is blessed with children. We can’t all be like you.


4 posted on 07/11/2009 3:55:00 PM PDT by ottbmare (Ein Reich, ein Volk, ein Obama!)
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To: NYer

I admire her desire to devote herself completely to God, as I admire it in the ascetics who’ve preceded her down through the centuries. However, I really don’t think God meant for us to live the Christian life in isolation and silence.


5 posted on 07/11/2009 4:08:08 PM PDT by Dan Middleton (Say no to political personality cults, on the left or the right.)
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To: NYer

I overlooked the Catholic Caucus tag until just now. If my previous post is out of line, then I ask that everyone ignore it. I’m not Catholic, but I didn’t intend for my post to be an attack, just an observation. As I said, I respect her devotion.


6 posted on 07/11/2009 4:09:20 PM PDT by Dan Middleton (Say no to political personality cults, on the left or the right.)
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To: ottbmare

I understand that. It was just an odd thing to say, that she had more solitude and silence while married.


7 posted on 07/11/2009 4:11:55 PM PDT by Tax-chick (In addition to living on the Riviera, the Goths ...)
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To: Tax-chick
Maybe I can explain:

As a married woman, she was able to rely on her husband to provide for her & to interact with the world for her. When he died, she was forced to interact with the world; she could no longer be “silent”...reclusive. As she said, she met his colleagues & friends for the first time at her husband's funeral.

8 posted on 07/11/2009 4:24:21 PM PDT by justkate
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To: Dan Middleton
However, I really don’t think God meant for us to live the Christian life in isolation and silence.

Some of the greatest prayers writings passed down through 2000 of christianity, spring from hermits and those living the monastic life. Apparently, this has caught on in contemporary society amongst our other christian brethren.

The unexpected monks

9 posted on 07/11/2009 4:44:18 PM PDT by NYer ("One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
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To: NYer

God bless this woman.


10 posted on 07/11/2009 5:12:45 PM PDT by lucias_clay (Its times like this I'm glad I'm a whig.)
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To: justkate; Dan Middleton

Well, that’s an unusual approach to marriage. Our FRiend Dan opined that God does not call “us” to live the Christian life in silence and solitude, and I’m inclined to agree. However, it also seems clear that He did call Kathryn to such a life: not “us,” but “her.”

This suggests that she erred in discerning her vocation to marriage, because “silence and solitude” are not the general conditions of married life.


11 posted on 07/11/2009 5:24:37 PM PDT by Tax-chick (In addition to living on the Riviera, the Goths ...)
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To: NYer
Our modern-day culture is utterly opposed to the interior life.

I recommend viewing a DVD of Into Great Silence. I was able to see it in a theater where a young priest who had explored Carthusian monasticism answered questions afterward. I will never forget the man who admitted that once the movie got rolling, his thoughts "attacked" him.

The movie is 3+ hours long. There is no talking. Every other sound is there but the human voice is absent. This guy 'fessed up to nearly losing his mind because he had never experienced that kind of silence before.

12 posted on 07/11/2009 5:57:54 PM PDT by Oratam
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To: Dan Middleton

“However, I really don’t think God meant for us to live the Christian life in isolation and silence”

The Catholic Church gives more latitude for that sort of thing. After all, perhaps God does mean for *some* of us to live like that.


13 posted on 07/11/2009 7:01:56 PM PDT by dsc (Only dead fish go with the flow.)
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To: NYer

We have a lady in our area who has done the same thing.


14 posted on 07/11/2009 8:34:50 PM PDT by Salvation (With God all things are possible.)
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To: Salvation

My father’s home town is near Maple Hill. There are so many devout Catholics in that area. They have statues of Mary in their front yards. Nobody in Southern California does that. It’s really kind of inspiring to go there for family reunions. There are also a lot of Pius X schismatics, as well. They have a college there, in St. Marys.


15 posted on 07/11/2009 10:55:16 PM PDT by married21
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To: Oratam
Our modern-day culture is utterly opposed to the interior life.

It began with the radio, grew with cinematography and fully blossomed with the expansion into television. Each day I see quite a few folks walking around with earbuds for their ipods and cellphones. Spending time in silence allows us to meditate on the words of God and allows us to hear His guidance and direction in our lives.

EWTN recently aired Into Great Silence and I believe will be airing it again during the summer. It's a wonderful film that can teach us much.

16 posted on 07/12/2009 4:18:01 AM PDT by NYer ("One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
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To: NYer
I was quite fortunate to see it at The Film Forum in lower Manhattan of all places. I think it reached quite a broad audience as a result, probably by accident.

I thought the Q&A was great, mostly because it revealed much about my fellow New Yorkers. One woman I remember was very angry that these men would withdraw from the world. "They should be working in charitable organizations," she said.

The young priest's response was "I would say living in close confines with 20 or 30 other men for the rest of your life is a daily exercise in charity." I think the woman was more confused after that answer.

17 posted on 07/12/2009 6:21:19 AM PDT by Oratam
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To: NYer

I am reminded of the parable of the talents ( coins).

The master wasn’t very happy with the servant who buried his talents.


18 posted on 07/12/2009 6:29:07 AM PDT by wintertime (People are not stupid! Good ideas win!)
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To: wintertime

Yes - and its a good thing that God does not consider prayer and worship all day long to be wasteful.

Jesus lived the life of a desert hermit for AT LEAST 40 days in a row.

I wonder if the Master is happy with post 18?


19 posted on 07/12/2009 10:10:38 AM PDT by Notwithstanding
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To: Salvation
We have a lady in our area who has done the same thing.

Just curious but how does she support this lifestyle without income?

20 posted on 07/12/2009 11:24:58 AM PDT by NYer ("One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
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