Mount Calvary Retreat House and Monastery
Mount Calvary
Retreat House and Monastery was established as a house of the Order
in 1947. Both the monastery and guesthouse are housed in a large
Spanish-style building dramatically situated 1250 feet above the
city of Santa Barbara. There are commanding views of the seacoast,
Pacific Ocean, and Las Padres Mountains. The guesthouse has accommodations
for thirty retreatants and has been described in the Los Angeles
Times as "possibly the most beautiful retreat house in the
country".
At the present
time, eight monks live out their stability to the Order in the Mount
Calvary community. In addition, one of our monks-not-residence is
attached here. We observe a fourfold liturgical day of Vigils, Lauds,
Eucharist, and Vespers. To honor our covenant relationship with
the Roman Catholic Cammaldolese, Benedictines, we use their office
books and music. Leadership and decision making is a blend of traditional
consultative, consensual, and discernment-depending upon its import
within the fullness of community life.
Formative to
our lives in community and complementary to the Order's Vision Statement
are our own local guidelines:
"In openness
to the movement of the divine wisdom and in the monastic tradition
we seek to create a place where might be built redemptive knowledge
and wonder in daily offices, in creation, in society and in the
mystery of being human. We believe we are called to corporate prayer,
hospitality, and other ministries. We
endeavor to be mutually accountable, risking, visionary, realistic
and diligent."
"Openness"
is the key: openness to the Spirit, to one another, and to the tradition."Openness"
allow us to unlock the riches of the monastic traditions and to
live our lives as a paschal people.
Even though
we maintain a lively and busy ministry of hospitality, the community
is diligent in nurturing a vital monastic core, enriched, rather
than overwhelmed, by its common work. In the enclosure and beyond,
the brothers encourage and support each other to grow and develop,
personally and spiritually in a variety of ways, honoring each one's
particular gifts, interests, and abilities. Art, calligraphy, astronomy,
spiritual direction, 12 step work, prison ministry and evangelism,
gardening, Hospital Chaplaincy, speaking, participation on the diocesan
communities and education, are but a few of the activities that
keep our lives rich, full, and spiritually active.
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