Trappist - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 01 Nov 2018 08:39:17 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Trappist - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Global leader in contemplative prayer dies https://cathnews.co.nz/2018/11/01/global-contemplative-prayer-leader-dies/ Thu, 01 Nov 2018 07:05:34 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=113368

Trappist priest, Thomas Keating, who was a global leader in both Christian contemplative prayer and interreligious dialogue, has died. He was 95. He died at St Joseph's Abbey, Massachusetts, where he had been abbot from 1961 to 1981. In the early 1980s Keating began his role as one of the chief architects of the contemporary Read more

Global leader in contemplative prayer dies... Read more]]>
Trappist priest, Thomas Keating, who was a global leader in both Christian contemplative prayer and interreligious dialogue, has died. He was 95.

He died at St Joseph's Abbey, Massachusetts, where he had been abbot from 1961 to 1981.

In the early 1980s Keating began his role as one of the chief architects of the contemporary practice of meditative prayer, which allows one to rest in the presence of God.

This form of silent prayer is now known as centering prayer.

During the early 1980s, the growing popularity of centering prayer led to Keating directing retreats and workshops worldwide. That networking, in turn, sparked widening interest in organisational and educational structuring.

Out of that grew Contemplative Outreach Ltd, which was officially incorporated in 1986. Keating was its first president.

Keating was internationally acclaimed for his extensive writing, lecturing and teaching on both meditative prayer and on interfaith discourse.

He spearheaded the formation of the Snowmass Interreligious Conferences in late 1983. These were a yearly gathering of major figures of various religious backgrounds that ran for three decades.

According to a website by Rabbi Hennoch Dov , Keating invited "deep practitioners" from Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, Hindu, Native American and Islamic traditions to the Snowmann conferences to connect, compare notes and clarify. One result has been to distill some profound points of agreement shared by each of the participants.

In a press statement responding to Keatings' death, Contemplative Outreach expressed the organisation's deep sorrow at "the passing of our beloved teacher and spiritual father."

"He modeled for us the incredible riches and humility borne of a divine relationship that is not only possible but is already the fact in every human being.

"Such was his teaching, such was his life. He now shines his light from the heights and the depths of the heart of the Trinity."

Contemplative Outreach is planning to hold a 24-hour, worldwide prayer vigil.

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How a Trappist monk inspired Steve Jobs and Apple's designs https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/03/15/trappist-monk-inspired-steve-jobs-apples-designs/ Mon, 14 Mar 2016 16:20:11 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=81250 Robert Palladino's name appears nowhere in Steve Jobs's lengthy authorised biography. But the one-time Trappist monk had an enduring influence on Jobs and the business empire he erected. Jobs sat in on Palladino's calligraphy class at Portland's Reed College. And this eventually inspired the elegance for which Apple computers are renowned. Continue reading

How a Trappist monk inspired Steve Jobs and Apple's designs... Read more]]>
Robert Palladino's name appears nowhere in Steve Jobs's lengthy authorised biography.

But the one-time Trappist monk had an enduring influence on Jobs and the business empire he erected.

Jobs sat in on Palladino's calligraphy class at Portland's Reed College.

And this eventually inspired the elegance for which Apple computers are renowned.

Continue reading

How a Trappist monk inspired Steve Jobs and Apple's designs]]>
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China's modern martyrs: from Mao to now, part 2 https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/09/17/chinas-modern-martyrs-mao-now-part-2/ Mon, 16 Sep 2013 19:13:32 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=49681

The little-known story of the murder of 33 Trappist monks by Chinese Communists in 1947: "The body of Christ which is the Church, like the human body, was first young, but at the end of the world it will have an appearance of decline." — St. Augustine As I sat with Brother Marcel Zhang, OCSO Read more

China's modern martyrs: from Mao to now, part 2... Read more]]>
The little-known story of the murder of 33 Trappist monks by Chinese Communists in 1947:

"The body of Christ which is the Church, like the human body, was first young, but at the end of the world it will have an appearance of decline." — St. Augustine

As I sat with Brother Marcel Zhang, OCSO (b. 1924), in his Beijing apartment, I thumbed through his private photographs of Yangjiaping Trappist Abbey. Some were taken before its destruction in 1947, and some he had taken during a recent visit to the ruins. What was once a majestic abbey church filled with divine prayer and worship had been reduced to debris and an occasional partial outline of a gothic window. When the People's Liberation Army (PLA) attacked the monastery in 1947 and began its cruel torments against the monks, Zhang was one of the monks. He shared with me some of his recollections, no doubt at great risk. As we looked at a picture of the Abbey church as it appears today, where the monks gathered for daily Mass prior to 1947, Zhang paused to contemplate the ruins. "It's already gone . . . already, the church is like this," he said, insinuating that the ruins of the Abbey "church" metaphorically represented the "Church" in China, still haunted by the past, still tormented in the present.1

After the People's Court had demanded the collective execution of the monks of Our Lady of Consolation Abbey at Yangjiaping, the Trappists were bound in heavy chains or thin wire, which cut deeply into their wrists, and were confined to await their punishments. Brother Zhang recalled that during the many trials, Party officials presiding over the interrogations accused the Trappists of being, "wealthy landlords, rich peasants who exploit poor peasants, counterrevolutionaries, bad eggs, and rightists". Essentially, they were charged with all of the "crimes" commonly ascribed to the worst classes in the Communist list of "bad elements."2 Normally, only one of these accusations was sufficient to warrant an immediate public execution, but some of the accused from the abbey were foreigners, and news that Nationalist forces were on their way to save the monks alarmed the Communist officers. Punishments had to be inflicted on the road, on what became the Via Crucis of the Trappist sons of Saint Benedict. More interrogations were staged during stops, and Brother Zhang noted that new trials, or "struggle sessions" (鬥爭) as he called them, were orchestrated at every village. Zhang himself was questioned more than twenty times at impromptu People's Courts. He remembered that he was treated with much more leniency than the priests, as he was still only a young seminarian in 1947. The priests were much more despised. "After the interrogations," Zhang recalled, "we would go out to relieve ourselves, and I saw the buttocks of the priests, which were red [from their beatings]; the flesh hung off like meat."3 Chinese Catholics who know about the Yangjiaping incident refer to these torments as a "siwang xingjun," 死亡行軍 or a "death march," and this is when most of the Trappists who died received their "palms of martyrdom." Continue reading

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