What Makes Carmelites Mendicants?
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If you enjoyed this content, you may also enjoy this video in which Carmelites share what it personally means to them to be a Carmelite Friar.
What does it mean to be a mendicant?
For more than 800 years, the Carmelite friars have lived as a mendicant order.
But what does that mean?
The word mendicant comes from a Latin word meaning to beg.
In practice, this means that unlike monks who live primarily within a monastery,
mendicant friars live among the people,
serving the needs of the community in many different ways
and relying on the generosity of those they serve.
From their origins on Mount Carmel in the Holy Land,
Carmelites carried a simple but powerful calling
to live lives rooted in prayer, community, and ministry.
Being mendicant means the friars are sent outward
into parishes, schools, retreat centers, hospitals, universities,
neighborhoods, and communities of every kind.
It means walking with people in their everyday lives,
bringing the Carmelite tradition of contemplation
into the heart of the world.
Because of this, many and varied are the ways the Carmelite friar ministers.
Some preach and teach.
Some accompany people in spiritual direction.
Some work in missions, social outreach, or pastoral ministry.
Others guide people through retreats and moments of prayer.
Different ministries, different places,
but one shared calling
to live the Carmelite Journey of faith
and to help others encounter God
in the midst of ordinary life.
That is the spirit of a Carmelite friar.
圣母纯心会加尔默罗派教徒效忠耶稣基督,以先知和沉思的姿态祈祷、共同生活和服务。 在以利亚和玛丽的启发下,在加尔默罗会规的指引下,我们在美国、加拿大、秘鲁、墨西哥、萨尔瓦多和洪都拉斯见证了长达八百年的精神转变传统。
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