Sunday, July 3, 2011

the "fragile plant" of monasticism in South Africa

From the blog Khanya:

Orthodox monasticism in Southern Africa is a fragile plant.

For the last few years there have been one or two people trying to live the monastic life, in one or other of the three “monasteries” in Gauteng (can you call it a monastery when there are no monks?)

Father Nazarius and Father Elias established the Monastery of the Descent of the Holy Spirit at Gerardville in 2000. Then Fr Nazarius died in 2008, and there were no monks there for a couple of years. Deacon Nectarius lived at Hennops Pride for a while, and then at St Nectarius, and then went overseas for a kidney stone operation and hasn’t returned. Fr Seraphim, as far as we know, was the first monk to be tonsured in South Africa, by Patriarch Theodoros, in 2006, but then he was ordained and sent to work in a parish as a parish priest...

Complete article here.

1 comment:

  1. The Orthodox Church needs to be more aggressive in sending monks to South Africa, and other countries where there are very few -- if any -- Orthodox monks. In fact, the Orthodox Church should become more involved in promoting evangelism throughout the world.

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