Our Lady of the Angels Monastery, Virginia

The Our Lady of the Angels Monastery is a 507 acres (205 ha)[1] Trappistine monastery near Crozet, Virginia (in the Diocese of Richmond, Virginia), which sits in a small valley of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Route 64. They are not cloistered from the public.[1]

History

On April 29, 1987, six nuns set out from Mount Saint Mary's Abbey in Wrentham, Massachusetts, to found a new house of Cistercian nuns.[2] They found a cheese farm selling at a discount price with all of the dated cheese-making machinery still intact on the property.[3]

Trappists emphasize self-sufficiency and manual labor. Therefore the idea of a small monastery producing and selling cheese to support itself appealed greatly to the nuns, and they took up residence in the two small log cabins on the property. Formally founded on May 1,[2] Our Lady of the Angels Monastery became the fifth house of Cistercian nuns in the United States, and the first situated in the South.

Work soon began on the new brick monastery for the Sisters on a nearby hill. The new structure was dedicated on April 29, 1989. The building had a small chapel that is open to the public daily, where the Sisters celebrate mass with a live-in priest and receive daily communion.

Learning to work the cheese-making machinery proved a challenge for the inexperienced Sisters, who knew nothing about the art and were working with old equipment that had been out of use for some 6 years. Happily, neighbors stepped in to help out. Hearing about the dilemma, Jim and Margaret Morris, self-described aging hippies,[3] shared their cheese-making skills and knowledge and before long the nuns were ready to sell. In November 1990 the Sisters began the production of Gouda (cheese) as their main means of self-support.[2]

Of the original Charter group, only Sister Barbara and Sister Mary David are still in residence at OLA.[3] Sister Barbara acts as the formation director and is in charge of vocations at the monastery. Their community has grown from the original six to a full dozen,[4] ranging in age from 40 to 77. As their numbers grew to finally double their starting number, the Sisters realized that they would need more room for dormitories and working. Therefore, in early 2006 the Sisters briefly interrupted their cheese-making for the beginning of an expansion of their monastery. Construction finished in February, 2008, providing the community with new rooms, extra space, and (most importantly), updated machinery for the production of gouda.[4]

Gouda cheese

The nuns order on average about 750 gallons of milk per week from a neighboring Mennonite farmer. Although they do not advertise their two- and five-lb rounds of gouda cheese, they generally sell out their 20,000[3] pounds by Christmas—and then receive orders for Christmas gift certificates that are ready to ship by February. However, the Sisters never make more than they need to pay the bills—even when more orders pour in than they can fill. In addition to mail-in orders for cheese, customers send in prayer intentions that the Sisters take very seriously.[4][1]

Daily Schedule

Following the Rule of St Benedict, in the method established by the Cistercian Order of the Strict Observance, the Sisters live a regimented monastic schedule:[2]

3:00 - Rise
3:15 - Vigils (Night Office) private prayer, reading, breakfast, wash
6:00 - Lauds (Morning Praise) followed by half-hour silent prayer before the Blessed Sacrament
7:00 - Chapter (conference by superior, community meeting or class)
7:30 - Eucharist, Terce (Mid-morning Prayer) work until 11:00
11:40 - Sext (Midday Prayer) dinner, optional siesta, private prayer or reading
1:30 - Nones (Afternoon Prayer) work until 4:15
5:30 - Vespers - (Evening Prayer) quarter-hour silent meditation, supper, private prayer or reading
7:00 - Compline (Concluding Prayer of the day) followed by strict silence and bed

They do not swear a vow of silence, but live in quiet contemplation rather than idly chattering. The Sisters sit in silence for their meals of bread and cheese, listening to one Sister read aloud while they eat. Work varies according to talent and ability. Cheese-making takes place once every 8 days.[4] The monastery has no television and the Sisters do not listen to music or go online, but one Sister of the community is appointed to listen to the radio for prayer-worthy news and to go online to tend to emails and orders for cheese.

The monastery is also home to two dogs, Amber and Jesse, and several cats.[4]

gollark: If you just sample random bytes or something, these will probably not be good policies.
gollark: Also, you need fairly evenly balanced choices in the first place for random selection to make any sense.
gollark: Arrow's theorem only applies to some types of voting system though, you can just use other ones.
gollark: If elected as supreme world dictator, I will eliminate parenting and family values, recursively bisect the planet into different regions for A/B testing, replace democratic processes with a random number generator on my phone, and replace all spokespeople with GPT-n.
gollark: We should replace all politicians with me (as supreme world dictator).

See also

References

  1. Latus, Janine (Fall 2013). "God and Gouda". Distinction. 19: 59–61.
  2. Our Lady of the Angels Monastery. 2002. 24 Mar. 2009 <http://olamonastery.org/>.
  3. Denton, Jean. "Parish Profile--Our Lady of the Angels Monastery." The Catholic Virginian. 7 Apr. 2008. 24 Mar. 2009 <http://www.catholicvirginian.org/archive/2008/2008vol83iss12/pages/parishprofile.html>.
  4. Hovey, Pauline. "Local News: Gouda for God." The Catholic Herald. 20 Feb. 2009. 24 Mar. 2009 <http://www.catholicherald.com/local_news/detail.html?sub_id=9467>.

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