What Did Medieval Monks Do All Day?

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  • čas přidán 28. 12. 2020
  • Did you ever wonder what medieval monks actually did all day long? Well, mystery solved: this excerpt from episode 13 of One Whirling Adventure opens the abbey door and lays out their day planner. See the rest of the episode, and the entire series, at www.lanecatholic.org/pages/join
    And check out our other channel, One Whirling Adventure: / @onewhirlingadventure1122

Komentáře • 657

  • @quercus5398
    @quercus5398 Před 2 lety +113

    Many hungry and injured people,knocked on monastery’s doors for help.
    Monks would bake bread,and bring it to folks and exchange it with other things that was needed at the monastery,
    like fruits and vegetables etc. they received a lot of respect from the town folks,before watches,the monks
    would sound the bell so people in the fields knew the time.

  • @nachodiaz2221
    @nachodiaz2221 Před 8 měsíci +14

    What almost EVERYONE doesn't know is that during the "dark age" the kings and royals had all the power and control of pretty much everything. It was after he monks and nuns decided to come out of their convents and monasteries that Europe came out of the dark ages. IT WAS THE TEACHINGS and guidance of monks and nuns that helped society to progress, NOT the governments.

  • @betinivinicius
    @betinivinicius Před 2 lety +109

    I like the respect and admiration for the monks. It's hard to see this kind of honesty towards the Catholic Church nowadays. Great job.

    • @traviousandrews1015
      @traviousandrews1015 Před 2 lety +6

      Well the church ain't that honest today lmao

    • @kaliyuga1476
      @kaliyuga1476 Před 2 lety +11

      @@traviousandrews1015 Thanks for proving his point

    • @kaliyuga1476
      @kaliyuga1476 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, being catholic nowadays is the new counterculture

    • @ueau
      @ueau Před 2 lety

      Yes much hate

  • @davidhoffman6391
    @davidhoffman6391 Před 2 lety +176

    I was a monk for 11 years. It's a mixed bag like anything else, there's good and there's bad. I actually got a great education there, and it was for free. I feel endebted to them.

    • @anpcpro
      @anpcpro Před 2 lety +7

      David, how is this possible to stop being a monk? I thought it's a lifetime commitment.

    • @davidhoffman6391
      @davidhoffman6391 Před 2 lety +18

      @@anpcpro I quit just before final vows.

    • @kerenstar13
      @kerenstar13 Před 2 lety +8

      @@davidhoffman6391 why?

    • @internetexplorer7303
      @internetexplorer7303 Před 2 lety +4

      Do you happen to know the david hoffman that interviews people and takes pictures of historical moments

    • @virgilflowers9846
      @virgilflowers9846 Před 2 lety +1

      A Benedictine monk? Or Buddhist?

  • @lucy6422
    @lucy6422 Před 2 lety +108

    One thing that could be mentioned is that the monasteries provided material relief for those in need at a time when there was no social welfare. They also provided hospitality, especially for pilgrims. When Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in the 16th Century there was nowhere for the poor to seek assistance, resulting in the appalling workhouses which employed child labour for those who couldn't pay their debts. Two good books on this subject are: "The Medieval Machine" by Jean Gimpell and "How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization" by Thomas E. Woods Jr.

    • @Surv1ve_Thrive
      @Surv1ve_Thrive Před 2 lety +5

      Agreed 👍🇬🇧

    • @johnjon1823
      @johnjon1823 Před 2 lety +14

      Completely correct. The ignorance of the wonderful works of charity and that much better solution is a profound loss of the "reformation" and the large abandonment of God for ideology. It took centuries to replace the monasteries and it finally resulted in the professional poverty industry we have today based entirely on materialistic philosophies in which the whole of the person is not helped. The mechanistic sociological approach fails to deliver the only thing which can liberate one from poverty and that is Christ Himself. Without Him one cannot conquer the vices, nor think with the wisdom God wishes us to have. In such a setting intergenerational poverty continues because one is doomed to live in a dysfunctional culture as are one's children. The lack of sufficient Christian influence means few can be rescued from the cycle, and the divisions in Christianity means the world will not believe, per Christ's prayer in the garden.
      Moral turpitude is not conducive to a productive and successful human flourishing. Living is the current society where the odor of Christianity has largely vanished and much of the salt has lost its savor we are impoverished in our plenty. Irony or ironies. Let us hope we can avoid utter collapse before so that the tide turns in time, or else we will likely see what Augustine saw only experience it in far worse ways.
      In times past, my poor Catholic School with limited resources and children from poverty of every race under the sun still performed in the 85th percentile having nothing more than tiny rooms with many children and one sister, and the Baltimore Catechism. People used to say then, how much nicer public schools were, all kinds of equipment, best educated and trained teachers, an actual school nurse, a nice auditorium and sports fields and all kinds of athletics. But none but their best and brightest could match our average student because we were made to work. We received discipline, every day. Catholic school preserved my faith, enabled me to graduate from college, succeed in business, and feed and educate a family like nothing else could have done. I laugh at the multicultural nonsense, we had Chinese, American Indian, Blacks, Spanish, Italian, Irish, Polish, and who knows what else. We didn't pay attention to such things as children because it didn't matter since everyone was a child of God.
      Best wishes!

    • @georgesouthwick7000
      @georgesouthwick7000 Před 2 lety +14

      Henry VIII got rid of the monasteries because he wanted their land and possessions. What a horrible individual.

    • @lucy6422
      @lucy6422 Před 2 lety +9

      @@johnjon1823 I also was taught by the Sisters of St Joseph - the order founded by St Mary MacKillop (Australia's first saint). We had next to nothing in the way of material resources, not even any heating and cooling, but we learnt the 3Rs and a good dose of religion. I am deeply grateful to those sisters who worked for nothing but the love of God. I still have my First Communion photo with 74 children in the class!

    • @tedtimmis8135
      @tedtimmis8135 Před 2 lety +2

      I was going to say the same thing but you said it better.

  • @joshuadarden7200
    @joshuadarden7200 Před 2 lety +18

    These monks really helped improve life because of their sacrifice

  • @ponzianomanning3071
    @ponzianomanning3071 Před 3 lety +162

    In addition to primarily being houses of prayer, Monasteries were the economic, academic and health care engines of their time, and in some parts of the world they still are today: St Mienrads in Indiana, St Vincents in PA, and many parts of Europe...

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 3 lety +25

      Absolutely! And our hope is that Catholic religious communities will once again become the cultural engines of their communities. Thanks for watching!

    • @miguelluissousadias1371
      @miguelluissousadias1371 Před 2 lety +7

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313 Salve, this is amazing, they produced scientists, tenders of the soul, farmers, scribes for document translation, preservtion of languages, etc they were authentic ofermadur. Gratias santissimi padre! Gratias institucione sanctissima et Deus est Louvatus!

    • @el_aleman
      @el_aleman Před 2 lety +7

      Good reason to tear them down and steal from them. What a horrible shame. If people want to be another religion fine, but what Henry VIII add Cromwell did was nothing short of wholesale crimes against humanity. In the end, Cromwell’s head was removed, Henry VIII died a slow painful death and the people of England who benefited from the monasteries became exploited by the wealthy and had to fend for themselves…

    • @mosessupposes2571
      @mosessupposes2571 Před 2 lety +5

      It’s a great business model to be able to take money from parishioners but not have any labor costs. That sure does enhance the odds of success.

  • @joshuakeeney8797
    @joshuakeeney8797 Před 3 lety +20

    Excellent video! Well-rounded, honest, and insightful.

  • @gljm
    @gljm Před 2 lety +40

    What did Medieval Monks do all day? Monk-ey Business obviously !

  • @celticspirit1
    @celticspirit1 Před 2 lety +4

    I am a 51 year old Catholic who is taking care of his elderly father. I attend a Franciscan church and attend Mass six days a week. I want to live the monastic life based on the ideals of St. Francis. I believe my vocation is to be a layman who lives a voluntary simple life dedicated to Jesus Christ. I found this video during my research into monastic life. God bless.

  • @isaiah3872
    @isaiah3872 Před 3 lety +34

    I've always wondered if _all_ the monks prayed the Hours at once, considering the various forms manual labour they did during the day. Or perhaps some monks were exempt from one of the minor hours e.g. Nones

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 3 lety +27

      They persisted in the liturgy of the hours until their dying day. It was the rhythm of their life, and their family. As they aged or suffered disability, they were more likely to be excused from manual labor than prayer.

    • @BpGregor
      @BpGregor Před 2 lety +8

      In this day, starting in the 80's, some monks did not have to go to the church for the prayers but would pray the lessor, or minor hours, where they were but at the same time as if the were in the church. Minor hours are Prime (6am), Terce (9am), Sext (12 noon), and None (3pm). Lauds, Vespers, and Matins were prayed in church. Compline is not counted among the seven hours. In some monasteries Matins and Lauds are seen as one office because Lauds follows Matins with just a minor break of a few minutes.

    • @gregsmith9690
      @gregsmith9690 Před 2 lety +2

      @@BpGregor Thanks for that explanation!

    • @Oldparson220
      @Oldparson220 Před 2 lety +5

      No monk was exempt. Those out in the fields far from the monestary would gather in small groups to offer the divine office. The small hours comprised 3 psalms , a passage from scripture and responsery and collect followed by a Pater and an Ave. This usually took no more than 10 minutes, as it would not be chanted like those in the church. That could take up to a half hour.
      All would/is relegated by the bell in the tower

  • @LoriFoster
    @LoriFoster Před 2 lety +31

    Seems not much time for Sinning in a jammed pack day like that!😳

  • @uptonsavoie
    @uptonsavoie Před 2 lety +13

    You fail to mention the charitable works of the monks. The poor depended on the monastic largesse, and when Henry VIII despoiled the monasteries and ousted the inhabitants, the monks were not the only ones starving in the fields and lanes. In those times, the indigent and starving could not hope for governmental support.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +2

      Absolutely true, Bud! In fact, many of the daughter orders (Cistercians, for example), had very specific rules/quotas for the set-asides they gave to the poor (x percentage of the goods they produced, or x number of meals or shoes given away on a feast day, etc.). And many of the poor lived as tenant farmers on monastic lands. Plus, they were bound by rules of hospitality, giving food and shelter to travelers. When Henry VIII abolished the monasteries in England, a major support for the poor was removed, requiring the government to become responsible for charity. Thanks for watching and commenting. And check out my website www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

    • @benhassan11
      @benhassan11 Před 2 lety

      Also forgot to mention the sexual assault, rape and murders these monks committed. They also forgot their support of slavery and misogyny.

    • @ecclesiaxxi6210
      @ecclesiaxxi6210 Před 2 lety +6

      @@benhassan11 Could you please provide the documented evidence of this e.g. primary sources, thanks.

    • @antoniolima1068
      @antoniolima1068 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ecclesiaxxi6210 she dosent need to, she only wants to denigrate the character of an association of single males, standart feminized tactic, imagine all that wealth not being channeled to uterus, now why did monasteries start to fade away?

  • @williammcdonald5086
    @williammcdonald5086 Před 2 lety +20

    Most monks were educated and thus were skilled at different trades so monasteries were able to generate profits with useful products. Also, the monasteries were able to keep learning alive. Members of the clergy were skilled in writing legal documents but employed their skills in managing the finances of many noblemen.

  • @marisYeaa
    @marisYeaa Před 3 lety +8

    That's a great review, thank you!

  • @Zelda_Thorn
    @Zelda_Thorn Před 2 lety +19

    i mean, this is a pretty rosy view. for much of history monasteries made profit because they were landowners who rented their lands to peasant farmers and then took a huge cut of what they produced.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +7

      Thanks for watching, Zelda! I think that's exactly what I said in the video: in the pre-capitalist, agrarian world (before capital cash markets), wealth was in property. And monasteries were gifted property as endowments, to produce revenue (largely through tenants). The land was owned by a nobleman, for example, and the tenant rents went to him. Now they went to the monastery. And, if you watched the video, the whole point was that every few generations, that wealth caused a loosening of discipline, a laxness of morals. Which is why every few generations reformers came along and branched off to start new monastic orders. And, as I said at the end, the reform-wealth-reform cycle would be reset. Subscribe, and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

    • @warreneckels4945
      @warreneckels4945 Před 2 lety +2

      @Rose Rose Sometimes. The fat and lazy monk was a cultural touchstone. Then a reform would hit, the order would split, and the new, purer order would set up shop.
      Another revenue stream was less savory: simony. In return for a donation, monks would pray that your sins be absolved. So if you went off to a Crusade against the infidel, but got carried away and massacre some Christians or commit crimes against civilians, the monks back home would pray away your sin and you could go to Heaven in the likely event that you died.
      This made monasteries very lootable when the local sovereign went Protestant or the Vikings/Tatars showed up.

    • @user-uy8wx4pk4h
      @user-uy8wx4pk4h Před měsícem

      You sound gay

  • @terrymarsalinas1882
    @terrymarsalinas1882 Před 2 lety +1

    You've gained a subscriber from the Philippines. Great output.

  • @wirebrushproductions1001
    @wirebrushproductions1001 Před 2 lety +16

    You left out something important in discussing the accumulation of wealth by monasteries.
    They were often exempt from taxes to the local lord and to the king. This gave them a considerable advantage.

    • @callsofscv
      @callsofscv Před 2 lety +1

      But, they also lived lives of poverty and simplicity. The wealth was still put back into the economy.

    • @californiaslastgasp6847
      @californiaslastgasp6847 Před 2 lety

      You want religious organizations taxes?

    • @wirebrushproductions1001
      @wirebrushproductions1001 Před 2 lety

      Irrelevant. The Medieval Period ended about 600 years ago. Things were different, and so were churches. Churches no longer operate as major businesses. If they did, taxes would be appropriate.

  • @clrobertson13
    @clrobertson13 Před 2 lety +5

    I have read the Brother Cadfael series by Ellis Peters and the monastic life, amidst the culture of 12th Century England, is very similar, if not identical, to what you have presented here. Cadfael was a Benedictine monk who came to the monastic life after having been a Crusader. I read the books for their historical value as much as for the (mostly) murder mysteries. Thank you for your excellent presentation!

    • @martijnb5887
      @martijnb5887 Před 2 lety

      But Cadfael had a tendency to run from his work for other jobs and stretching is permission to do so.
      Great stories written in beautiful English.

  • @godfreygalea8181
    @godfreygalea8181 Před 2 lety +11

    This explains why millions of US citizens are poor, despite that the majority work hard and long hours. Drugs, alcohol,gambling, prostitution or smoking are the main reasons.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +7

      “Go to the ant, you sluggard;
      consider its ways and be wise!
      It has no commander,
      no overseer or ruler,
      yet it stores its provisions in summer
      and gathers its food at harvest.
      How long will you lie there, you sluggard?
      When will you get up from your sleep?
      A little sleep, a little slumber,
      a little folding of the hands to rest-
      and poverty will come on you like a thief
      and scarcity like an armed man.”
      - Book of Proverbs 6:6-11

    • @philipwagner9169
      @philipwagner9169 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313 And yet Luke 12:22-32 seems to urge us not to worry about it, but to let God provide.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +2

      @PhilipWagner Luke 12 tells us not to worry about the outcome, not to not work. We do our part. Jesus tells a parable about a man who works his fields and goes home to sleep. While he rests, the crops grow, then he harvests them. Thanks for watching! Check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

    • @philipwagner9169
      @philipwagner9169 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313 Thank you!

    • @dadikkedude
      @dadikkedude Před 2 lety

      Millions are poor because we live in a capitalist society, in a capitalist world. People are poor by design, yet the rich like to point to people's character and give explanations like just work harder, you too can be rich. It's a fantasy, or American dream some like to call it.

  • @TroglodyteDiner
    @TroglodyteDiner Před 2 lety +4

    In the late 12th Century the Cistercians of Yorkshire were so rich they were able to pay the ransom for kidnapped Richard the Lionhearted to the Knights of Rhodes. In turn they won concessions from the monarchy.
    By the advent of the Renaissance the monastic system had grown to the point that it was tying up too much of the wealth of the emerging Nation-States. While Henry VIII was notorious for it, most Catholic states dissolved their monasteries too. One of the Hapsburg Holy Roman Emperors told the monks to either become parish priests or leave the religious life altogether and get jobs.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +3

      Thanks for watching, Paul! You’re right, the Orders did accumulate vast wealth-why and how was the point of the video. As I said in the film, most of that wealth was in property (they didn’t have hedge fund portfolios, etc.). They owned vast tracts of farmland for the reasons I explained. But to your point about having more than the secular governments, think about this: governments were always spending their wealth, largely on war (arsenals, navies, soldiers, costs of expeditions). The governments were always broke. King Richard the Lionhearted had to borrow money to go on crusade, and then get bailed out. The secular governments were always borrowing from Italian and German bankers. The monasteries, rich because of property and rents, didn’t spend cash on wars like the kings. So of course the kings looked with envy on that wealth, and saw the opportunity to seize it for more wars. Subscribe to the channel, and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

  • @Uberdude6666
    @Uberdude6666 Před 3 lety +13

    Very educational and interesting, also I love the title of the video xD
    So may I suggest you put your sources in the description or at the end of the video? It help a ton with fact-checking and credibility :-) I would like to be able to research deeper into the activities of monks in the middle ages, particularly the thing you said about them clearing forests and draining swamps.
    Unless, ofcourse, you have more videos going more in depths about monastic orders?

    • @Thanasis_Koligliatis
      @Thanasis_Koligliatis Před 2 lety +1

      I don't think that there are any sources, really.
      Most probably, he's just saying whatever he likes,
      without really having any connection with this whole matter.
      If you look at his channel,
      I suspect that it's some kind of scheme to make money out of nothing

    • @Uberdude6666
      @Uberdude6666 Před 2 lety

      @@Thanasis_Koligliatis LOL like every youtube ever u mean?

    • @Thanasis_Koligliatis
      @Thanasis_Koligliatis Před 2 lety

      @@Uberdude6666 Yeah, probably

    • @Thanasis_Koligliatis
      @Thanasis_Koligliatis Před 2 lety +1

      @@Uberdude6666
      Actually, it's a little bit more than that.
      If you see his video
      How to Sign in and Find Classes
      czcams.com/video/1LXqdNZdgCM/video.html
      at 2:02
      He explains that he charges
      $10/month
      $20/month
      to watch this nonsense at his website

    • @mambaman9363
      @mambaman9363 Před 2 lety +2

      Go see the history of the Norfolk Broads in UK. They were dug out manually for peat by the monks and now, filled with water you can sail a yacht or a barge in for some 280 km.

  • @bennysmemestore2274
    @bennysmemestore2274 Před 11 měsíci

    In June my wife and I spent three of the most peaceful and silent days in a monastery in La Malbaie, Quebec. Couples sleep in different floors/rooms.

  • @RVM451
    @RVM451 Před 2 lety +2

    Friend,
    How hard would it have been to leave the Monastery in those days, for those who found that Monastic Life did not suit them?

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +3

      An excellent question, Friend. St. Benedict made entering the monastery a process of discernment for the “novice” candidate and the other brothers before they were allowed to take vows. You were voluntarily being adopted into what they saw, very seriously, as a family. Could a monk leave? Yes, but it was serious, even more than, say, walking away from the military. It was akin to a divorce, or even renouncing your family. You could do it, no one would stop you, and there was no “penalty,” but it was a grave decision. It left wounds in the family of brothers. If you’re interested, here’s a link to the section of the Rule of St. Benedict about accepting brothers, their vows, and what happens if they decide to leave, with a commentary by the abbot of a modern Benedictine abbey: christdesert.org/rule-of-st-benedict/chapter-58-the-procedure-for-receiving-brothers/. Thanks for watching! Pleas subscribe, and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org.

  • @peterthorpe903
    @peterthorpe903 Před 2 lety

    At the start of the extract, is some very beautiful chant. Please can you tell me where I can find it ?

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for watching, Peter. Unfortunately, it’s an “anonymous” piece. To produce films to show on CZcams without copyright violations, we need to use licensed. The chant pieces in this film are 60-second “medieval chant samples” from a stock media company, not authentic compositions. But there is a lot of authentic Benedictine liturgical chant available. Search “Benedictine Monks of Norcia Chant” on Google or Amazon. Norcia is a mountain town in central Italy, the birthplace of St. Benedict. There is an amazing monastery there that practices the old ways. I’ve visited it for mass, and they chant the old liturgies there. I think they’ve put out 2-3 albums. Fantastic, just what you’re looking for. Subscribe to our channel, or visit my website, www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org.

  • @frankmann2899
    @frankmann2899 Před 2 lety

    My cousin is a priest in a monastery in California. It’s not quite like that today but I’d have a hard time doing work with only being compensated with room and board and basic necessities

    • @farishope6540
      @farishope6540 Před 2 lety

      Oh man that is ironic, LA and monesteary in the same state😂😂 your relative is a hero for making such a choice.

  • @johnorem1915
    @johnorem1915 Před 2 lety +3

    Very good for a six minute history. Since the exodus from the monasteries in the late 1960’s the life has changed dramatically.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +2

      @John Orem Thank you! And you are correct about the exodus from the religious orders since Vatican II. But there are Benedictine houses that are springing up, returning to strict observance of the Rule of St. Benedict. I've visited the one in St. Benedict's home town of Nursia, Italy. Thanks for watching. Subscribe and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org.

  • @CanadianToaster22
    @CanadianToaster22 Před 7 měsíci +1

    My only question is how can I find that background music?

  • @stinkythestunk9803
    @stinkythestunk9803 Před měsícem

    My good friend,
    Please tell me what the name of the song is that is played during the 'ora et labora' section in the beginning. It's so beautiful and is driving me mad. Thank you!

  • @eddiekulp1241
    @eddiekulp1241 Před 3 lety +10

    We do that now , pray that our work can support us

  • @spookyt8692
    @spookyt8692 Před 18 dny

    “Who will rid me of this turbulent priest?!”

  • @dangerouslytalented
    @dangerouslytalented Před 2 lety +35

    Sounds like a huge racket for the bishops

    • @gregsmith9690
      @gregsmith9690 Před 2 lety +2

      Some people volunteered to leave the cities a simpler, more authentic spiritual life, working with their hands and living in friendship in a rural setting. Their simplicity and hard work results in productivity. And all of this is a “racket for the bishops?” If so, then what do you have to say about anyone who works today for the government or businesses? If everything is a “racket,” then what’s the alternative? Self-employment? Moving to a remote rural location with a few friends and working with your hands together--oh, wait, that’s the Rule of St. Benedict.

    • @skankhunt_-42
      @skankhunt_-42 Před 2 lety

      @@gregsmith9690 the alternative is paying the monks for their hard work lmao it ain't that deep

    • @zonianinexile
      @zonianinexile Před 2 lety +3

      They could leave whenever they chose to…they were performing personal sacrifice and surviving as a community , something many contemporary folks of the “me” generation wouldn’t understand .

  • @tedtimmis8135
    @tedtimmis8135 Před 2 lety +4

    Excellent video!

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you, Ted! Please subscribe, and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

    • @stinkythestunk9803
      @stinkythestunk9803 Před měsícem

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313 Excellent video with excellent music too! Incidentally, what is the name of the song you used in the beginning? The one done in polyphonic style in the section about 'ora et labora'? I would like to know if it shouldn't be too much trouble. Thank you!

  • @suziewhattley3917
    @suziewhattley3917 Před 2 lety

    Were Lauds and Prime adjusted during winter? In Scotland sunrise isn't until 8 or 9 during winter.

    • @KonoShunkan
      @KonoShunkan Před 2 lety +2

      At the time of St Benedict they didn't have clocks as we know them today (not for nearly 1000 years) and time-keeping was much more organic. Time was told mainly by the sun (sundials being a common method) and of course the position of the sun and length of the day varies by the season. So in southern England, for example, Prime could be as late as 8am in midwinter, and around 4am in midsummer. Even the length of an hour changed according to the season: in winter daylight hours were shorter than the hours of the night and the other way around in summer. This is because there were always considered to be 12 hours of daylight time, and 12 of night, and hours were only the same length at the equinoxes.

  • @abdelrahmanmekawy4418
    @abdelrahmanmekawy4418 Před 2 lety

    what is the name of that fantastic chanting played at @6:10 ?

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +1

      Not sure. To produce our films, we purchase stock music from media libraries. It is a composed stock chant piece, meant to resemble “real” chants which often have copyrights we can’t use. But it is beautiful! I’ve attended mass in actual Benedictine monasteries in Italy that still use the ancient rite, and that piece really does evoke that experience. You can find recordings of actual chanted Benedictine monastic liturgies on Amazon music.

  • @ww2expertchannel343
    @ww2expertchannel343 Před 2 lety +5

    Before there were schools there were monasteries.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +2

      That's absolutely right! Prior to the monasteries, most instruction--going back to the classical era--was by private tutors. The monasteries began organized teaching, and then gave birth to one of the greatest gifts of the Middle Ages: the universities. Dominican and Franciscan friars were the first professors at places like Oxford, Paris, and Bologna. Thanks for watching! Subscribe and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

  • @Oldparson220
    @Oldparson220 Před 2 lety +3

    The incidental wealth of the Benedictine monestaries lead groups like the Carmelites to rule that no house should be more than 15, to keep it small and simple.
    This same rhythem continues today in very strict houses, like Clear Creek Abbey in Oklahoma and O.L.Guadalupe monestary in silver city n.m. the Carthusians in Vt. A medieval monk would have little trouble fitting in there.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety

      True, Daniel! And then when the Carmelites became too comfortable, the Discalced Carmelites were born. As I said in the video, the cycle of founding-success-ease of life-reform-refounding occurred every few generations. Look at how many times and ways the Franciscans have reformed as they went from wandering friars to having established houses, to reformation sub-orders (the Cappucins, etc.). Great observation! Thanks for watching. Subscribe and check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

    • @Oldparson220
      @Oldparson220 Před 2 lety

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      That would be an interesting video comparing some of these modern strict communities with their medieval counterparts

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety

      Hmmm…good idea. I’m actually working on some interesting projects in that vein. czcams.com/video/m8ENAR7A60s/video.html

    • @lauriemarie6902
      @lauriemarie6902 Před 2 lety +1

      Since the age of four I always wanted to become a Carmelite nun. Philadelphia USA

    • @benhassan11
      @benhassan11 Před 2 lety

      It’s all a show, these monks own all the Lands and lead extravagant life styles when no one is watching. Bunch of creeps and pedophiles!

  • @arcticfoxvikingseaking2206

    Donations were crucial. Nobles would want forgiveness for action in ear, etc., so they would donate or even fund a new monestary to "buy there way into heaven". Monks were even revered by high ranking clergy such as bishops and the pope himself.

  • @JayDonagh
    @JayDonagh Před 3 lety +55

    I was born in the wrong generation

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 3 lety +10

      Amen! Hopefully, examples and models of life from the last 20 centuries can inspire the Church in the 21st.

    • @matttheman9740
      @matttheman9740 Před 3 lety +17

      Don't believe that. You were born when you were born, it was not a right or wrong time. Appreciate what you have and don't mope about what you don't have.

    • @signoguns8501
      @signoguns8501 Před 2 lety +3

      @@matttheman9740 I dont know, man. I think i'd like to live a simple life, devoted to a higher purpose. I'd rather spend my days living in a beautiful monastery making wine and tending sheep than watching Netflix and doomscrolling Twitter. Modern life just isn't very spiritually fulfilling and I think most people would agree with that assessment.

    • @philmansfield8825
      @philmansfield8825 Před 2 lety +3

      I have to agree with you. However, if not for modern medicine such as dialysis and transplantation, I would have only lived to 25 ( I'm 60 now )

    • @el_aleman
      @el_aleman Před 2 lety +1

      There are still monastic orders out there, there’s one in northern New Mexico that is much like the order in this video. Of course one needs to be pretty secure in their Catholic faith but they are the real thing and live a true monastic life. Of course Covid has turned everything sideways for now, but they do have retreats where one could go for overnight stays to get a taste of this type of life. Hopefully in the near future they will open up their retreat stays again, if anything it would be a good place to chill out for a time, do some spiritual and mental healing.

  • @stylembonkers1094
    @stylembonkers1094 Před 2 lety +1

    Great stuff.

  • @ralphmarionvicta3795
    @ralphmarionvicta3795 Před rokem

    Are prospective monks allowed to bring in books of their choice? For example, philosophy, history, non-canonical books. Or are these available in the monasteries?

  • @Chiefab22
    @Chiefab22 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks 🙏🏻 for sharing

  • @michaeljay9019
    @michaeljay9019 Před 2 lety +3

    I've heard they monk...eyed around quite a bit. Then at night they watched Ted talks while enjoying cheese and a crusty bread

  • @xander7ful
    @xander7ful Před 3 lety +8

    I was a Medieval monk in a past life. I was a copyist or scribe. It was my favorite life so far.

    • @johkupohkuxd1697
      @johkupohkuxd1697 Před 3 lety +3

      Lmao you two are delusional. I was Alexander the Great once.

    • @Steampunksaly
      @Steampunksaly Před 2 lety +4

      Dear friend,
      Keep taking your medication and you will be just fine,
      Kind regards,
      Napoleon

    • @stephenburnage7687
      @stephenburnage7687 Před 2 lety

      Me too. By far the happiest of all my life's..But it is a long time ago now.

  • @aranthos
    @aranthos Před 2 lety

    Great video

  • @BpGregor
    @BpGregor Před 2 lety +2

    Many of the men you showed were not monks but Franciscan Friars. Friars are much different from monks. First, monks take a vow of stability (the Monastery where the person enters is the place where the monk stays for life, leaving only to help start another monastery - a daughter house - only if ordered by the abbot). Friars move about regularly. Monks earn money (support for the monastery) by providing things to sell, by working in the fields, and having schools. Friars are mendicants - they beg for alms. Please note that even though Saint Benedict started the order while there was only one Church, the Benedictines are primarily Roman Catholics. There are Benedictine Monasteries outside the Roman Church. Orthodox Monks are different from Benedictines, although they do many of the same things as Monks of "Western" traditions.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for noticing Kenneth. Totally aware of the differences between the Benedictine cenobite tradition and the Dominican and Franciscan friars, which you point out. The reason for using images of Franciscan friars is that in editing the film, it was hard to find a lot of stock photography or public domain imagery of Benedictine monks. There was a photo essay from the early 20th century of some of the Franciscan mission in California, and I used those to fill gaps. I think-hope-they still illustrated the point. I’m not clear whether Rule of St. Benedict is utilized in either the Greek or Russian Orthodox traditions-if so, it’s not the most common Orthodox monastic model. There are Eastern Rite Catholics that live according to Benedict’s Rule. Thanks for watching, and for sharing information!

    • @nuns8126
      @nuns8126 Před 20 dny

      ​​@@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      The Orthodox church has both Eastern Rite monks (who follow the Rule of St. Basil) & Western rite monks (who follow the Rule of St. Benedict.) Notice the Benedictine monastery in Canon City, Colorado is Orthodox western rite. Its called "Our Lady & St. Laurence."

  • @Dae351
    @Dae351 Před 10 měsíci

    One thing I learned in this video is that monasteries are the OG Factory

  • @michaelcorbidge7914
    @michaelcorbidge7914 Před 2 lety

    So it looks like it was six hours sleep between 9pm and 3am

  • @LoriFoster
    @LoriFoster Před 2 lety +4

    Is Rob Lowe narrating this….🧐 between prayer sessions? 🕺🏼

  • @claireseyeviewonredbubble

    Maybe some prisons should experiment by trying this.

    • @sampetrie340
      @sampetrie340 Před 2 lety

      Both work and prayer would be ruled unconstitutional.

  • @mikec6733
    @mikec6733 Před rokem

    Narrator's voice sounds familiar but I can't place it.
    Can anyone help me out ?

  • @isarex88
    @isarex88 Před 3 lety +16

    I feel like this video is gonna blow up in a few days/weeks.

  • @adeaton1093
    @adeaton1093 Před 2 lety

    Did or do monks take a day of rest?

  • @astolatpere11
    @astolatpere11 Před 2 lety +2

    That has been on my mind lately. Just what did those rascal monks do all day?

  • @Reggie-The-Dog
    @Reggie-The-Dog Před 2 lety

    There was more information here in six and a half minutes than in some documentaries lasting over an hour.

  • @astridvallati4762
    @astridvallati4762 Před 2 lety +3

    Read " The Brother Caedfel Mysteries" by
    Peters, the story of an ex-Crusader, leading a Monastic Life as an Apothecary, in Shrewsbury Abbey ( Welsh Border area,) solving Murders and other Mysterious occurrences by Forensic Techniques.
    Over 20 volumes, explains all the ins and outs of a Benedictine Monastry in the 1200s ( Time of Civil War between King Steven and Queen Margaret)

    • @el_aleman
      @el_aleman Před 2 lety +1

      I can relate to brother Cadfael. As a returning career soldier who then became a pharmacist and decided the mess that is our healthcare system was not for me, I retreated to a simple life of becoming a teacher of pharmacology and medical topics and a small school for medical sciences. I love Derek Jacobi‘s interpretation of his character. I think a lot of his sentiments, especially towards human desires, behavior, conflict and its after effects are spot on. So I have the former war veteran-soldier-pharmacist part down with a strong background in toxicology, but I’m OK without being a forensic detective…I do attend mass a lot so does that count? Ha ha !

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive Před 2 lety

      @@el_aleman you sound like you'd be an awesome protagonist for a book or movie or TV series or something

  • @TriPham-xd9wk
    @TriPham-xd9wk Před 2 lety +1

    Maybe medival age define physics laws for later generation

  • @jasonbrown1807
    @jasonbrown1807 Před 2 lety

    Ora et labora doesnt appear in the Rule.

  • @vuho2075
    @vuho2075 Před rokem +1

    I ain't getting up at 3 am. Period..

  • @nancydrew5
    @nancydrew5 Před 2 lety

    When did Monks sleep?

  • @jamesozechoski8254
    @jamesozechoski8254 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Catholic monasteries are the foundation of modern universities

  • @RobertRod818
    @RobertRod818 Před 3 lety +12

    Wow, this video made shed tears

    • @veen9667
      @veen9667 Před 2 lety +2

      Why,because you're a lazy monk who smokes?

    • @Calvinwiresner
      @Calvinwiresner Před 2 lety +1

      @@veen9667 no! he wishes to be enclosed with a bunch of sexually deprived men.

    • @benhassan11
      @benhassan11 Před 2 lety

      The boys they raped she’d different types of tears.
      They are really good at making people cry.

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive Před 2 lety

      @@benhassan11 speaking from personal experience, I presume? Evidently a sore spot for you. Hope you can find healing, bro.

  • @martinmorrissey5647
    @martinmorrissey5647 Před 2 lety +1

    Yes, idle hands do the devils work

  • @jonahmaddox2885
    @jonahmaddox2885 Před 3 lety +1

    What about those monks wrestling thing ?

  • @davidurban6813
    @davidurban6813 Před 2 lety +2

    Q; What do monks do all day?
    A; Monkee around LOL

  • @frankribeiro399
    @frankribeiro399 Před 3 lety +3

    Their life is to pray.Live in community.The 3 vows.They do not work to feed themselves.They have the brothers who are not priests who cook for the monks.Tough life and in name of God. No ease vocation.

  • @nrgrlsd9931
    @nrgrlsd9931 Před 2 lety +1

    What did medieval monks do all day?
    Little boys..........

  • @AFC0712
    @AFC0712 Před 2 lety +1

    devil makes work for idle hands

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for watching, Jack! “Idleness is the enemy of the soul; and therefore the brethren ought to be employed in manual labor at certain times, at others, in devout reading.” ― Benedict of Nursia, The Rule of Saint Benedict. Check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

  • @anypercentdeathless
    @anypercentdeathless Před 2 lety

    Why are you playing music from the 1500's?

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety

      Because we have to use copyright-free stock media, and there aren't a lot of authentic plain-chant medieval tunes available on stock music websites.

  • @stevedavenport2975
    @stevedavenport2975 Před 2 lety +2

    Bring back all the working monasteries

  • @felixniederhauser7799
    @felixniederhauser7799 Před 2 lety

    Ora et Labora is fine, however,what does it help to be closer to Hod if they Ignore Sola Scriptura.
    There is written you shal no one call Father then your Jather in Heaven.
    NB: Check out for youselfs, how where is Momks called or there superior in Rome? Frater,Father and even Holy Father.

  • @marion8763
    @marion8763 Před rokem

    ...and then the reformed order went down the same way after getting wealthy. makes you realize money changes people! for example the Cistercians. great video ! im a monastery tour guide and really enjoyed it.

  • @knowledge-is-infinite
    @knowledge-is-infinite Před 2 lety

    What happen to the old monks when they get old? Never see any old monks among them.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks for watching, Vanao! There were plenty of old monks. They lived in the monastic house until they died. I didn't have stock photos of old monks for the video, though. Check out my website: www.OneWhirlingAdventure.org!

    • @benhassan11
      @benhassan11 Před 2 lety

      When they are old they end up in prison for raping boys. It’s a serious problem with the statue of limitation. At least in America.

  • @tilethio
    @tilethio Před 2 lety +1

    This is a very educative video. I am sure you will come back with "What would monks and prists today spend their day."

  • @shireboundscribbles
    @shireboundscribbles Před 7 měsíci

    No family, work like a cog in a machine, own nothing, wake at 3am after/before a long days work.
    I know that it is canonical but I still think that is unhealthy.

  • @icecreamforcrowhurst
    @icecreamforcrowhurst Před 2 lety

    In England they got things done... until Henry put the kibosch on it.

  • @Plymouthmusicschool
    @Plymouthmusicschool Před 2 lety +5

    This is would make an incredible reality show for Netflix however I’d be sure to be a binge watcher of the show and eventually neglect my responsibilities

  • @damirbrcko6043
    @damirbrcko6043 Před 2 lety

    I am not native english speaker and loud music makes me hard to understand speaker

  • @mukhumor
    @mukhumor Před 2 lety

    They didn't have unemployment, they had monasteries. Getting up a 03:am to pray? That sounds like a broken sleep regime. I wonder how many were there because it was the last chance.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +2

      Or a simple, rural life of hard work and a healthy lifestyle. Talk to a farmer. Is it better or worse than modern man, spending half his night surfing the internet or playing video games before driving through traffic to a corporate or government job to make the minimum payments on his debts?

    • @mukhumor
      @mukhumor Před 2 lety

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313 Hey I don't know. Swings and round abouts I guess.

  • @Kwankle_1
    @Kwankle_1 Před 5 měsíci

    They play twister.

  • @rezwanurrahman5997
    @rezwanurrahman5997 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent lifestyle. I like it

  • @PureVikingPowers
    @PureVikingPowers Před 3 lety +5

    What Did Medieval Monks Do All Day? You need to change the title. But sure i always wondered why most Swedish, France & Italian Cheeses were made by monks in monasteries

    • @farishope6540
      @farishope6540 Před 2 lety

      Apart from your comment, how you choose that name and pic and what they mean 😂😂 A big cats fan here

  • @JeremiahAranez
    @JeremiahAranez Před 20 dny

    Saint benedict was a genius

  • @michaellowry7675
    @michaellowry7675 Před 2 lety +1

    I would like to see a Catholic Priest Work like these guys today

    • @enixbluerain7213
      @enixbluerain7213 Před 2 lety +3

      Just follow a diocesan Catholic priest who handles a parish to know one.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety +3

      I work with a lot of diocesan priests, and some Dominican friars. None of them works less than 60-70 hours in an average week.

  • @michaeltschol5308
    @michaeltschol5308 Před 2 lety +4

    Seems like the monks had the original OG Grindset going before there was crypto.

  • @andyiswonderful
    @andyiswonderful Před 2 lety +1

    The land possessions of the Roman Catholic Church are larger than France.

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety

      Well, the Roman Catholic Church has approximately 250,000 parishes around the world, with 1.3 billion members. Throw in probably the same number of schools, colleges, hospitals, monasteries, basilicas/cathedrals, etc. Much of that acreage has been in place for thousands of years (St. Peter's Basilica, etc.). A quick search tells me that France covers 165 million acres, including land and water (lakes, rivers, etc.). Maybe all those little parcels add up to that much, spread around the globe. They aren't owned by "The Church" as a central entity. Each parish and school and whatnot is more like a franchise, not an asset of the pope. So what?

  • @1220b
    @1220b Před 2 lety

    Pray, Bash the Bishop, pray, eat, Bash the Bishop, Snap one off, Pray Sleep

  • @SuperDarkrock
    @SuperDarkrock Před 2 lety

    And we still follow these rules in the U.S. Navy to this day.

  • @arda0893
    @arda0893 Před 2 lety +1

    Hello im here because of my Teacher lololol

  • @pradeepakrish
    @pradeepakrish Před 3 měsíci

    We would not have any European civilization during the middle ages without these monks! ✝️📚🌾🐂

  • @gerardmazzarese9363
    @gerardmazzarese9363 Před 2 lety +1

    One third of catholic adults peopled the monastaries in those days. Millions were turned away because they had no more space. They were the social workers taking care of the orphans, the old and the sick. The land contracts with the farmers were 100 year leases. The rent required was 10 percent and was considered their tithe. If there was a bad crop or some other family problem and the 10 percent could not be met for that year, it was forgiven unlike the modern banks or government that forclose or reposess. Then came the plague. Millions died and these millions of social workers died because they took care of the sick to save the families. Then they had to take in less then qualified persons to repeople the monasteries. This led to the protestant rebelion started by bad priest who did not like the vows of poverty, chastity and obediance. War broke out between catholics and pretestants and monastaries were looted and destroyed in the protestant nations. Then the freemasons started and were peopled by protestants. Then a group of these guys had a revolution and started the first democratic nation of the Black beast (the United States). Then the French Revolution took over France and killed all the catholic nobility, the catholic king and queen. Then they put together a 5 million man army and swept through Europe destroying catholic churches and monastaries. They hunted down priest and murdered them. On and on till this day.

  • @brian752
    @brian752 Před 2 lety

    Monk-ey around?! lol

    • @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313
      @lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313  Před 2 lety

      Congratulations! You're the 100th person to think up that joke in this comment thread!

    • @brian752
      @brian752 Před 2 lety

      @@lakeshoreacademyforthenewe3313 Wonderful to be in the groove! ;-}

  • @eamonbreathnach4613
    @eamonbreathnach4613 Před 11 měsíci +1

    A wonderful way of life

  • @Smitty19966
    @Smitty19966 Před rokem

    I'm not religious at all but I will say Medieval Europe was built on the backs of monks who set in motion the Renaissance.

  • @Bobdixon_Moonvarga_Dancer_III

    If they lived a very simple two dimensional life with all their needs taken care off what exactly did they pray for?

  • @marvlb
    @marvlb Před 2 lety +6

    I’ll go for the "sex at noon" Second choice would be making wine!

    • @akemdam9824
      @akemdam9824 Před 2 lety +1

      Hahah then i would go with mating at 3 am

  • @Vikasit952
    @Vikasit952 Před 8 měsíci

    Sounds very similar to ancient Hindu way of life and from it developed the famous Hindu Caste System . A fine vedios . Thanks .

  • @MCeili
    @MCeili Před 2 lety +3

    This reminds me of my favourite book. A door in the wall.

    • @suziewhattley3917
      @suziewhattley3917 Před 2 lety

      If you like that, try "In This House of Brede" by Rumer Godden. The book, not the movie. The movie deviated terribly.

  • @anon2867
    @anon2867 Před 2 lety

    Oh so they just casually created society.

  • @greggoodes
    @greggoodes Před 2 lety

    A leaf out of Mother Theresa's book