Monastery information | |
---|---|
Order | Order of Saint Benedict |
Established | 1856 |
Mother house | Saint Vincent Archabbey, Latrobe, Pennsylvania (founded 1846) |
Archdiocese | Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis |
Diocese | Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Cloud |
Controlled churches | 19 total Monastic Residence points outside of the Abbey, and 16 of them being Benedictine- run Parishes |
People | |
Founder(s) | Fr. Bruno Riss, O.S.B., Fr. Cornelius Wittmann, O.S.B., and the founding German Benedictines. |
Abbot | Rt. Rev. Fr. Doug Mullin, O.S.B. |
Prior | Rev. Fr. Eric Hollas, O.S.B. |
Site | |
Location | 2900 Abbey Plaza, Collegeville, Minnesota, United States |
Coordinates | 45°34′49″N94°23′32″W / 45.58028°N 94.39222°W |
Public access | Yes |
Website | www |
St. John's Abbey and University Historic District | |
Area | 26 acres (11 ha) |
Built | 1868–1959 |
Architect | Multiple |
Architectural style | Late Victorian, Second Empire, Romanesque Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 79001256 [1] |
Added to NRHP | March 23, 1979 |
Saint John's Abbey is a Benedictine monastery in Collegeville Township, Minnesota, United States, affiliated with the American-Cassinese Congregation. The abbey was established following the arrival in the area of monks from Saint Vincent Archabbey in Pennsylvania in 1856. Saint John's is one of the largest Benedictine abbeys in the Western Hemisphere, with 110 professed monks. [2] The Right Reverend Fr. Doug Mullin, OSB, serves as the eleventh abbot.
A school founded at the abbey grew into Saint John's University in 1883. 17 buildings constructed at the abbey and university between 1868 and 1959 are listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the St. John's Abbey and University Historic District. [3]
In 1856, five monks of Saint Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, arrived in St. Cloud, Minnesota. [4] They established a priory there and began to minister to the German immigrants in central Minnesota. One of the first ministries of the new community was Saint John's College, which would come to be known as Saint John's Preparatory School. In 1862 the community moved some miles west, into the wooded area of the valley, and again in 1865 to the shores of Lake Sagatagan. It was in this location that the community began to flourish, and in 1866 the priory was raised to the status of Abbey and the community elected Fr. Rupert Seidenbusch as the first Abbot.
By the early 1950s the monastic community comprised about 450 monks, and had outgrown the original abbey church. Plans were made to construct a new, larger worship space which could accommodate a larger congregation. [5] The liturgical movement which would culminate in the Second Vatican Council was in full swing at Saint John's and the new church was to be designed with some of the anticipated liturgical changes in mind. (Following the Council, almost no changes needed to be made to incorporate the new liturgical rules.) The community contacted twelve architects and asked them to submit plans for a church which would "be truly an architectural monument to the service of God." [6] In 1954 the community selected Marcel Breuer to design not only the new church but an addition to the monastic enclosure.
Breuer's design incorporated the traditional axis of baptistery, nave, and altar in a modern concrete structure. [7] The monastic choir stalls and Abbot's throne were placed in a less traditional semi-circular shape around the main altar, which also served to invite the congregation closer. [6] The church was designed so that even with a capacity of over 2000, the entire community was able to feel like they were intimately involved in the liturgy. Perhaps the most striking part of the design was the facade and bell tower, which itself was shaped like a large bell and sat suspended over the main entrance of the church. The "bell banner" rises 112 vertical feet in front of the church and houses the 5 bells which sound the hours and call the monastic and university communities to prayer. [8] [5] The north facade of the building is the largest wall of stained glass in the world. It contains 430 colorful hexagons of abstract design.
Construction of the church began on May 19, 1958, and lasted until August 24, 1961. [5] The church was consecrated in the fall of 1961 and serves as the principal liturgical space of both the monastic community and the university. The monastic community gathers for Morning Prayer, Midday Prayer, Mass, and Evening Prayer every weekday, and except for rare occasions these liturgies are open to the public. [9] On the weekends there is no public Midday Prayer. All liturgical events in the Abbey Church are livestreamed on the Abbey website.
In addition to the preparatory school, the abbey also established Saint John's University, which was connected to the abbey by the "Quadrangle", at the time the largest building west of the Mississippi River dedicated to education.[ citation needed ] The abbey also operates the Liturgical Press, one of the foremost liturgical publishing houses in the United States. [10] Liturgical Press publishes book series such as Cistercian Studies.
Also located on the grounds of the abbey are the Collegeville Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research, the Episcopal House of Prayer (Diocese of Minnesota), the original Minnesota Public Radio studio, and the Saint John the Baptist Parish Center. The 2,500-acre (10 km2) grounds of the abbey comprise lakes, prairie, and hardwoods on a rolling glacial moraine, and have been designated the Saint John's Arboretum. The abbey is the location of a number of structures designed by the modernist Bauhaus architect Marcel Breuer. The Abbey Church, with its banner bell tower, is one of his best-known works. The upper church houses the newly expanded Holtkamp Pasi organ with over 6,000 pipes. In its undercroft is a chapel that contains the relics of Saint Peregrine.
A historic district of 17 buildings at Saint John's Abbey and University was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 for having national significance in the themes of architecture, community planning and development, education, and religion. [11] It was nominated for being an architecturally and historically significant campus of a leading religious and educational institution of the Order of Saint Benedict. [3]
The abbey is the setting for The Cloister Walk, a collection of essays on Christian spirituality by Kathleen Norris.
The grounds include the Episcopal House of Prayer, a retreat center affiliated with the Episcopal Church. [12]
Outside of Saint John's, the abbey's monks serve 12 parishes and various nursing homes and hospitals in the Diocese of Saint Cloud.
The Saint John's Bible is the first completely handwritten and illuminated Bible to have been commissioned by a Benedictine monastery since the invention of the printing press.
Saint John's Abbey has been subject of several child abuse cases with accounts reaching far back as the 1970's. In 2011, St. John's Abbey released the names of 18 current or former monks who "have had credible allegations of sexual abuse, exploitation, or misconduct brought against them while they were working in one of the apostolates of St. John's Abbey, or before they were a member of the abbey." [13] On December 10 2013 the Abbey described 23 current and former monks who have "likely have offended against minors" and released the names of 18, distinct from the 2011 list of 18 monks. Of the 18 7 were dead and 2 were no longer practicing monks. [14] [15] [16]
(Michael) Bik was accused in 1997 of abusing two teenage boys in the 1970s, before his ordination, when he taught at the parish school of St. Stephen Catholic Church in Anoka.
Two men accused (Richard) Eckroth in 1993 of raping them at a St. John’s-owned cabin near Bemidji in the 1970s when they were boys. He denied raping them but admitted being naked with them.
Three men filed lawsuits alleging abuse by (Francisco) Schulte when he served in Raleigh, N.C., in the mid-1980s, and at a Puerto Rico boarding school operated by St. John’s. One of the men from Raleigh said Schulte recruited him to come to St. John’s Preparatory School in Collegeville.
(Finian) McDonald, (Brennan) Maiers, (Dunstan) Moorse, (Allen) Tarlton, (Francis) Hoefgen and (John) Kelly acknowledged wrongdoing and sought treatment, Klassen said in 2002.
(Cosmas) Dahlheimer denied the allegations, Klassen said. [17]
On April 25 2015 the Abbey settled a Stearns County sex abuse suit for an undisclosed amount. The victim claimed that Rev. Allen Tarlton sexually abused him in 1977 at St. John's Preparatory School in Collegeville. The victim's lawyer stated that one of the settlement conditions was for the Abbery to release documents on 19 monks accused of child abuse. [18] Among those released documents Tarlton admitted to molesting a high school student in a 14-page undated memoir. [19]
The Benedictines, officially the Order of Saint Benedict, are a mainly contemplative monastic order of the Catholic Church for men and for women who follow the Rule of Saint Benedict. Initiated in 529, they are the oldest of all the religious orders in the Latin Church. The male religious are also sometimes called the Black Monks, especially in English speaking countries, after the colour of their habits, although some, like the Olivetans, wear white. They were founded by Benedict of Nursia, a 6th-century Italian monk who laid the foundations of Benedictine monasticism through the formulation of his Rule. Benedict's sister, Scholastica, possibly his twin, also became a religious from an early age, but chose to live as a hermit. They retained a close relationship until her death.
Maurus, OSB (512–584) was an Italian Catholic monk best known as the first disciple of Benedict of Nursia. He is mentioned in Gregory the Great's biography of the latter as the first oblate, offered to the monastery by his noble Roman parents as a young boy to be brought up in the monastic life.
The Abbey of Our Lady, Help of Christians, commonly known as Worth Abbey, is a community of Roman Catholic monks who follow the Rule of St Benedict near Turners Hill village, in West Sussex, England. Founded in 1933, the abbey is part of the English Benedictine Congregation. As of 2020, the monastic community had 21 monks.
Subiaco Abbey is an American Benedictine monastery located in the Arkansas River valley of Logan County, Arkansas, part of the Swiss-American Congregation of Benedictine monasteries. It is home to thirty-nine Benedictine monks. The abbey and the preparatory school it operates, Subiaco Academy, are major features of the town of Subiaco, Arkansas. It is named after the original Subiaco, Italy, where the first monastery founded by Saint Benedict was located.
St. Gregory's Abbey is an American monastic community of men living under the Rule of St. Benedict within the Episcopal Church. The abbey is located near Three Rivers in St. Joseph County, Michigan.
The Abbey of Saint Mary and Saint Louis is an abbey of the Catholic English Benedictine Congregation (EBC) located in Creve Coeur, in St. Louis County, Missouri in the United States. The Abbey is an important presence in the spiritual life of the Archdiocese of St. Louis. The monks of the Abbey live their faith according to the Benedictine discipline of 'prayer and work', praying the Divine Office five times daily, celebrating daily Masses in English and Latin, and working in the two parishes under their pastoral care and in the Saint Louis Priory School, which the Abbey runs as an apostolate. The Abbey and its school sit on a 150-acre (0.61 km2) campus in west St. Louis County, in the city of Creve Coeur.
St. Peter's Abbey is in Muenster, Saskatchewan, Canada. It is the oldest Benedictine monastery in Canada. It was founded in 1903.
Frank Thomas Kacmarcik was an American artist, designer, calligrapher, liturgical consultant, and collector of fine art and manuscripts. "Much of the progress that has been made in [religious] architecture and the arts in this country can be attributed to Frank Kacmarcik." Also "No one has had a greater influence on the development of American religious architecture and art in the past four decades than Frank Kacmarcik."
Leo Haid was an American Benedictine abbot and Catholic bishop, who served as the abbot of the Abbey of Mary Help of Christians, in Belmont, North Carolina, from 1885 to 1924. He also served as vicar apostolic of North Carolina from 1888 to 1910 and territorial abbot from 1910 to 1924.
The American-Cassinese Congregation is a Catholic association of Benedictine monasteries founded in 1855. The monasteries of the congregation follow the monastic way of life as outlined by St. Benedict of Nursia in his early 6th century Rule of Saint Benedict. The congregation is one of 19 congregations in the Benedictine Confederation and includes 25 monasteries: 19 autonomous abbeys and 6 dependent priories, located across 15 states and Puerto Rico, as well as Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Mexico, and Taiwan.
Rupert Seidenbusch was a German prelate of the Catholic Church. A Benedictine monk, he served as the first abbot of Saint John's Abbey (1866-1875) and the first Vicar Apostolic of Northern Minnesota (1875-1888).
The Anselmianum, also known as the Pontifical Athenaeum of Saint Anselm is a pontifical university in Rome associated with the Benedictines. It offers courses in philosophy, theology, liturgy, monastic studies, languages, sacramental theology, and the history of theology.
The Swiss-American Congregation is an association of Benedictine monasteries founded in 1881 in the United States, as a part of the international Benedictine Confederation of monasteries.
Hugh Gilbert OSB is an English Catholic Benedictine monk who currently serves as the Bishop of Aberdeen. He previously served as the Abbot of Pluscarden Abbey, of which he is a member, also in Scotland.
Paul Benno Marx, OSB was an American Roman Catholic priest and Benedictine monk, family sociologist, writer, and one of the leaders of the anti-abortion movements.
The College of Sant'Anselmo is an international Benedictine college founded by Pope Leo XIII in 1887 and located in Rome, Italy. Situated on the Aventine Hill, it is one of four Benedictine institutions that occupy the complex known as "Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino" which serves as the Primatial Abbey of the Benedictine Confederation. As an ecclesiastical residential college in the Roman College tradition, it serves as both a house of formation for Benedictines, but also as a residence for over one hundred monks from around forty countries, religious, diocesan priests, and lay people. It offers a monastic environment for those who study at the onsite Pontifical Athenaeum of Saint Anselm or at other Roman pontifical universities.
Saint Martin's Abbey is a community of Roman Catholic Benedictine monks who follow the Rule of St Benedict in Lacey, Washington, United States. First founded as a priory in 1895, the abbey is part of the American-Cassinese Benedictine Congregation and the Benedictine Confederation. As of 2020, the monastic community had 20 monks.
Jerome Theisen was an American Benedictine monk of Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville, the eighth abbot of Saint John's Abbey, Collegeville, and the seventh Abbot Primate of the Order of St. Benedict and the Benedictine Confederation.
Gregory Polan is an American Benedictine monk, priest, abbot, scripture scholar, musician, and author. He is a member of Conception Abbey located in Conception, Missouri, which is part of the Swiss-American Congregation and the Benedictine Confederation. He was previously elected and served as the ninth abbot of Conception Abbey. He served as the tenth Abbot Primate of the Order of St. Benedict, residing at Sant'Anselmo all'Aventino in Rome.
Alcuin Henry Deutsch was an abbot of St. John's Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires |journal=
(help)Spanish theologian Luis Sánchez Navarro visits Liturgical Press, one of the most important Catholic publishers in the United States
The Episcopal House of Prayer in Collegeville is a retreat center on five wooded acres provided by Saint John's Abbey.