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Monastic Life

The Littleton Carmel observes the original Constitutions of the Discalced Nuns of the Order of the Blessed Virgin of Mount Carmel as written by St. Teresa of Avila and renewed by the Holy See in 1990 with the most minor and necessary adaptations possible. The Nuns wear the complete, traditional religious habit, as given by St. Teresa in her Constitutions.

“The ancient spiritual tradition of the Church, taken up by the Second Vatican Council, explicitly connects the contemplative life to the prayer of Jesus “on the mountain,” or solitary place. The Holy Spirit, Who led Jesus into the desert, invites the nun to share the solitude of Christ Jesus, Who, with the eternal Spirit, offered Himself to the Father. The solitary cell, the closed cloister, is the place where the nun, Bride of the Incarnate Word, lives wholly concentrated with Christ in God. The cloister becomes the fulfillment of His eternal desire to welcome the creature into the mystery of intimacy with the Word. To the gift of Christ the Bridegroom, Who on the cross offered His body unreservedly, the nun responds in like terms, offering herself with Jesus Christ to the Father and cooperating with Him in the work of Redemption.”

“The contemplative nun fulfills to the highest degree the First Commandment of the Lord: ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, with all your mind,’ making it the full meaning of her life. She moves toward the perfection of charity, choosing God as ‘the one thing necessary,’ loving Him exclusively as All in all. This is so that He alone may dwell in the utter silence of the cloister, filling it with His word and presence, and the Bride may truly dedicate herself to the Only One, in the mystery of a total and exclusive love” (Verbi Sponsa)

“What is the life of the Carmelite if not one of contemplating, adoring, and loving God incessantly? The life of Carmel is one of LOVE. This is our profession.” (St. Teresa of the Andes)