New Mexico
Related: About this forumMonks in New Mexico desert dedicated to hospitality reflect on two years without guests
CHAMA RIVER CANYON, N.M. - Hidden in this canyon of crimson sandstone cliffs encompassed by miles of federally protected wilderness, the Monastery of Christ in the Desert seems like an ideal place to ride out a pandemic.
For more than 50 years, a small community of Benedictine monks has quietly lived, worked and worshiped here in a cluster of off-grid adobe buildings along the banks of northern New Mexico's Chama River. Considered the most remote Catholic monastery in the hemisphere, it can be reached only by a 13-mile single-lane earthen road that winds through the canyon. Abiquiu, the closest village - population 151 - is 25 miles away. Groves of cottonwood and willows line the river where bald eagles hunt for rainbow trout. Black bears, coyotes and cougars prowl the pinyon- and sage-scented Santa Fe National Forest, which surrounds the monastery.
Despite the difficult journey, outsiders have flocked to this serene abbey for decades in search of spiritual renewal. As adherents of the sixth-century Rule of Saint Benedict, which teaches that monasteries are to treat visitors as they would Jesus himself, the monks graciously welcome outsiders. As many as 30,000 people make the pilgrimage each year, including past notables such as the artist Georgia O'Keeffe and the actor Matthew McConaughey. Guests are an integral part of Benedictine monastic life and have been for 1,500 years. "Monasteries," Saint Benedict wrote, "are never without them."
That was true for Christ in the Desert until March 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic forced the monks to close their doors to the outside world. For nearly two years now, guests have been prohibited from staying at the monastery, leaving the monks in a position they have never faced before.
Read more: https://www.mrt.com/news/article/Monks-in-New-Mexico-desert-dedicated-to-16796069.php
(Midland Reporter-Telegram)
BunnyMcGee
(475 posts)but I now would love to go there and see it. And stay for a while.
KS Toronado
(19,577 posts)BunnyMcGee
(475 posts)Sanity Claws
(22,038 posts)I have to put it on my list.
littlemissmartypants
(25,483 posts)TexasTowelie
(116,799 posts)It seemed like one of those off the beaten path articles worth sharing.