This image  resides in the Monk’s Oratory of

Mary our Mother, Undoer of Knots

It is an original statue carved in Portugal,

Intitled: Divine child Jesus, Mirror of our Merciful Father

donated by the Aires and Maria gomes and  Maria oliveira Family.

 

Welcome to the new home and web site of the

Augustinian Monks of the Primitive Observance

 

You alone do I love, you alone do I follow, and you alone I seek. I am prepared to serve only you, because you alone govern justly, and I wish to be under your rule. I ask that only in your great mercy you convert me wholly to yourself and allow nothing to prevent me from coming to you.  Grant that, while I live, I may be temperate, strong, just, and prudent, in love with your wisdom and capable of understanding, worthy of your blessed kingdom, and one day a dweller in that kingdom.  (St. Augustine of Hippo (

At the moment St. Augustine and his close friend Alypius were converted, they resolved to leave all and follow Christ in the monastic life.  “Then we went in to my mother and told her, to her great joy. We related how it had come about; she was filled with triumphant exultation, and praised you who are mighty beyond what we ask or conceive…. For you converted me to Yourself so that I no longer sought a wife nor any of this world's promises, but stood upon that same rule of faith in which You had shown me to her so many years before. Thus you changed her mourning into joy, a joy far richer than she had thought to wish, a joy much dearer and purer than she had thought to find in grandchildren of my flesh.” (Confessions, book 8, ch. 12) In fact, learning about the life that St. Antony the Abbot had embraced and how others had adopted his way of life was the catalyst that brought Augustine to the moment of his conversion. As yet there was no developed rule for monks in the west, and so Augustine, Alypius, and others were inspired to embrace monasticism, adapting it to the west. When St. Augustine was chosen to be the successor to the see of Hippo, the venerable Bishop Valerius gave him a garden for his monastery, and even after taking possession of his see Augustine lived as far as possible the monastic vocation. As bishop of Hippo he wrote the rule for monks and later the rule for nuns that have been handed down throughout the ages. His first biographer, Possidius, gives us an insight into the primitive Augustinian monastic life, and we also have the model of the Monastery at Gafsa. Under the guidance of the Abbot Liberatus, the Monastery with its seven monks bore witness to the way of life under the Rule of St. Augustine. These holy monks bore witness to Christ and the monastic life by the shedding of their blood as martyrs in 490 A.D. 

 

We set before us this primitive observance and embrace as our own the Rule of St. Augustine. Our Father Augustine begins the Holy Rule with the statement, “Above all else, dear brothers, love God and then your neighbor, for the main purpose of our coming together in the monastery is to be one in mind and heart intent upon God.” The heart of our vocation is to give ourselves to God through the monastic way of life, being one in mind and heart with our fellow monks, under the care and guidance of an abbot, according to the teachings of St. Augustine of Hippo and the early Augustinian Monks.

Augustinian Monks of the Primitive Observance have relocated their monastery on January 3, 2004, from Peaks Island Maine to Glenwood DeLand Florida.   Deland is located in the central part of the State 24 miles from Daytona Beach and 45 minutes from downtown Orlando. 

 

The Monks hope you will enjoy their site and come back often.  The Brothers pray daily for all who visit their site.  

As monks of the Roman Catholic Church, our deep desire is not only to help you understand more monastic life, but above all to bring you ever closer to being in love with the Lord Jesus Christ!

Please go to our former web site at this time to learn about us.

http://augustinianmonks.com.

 

Our Winter Mass Times

Sunday: 10:00 A.M.

Monday 5:30 P.M.

Tuesday – Saturday 8:00 A.M.

Please feel free to telephone the Monastery at (386) 736-4321 choosing option #2 for any possible change in our weekday Mass time.

Our schedule .

http://augustinianmonk.com/monasteryhorarium.htm

Audio from the Monastery

http://augustinianmonk.com/audio

Discription of our Augustinian Logo

http://augustinianmonk.com/symbolismoflogo.htm

Is  God calling you to be a monk?

http://augustinianmonk.com/vocations.htm

Augustinian history

http://augustinianmonk.com/augustinianmonasticism.htm

The Holy Rule of St. Augustine, Monk, Priest, Bishop, Doctor of the Church

http://augustinianmonk.com/ruleofsaintaugustine.htm

Do you need a Miracle?  Why not join your prayers to St. rita of Cascia known as the intercessor for the impossible

http://augustinianmonk.com/strita.htm

Monastery NewsLetters

http://www.augustinianmonk.com/newsletters

novinas

http://augustinianmonk.com/novinas

st. joseph

http://augustinianmonk.com/novinas/joseph

let us pray

http://augustinianmonk.com/prayers

Augustinian saints & more

http://augustinianmonk.com/saints

writings from the popes

http://augustinianmonk.com/popes

litanies of our Lord his mother and the saints

http://augustinianmonk.com/litanies

photos of monastery, monks and more

http://augustinianmonk.com/photogallery

 

 

Other useful sites

New advent

www.newadvent.org

Zenit www.zenit.org

Catholic answers

www.catholic.org

United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

 

www.usccb.org

 

Catholic Exchange

 

www.catholicexchange.com

 

Eternal Word

www.ewtn.com

 

 

To Contact the Monks

Mother of the Good shepherd Monastery

2075 Mercers Fernery Road

DeLand, FL 32720

Tel: (386) 736-4321

Email

monks@augustinianmonks.com

Twitter

www.twitter.com/augustinianmonk

Please feel free to donate to the Monks and the Monistary by the following:

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