Drogheda Independent

Brother Cassian swaps Sydney surf for a life with the monks of Stamullen

- By HUBERT MURPHY

THE Benedictin­e Monks of Perpetual Adoration at Silverstre­am Priory in Stamullen hosted a very special event recently.

Brother Cassian Maria Aylward (28), a native of Sydney, Australia, (pictured_ pronounced his first vows as a Benedictin­e monk at the Priory.

The profession took place during Holy Mass in the Oratory of the Priory.

Dom Mark Kirby, O.S.B., Conventual Prior, received, for a period of three years, Brother Cassian’s vows of stability, conversion of manners, and obedience, as set forth in the Rule of Saint Benedict.

Brother Cassian, the son of Diane and Paul Aylward, and the brother of Matthew and Luke, is the great–grandson of the noted Australian classicist, Catholic apologist, poet, and Papal Knight, Dr Frank J. H. Letters.

Brother Cassian, a 2007 graduate of St Paul’s Catholic College, Manly, holds a degree in education from Notre Dame University, Sydney. Before embracing the monastic life in 2016, Brother Cassian was an avid body–boarder in the Australian surf and taught primary school in Sydney. Brother Cassian currently serves as the monastery’s guestmaste­r.

In his homily for the occasion, Dom Kirby said: ‘Why did you leave your father and your mother, and your brothers, Matt and Luke, and your dear grandparen­ts, and your all mates in Australia?

‘Why did you leave the sunshine and sparkling waves of the beaches of Sydney for this darkling east coast of Ireland?

‘Why did you forsake the opportunit­ies offered you by the world to travel the globe to this place, coming to this day, and to this hour?

‘You did it because, like John the Baptist in today’s Gospel, you saw Jesus coming towards you. “John saw Jesus coming towards him” (John 1:29). To those who ask you, “But why a monk?” you can answer only this: “I saw Jesus coming towards me”. There is no other explanatio­n for the profession of the three vows of stability, conversion of manners, and obedience that you are about to make. . . . In making your monastic profession today, know this: in the hours, and days, and months, and years that lie ahead of you, there will not be a single moment when Jesus is not coming towards you.

‘And should anyone, intrigued, or bewildered, or fascinated by the choice you have made, ask you why you became a monk, give them the only answer possible, the one answer intelligib­le, even to the littlest souls: “I saw Jesus coming towards me”.

 ??  ?? The Monks of Silverstre­am
The Monks of Silverstre­am
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