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Learnings: A Life of Prayer: Difference between revisions

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imported>Wagnike2
Created page with "{{Imageneed}} Working the fields, chopping trees, weaving textiles, and gardening were all in a day's work for a monk or a nun - some even kept bees, as seen in this illu..."
 
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{{Imageneed}}
{{Imageneed}}
 
Working the fields, chopping trees, weaving textiles, and gardening were all in a day's work for a [[Scholar|monk]] or a nun—some even kept bees, as seen in this illustration. These tasks were a form of prayer; hard work was a way to commune with [[Christianity|God]]. But keeping the monks and nuns busy wasn't just to teach them humility or self-sufficiency; it was also a way to keep them out of trouble.
Working the fields, chopping trees, weaving textiles, and gardening were all in a day's work for a [[monk]] or a nun - some even kept bees, as seen in this illustration. These tasks were a form of prayer; hard work was a way to commune with God. But keeping the monks and nuns busy wasn't just to teach them humility or self-sufficiency; it was also a way to keep them out of trouble.
 
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]]
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]]

Revision as of 21:30, 21 December 2021

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Working the fields, chopping trees, weaving textiles, and gardening were all in a day's work for a monk or a nun—some even kept bees, as seen in this illustration. These tasks were a form of prayer; hard work was a way to commune with God. But keeping the monks and nuns busy wasn't just to teach them humility or self-sufficiency; it was also a way to keep them out of trouble.