As I was digging through all my files and piles of paperwork looking for a very specific piece important to finish filing my taxes (that always seems to happen like that, right?), I came across the bag of keepsakes (or some may describe as just stuff) from my six week adventure from this past summer. From London to Italy to Uganda, I had a bag full of little things that held memories. One was a program from the choral service we went to at Westminster Abbey in London.
If you are unfamiliar with the Abbey, here is a brief history:
Westminster Abbey is steeped in more than a thousand years of history. Benedictine monks first came to this site in the middle of the tenth century, establishing a tradition of daily worship which continues to this day. The Abbey has been the coronation church since 1066 and is the final resting place of seventeen monarchs. The present church, begun by Henry III in 1245, is one of the most important Gothic buildings in the country, with the medieval shrine of an Anglo-Saxon saint still at its heart.
A treasure house of paintings, stained glass, pavements, textiles and other artefacts, Westminster Abbey is also the place where some of the most significant people in the nation's history are buried or commemorated. Taken as a whole the tombs and memorials comprise the most significant single collection of monumental sculpture anywhere in the United Kingdom.
The Library and Muniment Room houses the important (and growing) collections of archives, printed books and manuscripts belonging to the Dean and Chapter of Westminster, providing a centre for their study and for research into all aspects of the Abbey's long and varied history.
On the back of the program, I had written a prayer that I heard during the service.
This is my heart's desire:
O gracious and holy Father,
give us wisdom to perceive Thee,
diligence to seek Thee,
patience to wait for Thee,
eyes to behold Thee,
a heart to meditate on Thee,
and a life to proclaim Thee;
through the power of the spirit of Jesus Christ our Lord.
-St. Benedict
c. 480- c. 547
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