NOVITIATE
After
completing the year of postulancy, if an individual believes God may be
calling him to a Capuchin vocation, then he applies to the next step of
formation: the novitiate. The novitiate is a very structured one year
period of seclusion and intense prayer in which the novice enters more
deeply into the process of discernment.
Because the year is geared toward prayer, there is a very limited
amount of ministry and the novice has few obligations outside of the
daily novitiate schedule. This freedom from responsibilities allows the
novice to give himself completely to the practice of prayer and to seek
to hear the call of the Lord in the deepest recesses of his heart.
The novitiate begins with the Investiture, a ceremony in which the
postulant receives the "clothes of probation" and officially begins the
novitiate year. This ceremony is followed by a silent eight day retreat
during which the novice will have regular meetings with his spiritual
director who will assist him in entering deeper into the process of
discernment. Other retreats are scheduled periodically throughout the
course of the year.
The novitiate schedule consists of Morning Prayer and Mass followed by
breakfast. Four days a week the novice will have in-house classes in
the morning. The classes cover a variety of topics including
Spirituality, Prayer and Discernment, The Rule of St. Francis, The
History of the Capuchin Order as well as various workshops throughout
the year. The class period ends with Mid-Day Prayer followed by lunch.
The novice then has a few hours of personal time to pray, read or
complete his assigned house jobs. The fraternity gathers again in the
evening for a period of silent meditation followed by evening prayer
and dinner. Following dinner and clean-up, there is a two hour period
of silent, personal time which the novice may use for prayer, spiritual
reading or exercise. The day ends with Night Prayer followed by a
period of fraternal recreation.
In addition to regular meetings with his spiritual director, the
novice will also meet regularly with his formation advisor, one of the
novice directors to which he is directly assigned. The formation
advisor will help guide the novice through any difficulties he may
encounter in the course of the novitiate as well as point out any
"rough edges" which may need more personal attention.
Friars will often refer to the novitiate as a time of special grace, a
year full of blessings and intimate encounters with the God of love.
The novitiate has one main goal: to allow the novice to become
completely attentive to the whisper of God in his heart. In this way,
the individual is able to discern, with the aid of his spiritual
director and formation advisor, if he is indeed called to profess vows
of poverty, chastity and obedience as a Capuchin Friar Minor.
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