On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity

For decades, the Catholic monastic tradition has been defined by demographic decline and the closure of monasteries. And yet, new religious groups have emerged that have cultivated their own take on the monastic tradition, while old monasteries have become treasured heritage objects. In recent years...

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Main Authors: Wouter Kock, Eric Venbrux, Thomas Quartier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-12-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/16/1/23
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author Wouter Kock
Eric Venbrux
Thomas Quartier
author_facet Wouter Kock
Eric Venbrux
Thomas Quartier
author_sort Wouter Kock
collection DOAJ
description For decades, the Catholic monastic tradition has been defined by demographic decline and the closure of monasteries. And yet, new religious groups have emerged that have cultivated their own take on the monastic tradition, while old monasteries have become treasured heritage objects. In recent years, these new religious groups have started to acquire and inhabit old monasteries. It follows that simultaneous re-religionization and heritagization is taking place at these locations. This combination presents a unique opportunity to scrutinize an unexplored entanglement of religion and heritage. Although re-religionization might seem to conflict with the cultural heritage narrative surrounding these monasteries, this article presents Klooster Nieuw Sion—a new Dutch religious initiative—as a case study, indicating that these developments do not only coexist or oppose each other but are also mutually reinforcing. Drawing on our fieldwork, we explore how heritagization can offer new spiritual opportunities for religious actors within these revitalized monastic spaces.
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spelling doaj-art-68fd41008e9447288b68064656477f792025-01-24T13:47:19ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442024-12-011612310.3390/rel16010023On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual OpportunityWouter Kock0Eric Venbrux1Thomas Quartier2Department of Comparative Religious Studies, Radboud University, Postbus 9103, 6500 HD Nijmegen, The NetherlandsDepartment of Comparative Religious Studies, Radboud University, Postbus 9103, 6500 HD Nijmegen, The NetherlandsDepartment of Comparative Religious Studies, Radboud University, Postbus 9103, 6500 HD Nijmegen, The NetherlandsFor decades, the Catholic monastic tradition has been defined by demographic decline and the closure of monasteries. And yet, new religious groups have emerged that have cultivated their own take on the monastic tradition, while old monasteries have become treasured heritage objects. In recent years, these new religious groups have started to acquire and inhabit old monasteries. It follows that simultaneous re-religionization and heritagization is taking place at these locations. This combination presents a unique opportunity to scrutinize an unexplored entanglement of religion and heritage. Although re-religionization might seem to conflict with the cultural heritage narrative surrounding these monasteries, this article presents Klooster Nieuw Sion—a new Dutch religious initiative—as a case study, indicating that these developments do not only coexist or oppose each other but are also mutually reinforcing. Drawing on our fieldwork, we explore how heritagization can offer new spiritual opportunities for religious actors within these revitalized monastic spaces.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/16/1/23re-religionizationheritagizationmonasticismspiritualization
spellingShingle Wouter Kock
Eric Venbrux
Thomas Quartier
On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity
Religions
re-religionization
heritagization
monasticism
spiritualization
title On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity
title_full On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity
title_fullStr On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity
title_full_unstemmed On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity
title_short On Inhabiting Monastic Heritage: Monastery “Nieuw Sion” in the Netherlands as Material Burden and Spiritual Opportunity
title_sort on inhabiting monastic heritage monastery nieuw sion in the netherlands as material burden and spiritual opportunity
topic re-religionization
heritagization
monasticism
spiritualization
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/16/1/23
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