All Diocesan Articles

Addiction to Adoration: One Man's Spiritual Journey

Posted on May 25, 2023 in: Vocations

Addiction to Adoration: One Man's Spiritual Journey

There is an old saying that could very well describe Brother John Blaschik’s journey to the Trappists: “Every saint has a past and every sinner a future.”

Not too long before becoming a monk, he was on a very different path — a path to perdition.

Blaschik is a monk of the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance (also known as the Trappists). He resides at Our Lady of the Holy Cross Abbey in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. He leads a life of relative simplicity, silence and separation from the dominant culture, following the Rule of St. Benedict, balancing the practices of prayer, spiritual reading and work. 

As a Trappist, Brother John rises at 3 a.m., prays seven times a day and is a vegetarian. He also works as groundskeeper, cooks for the community and helps prepare the sweet cakes and honey the monastery sells.

In 1983, John Blaschik’s life looked rosy. At 27, he  was elected  the first selectman of the town of East Haddam — at that time, the youngest person ever to hold such office in the state of Connecticut. And some years later, he became deputy state fire marshal, with statewide jurisdiction. But by 2009, two failed marriages and alcoholism had ravaged his life and his family.

In December of that year, driving home from a bar, he crashed his car into a telephone pole. Because he had been driving drunk and without a license (his license had been suspended the previous September due to a DUI), he was sentenced to 30 days in prison.

In prison, he attended meetings with Chaplain Sister Mary Healy. He was looking for spiritual guidance, and she recommended that he read books by three Trappist monks: Fathers Thomas Merton, Basil Pennington and Thomas Keating. 

“I devoured those books,” Blaschik said.

By reading the books he came to realize that his own mind was the real prison he was in, and that through prayer and treatment he could be released. He also developed a curiosity about the Trappists, which he later realized was a calling.

Thus began several years of spiritual journey to monastic life. In 2013, he applied for the permanent diaconate, but was not chosen. Realizing God was calling him to a different vocation, he applied to several monasteries, however was rejected because of his age. 

Then, someone told him about a small Trappist monastery situated on 1,500 acres alongside the Shenandoah River in Virginia that accepted older novitiates. After several visits and interviews, he was admitted into Our Lady of the Holy Cross Abbey in February of 2017.

This year, on June 17, after five years of novitiate, Brother John will take solemn vows: stability, poverty, chastity and obedience. He describes his salvation story by paraphrasing the 14th-century mystic Jullian of Norwich. “First there is the fall and then there is the recovery from the fall, both are the mercy of God.”

In prison, Sister Healy had told him that what we call coincidences or chance are really “God winks.”

God has truly winked at Brother John Blaschik.

Our Lady of the Holy Cross Abbey was the subject of a PBS Special entitled: “Saving Place, Saving Grace:

www.pbs.org/video/wvpt-saving-place-saving-grace/

By Deacon Ben LoCasto


Most Viewed Articles of the Last 30 Days

Diocesan Vocation Prayer

Posted on December 05, 2024 in: News, Vocations

393

Diocesan Vocation Prayer
Heavenly Father, Through all generations, You have chosen men to serve You by sharing in the Holy Priesthood of Christ, Your Son. We beg You to call men from our diocese to serve as priests at the altar, and to send Your Holy Spirit to help them discern Your call. Give them understanding to know Your will and courage to follow it. Pour out, too, Your grace upon women from our parishes to serve You in religious life, formed after the model of our Blessed Mother. We ask this through our eternal High Priest and King, Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. &nbs...

Read More

A Life of Faith and Service

Posted on December 20, 2024 in: Vocations

219

A Life of Faith and Service
Bishop Emeritus Michael R. Cote has led a life defined by unwavering faith, dedication, and service to the Catholic Church. Born in Sanford, Maine, on June 19, 1949, he was raised in a family deeply rooted in Catholic values. His parents, Paul and Margaret Alma (Trottier) Cote, greatly influenced his early formation, but as Bishop Cote recalls, it was Sister Celeste, his second-grade teacher, who said, “‘Michael, you will play the role of a priest in the school play’” that planted a seed that would later take root. During his college years he began t...

Read More

Annual Catholic Appeal

ACA DONATE

English

Español

 

Latest Articles
Watch the Replay of Christmas Eve Mass from the Cathedral.
Archbishop Coyne’s Christmas Message — A Call to Peace and Anticipation
January 1: A Holy Day of Obligation
A Timeless Tradition: The 45th Annual Festival of Lessons and Carols at the Cathedral
A Life of Faith and Service
Hope Does Not Disappoint: Join the Jubilee Year Mass at the Cathedral
Amid Christmas and Jubilee Preparations, Prepare Your Hearts, Pope Says
Finding the Manger
Recently Added Galleries
Click to view album: 40 Days for Life 2024
Click to view album: Blessing of the Fleet 2024
Click to view album: Mass of Ordination for Fr. Eric Carl Hosmer, Fr. Julian Felipe Cuervo-Lozada and Fr. Alexander James Pandolfe
Click to view album: Norwich Diocesan Council of Catholic Women (NDCCW) 46th Annual Layette
Signup for Weekly Newsletter

     

    Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich
    201 Broadway
    Norwich, CT 06360-4328
    Phone: 860-887-9294