Blessing
Station 1 Wilhering
The name Benedict translates from Latin as the blessed one.
Meditation text to listen to
Meditation text for the journey
to Puchenau
What am I blessed with in my life?
For whom do I particularly wish to ask for blessings on my pilgrimage?
To whom can I be a blessing in my life?
I allow the atmosphere of this place to impact me. I take my time and I listen to my mind. I take a few deep breaths and I consciously observe myself. I ask: How am I present with my body, my mind and my soul as I begin my pilgrimage? I allow peace to settle within me. I light a candle and I begin my journey with optimism.
The Wilhering Abbey courtyard reflects what the monastery has stood for since 1146 – spirituality and community, culture and tradition, history and the present. Ulrich and Cholo von Wilhering used their inheritance to found the abbey and brought in the first Cistercian community. The monks moved with the first settlers to the newly cleared land in the Mühlviertel region. The connections to the nine ‘monastery parishes’ are still alive today. In addition, there are four monastery parishes in Lower Austria and five parishes in the diocese of Linz, which are looked after by Wilhering clergy. The exuberant Rococo church shines with frescoes by Bartolomeo Altomonte. Its reconstruction became necessary after arson in 1733. The Meierhof and Stiftshof were renovated or redesigned on the occasion of the 850th anniversary. Since then, a museum has told the story of the eventful history and spirituality of the place. Art plays an important role in Wilhering. The abbey garden features, among other things, a work by contemporary artist Daniel Spoerri. Balduin Sulzer, a contemporary monk of the monastery, original composer, musician and teacher, has created numerous works in the abbey. The painter Fritz Fröhlich was not only connected to the monastery as a tenant of a studio. He decorated the monastery's banquet hall with ceiling frescoes depicting the ‘Ship of Fools’. A curious coincidence: the Latin name for Wilhering, “Hilaria”, translates as ‘the cheerful one’. In addition to Mary, whose Assumption is celebrated in the high altar, guardian angels also play a role in Wilhering. Their chapel in the entrance area of the church and the Lady Chapel, accessible via the cloister, have recently been redesigned.
