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Br.
Randall Horton is a hermit. That means that he is a Benedictine
Monk under direct vows held by a Bishop--in this case, the Bishop of New
York. He became an Episcopalian at the age of nineteen years and
was a member for many years of St.
Luke's Parish in Los Gatos, California.
Br. Randy, as he is known, is
fifty-two
years old and, at the moment, eighteen years sober. Before
becoming a monk at the age of thirty, he successfully negotiated the
rigors of two different professions. First, after his education
was complete, he became a touring concert pipe organist, playing
concerts in Europe, Canada and the United States, for a total of five
years. Br. Randy studied pipe organ performance with Drs. Phillip
Simpson, John Walker, and David Hurd, as well as choral conducting with
Dr. Charlene Archibeque.
Then, Br. Randy was re-educated in
computer technology and became a customer service specialist with a firm
then known as Tymshare, Inc. in Silicon Valley. Br. Randy had the
privilege of working in the team of Dr. Douglas C. Engelbart, the man
who holds the patent on the original Mouse and the inventor of much of
the technology now standard with such systems as Apple and Windows.
With Dr. Engelbart and his team, Br. Randy worked with a system then
known as Augment, a computer environment which contributed many features
that were later incorporated into both Macintosh and Windows systems.
Br. Randy is the webmaster for this website.
At the age of thirty, Br. Randy entered
an Episcopal Benedictine community called the Order of the
Holy
Cross at West Park, New York. He stayed there for his
formation as a member of the novitiate and, later, as a monastic oblate
in charge of the monastic choir of men. In addition to his work at
West Park, Br. Randy identified his problem with alcohol. He went
to the Addiction Research Foundation (also known as ARF) in Toronto,
Canada, and began the greatest journey of his life--the journey into
recovery. He has been sober ever since.
After six years of life in formation at
the Monastery, Br. Randy left and established a hermitage called the
Hermitage of St. Antony of the Desert. He moved his hermitage to
the Northwest Corner of Connecticut, to a small cabin in the country
about a ten minute walk from the Great Falls on the Housatonic River.
Br. Randy made his annual vows at The
Cathedral of St. John the Divine, but continued to live in
Connecticut. There he lived and prayed with his pet cocker-poo
Fred while serving as the part-time spiritual director for Mountainside
Treatment Center. Br. Randy was life professed as a
Solitary (or hermit) by The Rt. Rev. Richard F. Grein, Bishop of New
York, on October 3, 1998. His Rule of
Life is here presented for those who are interested in such things,
along with his Spiritual
Autobiography.
In March of 2002 the time came for Br.
Randy to move back to the city and bring with him the fruits of his own
interior work in the hermitage as well as the fruits of his professional
work at Mountainside. The position at Fessenden House
materialized, and the deal was struck. Br. Randy has been here
ever since.
Br. Randy is the author of The
Miracle of Peace, a workbook in the 12 Steps of Alcoholics
Anonymous. Click on the link above to see the full text of The
Miracle of Peace. He is also author of The St. Gregory Antiphoner and Monastic Hymnary,
a 2,000 page plus, hand calligraphed, modern inclusive language adaptation of the
Benedictine Office Chants for use with the Book of Common Prayer Office.
His hobbies include all things medieval as well as playing his
harpsichord, cooking, and doing calligraphic projects. His
interests include Harry
Potter, The Lord of the
Rings, gnostic studies, biblical criticism, and the evolution of
languages. Br. Randy also is currently serving as director of
music at St. James Church
(Fordham) in the Bronx, New York.
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