On the subject of the Tironensians, and to progress further, may I suggest further research into the hidden mysteries of Pelagius?
e.g.
"The great German theologian Karl Barth a few years ago described British Christianity as "incurably Pelagian." The rugged individualism of the Celtic monk, his conviction that each person is free to choose between good and evil. And his insistence that faith must be practical as well as spiritual remain hallmarks of Christians in Britain. An the British imagination has remained rooted in nature, witnessed by the pastoral poetry and landscape painting in which Britain excels, indeed that peculiar British obsession with gardening is Celtic in origin. Visitors to the British Isles are often shocked at how few people attend church each Sunday. Yet to the Britons, church-goers as well as absentees, the primary test of faith is not religious observance, but daily behavour towards our neighbours—and towards one’s pets, livestock and plants." (Alan G. Hefner)
It's worth noting, this resonates with the words of another great man. Gandhi.
“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”
The Tironensians were practical people. They built things. They were the working class of the ecumenical orders, while the Cistericians prefered to keep their hands clean and provide "the management".
(Bernard de Clairvaux, in his Apologia ad Gulielmum (1123), set the stage for new, very strict architectural standards for all Cistercian monasteries and churches, claiming that monks should spend their precious time on earth doing penance and meditating on God’s Law, not on architecture and religious art.)
This couples with the business model. The Celtic Church had much in common with early Gnosticism, which of course the Roman Church also found to be a major threat. The doctrine of the Celtic Church included the concept that man was free from God's will - the Roman Church in turn preached that absolution from the wages of sin could be attained by payment to the Church. We will protect you, if you pay us.
In latter years, the Cisterician business model triumphed, by acquisition of other orders in hard times.