During last Sunday's Chapter, Brother Michael pronounced his simple vows and was clothed in the black scapular and leather belt of the professed. We rejoice with him. The ceremony began with Dom Damian asking Brother Michael, "What do you seek?" Michael responded, "The mercy of God and of the Order." This brief dialogue reminded all of us that our life as monks is a life of total, loving dependence on Christ our Savior who constantly invites us to draw water in joy from the fountains of his mercy.
Sunday, September 27, 2015
Saturday, September 26, 2015
The Church
I, Zechariah, raised my eyes and looked:
there was a man with a measuring line in his hand.
I asked, “Where are you going?”
He answered, “To measure Jerusalem,
to see how great is its width and how great its length.”
Then the angel who spoke with me advanced,
and another angel came out to meet him and said to him,
“Run, tell this to that young man:
People will live in Jerusalem as though in open country,
because of the multitude of men and beasts in her midst.
But I will be for her an encircling wall of fire, says the LORD,
and I will be the glory in her midst.”
Sing and rejoice, O daughter Zion!
See, I am coming to dwell among you, says the LORD.
Many nations shall join themselves to the LORD on that day,
there was a man with a measuring line in his hand.
I asked, “Where are you going?”
He answered, “To measure Jerusalem,
to see how great is its width and how great its length.”
Then the angel who spoke with me advanced,
and another angel came out to meet him and said to him,
“Run, tell this to that young man:
People will live in Jerusalem as though in open country,
because of the multitude of men and beasts in her midst.
But I will be for her an encircling wall of fire, says the LORD,
and I will be the glory in her midst.”
Sing and rejoice, O daughter Zion!
See, I am coming to dwell among you, says the LORD.
Many nations shall join themselves to the LORD on that day,
and they shall be his people and he will dwell among you.
In this reading the Lord speaks through the prophet
Zechariah of a Jerusalem to come that will be without walls, like open country.
But, says the Lord, I will be for her as an encircling wall of fire and I will
be the glory in her midst. The Church, the New Jerusalem, is this city without
walls, at one and the same time welcoming to the world and generous to it with
her gifts and yet without defenses against it, just like her Lord who went
before her. The Church is strongest and the
most effective bearer of that glory where she can stand firm in that open and vulnerable
space, confident that the Lord will see to it that no worldly force bring any
harm to her, and secure that that glory which is the gift of his presence will always
be with her, since she is not only his bride but his body as well.
Vintage photograph of the Abbey church of Our Lady of the Valley. Meditation by Father Timothy.
Friday, September 25, 2015
Patient
We were touched by these words from the First Letter of
Peter which were read to us at Vespers a few evenings ago. They were of course
intended as an exhortation to Christian slaves of the first century, but
fitting words for all of us seeking to follow Christ with all our hearts.
...whenever anyone bears the pain of
unjust suffering because of consciousness of God, that is a grace. But what credit is there if you are patient when beaten
for doing wrong? But if you are patient when you suffer for doing what is good,
this is a grace before God. For to this you have been
called, because Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example that
you should follow in his footsteps.
As we see each day in the newspaper so much sorrow, the
anguish of refugees and other victims of violence, we try to bear patiently the
little things that may complicate our lives.
A photo from the early days at Spencer.
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
Nothing
Jesus summoned the Twelve and gave them power
and authority
over all demons and to cure diseases,
and he sent them to proclaim the Kingdom of God
and to heal the sick.
He said to them, “Take nothing for the journey,
neither walking stick, nor sack, nor food, nor money,
and let no one take a second tunic.” Luke 9
We are always amazed when we hear this Gospel. Take nothing. It can only mean that Jesus wants us to depend on him totally. He longs to be our support, our sustenance, our currency, our shelter by day and by night.
over all demons and to cure diseases,
and he sent them to proclaim the Kingdom of God
and to heal the sick.
He said to them, “Take nothing for the journey,
neither walking stick, nor sack, nor food, nor money,
and let no one take a second tunic.” Luke 9
We are always amazed when we hear this Gospel. Take nothing. It can only mean that Jesus wants us to depend on him totally. He longs to be our support, our sustenance, our currency, our shelter by day and by night.
We share this vintage photograph of old Brother Stephen at our founding monastery of Our Lady of the Valley in Lonsdale, Rhode Island.
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Nobodies
In response
to the disciples’ argument about who is number one, Jesus provides this
remarkable teaching: “Whoever receives one child in my name receives me, and
whoever receives me receives not me but the One who sent me.”
In the Greco-Roman
society of antiquity, the only individuals with legal and social status lower
than that of a child were a slave and a household slave child, who was the least of
all, the nobody-par-excellence, the almost literally invisible one. Jesus declares to his disciples then and now
that to
receive such a nobody in his name is to receive him, for in the encounter with
the nobodies of our lives, there God is waiting for us. Think of the river of
human beings fleeing the Middle East and flowing into western Europe, these persons with only the clothes on their
backs and the children in their arms. In receiving them, there God is waiting
for us. On a personal level, think of the individuals we might prefer not to be
part of our lives. In the movement toward recognition, forgiveness and
reconciliation God is waiting for us. Not to encounter these persons, to avoid
them is to avoid the Living God in the very place where he awaits us.
The most
compelling piece of evidence for the truth of this teaching is Jesus’ own
practice, his life, his ministry. When it came to poor people, victims of
disease, prejudice, injustice, social and religious ostracism, victims of
violence- Jesus embraced them all unconditionally.
In the end,
he not only embraced them but he took their place as the last and least of the
nobodies, when he became the victim whose life would be crushed on the cross; it
was from within this experience of the victim, when his body was trashed, his
human life extinguished, that he prayed, “Father, forgive them for they know
not what they do”– “They don’t get it.” This Praying Victim pushes us to
recognize the cross as a place of profound religious experience. If it is that kind of place for Jesus, it is
meant to be that kind of place for us.
Excerpts from Father Isaac's Homily at this morning's Eucharist.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
The Love of the Bride
Medieval authors such as Saint Bernard of Clairvaux saw in the Bride of the biblical book of the Song of Songs an image of the the Church, the Virgin Mary as well as the individual soul. We have been reading Saint Bernard's Commentary on the Song of Songs, and were struck by these lines that remind us that the Lord Jesus, as Bridegroom of the soul, is always searching after us.
You would not seek him or love him unless you had first been sought and loved. Not only in one blessing have you been anticipated but in two: being loved as well as being sought. Love is the reason for the seeking, and the seeking is the consequence of the love as well as the proof...Since I love, I cannot doubt that I am loved, anymore than I can doubt that I love. Nor can I fear to look upon his face, since I have sensed his tenderness.
Photograph by Justin Munroe. Excerpt from Sermon 84 On the Song of Songs by Saint Bernard of Clairvaux.
Photograph by Justin Munroe. Excerpt from Sermon 84 On the Song of Songs by Saint Bernard of Clairvaux.
Monday, September 14, 2015
The Triumph of the Cross
Peter’s
confession is a breakthrough, a burst of light. Why is
that he is able to proclaim with such boldness, “You are
the Messiah”? And what keeps him on the road with Jesus despite his failure to
understand Jesus when he begins to talk about his destiny?
Jesus’
question calls Peter and the disciples to make a judgment, and Peter as their
spokesman makes it. It is the courage of his public proclamation, “You are the
Christ”, that is the condition for the possibility of all else that follows in
his life on the “way” with Jesus. Peter has a long way to go before his sight
comes to full clarity, but this decision continues him on his way. Up until
now, he and his fellow disciples, although they have gone so far as to make the
commitment to follow Jesus, have nevertheless remained among the crowd of those
who have been floating various opinions about the identity of Jesus. But now
Peter’s proclamation, has set them apart. “You are the Messiah”
To be on
the way as a Christian means that it is not enough to know or profess the
truth, the truth must also be done. There are
times when this is quite difficult. But the way of Jesus is not a dreary way of
resignation. By walking with Jesus we create the condition for the possibility
of him initiating us into his world, into what he loves. By putting on his mind
we become like him, we learn to love what he loves, delight in what he delights
in, and share in the joy that is his in the Father and the Holy Spirit.
As we celebrate today the Triumph of the Cross, we rejoice because by his passion, death and resurrection Jesus has not left us alone and unaided but has given us his Spirit and his Church, who with her sacraments, teaching and example of her saints, shows us the way to go and provides us the nourishment necessary for the journey. The cross of Christ is truly the way to life.
As we celebrate today the Triumph of the Cross, we rejoice because by his passion, death and resurrection Jesus has not left us alone and unaided but has given us his Spirit and his Church, who with her sacraments, teaching and example of her saints, shows us the way to go and provides us the nourishment necessary for the journey. The cross of Christ is truly the way to life.
Picture by Brother Brian. Reflection by Father Timothy.
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Saints And Poets, Maybe
We recall a scene in Our Town, that iconic American play of the 1930’s. Near
the end a young wife named Emily dies in childbirth. And from the grave she
asks the Stage Manager, the godlike narrator who presides over the action of
the play, if she may go back in time, back into her life for just one day. He
discourages her; she insists. And she is allowed to return to an ordinary
morning when she was a teenager. She views it from afar and relishes its quiet,
ordinary beauty. But very soon she is overwhelmed by it all. It’s too much
for her, and she cries out to the Stage Manager: I can't. I can't go on. It goes so fast. We don't have time to look at
one another. I didn't realize. So all that was going on, and we never noticed.
Oh, earth, you are too wonderful for anybody to realize you. Do any human
beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute? The Stage
Manager replies: No. The saints
and poets, maybe they do some.
Our earth is wonderful, indeed, for
Jesus has come to stay with us. His mercy finds us here over and over again.
Eternity is always interrupting, if we dare notice. The amazing yet ordinary
things- the beauty, the sorrow in human experience and in all of creation-
beckon to us and draw us to him, who is constantly seeking opportunities to
engage us. And the more needy we are; the more impossible our impediments, the
greater the opportunity for Jesus’ graced entrĂ©e.
Day after day atrocities beyond
imagining all over the world. And so again every
morning, we bring each other, we bring the world in its suffering and
despondency and seeming hopelessness to Christ, longing for the intrusion of
his grace. Not knowing how to speak our need and longing, and perhaps deafened
by too much tragedy, still we bravely pray with hope in our hearts. Christ Jesus assures us that he hears, he
understands; that he is with us, he himself praying, articulating our desire in
words beyond words. This is what our prayer is best of all: our desire groaned
by Jesus for us, within us.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
On Our Lady's Birthday
Exercising a motherly care for her poor children in all things and through all things the Virgin Mother calms our trembling fear, enlivens our faith, supports our hope, drives away our distrust, encourages us in our hesitancy.
Adam, you were afraid to approach your Father; you were terrified at the mere sound of his voice and tried to hide amid the trees. And so he gave you Jesus as your Mediator. What shall such a Son not be able to obtain from such a Father? Undoubtedly he will be heard because of his reverence, for the Father loves the Son.
Surely you are not afraid to approach Jesus as well? He is your Brother and your flesh, tempted in all things as you are, yet without sin, so that he might have compassion. And this Brother has been given to us by Mary.
Our hearts are never far from Our Lady. We trust always in her real interest in us and our needs. And each of us monks is dedicated to her.
Quotation by Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, Sermon for the Nativity of The Blessed Virgin Mary, 7.
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Ordinariness
In
this morning’s Gospel as Jesus heals the deaf and speech-impaired man, we watch as grace intrudes, amazing grace, mercy in abundance expressed in the infinitely
tender touch of Jesus. Jesus is God’s word in opposition to all sickness and
evil and pain. Jesus enfleshes the words of the prophet Isaiah from the
First Reading: “Say to those whose hearts are frightened: Be strong, fear not!
Here is your God; he comes with vindication; with divine recompense he comes to
save you. Then will the eyes of the blind be opened, the ears of the deaf
unstopped…then the tongue of the mute will sing.” This morning these words are fulfilled in our hearing . The Kingdom is now, here among us in Christ Jesus our
Lord.
He
reverses and restores, breaking through dead ends with hope and the promise of
a new way through. This is what Jesus wants, this constant eruption of the
Kingdom. Jesus’ healing restores this man to his family, his kinsfolk, and his
friends. He is no longer isolated by his malady. Jesus gives this man back to
ordinariness. He will be able to hear a friend say hello, hear her laugh; hear
a breeze blow through the trees. He will at last be able to speak clearly, tell
someone a story; whisper I love you. He can simply blend in again. Jesus has
given this man back to ordinariness, blessed ordinariness. It is after all
where he always comes to meet us.
God
only wants to be ordinary. It is why Jesus has come, God with us, near us, in
us. The ordinary is charged forever with his kind, incessant presence. God longs
to be ordinary, not taken for granted, but here, always here with us. Why else
would he choose to be a child, why else a small town carpenter and a wandering teacher?
Why else allow himself to be done in by thugs and jealous bureaucrats? Why else
choose to be hidden in a morsel of bread on our altar?
Excerpts
from this morning’s homily.
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Gregory the Great
As the Church celebrates the holiness of Pope Saint Gregory the Great, we recall his longing to return monastic life all during his papacy. Devoted to the solitude and silence of his Benedictine monastery on the Caelian Hill in Rome, he nonetheless responded generously and readily when appointed to the papacy. As monks we want to follow the Lord with open hearts, ready for all that he asks of us day by day.
Inspired by this morning's meditation by Father Nickolas of Collegeville.
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation
Living our vocation to be protectors
of God’s handiwork is essential to a life of virtue; it is not an optional or a
secondary aspect of our Christian experience. - Pope Francis, Laudato Si’
Pope Francis has asked that September 1st be designated as a new annual commemoration - World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation. In his encyclical Laudato Si’ he states: “The life of the spirit is not dissociated from the body or from nature, but lived in communion with all worldly realities. The ecological crisis, is a summons to a profound spiritual conversion and to a way of life that clearly shows that we are believers. It is a time to reaffirm our personal vocation to be stewards of creation, to thank God for the wonderful handiwork which he has entrusted to our care, and to implore his help for the protection of creation as well as his pardon for the sins committed against the world in which we live.”
Praise be to Thee, my Lord, with all thy creatures, above all brother sun who illuminates the day. - Saint Francis of Assisi, Hymn of the Creatures
Pope Francis has asked that September 1st be designated as a new annual commemoration - World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation. In his encyclical Laudato Si’ he states: “The life of the spirit is not dissociated from the body or from nature, but lived in communion with all worldly realities. The ecological crisis, is a summons to a profound spiritual conversion and to a way of life that clearly shows that we are believers. It is a time to reaffirm our personal vocation to be stewards of creation, to thank God for the wonderful handiwork which he has entrusted to our care, and to implore his help for the protection of creation as well as his pardon for the sins committed against the world in which we live.”
Praise be to Thee, my Lord, with all thy creatures, above all brother sun who illuminates the day. - Saint Francis of Assisi, Hymn of the Creatures