Here, we work. Whether in the kitchen, the jelly factory, the laundry, the greenhouse, the brewery or at the guild; whether sweeping, scrubbing, packing or cooking - we work. Our work never eclipses our prayer but provides balance and a level of creativity and expression to our day - all for Christ - in this life that is quite ordinary. We live by the work of our hands - to support our life together in the monastery, to support the poor and needy who seek our assistance.
Thursday, August 30, 2018
Wednesday, August 29, 2018
With Paul
And as we grieve the current suffering in our Church and in our country and our world, we recall Saint Paul's admonition to the Philippians: "...whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is gracious, if there is any excellence and if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things."
We pray with confidence; we live in hope.
We pray with confidence; we live in hope.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Monday, August 27, 2018
Memorial of Saint Monica
When
Monica was told of Augustine’s conversion, he tells us in his Confessions that she leapt for joy,
rejoiced and praised God, who can do more than we ask or think; for she understood
that God had given her more than she had ever dared to beg for. He continues, “you
changed her mourning into joy, much more plentiful than she had desired, and in
a much more precious and purer way than she ever required.”
God
hears our prayers, God always answers our prayers – in ways we may recognize and in ways that we may never
understand. We pray with confidence and even wonder.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Friday, August 24, 2018
Nathanael
Jesus saw Nathanael coming toward him and said of him, "Here is a true child of Israel. There is no duplicity in him."
An amazing compliment given by Jesus to this apostle-to-be. May our hearts be like Nathanael's - ever be pure and free, brimming with truth and love and transparent to the Lord Jesus.
Photograph of the south cloister by Brother Brian.
An amazing compliment given by Jesus to this apostle-to-be. May our hearts be like Nathanael's - ever be pure and free, brimming with truth and love and transparent to the Lord Jesus.
Photograph of the south cloister by Brother Brian.
Thursday, August 23, 2018
Beauty
But nothing you ever understand will be sweeter, or more binding,
than this deepest affinity between your eyes and the world.
...maybe such devotion, in which one holds the world
in the clasp of attention, isn't the perfect prayer,
but it must be close, for the sorrow, whose name is doubt,
is thus subdued, and not through the weaponry of reason,
but of pure submission. Tell me, what else could beauty be for?
Photograph by Brother Brian. Excerpt from the poem Terns by Mary Oliver.
than this deepest affinity between your eyes and the world.
...maybe such devotion, in which one holds the world
in the clasp of attention, isn't the perfect prayer,
but it must be close, for the sorrow, whose name is doubt,
is thus subdued, and not through the weaponry of reason,
but of pure submission. Tell me, what else could beauty be for?
Photograph by Brother Brian. Excerpt from the poem Terns by Mary Oliver.
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
With Mary
Saint Bernard says that above all what has drawn God to Mary is her humility. God finds it absolutely irresistible. Certainly we will come to our humility by a route very different than Our Lady’s, but it can give us the same irresistible quality. We can do it through our sinfulness, acknowledging that we have nothing to boast of before God but our weakness. It is after all the only thing about myself that I am absolutely confident about. Problem is it’s also the one thing I most want to deny. But this reality, this humility lets God be God. Said another way, when things fall apart then God can be God, for he desperately wants to mercy us. Our humility - our humble self-knowledge - allows God a place in our hearts.
An etching by Margaret Walters, (1924 - 1971).
Monday, August 20, 2018
Saint Bernard of Clairvaux
…whatever gains I had, these I have come to consider a loss because
of Christ. More than that, I even consider everything as a
loss because of the supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake
I have accepted the loss of all things and I consider them so much rubbish,
that I may gain Christ and be found in him... Phil. 3
So it is that one theologian will write of the "madness of the vowed life." Indeed daring to give ourselves to Christ Jesus in our monastic way of life that is "ordinary, obscure and laborious" is utterly mad and wonderful and worth all our effort.
As we celebrate the Solemnity of our Father, Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, we are reminded of his words as he ponders the great loving mercy of Christ. He writes of the human soul trying to respond to such love: “She loves ardently, yet even when she finds herself completely in love, she thinks she loves too little because she is loved so much.”
As we celebrate the Solemnity of our Father, Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, we are reminded of his words as he ponders the great loving mercy of Christ. He writes of the human soul trying to respond to such love: “She loves ardently, yet even when she finds herself completely in love, she thinks she loves too little because she is loved so much.”
Sunday, August 19, 2018
Real Food
One
of the monks tells us this story. One day when he was a four or five, he was playing
in his backyard when he noticed, of all things, scraps of chocolate cake on the
lawn. A neighbor had thrown bits of stale cake onto the grass for the birds to
eat. Without thinking twice he picked up some cake and started munching. It was
definitely a bad move. His mother happened to be looking out the window
and saw what he was doing. She roared, “Stop. What will the
neighbors think! If you’re hungry just ask, and I'll give you something to
eat, anything you want.” And he admits after all that the cake definitely quite dry, quite stale and not very tasty.
Christ
Jesus wants more for us. What the more is, each of us probably knows somewhere,
way down in the depth of our own heart. Like our friend’s mom, he wants us to
come to him for everything we need. His loving regard is healing, drawing us,
calling us away from all the stuff that distracts us, all the things that we think might be
nourishing but are just stale, dry and not at all life-giving.
In
the Eucharist he gives us everything - his very Self as our Food. He is the living Bread;
his flesh real Food, his Blood real Drink. He is our hope, our fulfillment,
well worth hungering after. Riches, accomplishments - whether spiritual or
material - are nothing in comparison with him. And so he sets the table for us and
cries out to us, “Come, eat and drink.”
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Thursday, August 16, 2018
Mary’s Glorification
The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
affirms something very important, not only about the dignity and destiny of
Mary but about the dignity and future destiny of every human being. Her
Assumption reminds us that God’s infinite desire is that we be with him for all
eternity. Jesus himself explicitly revealed this desire when he prayed:
“Father, I want those you have given me to be where I am.” Jn 17:24 This is
the God who loves our company.
Mary’s glorification in body and soul is a
sign that every aspect of our lives is important to God and is touched by God’s
saving Spirit. The salvation Jesus offers us is not just about our souls
getting to heaven in the future but about our whole multi-dimensional existence
being sanctified in the present in a way that leads to a future fulfillment.
Our entire existence has already been touched by the redemptive love of Christ
in the present, as we await its future fulfillment.
The Assumption proclaims loud and clear the
amazing inheritance that is ours as sons and daughters of God. An inheritance
that is enjoyed by us already in the present but awaits a future fulfillment
preserved and reserved for us by God. By our Baptism, we have all received
“confirmed reservations.” Such a confirmation does not deny any of our real
present-day responsibilities and challenges. Human dignity is ‘assumed’ and
lifted closer towards its future in company with Mary in whose life the seeds
of her Son’s resurrection have fully blossomed. Thus, Mary is a profound symbol
of hope and healing for body and soul in our very broken world.
Mary’s Assumption urges us never to forget
the destiny of the journey we are on together. And it functions as a window
into the beauty in which we see our entire existence transfigured and radiant
with God’s glory. The Assumption is an inspiration for us to protect and defend
human dignity, especially for those whose futures are being threatened through
violence or neglect. In every age and time, there are dark forces that try to
reduce the dignity of the human person. The Assumption of Mary holds before us
the awesome truth of what the Gospel teaches and the awesome dignity to which
God has raised humanity.
Fra Angelico, The Dormition and the Assumption of the Virgin, 1424-1434, (detail.) Tempera with oil glazes and gold on panel. The Gardner Museum. Excerpts from Abbot Damian's homily for Assumption Day.
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
Her Assumption
There is nothing that pleases me more, and nothing that terrifies
me more than to preach on the glory of the Virgin Mary. For, see, if I praise
her virginity, I see that there are many who have offered themselves as virgins
after her. If I preach on her humility, we will find, perhaps, even a few who,
taught by her Son, have become meek and humble of heart. If I want to proclaim
the greatness of her mercy, there are some also some very merciful men and
women. There is, however, one thing in which she does not have someone like
her, before or after, and that is her joining the joy of motherhood with the
honor of virginity. This is Mary's privilege, and it is not given to another:
it is unique, and it is also something that words cannot perfectly describe. Nevertheless,
if you pay attention closely, you will find not only this one virtue, but even
other singular virtues in Mary, which she only seems to share with others. For
can one even compare the purity of the angels to that spotless virginity which
was found worthy to become the tabernacle of the Holy Spirit and dwelling place
of the Son of God? How great and how precious was her humility, together with
such perfect innocence, such wisdom without fault, and such a fullness of
grace? How did you obtain such meekness, O Blessed Woman, such great humility?
You are indeed worthy, whom the Lord considered carefully, whose beauty the
King desired, on whose lap with its sweetest fragrance the eternal Father was
brought to rest. Behold, with these acts of devotion we have meditated on your
ascension to your Son, and we have followed you as though from a distance, O
Blessed Virgin. Let the grace of your mercy, the favor that you found with God,
be made known to the world: may your prayers obtain mercy for the condemned,
remedy for the sick, strength of heart for the lowly, consolation for the
afflicted, aid for those in peril, and freedom for your holy ones. And on this
day of celebration and gladness, may Jesus Christ, your Son, our Lord, through
thee, O merciful Queen, pour out the gifts of His grace upon all those who
invoke the sweetest name of Mary with praise, for He is the God of all things.
Fra Angelico, The Dormition and the Assumption of the Virgin, 1424-1434, (detail.) Tempera with oil glazes and gold on panel. The Gardner Museum. Lines by Saint Bernard of Clairvaux.
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
Self-offering
The self-offering of Saint Maximilian Kolbe, whom we celebrate today, seems a perfect imitation of Jesus' self-gift in his passion and death. We deserved punishment, but Jesus says,"Let me do this for you. I will bear your burden, you may go free. I love you, I do not want you to suffer."
Jesus takes our place, just as Maximilian volunteered to take the place of a fellow prisoner in a starvation bunker.
Lord, teach us to be generous as you and your servant Maximilian were.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Saturday, August 11, 2018
To Follow
The Good News of Jesus proclaimed in the Scriptures is always joy-filled, freeing and an invitation to follow him to the cross. But the cross is never separated from resurrection. We follow him with hope and confidence in his love. Christ Jesus is with us in our sufferings and dyings; we are always with him and in him. With faith in his call, we dare to continue to follow. It is always a journey through a very narrow gate, but one that inevitably leads to to life - Jesus himself who is our life.
Photograph by Brother Brian.
Friday, August 3, 2018
Understanding
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 needier we are; the more impossible our impediments, the
greater the opportunity for Jesus’ graced entrée. The “horizon of the
reign of God is immeasurable…and begins here, on this earth, and it is about
this world because from the very beginning God's intent was nothing other than
the world,”* a world that he longs to heal and sanctify more and more.
Day after day atrocities
beyond imagining all over the world. And painfully, astoundingly,
embarrassingly, disaster and mass murder have become ordinary occurrences. Our
hearts numb, desensitized, inured to horror. And so we come to him; we bring each other, we bring the
world in its suffering and despondency and seeming hopelessness, longing for
the intrusion of his grace. Impeded, our tongues thick, not knowing how to
speak our need and longing.
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. *Quotation by Gerhard Lohfink.
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Anniversary
In his brief treatise on prayer Origen
speaks of one's entire life as prayer. He notes that 'one prays
constantly... who unites deeds of virtue or fulfilling the commandments
with prayer and prayer with right deeds'. He elaborates this by saying
that the entire life of a saint taken as a whole is a single great prayer
and that what is customarily called prayer is part of this single great
prayer. Frank Houdek, SJ
As
today we celebrate today the 43rd Anniversary of the Dedication of our
Abbey Church, we recall the ceaseless prayer that our Church has held,
the prayers of monks and their guests. We ponder, and we wonder at all the
desires and urgent pleadings, the prayers of praise, the hymns of gratitude and
thanksgiving that our Lord has heard from within these walls.
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