Thursday, June 30, 2022
Faithful
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
Saints Peter & Paul
An essential element of our
monastic conversatio is mindfulness of God. We are to be responsive to the
Holy Spirit and so cultivate continual mindfulness of God's presence. A good
part of this “mindfulness” often entails a great deal of “mindfulness of my
desperate need for God’s mercy.” And my heart is broken open with regret and
repentance as I recall, sometimes in vivid detail, the dumb, selfish things
that are a real and embarrassing part of my past. How could I have been such a
jerk? God is not surprised. Why should I be? So it is that I remember
blowing up at my Dad one day for some trifle that I deemed inappropriate. I was
not proud of myself. And a day or so later, I had the sense to apologize. His
response was simple, “Jimmy, you never have to apologize to me.” This touched
me deeply. His words were my forgiveness. He knew
me and understood me, he loved me. And I understood that the
love, the relationship we had, meant more and could tolerate the breach. In the
end, I think I really learned to forgive and what it feels like to be forgiven
by my father. He simply was not a grudge-holder. And when I was trying to
muster the courage to take steps toward entering this monastery, it was somehow
imagining his words as the Father’s words deep in my heart that gave me the
courage I needed, “Give it a try. What have you got to lose?” My father knew me well.
The idea of "knowing" in Ancient Hebrew thought implies
a highly personal and intimate relationality. (See Jeff Benner) It is the intimate knowledge of
lovers; in Genesis, we read that Adam "knew Eve his wife". And we pray
in the psalm, “O God, you search me, and you know me,” implying an intimate
loving awareness that is much, much more than God smugly spying on us.
Hopefully, most often, this knowledge spurs a response, and we say with Saint
Paul, “All I want is to know Christ.”
Both are converted, literally turned
around by mercy. Peter who three times denied his Friend in the light of a
charcoal fire is given the opportunity by Jesus three times to proclaim his
love early one morning by another charcoal fire. There on the beach, he gets to
say, “Lord, I do love you; you know well that I love you.” Jesus knew that all
along never doubted it.
So, we know how Peter and
Paul would respond to Jesus’ question, but what about when we hear the wounded
resurrected Christ Jesus ask us this same question, majestic in its quiet
insecurity Who? Who do you say I am/ How do you experience me? And Paul
temporarily blinded by the glaring light of Christ’s self-revelation- “I am
Jesus whom you are persecuting”- speaking from his deep-down experience will
tell us that, “Nothing whatever can separate us from the love of God in Christ
Jesus, our Lord.” Their encounters, and their evolving relationships with Jesus the
wounded Life-giver, empower them both to be themselves wounded
and forgiven life-givers. They have been empowered by mercy and compassion and
forgiveness. We celebrate two men desperately in need of transformation, a transformation
that happens in their encounters with their most merciful betrayed and
persecuted Lord.
Paul will say it best: “God
has chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are
mighty.” Clearly, God’s preference for the weak is all about availability. Simply
put- it is that only what is fragile, weak (and) precarious according to the
order of this world that can allow itself to be “broken so as to be created
anew.” That which is vulnerable is transformable; what is sinful can be mercied.
But what is stiff, stubborn, and intractable is stagnant and stuck. Allowing
myself to be forgiven changes everything.
Perhaps this is our most
important work as monks- to allow things to fall apart and notice that, as
things fall apart, we are more available for mercy. Perhaps part of our work is
to normalize this fragmentation for one another- normalize the falling apart as
the means to a most glorious end, life in Christ Jesus. This is not a careless,
presumptive laziness, (“I’m broken, you’re broken; Christ will rescue us. No
problem!”) Neither is it the blind leading the blind into a catastrophic fall.
It is rather the weak leading the weak into a willing acknowledgment and
celebration of the inevitability of our fragmentation and weakness as good news
that will lead to our transformation in Christ. And so, I like to imagine us
encouraging each other as once the about-to-be martyrs did, watching and
waiting their turn with the beasts there in the dreary dugouts of the Coliseum.
“Go forward; don’t be afraid. This falling, this dying will not be your
dissolution but your means, a royal, jubilant gateway to new and more abundant
life in Christ, into Christ. Go ahead, let yourself be eaten up! It’s worth it.
He’s worth it. Don’t be afraid.”
Jesus’ question to Peter,
to each of us in this morning’s Gospel, situates us with Peter poised to listen
to our Master as he whispers this hauntingly beautiful question to each of us
in the depths of our hearts, “Who do you say that I am? Who am I for you? What
is your experience of me in your life, in your history? How do you experience
me now?” What will you answer? Perhaps when we come to understand ourselves as
sinners desperately beloved by God in Christ, then with Peter we can say, “You
are the Messiah, the Son of the living God,” and with Paul, “All I want is to
know (you) Christ Jesus and the power flowing from (your) resurrection. Now
nothing else matters.”
When we eat this Bread and
drink this cup, we proclaim with every fiber of our being that Mercy has found
us, that we too like our saints have been empowered by his forgiveness because
love is more powerful than death.
Reflection by one of the monks.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Without Fanfare
It seems the needier we are, the more impossible our impediments, the greater the opportunity for Jesus’ graced entrĂ©e, for God longs to be ordinary. Why else would he choose to be a child, why else a 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 altars? It is why Jesus has come, God with us, near us, in us. Our messes personal, and communal are charged forever with his kind, incessant presence. God longs to encounter us there. Jesus has come to stay with us, now right now. His mercy finds us here over and over again. Eternity is always interrupting. 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, here and now, without fanfare.
It has seemed to me sometimes as though the Lord breathes on this poor gray ember of Creation and it turns to radiance - for a moment or a year or the span of a life. And then it sinks back into itself again, and to look at it no one would know it had anything to do with fire, or light ... Wherever you turn your eyes the world can shine like transfiguration. You don't have to bring a thing to it except a little willingness to see. Only, who could have the courage to see it? .... Theologians talk about a prevenient grace that precedes grace itself and allows us to accept it. I think there must also be a prevenient courage that allows us to be brave - that is, to acknowledge that there is more beauty than our eyes can bear, that precious things have been put into our hands and to do nothing to honor them is to do great harm.
Quotation from Gilead by Marilynne Robinson.
Monday, June 27, 2022
Brother Jerome
Our Brother Jerome Collins passed peacefully to the Lord on Sunday morning, June 26. Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, after graduation from high school he served in the U.S. Army during World War 2 as a teletype operator and was honorably discharged, having been awarded Army of Occupation and World War II Victory medals. He worked as a traveling salesman for eighteen months and for three years as a precision tool grinder. Br. Jerome entered our founding monastery, Our Lady of the Valley in Rhode Island, in the autumn of 1949. When in March of 1950 that monastery burned to the ground he transferred with the rest of the monks to help build a new monastery, St. Joseph’s Abbey, on the grounds of the former Alta Crest Farm here in Spencer.
Here at the Abbey Brother Jerome worked as an electrician, cook, and porter. For a little over a year in the mid-1950s, he helped to build the monastery’s daughter-house of St. Benedict’s Abbey in Snowmass, Colorado. Brother was noted for his deep devotion, a serene and humble disposition, his kindness, and his tireless service to the religious life at the monastery.
With gratitude for his gentle presence among us, we commend his soul to your prayers. There are no calling hours.
Sunday, June 26, 2022
Thirteenth Sunday
Today's gospel begins the fifth section of the Gospel of Luke, the Journey Section, the climactic narrative of the ever-ascending journey of Jesus to the Father. Last Sunday, because of Corpus Christi's special gospel, the normally read gospel was not heard. That gospel, Luke 9:22-27, is important for the proper understanding of what the journey embarked upon in today's gospel is about. Last week we would normally have heard St. Peter call Jesus the Christ or the Messiah of God, and we would have heard Jesus correct any erroneous notions that Peter and ourselves might have about that. Jesus claimed for himself the title The Son of Man who must suffer greatly, be killed and raised on the third day. Furthermore, he said that anyone who wishes to follow him must deny himself, take up his cross daily and thus follow him. The opening verse of our gospel today which is Luke 9:51 forms with Luke 24: 51 what is called a literary inclusion—these are like literary bookends that aid in the understanding of the passages between them. Luke 9:51 reads, “When the days for Jesus's being taken up were fulfilled, he set his face (here translated as “resolutely determined”) to journey to Jerusalem. Luke 24:51 reads, “As he blessed them, he parted from them and was taken up to heaven.” These verses both refer to the mystery of Jesus's Ascension—his being taken up into heaven, but they surround a journey narrative that takes us up to the heights of the preaching and teaching of Jesus—think of the parables of the Lost Sheep and the Prodigal Son-- which inspire us to take up our own cross daily.
The journey of Jesus will take him up to the heights of Mt. Zion and the city of Jerusalem where all God's messengers have been rejected and slain. Thus, Jesus, like the Suffering Servant of the Lord in Isaiah, has to “set his face” to go to Jerusalem. The journey will take us up Mt. Calvary, Golgotha, where Jesus is taken up upon a cross to suffer and die for us, but then in three days to be taken up, raised up, “He has been raised!” Finally, the journey reaches its fulfillment as the risen Jesus leaves Jerusalem for Bethany, and there, as he raises his hands over his beloved disciples in blessing, (there he) is taken up to heaven by the Father. We are all of us on a significant journey—one called LIFE, better called Life, Death, and Eternal Life.
We are being poignantly reminded of this lately each day in the refectory as we reflect on Francie Nolan's life as a parable about our own lives growing up—I doubt that any of us felt it was easy, and as we get older and life's experiences become more challenging, we, like Jesus, have “to set our face,” that is, resolutely determine to continue on the Way in our prayer and in the way we live. This important Christian word “Way” was lost in translation this morning as we heard, “As they were proceeding on their journey...” The Greek, if translated literally, says, “As they went in the way...” The word “way” was used in the early days of the Church to describe Christianity itself which was seen as a following of Jesus who is the only “Way” to salvation. Today in the global Church renewal process called Synodality, the concept of the People of God being together on the Way has been emphasized. The word Syn-odality is derived from two Greek words meaning simply, “together on the Way.” The document from the bishops that introduced the process speaks highly of our particular way, the Rule of St. Benedict, with its remarkable chapter three about calling the whole community together for counsel - everyone from oldest to youngest. We know as followers of St. Benedict who followed Christ that our strength to persevere by the grace of God is enhanced immeasurably by our being and living here at the Abbey as a small but Spirit-filled manifestation of the Body of Christ, the whole People of God journeying together along the way—each one of us bearing his particular cross along the Way, but together with his brothers and sisters, not in isolation from one another.
Two other sections of Chapter Nine in Luke illuminate how we journey together with Jesus along the Way. One is Luke's description of the Transfiguration of Jesus in Luke 9:28-36, where we hear the voice of the Father telling us, “This is my chosen Son; listen to him.” We find the strength to follow in the very listening with goodwill to the words of the Lord in the Scriptures, in the teachings of the Church, the words of our Church leaders and the Abbot, the anointed words of our brothers and sisters, and sometimes the words of our worst critics and even enemies. Listen to Him! So, we are nourished and strengthened along the Way by our brothers and sisters, by the Word that we hear and obey, and finally and perhaps most especially, the Eucharist, which is also present in Luke's immensely rich Chapter Nine in the prefiguration of the Eucharist in the miraculous feeding of the five thousand that Fr. Dominic spoke about so beautifully last Sunday, Corpus Christi. Every Mass, like this celebration right now, is a milestone on our own ever-ascending journey to the Father—a milestone where there is time for the leisure that is liturgy where we are refreshed and made ready for the rest of our journey by the gathering of the community in the love of God and by the celebration of God's Word and Eucharist, the bread of wayfarers going to God. Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me and I in them, and I will raise them up on the last day.
There is one more heavenly grace that strengthens us on the Way to the Father that is emphasized by far more in Luke's Gospel than in the others. Whereas the Holy Spirit is mentioned in Mark 3 times, four times in John, 5 in Matthew, the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit is mentioned in Luke 13 times explicitly and many more times if you count the references to the Spirit of God and The Spirit of the Lord which one would, of course, do. The introduction to Luke in the latest version of the New American Bible points out that “no other gospel writer is more concerned than Luke with the role of the Spirit in the life of Jesus and the Christian disciple.” The fact that in Luke the Holy Spirit is so intimately associated with the Virgin Mother Mary makes his gospel spirituality all the more attractive and life-giving. It is the Holy Spirit that gathers us to celebrate the Eucharist. It is the Holy Spirit that imparts life-giving power and meaning to the words we hear in the liturgy. The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that the Epiclesis of the Eucharistic Prayer is that prayer in which we “petition God to send the Holy Spirit so that the offerings at the Eucharist may become the Body and Blood of Christ and thus the faithful, by receiving them, may themselves become a living offering to God.” Fr. Thomas Stegman remarks in his commentary on the Epistle to the Romans that the Holy Spirit is “the empowering presence of God.” St. Paul, in this morning's reading from Galatians, exhorted us to LIVE BY THE SPIRIT! The Spirit gives us the power to “set our face” to go to our own Jerusalem to die to ourselves through, with and in the Paschal Mystery of Jesus and so live for others and for God who, at the end of our journey on the Way, will take us up in glory to the Kingdom.
Photograph by Father Emmanuel. Today's homily by Father Luke.
Friday, June 24, 2022
His Sacred Heart
Words have lives, they evolve. Such is the word, passion. It comes from the Latin passio meaning to bear and endure. It is the origin of the word patient. Later in its life, passion came to mean suffering. Further on, the passion would describe erotic love and soon after any ardent emotion or enthusiasm. How fitting then that we use the word passion with all of its nuances and resonance to describe the suffering and death of Jesus our Lord. For all that Jesus endures because of his tender love for us is most truly his passion. “For the joy that lay before him, Jesus endured the cross despising its shame.” Patiently, passionately, most ardently Jesus gives himself away to us, for us. And when he feels things, he’s moved to his very guts. Jesus is thus the perfect enfleshment of this passion of God’s self-forgetful love for us. He has come to establish an intimacy with us that signals our access to everything he has received from his Father, even the glory that is his as Beloved Son.* Jesus’ passion is to draw us into God. Today we celebrate the wonder of this divine passion for us perfectly enfleshed in his broken Heart.
In the First Reading Ezekiel the prophet has given us God’s self-description as loving shepherd, this, in turn, becomes a template for Jesus’ own understanding of his vocation as Beloved Son of the Father. Jesus is the good shepherd who will relentlessly search, run after and rescue all who are lost, even just one lost sheep. We might say, “Why bother? Why put the other ninety-nine at risk?” But this is who God is. And Paul assures us that this passionate desire of God in Christ for us is expressed in a great gush of graced love lavished upon us through God’s own Spirit – “poured into our hearts.” When we go to prayer, when we wake and walk and work and eat and breathe our day, God is drawing us, ceaselessly, searching and coming after us.
This desperation of a God in love, whose burning desire for us is unquenchable and unending, is in evidence constantly in the gospels. Jesus’ heart is constantly magnetized by desperation. A sobbing widow following the bier of her dead son knows she’s now without resource, destined now for a life of leftovers and condescension. I want to see, cries Bartimaeus. My son is at home dying, my dearest young slave, my daughter is possessed. Do something, I beg you. I’ve been to every doctor, tried every cure. But now, if only I touch his tassel. They have no wine, it’s only the first day of the celebration, and everything will be lost. Lord, wake up we’re going to drown, don’t you care. Lord, the one you love has died. And so best of all, last of all this dead-end that was always looming ahead will be destroyed by his passion and death on the cross. Because Jesus could not bear to have us live in fear of this final terror. He tramples down death by death because he is all Life. If only we knew the gift of God. If only understood his passion for us. He has given himself away totally, lavishly, foolishly, unreasonably.*
He cannot make us love him, still, he boldly exposes his broken Heart for us, longing as any man would for a loving response. He is not embarrassed by the vulnerability and desperation he reveals, he puts his Heart right out there. Perhaps all the tenderness and divine vulnerability are too much, perhaps even tasteless or off-putting. It is after all, way beyond a certain manly coolness and detachment. But Jesus loves us to folly, and he is not about to be evasive or diplomatic about it. How could he be? He’s on fire with it. And his love for us is not some disembodied theological premise or a refined, pious sentiment but a deeply felt, very raw, and real emotion. Jesus feels things deeply in his gut.
Today’s solemnity is all about this Divine Exposure. All falsehood, pretense, and sin; all the pain and suffering he endured and we endure, all the love we long for but dare not express, there too in his wounded Heart we see all the sorrow and suffering in Ukraine and Uvalde and Buffalo - it’s all right there in that Heart - exposed for all to see, in its bleeding, gut-wrenching beauty, the vulnerability of God. He shows us who he is, who God is, and who we are meant to be. The invitation is to go and do likewise – to love until it hurts, though often we might like to think there is an easier way. In the wounded Heart of Jesus, we see our reality and our sublime destiny, as individuals, as Church, as monastic community.
If like Jesus we dare to open our wounded hands and hearts to one another, with nothing to hide - at ease with the awkwardness and embarrassment of loving, at home with our vulnerability the kingdom can happen. At best two desperations will meet. Jesus’ desperate passion to share God’s love and our desperate need for the healing, grace, and love that only Father, Son, and Spirit can bestow. We cry out in a confident appeal that is always the echo of God’s first desperate longing for us.
In the humility of his passion
for us, Jesus has come to give himself away. As we gather together around this Table to
consume Christ’s wounded body and drink the blood of God poured out for us, we find
ourselves once again overpowered by the mystery of his love, by the
unquestionable reality of the mystery of a God who is love,* a God who even now desperately desires to offer us his precious body and blood
even his wounded heart.
The Sacred Heart by Odilon Redon. Today's homily by one of the monks. References: 1. Sandra Schneiders. 2 Robert Barron. 3. Adapted from Karl Rahner.
Thursday, June 23, 2022
Birth of John the Baptist
Something
utterly unprecedented in God’s graciousness was about to occur, something so
exceptional in Israel’s history, that a forerunner would be essential, someone
to prepare the hearts of the people for God’s radical inbreaking. John is that man. His call to repentance, to absolute honesty,
justice, and care for the poor will prepare Israel for the immense reversal that
will take place in the person of Christ Jesus. For Jesus will indeed be the Messiah,
but not the one everyone expected.
And this
morning we look back at the infancy and early childhood of John and notice with
him the Lord calling him even “from his mother’s womb.” John will kick and stir
in the long-barren womb of his mother Elizabeth at the nearness of Christ in
Mary. And miraculously when his father names him John, the name given him by an
angel, his mute father’s tongue will be loosed. And so today the local folks
all wonder, "What, then, will this child be? For surely the hand of the
Lord was with him.” We might also imagine what they said, as they saw him as a
young man sneak off to the desert, and then preach and baptize with such
urgency. “Not surprising at all; I always saw it in him,” they might say. “He
was always different, not like the other kids; a kind of fire in him; a
thoughtful kid; he liked to pray…” Maybe like things our friends and family
said when we came to the monastery.
So it is
that we celebrate today a kind of feast of sacred retrospection. Sacred retrospection. Tradition reflects
back on the life of John the Baptizer and wonders at the holiness and
uniqueness it sees even from his birth. We know this is a typical motif in
Scripture and in accounts of many of the saints’ lives. And these stories were
very often depicted in art. A favorite example is a relief of the infant St.
Nicholas resting in his mother’s left arm. As she offers him her right breast
to nurse him, Baby Nicholas raises both of his little hands, as if to say, “No
thanks, Mom. I’m good.” Amazingly, it seems he has weaned himself; already
quite a little ascetic and brimming with self-control even as a baby. The
message is clear: Nicholas’ sanctity was obvious, even from any early age. Really?
To the believing mind perhaps it’s not as ditsy as it sounds, but instead an
unsophisticated expression of the truth which faith offers us.
Today on this Birthday feast of the Baptist, we celebrate a God who is constantly “acting on our behalf, out of love for us;” God drawing us to our truest identity. And since God preserves the universe in being, we believe that he acts in and with every creature in each and all its activities. This is not to say we are stuck in some plan, some occult predestination, but that God is always, always calling, beckoning us, drawing us to himself, longing to fill us with himself, drawing into the Trinity. We name this divine Providence.
And if
today’s Solemnity strikes us as somewhat folkloric, this is not to diminish its
truth. We are invited to look back and notice the finger of God - God acting in
John’s life, and in our own. And so jubilantly we imagine John chanting to us
with the Psalmist, “I
praise you, for I am wonderfully made.” Each of us is invited to do the same,
to reflect on our own lives with a kind of road-back-to-Jerusalem-from-Emmaus
insight - “It was the Lord all the time, though I did not recognize him. It was
you Lord, calling, using anything at all to bring me to you, to my truth, to
the secret for which I was made.” It was, it is God’s finger in my life day in
day out, all through the years.
This is
what our candidates discover as they compose their autobiographies and tell us
their stories in preparation for entrance, a kind of prayerful inventory that notices
the earliest echoes of God’s call, what was always there, though they might not
have named it that back then.
In the
end each of us is meant to say with Isaiah, “The Lord called me from my
mother’s womb; he pronounced my very name…” Divine Providence had been at work all
the time in our individual stories, in our personal histories, through all the
blessings and reversals. These graces must be named and celebrated as God’s
work in us, through us, for us.
God’s Providence is with us; God behind and before us, using anything at all, everything to draw us to himself. And so he invites us once again to this altar to our ultimate identity: Holy Communion, Holy Communion with him and with one another. And if our hearts leap for joy as did the infant John in Elizabeth’s womb, it is a good thing for the Lord Jesus is indeed very near.
Domenico Ghirlandaio, The Birth of the Baptist, fresco in the Cappella Tornabuoni of Santa Maria Novella, Florence. Homily by one of the monks.
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Fire Safety
Fire safety at the Abbey is a priority, and drills are held on a regular basis. Because of the immense size of our property, The Spencer Fire Department has kept a substation here at the monastery which houses equipment for their own use in town and for use here at the Abbey in the event of an emergency. F.D.S.J.A. Station 2 was established to assist the Spencer Fire Department. We are blessed to have the concern of our local fire department.
Many of our monks have volunteered for training and manning the station through the years. Brother Benedict has been Captain of our little station for some time, and a group of monks has recently been outfitted for turn-out gear. And they meet regularly for training. Pictured above with Engine 4 are Brothers Guerric, Kenneth, Benedict, Michael, and Andrew.
We pray that these services will never be
needed, but it is a comfort to know we are prepared.
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
Saint Aloysius
Sunday, June 19, 2022
Corpus Christi
She saw the moon hanging in midair, in the sky. Although the moon was shining bright, there was a single black spot on it. This became a recurring vision that for years Juliana couldn’t figure out. One day the Lord told her that this vision of the moon was a symbol of the Church, so bright with all its feasts, but the black part of the moon meant that there was no feast to honor the Sacrament of the Altar in a special way. (At that time the celebration of this Mystery was only observed on Holy Thursday, but on that day it is mostly Christ’s sufferings and death that are thought about.) So the Lord told her that he desired another day be set apart to celebrate his real Presence in the Eucharist. In 1246, St. Juliana, an Augustinian nun, and prioress persuaded the bishop of Liège to initiate a special feast on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday to honor the Blessed Sacrament. Fifteen years later, in 1261, Pope Urban IV, formerly Archdeacon of Liège, ordered the whole Church to observe this Feast of Corpus Christi. He also asked his personal friend, St. Thomas Aquinas, to compose the hymns and antiphons for its celebration. (St. Juliana spent her last years, and died, in a Cistercian abbey.)
I find that the particular significance of today’s Feast is communicated well by the three fundamental actions we carry out in celebrating it: first of all, we gather around the altar of the Lord to be together in his presence; secondly, we process with the Blessed Sacrament from the church, through the cloisters, and back into the church; and thirdly, we kneel before the Lord in adoration. (Of course, this adoration already begins in the Mass and accompanies the entire procession but culminates in the final moment of Benediction, when we all prostrate ourselves before the One who stooped down to us and gave his life for us.) I’d like to offer a brief reflection on each of these three specific actions of today’s liturgy through the “prism” of today’s Gospel.
First of
all Corpus Christi reminds us that
being Christian means coming together
to be in the Presence of the one Lord, and to
become one with him and in him. We gather
together in order to celebrate the Eucharist, and the culmination of our
gathering is communion.
In the Gospel, which is Eucharistic
through and through in language and imagery, Jesus spoke to the crowds about
the kingdom of God, and he healed those who needed to be cured, but as the day
was drawing to a close he gathered them
more intimately by having them sit down in groups of about 50 in order to
feed them: he “took the bread, blessed it, broke it and gave it” to over 5,000.
We come together every day to the Eucharist with our fragile identities, often
enough constructed over against each other. However, the Body and Blood of
Christ is not just received by us but transforms
our gathering so that we now corporately
share in the Lord’s own identity. The climax of the Eucharist, which we
call “Holy Communion,” is nothing less than our
homecoming to each other and to God. How is this so?
Looking back to the Last Supper, we know
what it means for Jesus to give his body to us in the form of bread. It is a gift totally given and completely
received. “Take this, all of you and eat it: this is my body which will be
given up for you.” Of course, we know that eating food is not primarily a matter
of ingesting nutrients, any more than speaking is just a question of making
noises. In every culture, except increasingly in our own, eating and drinking
is about sharing life and being at home with
one another.
Here is a simple but compelling
illustration of this. The French anthropologist Claude LĂ©vi-Strauss noticed
that in simple restaurants in the south of France where the workers ate
everyone sat at a common table. A bottle of wine was placed before each person, and
each began by pouring wine into the glass of
his neighbor. Claude LĂ©vi-Strauss observed: “No one has any more wine than
he did to begin with. But society (community) has appeared where there was none
before.”
Infinitely more so, the Body and Blood of
Christ is where we are at home with each
other in Christ. It brings about the greatest embodiment of our “gathering”
together: namely, communion with and in
Christ. There is no bond of human communion comparable to that effected by the
Eucharistic Body of Christ. It is called “the Sacrament of Unity.” BWhy? The Body of Christ is the bond which
unites us to him: eat it, or we will have no part in him. And Jesus gives us
his Blood, the blood of the new and eternal covenant, poured out for us as his total
self-gift: drink it, lest we despair of ourselves. Yes, his blood was shed
because of the human thirst for violence. But it is also the blood of birth.
For St. John, it was the moment when Jesus gives birth to a new community, the
Church. His side is opened by the soldier’s spear, and out pour water and
blood, the sacraments of the new community. St. John Chrysostom wrote, “It is
from his side, therefore, that Christ formed his church, just as he formed Eve
from the side of Adam….Have you seen how Christ united to himself his bride?
Have you seen with what food he nurtures us all? Just as a woman nurtures her
offspring with her own blood and milk, so also Christ continuously nurtures
with his own blood those whom he has begotten.”y participating in the
Eucharist, and by feeding on it, we are incorporated into a communion that does not admit divisions. This is
because the Christ present in our midst, in the sacramental signs of bread and
wine, requires that the power of love
exceed every laceration and, at the same time, become communion with the poor, support for the weak, and fraternal attention
to those who are struggling to carry the weight of everyday life—that refers
to us all!
Secondly, the Feast of Corpus Christi is distinguished by a procession. The procession became the feast’s most prominent feature and experientially represents walking with the Lord. Remember that in the Gospel Jesus feeds the crowds precisely so that they will have strength for the journey home. He himself is “food for the journey”—food for the journey Home. “Viaticum.” We have our “First Holy Communion,” and we have our last, which is traditionally called “Holy Viaticum.” We all need this sacramental food to sustain us on the journey, and not only at the end of life. Many of us can hardly move, or can barely trudge along, but through the gift of himself in the Eucharist, the Lord sets us free from our spiritual “paralysis,” helps us up, and enables us to proceed (i.e. to take a step forward, and then another, and then another), and thus he gives us strength through the nourishment of the Bread of Life…..The Corpus Christi procession, traditionally in many places a full-blown pageant, teaches us that the Eucharist seeks to free us from every kind of despondency and discouragement so that we can once again set out on the journey with the strength God gives us through Jesus Christ. Who can face the pilgrimage of life without God-with-us? Our procession is literally walking with the Lord. The Eucharist is the Sacrament of the God who does not leave us alone on the journey but stays at our side and shows us the way. Indeed, he made himself the “way” and came to walk together with us so that in our freedom we should also have the criterion we need to discern the right way and take it. Our Corpus Christi procession expresses in a solemn and public way the grace of the “ordinary, obscure and laborious” daily journey of our heart home to God.
And thirdly, our celebration of this Feast Day culminates in our kneeling before the Lord in adoration. Adoring the God of Jesus Christ, who out of love made himself bread, broken and given to us, is the most effective and radical remedy for whatever helplessness or separation from God we may experience along the way. Kneeling before the Eucharist is a profession of faith, of need, and of freedom: we prostrate ourselves before a God who first bent over us like the Good Samaritan to assist us and restore our life; like the Lord who first knelt before us to wash our dirty feet before giving himself to us as a covenantal food. Adoring the Body of Christ means believing that there, in that piece of Bread, Christ is really present and gives true sense to life: to the immense universe as well as to the smallest creature, to the whole of human history as well as to the briefest existence. Eucharistic Adoration is prayer in which we continue to be nourished by the Real Presence of Christ.
In conclusion, on this Feast of Corpus Christi our gathering, walking, and adoring together fills us with a special joy and grace. Even more, the Eucharist is an encounter of the heart when we recognize Presence through our own offered presence. In the Eucharist, we move beyond mere words or rational thought, and go to that place where we don’t talk about the Mystery anymore; we begin to chew on it. Jesus did not say, “Think about this,” or “Stare at this,” or even “Worship this.” Instead, he said, “Eat this!” We must keep eating and drinking the Mystery, until one day it dawns on us, in an undefended moment, “My God, I really am what I eat! I also become the Body of Christ.”
Photograph of the Abbey Corpus Christ procession by Father Emmanuel. Father Dominic's homily for the Solemnity.
Friday, June 17, 2022
Boredom?
Sunday, June 12, 2022
On Trinity Sunday
Today the One who cannot lie—the very one
who is “the Way and the Truth and the Life”—addresses us as his intimate
friends and makes us a solemn promise: I have much more to tell you, but you
cannot bear it now. But when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you
to all truth. As the source, foundation and final end of all lesser truths,
surely the Reality of God’s Triune Being as a mystery beyond words, but
embraced in faith and adored with love, is the deepest and most precious
revelation that the Holy Spirit makes to the Church and to humanity.
This Mystery of the Holy Trinity that we
celebrate today is eternally unfathomable, infinitely more so than the
magnificence of all universes, real or imagined. Yet this ineffability is
really no valid excuse for muteness, because mystery is the very spice of
celebration, and human celebration requires language, no matter how imperfect
and groping—rather like a blind person trying to describe the bright splendor
of the sun while only feeling its heat.
But we shouldn’t approach God’s Tri-Unity as
a head-splitting conundrum we must wrestle with once a year to make a dutiful
bow to dogma. If I have grasped anything in today’s readings it’s that the
Trinity is not a remote, abstract puzzle, forever frustrating my feeble
attempts at believing it. The triune God revealed to us in our Lord Jesus
Christ is not some abstract, mystifying construct but a perennial, personal Event
of life and joy, endlessly overflowing over all creation with grace, love,
compassion and transformative power. The God we believe in as Christians—the
Blissful Trinity—is, purely and simply, Eternal Life outpoured and perfectly
received.
Let’s first relish the following confession
of love that God’s Wisdom herself sings to the universe, lifting the veil on
God’s inner life: “The Lord possessed me, The beginning of his ways…I was [his]
delight day by day, Playing before him all the while, Playing on the surface of
his earth; And I found delight in the human race.
For God to be Trinity means that God
explodes with delight from within. Such delight requires mutuality of persons,
for it is delight at knowing and being known, delight at belonging to Another, delight
at the inability of having one’s own existence apart from that Other, delight
in never—for all eternity—having been absent from the life of the beloved
Other, delight that celebrates its freedom in a playful, unstoppable dance that
has as stage the whole enraptured cosmos and that thrills in abiding with the
blessed Two who are Persons other than Oneself. This explosive, world-creating energy
of delight wells up from the bosom of the Blessed Trinity like the most
powerful of geysers bursting forth from the heart of the earth.
What is good is “diffusive of itself”, says
St Thomas Aquinas, quoting Aristotle, I believe. God is too good, and therefore
too “diffusive” of himself—too exuberant and squandering of his Being—to keep
his secret delight to himself. The action of a divine self-outpouring is a
central biblical category already at work from the first verses of Genesis: In
the beginning God created the heavens and the earth…. And the Spirit of God was
moving over the face of the waters. And God said, ‘Let there be light.’
Each of these verbs—creating, moving and
saying—imply a dynamic outward movement on God’s part, beyond the sphere of his
own self-sufficient Being and into the void of nothingness, that he might pour
himself out into what is Not-God. Note the Trinitarian undertones present in
Scripture from the outset: God creates not out of a splendid isolation but with
the collaboration of “the Beginning (the ArchĂª)”—that is, the First Principle,
who says: I was beside him as his craftsman—and God sends out their common Ruach
(or Breath) to flutter lovingly like a mother-bird over the primal egg of
chaos, to incubate a beautiful, orderly cosmos. And when God says, Let there be
light, this implies his uttering his all-powerful Logos or Word as foundation
of the universe. The Father created all things in the Word through the
Spirit.
Every action of God is a self-outpouring of
divine life that in no way depletes the Being of God. This unending divine
action, however, does not first occur with regard to creation—that is, with
regard to ourselves and all other creatures—but within the interior life of God
himself. This is crucial. For, if God is to be love for us, he must first be
love within himself, and this implies eternal Relation, Mutuality, which in
turn requires radical difference of Persons within absolute unity of Being.
This is the meaning of Tri-unity. We have heard Wisdom affirm: From of old I
was poured forth, at the first, before the earth… I was brought forth while as
yet the earth and fields were not made, nor the first clods of the world.
Wisdom herself insists here that she was generated eternally, before the
creation.
God is love means, necessarily, then, that
God, already in himself and quite apart from creation, is Community of Persons,
since genuine love, whether in God or man, must circulate incessantly from Self
to Other and back.
The expansive throbbing of God’s triune
Heart can never quite contain itself because in God there are no “separate
egos”; from here flows the delight which is the primary quality of the utterly
free joy and in-joy-ment that blossom wherever Persons are in Love, are Love, beginning
in the depths of the Uncreated Godhead. The beaming forth of that primal,
triune Joy then provides the blissful pattern for all created love and
friendship. From the Trinity we learn that our own greatest joy should be to
fill someone else with life. Joy, in fact, may be said to be but another name
for God; for what is joy but the spark that jumps from heart to heart at the
sight of one another’s beauty? And where does this fire blaze more
magnificently than among the divine Persons?
Jesus says to his disciples, I have told
you this so that my joy may be in you and your joy may be complete. Here Jesus
is communicating to the disciples the essence of his being, which is his
relationship to Father and to Spirit—their triune Joy in one another as the
very substance of their common Life. My joy is Jesus’ superbly original name
for his relationship with his Begetter and their common Breath. And this
outpouring of Christ’s joy into our hearts reaches its culmination in the
intimate Pentecost of the Cenacle. There Jesus, eight days after his Resurrection,
breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit’. The Greek text
literally says that Jesus breathed [the Holy Spirit] into [them]. The unusual
verb enephĂ½sĂªsen (in English we could clumsily say insufflate) graphically
evokes mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, and this word in John 20:22 duplicates
down to the last accent mark the word we find in Genesis 2:7 concerning the
creation of Adam: The Lord God formed man of dust from the ground, and breathed
into (enephĂ½sĂªsen) his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living
being.
Thus, the ecclesial event in the Cenacle
amounts to nothing less than a re-creation and resurrection of the human race
in the person of the apostles. The Breath they receive from Jesus’ mouth is the
very Breath that sustains the life of the Three Divine Persons. All
post-Resurrection encounters with Jesus imply and effect the resurrection of
the apostles themselves. Jesus comes to transmit his own New Life to them, and
only in that context does he give them his final commands and their mission to
evangelize the world.
No wonder Christ immediately gives them the
power to forgive or to retain sins, clearly a divine prerogative, now shared
with weak and fallible human beings; but this enormity, which continually
scandalized the Pharisees when practiced even by Jesus himself, can be
explained only by the fact that Jesus, by this insufflation, is making the
apostles “partakers of the divine nature”. No wonder either that St Paul today
feels entitled to proclaim the astounding doctrine: We boast in hope of the
glory of God … because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts
through the Holy Spirit that has been given us!
What is, then, the practical conclusion we
ought to draw from the majestic mystery of the Most Holy Trinity, the central
article of our faith? I suggest the following: If we—as Trinitarian
communicators of life who have received the Holy Spirit into us—do not pour out
our lives in selfless service, infusing God’s Breath into the breathless and
loving them with God’s own creative Love, now active within us, then we will be
denying in practice what we proclaim in word and rite: namely, that the God who
indwells us, and whom we worship and glorify, is for us a revitalizing Trinity
of Persons.
But we should never forget that “selfless
service”, lovely though the idea sounds, can be learnt only with Our Lady at
the foot of the Cross: for it was from the Cross that the most palpable and
overwhelming divine self-outpouring of all occurred. On Golgotha, Jesus quite
literally emptied himself for our sake when one of the soldiers pierced his
side with a lance, and immediately blood and water flowed out.
In giving us Jesus, the Father has poured
out to us the Beloved of his heart and given us all things desirable along with
him. Our communion in Jesus’ Flesh and Blood will in a few moments fling open
for us the entryway into God’s ecstatic swirl of expansive delight. May we
allow the playful Wisdom of Father and Son come and delight in us, too, and
thoroughly possess us and so heal all our sadness with the Joy that is God.
Today's homily by Father Simeon.
Thursday, June 9, 2022
Reverence
will be liable to judgment,
and whoever says to his brother, Raqa,
will be answerable to the Sanhedrin,
and whoever says, 'You fool,' will be liable to fiery Gehenna. Mt 5
Tuesday, June 7, 2022
Light in the Cloister
With the assistance of local architects and contractors, monks designed and built our monastery in the 1950s. Their vision formed the architecture, and its beauty has continued to form succeeding generations of monks. We remain grateful for their care.
Sunday, June 5, 2022
On Pentecost Sunday
Our community could not exist
without the gift of the Holy Spirit. Only the Spirit of the Father and the Son
can make communion possible among us: "being of the same mind…united
in heart, thinking the same thing.” The Lord has called us to a special charism
in the Church: forty-five men of all ages and backgrounds, living and working
together day in and day out, without wives and children, at all hours of the
night and day in church, obedient to a Rule and an abbot – this charism is
impossible without the Holy Spirit. It is all too easy to see what happens in
the absence of the Spirit – community life dissolves, discipline is
non-existent, a monastery becomes a home for numerous groups of sarabites
whose law is to do whatever pleases them. Only the Holy Spirit can keep this
from happening.
That is why Our Lord’s appearance to
the disciples on Easter night is so important for us. It is the final act of
Jesus’ hour, St. John’s version of Pentecost, in which the Spirit is given to
the disciples to overcome fear and create communion. The Lord’s glorification
on the cross culminates in this pouring out of the Spirit on his first little
community. He continued to pour it out on our Fathers of Citeaux, and he does
the same for us today. The Spirit reminds us of our charism as a cenobitic,
Cistercian community. As the Father has loved the Son; as the Son has handed all
things over to the Father; as the Spirit continues this divine exchange among
us, so now the Spirit draws us into this ever-deepening communion of
self-emptying.
What else does Jesus reveal to us about our charism of communion? First of all, it is a grace that enables us to live in peace, even in the midst of the hardships and obscurity of Cistercian life. “Peace to you,” the Risen Lord says, breathing out his Spirit. The Spirit casts out that false peace that the world gives and which the prophet speaks about, “‘Peace, peace,’ they say when there is no peace.” The Spirit convicts the world – and us – when we give a false peace, but he gives the fruit of righteousness to those who sow and cultivate true peace. We are to cultivate this peace by laying down our lives for our brothers.
Jesus then showed the disciples his
hands and his side. In this gesture the Spirit is reminding us of our special
calling to contemplate the Lord’s mission. Everything else must be at the
service of this. He labored with his hands and only completed his labors when
his hands were nailed to a tree. He bore within his heart his undying adherence
to his Father’s will until that heart was pierced for us so that his
faithfulness could be poured out on us. In our own humble way in the daily
tasks of our common life, we are to allow the Spirit to use our hands and our
heart to build communion.
Finally, Jesus says, “As the Father
has sent me, so I send you.” Our charism includes being sent forth as Jesus
was. The Spirit drove Jesus into the desert for forty days. He has sent us as a
community into the desert for a lifetime. It can feel like a wasteland of
howling desert where acedia abounds, where demons prowl, “Until the spirit from
on high is poured out on us. And the wilderness becomes a garden land and the
garden land is deemed a forest.” Jesus sends us out where the Spirit can
complete his work of purification and sanctification. The silence and solitude
of the desert is meant to become the home of men and angels for the sake of the
whole Church and mankind.
How earnestly we must thank God for the gift of the Spirit! Just as the disciples without the Spirit were unable to set out and proclaim God’s communion with humankind, so we could never persevere in our common life without the breath of the Spirit. Come, O Holy Spirit, and fill the hearts of this community, and enkindle in us the fire of your love.
Thursday, June 2, 2022
Enkindle
visit the minds of your children,
and fill the hearts you have made,
living spring, and fire, love,
and spiritual anointing.
infuse your life in our hearts;
strengthen our bodies’ weakness
by your never-failing might.
and grant peace without end,
that with you to lead us on,
to know the Father, also the Son;
may we ever believe in you,
Amen.
Learning to Find Christ
Ever since Jesus’ return to the Father at
the Ascension we are now enabled to encounter, love, and minister to Jesus in
every human being, and this not as a fragment of our mystical imagination but
as a concrete existential fact and an act of obedience to Jesus’ own
commandments!
Jesus’ going to the Father, and our gladly letting him go to the One who begot him, is what enacts Jesus’ Real Presence in every member of humanity and makes him accessible to us at every turn. The mystery of Christ’s Ascension results in the harmonious merging of the two previously distinct commandments of love of God and love of neighbor, so that they, in practice, become but a single commandment. At the Ascension, Jesus of Nazareth becomes the universal, cosmic Christ. What an extraordinary explosion of love!
This explosion of love, this drowning of the whole cosmos in the tumultuous ocean of divine love by the re-creating action of the Divine Spirit, has very concrete consequences in our way of life…Inspired by our good Master’s teachings and example, should we not strive to practice habitually a hermeneutic of reconciliation, which seeks to find all possible common ground with the other, and never doubts the indestructible and always redeemable goodness of all God has created? To seek God’s dynamic grace as always at work in the souls of those we may be tempted to dislike or even to despise, naturally speaking: this is the concrete way to live out, day by day, encounter by encounter, the Paschal Mystery of Christ.
Consider the way in which St Paul earnestly pleaded with the contentious Christians of Corinth: God has given us the ministry of reconciliation. So, we are ambassadors for Christ, as if God were appealing through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God (2 Cor 5:18-21). The Reconciled must become the Reconcilers, or else they are living in flagrant hypocrisy. Only the assiduous practice of agĂ¡pe-love can make us ambassadors for Christ. Only a reconciling love shifts our viewpoint radically so that it merges with God’s own. Only putting the good of others before our own good confers on our soul a new manner of vision like Christ’s, capable of seeing the invisible. This vision fills us, in turn, with divine life: In a little while the world will no longer see me, but you will see me; because I live you also will live (Jn 14:19). By ‘the world’ Jesus here designates those who cannot see past their own noses.
We should strive to seek Jesus, then, where
he truly is, where he has chosen to be, where he wants us to find him, that is:
in his Word heard in the Liturgy, lectio, and silent prayer; in the Eucharist and
in the community that celebrates it; and not least in the men, women, and
children of this world, with each of whom Jesus has intimately identified
himself. If we learn to find Christ in these privileged places of his presence,
then we will also know how to find him authentically in the silence and solitude
of our hearts. The Jesus of the monk’s heart, of any Christian’s heart, will never
be a private, comfortable Jesus bringing personal consolation to a select few.
The Jesus of the Christian heart is total, cosmic Christ, the risen Lord of all,
Head of his Body the Church, and of all suffering humanity.
How does Jesus—who is Truth and Love and
Life incarnate—give himself to us? Where is he to be found without fail? He is
now to be found precisely where he chose to take up mystical residence at the
Ascension: namely, in the Word and Eucharist, we receive and in the members of
his humanity, in whom he offers himself to our selfless love. Of the offered
bread and wine on the altar, the King of glory astoundingly declares: This is
my Body, this is my Blood. And of all our brothers and sisters he declares no
less astoundingly: Truly I say to you, whatever you did to one of the least of
these, you did to me (Mt 25:45).
This is what the universal circulation of
God’s love has accomplished through the Risen Jesus: His Body in the Eucharist,
inseparable from his Body in humankind; ourselves invited to revere and serve
both Real Presences and thus attain the indestructible bliss of God
himself. These palpable Presences of Jesus contain the whole Easter Mystery and
powerfully fuel our whole life of faith. Jesus’ manner of presence to us after
the Resurrection has forever changed the nature of our relationship with God and
with one another. May its irresistible force transform us and make us alive with
God’s embodied glory!
Photograph by Brother Brian. Excerpts from a homily by Father Simeon.