Saturday, August 20, 2022

Saint Bernard's Day

 

Pope Francis recently published an apostolic letter on the liturgy entitled Desiderio desideravi. This morning I’d like to look at how St. Bernard might help us to appropriate the teaching in this letter. The title comes from the first two words from Jesus' words to his disciples at the opening of the scene of the Last Supper in Luke’s Gospel: “I have earnestly desired (Desiderio desideravi) to eat this Passover with you before I suffer.” 

These words of Jesus, the Holy Father says, are a “crevice through which we can intuit the depth of the love of the persons of the Holy Trinity have for us.” Our response, which he repeats twice in this opening section, is “surprise.” Surprise at the gift of the supper despite the infinite disproportion between its immensity and smallness of the one who receives it, and surprise at the love of the persons of the Trinity for us, expressed by Jesus burning and infinite desire to eat the Passover with the disciples, and through it to re-establish communion with us, a desire, he says, that “will not be satisfied until every man and woman…shall have eaten his Body and drunk his Blood.”

For our part, “the possible response – which is also the most demanding asceticism – is, as always, that surrender to this love, that letting ourselves be drawn by him.”

For the Holy Father, “all the powerful beauty of the liturgy” lies in the fact that the liturgy guarantees for us the possibility of a true encounter with the living Lord and of having the power of his Paschal Mystery reach us.

The Holy Father says that with this letter of his he “simply want[s] to invite the whole Church to rediscover, to safeguard, and to live the truth and power of the Christian celebration.” Later he formulates it this way: “How can we grow in our capacity to live in full the liturgical action? How can we continue to let ourselves be amazed at what happens in the celebration under our very eyes?”

The Liturgy, he says, is an antidote to what he calls “the poison of spiritual worldliness”, but for the antidote to be effective, the beauty of the truth of the Christian celebration must be rediscovered daily. This means maintaining a disposition of astonishment before the paschal mystery, if this astonishment were lacking “we would truly risk being impermeable to the ocean of grace that floods every celebration.”

To start, I asked myself what form this astonishment might take in Saint Bernard. In my opinion, we have a good example of it in his Sermon on the Assumption which was read at the Second Nocturn at Vigils on Monday. First, it catches us up beyond ourselves in joy and praise: This “glorious festival” “when the nature of man is elevated in the Virgin to solitary eminence…is a time when all flesh should shout for joy…” It is a response to a mystery perceived but that lies beyond words: “neither my barren mind can conceive nor my unpolished tongue express anything worthy of so grand a theme.” So great a wonder can only bring forth admiration in the form of a question: “Who is she that comes up from the desert flowing with delights?” Astonishment can only pile up attributes and images: “loveliness of humility”, “‘dropping honeycomb’ of divine charity”, “seat of mercy”, “fulness of heavenly grace”, “prerogative of singular glory”, “Queen of the universe”, “lovely and sweet in her delights…even to the holy angels.” When it tries to express what it has seen, it finds itself taking refuge in irreducible polarities and paradoxes that remain suspended and unresolved except in the mystery of divine revelation: for, in a unique way, we find in Mary a “virginal fecundity, or should I call it a fecund virginity?”

But there is no resting in astonishment, nor is Bernard interested first of all in speculation, but in action. “Therefore,” he says, “my dearest brethren, let us run with thirsting souls to this fountain of mercy, let our misery have recourse with all the eagerness of desire to this treasury of compassion.” From here flows a missionary impulse, the desire to share with others the grace received: “I beseech you, let it be the concern of your loving-kindness to make known to the whole world the grace you have found with God, by obtaining through your holy prayers pardon for the guilty, health for the sick, courage for the timid.”

In this short excerpt from one of Bernard’s sermons, we find in the flight of the “thirsting soul” the three pillars of the Bernardine path to God: humility, charity, and contemplation. In this simple but profound pattern, I believe Bernard shows us the way to the answer to the Holy Father’s questions: “How can we grow in our capacity to live in full the liturgical action? How can we continue to let ourselves be amazed at what happens in the celebration under our very eyes?” Because Bernard offers us a path of encounter.

In his “Steps of Humility and Pride,” Bernard says that there are three degrees in the perception of truth. “We must look for truth in ourselves (humility); in our neighbors (charity); in itself (contemplation). We look for truth in ourselves when we judge ourselves; in our neighbors when we have sympathy for their sufferings; in itself, when we contemplate it with a clean heart.” Bernard justifies the order and the number of these degrees by their place in the order of the Beatitudes. For there, he says, “the merciful are spoken of before the clean of heart”, and “the meek are spoken of before the merciful:” meekness, mercy, a clean heart; these three.

“The merciful quickly grasp the truth in their neighbors when their heart goes out to them with a love that unites them so closely that they feel their neighbor’s good and ill as if it were their own.” “For just as pure truth is seen only by the pure of heart, so also a brother’s miseries are truly experienced only by one who has misery in his own heart. You will never have real mercy for the failings of another, he insists, until you know and realize that you have the same failings in your own soul. Our Savior has given us the example. He willed to suffer so that he might know compassion; to learn mercy he shared our misery…” “…pay attention, then, to what you are, Bernard admonishes us, because you are truly full of misery;” that is, in need of mercy, of salvation.

“If you have eyes for the shortcomings of your neighbor and not for your own, no feeling of mercy will arise in you but rather indignation…” We all know that experience, I think. We will lack what St. Paul calls the “spirit of gentleness”, which is not some contrived mannerism assumed at will, but the fruit of the formation of our character, that wells up from within, as connatural to us. “When a man has seen the truth about himself, or better, when he has seen himself in truth”, that is in the light of Christ, he will come to what Bernard calls a “deep heart”. The ideal to be reached is “perfect humility”, which I attain when I am “not…ashamed to confess the known truth about myself.”

Souls in this state “hunger and thirst after justice” and are “anxious to exact from themselves full satisfaction and real amendment.” From justice, they fly to mercy, by the road Truth himself shows them: “Blessed are the merciful for they have obtained mercy.” “They look beyond their own needs to the needs of their neighbors and from the things they themselves have suffered they learn compassion…”

We are called to persevere in these three things: sorrow of repentance, desire for justice, and works of mercy. In these three our hearts are cleansed by grace and prepared for the highest possible gift: union of will with God; by the grace of the Spirit, to be made one spirit with God. Ultimately, those who persevere receive what Bernard calls a “simple eye”, the fulfillment of the promise made in the beatitude: “Blessed are the pure of heart for they shall see God.” In the purity of truth, these souls are swept up to the sight of things invisible. With this rapture, then, we have come full circle. Astonishment shows itself to be not just the beginning but ultimate, and the abiding reality for those with eyes to see.

Here we have, brothers, the fitting response to the love that loved us first, what the Holy Father called that “most demanding asceticism,” that is, “the surrender to his love, that letting ourselves be drawn by him,” who in this “today” of salvation, earnestly desires to share this sacred banquet with us, which he himself has prepared for us, that we may accept the gift of his body and blood and so become one body with him. Let us then partake of this gift.

Apparition of the Virgin to Saint Bernard, Filippino Lippi, 1485-1487, oil on panel, 83 x 77 in., Badia, Florence. Today's homily by Father Timothy.