Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Saint Benedict

What exactly is it that we celebrate on today’s solemnity of Our Holy Father Benedict? It seems to me that, in honoring the Patriarch of Western monasticism liturgically, we are not memorializing the existence of monastic life as such, or even the Holy Rule that came from his pen. Rather, I’d say we’re celebrating the source of the Rule and of the way of life it teaches. This source can be nothing other than St Benedict’s personal holiness—that is, the heroic struggles and perseverance in love that mark his life through his fidelity to grace. Without such holiness, offered by God and embraced by St Benedict, the Rule by which we Cistercian monks have vowed to live could never have come into existence.  

In today’s gospel, the Lord Jesus assures us: You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit should abide. For us who are consecrated to live monastic life in this abbey, our response to the call of Jesus is inseparable from St Benedict’s paternity of us through the Rule, and from our sharing consequently in the particular graces of his holiness. So I would like to point out one glaring feature that all three of today’s readings have in common, something that can perhaps help us better understand the kind of relationship we ought to cultivate with St Benedict in living out our Benedictine-Cistercian vocation.  

This striking feature is the fact that, in each selection from Scripture, we hear the voice of a wise speaker imparting spiritual instruction. In the first reading, it is Solomon; in the second, St Paul addresses his beloved “saints”, the members of the church at Corinth; and in the gospel, the Lord Jesus converses intimately with his disciples at the Last Supper. In each case we sense the existence of a strong bond between the wise teacher and those he addresses, a bond that deserves to be called paternal. The ardor, kindness, firmness and serenity of each seasoned elder are clear signs that he is speaking out of a deep love, and thus endeavoring to generate new life in those with whom he is sharing the most precious treasure of his heart. In the case of Jesus, this treasure is nothing less than his eternal relationship with the Father.

The communication of divine wisdom, these readings show, can happen only in the context of an I-Thou dialogue, where heart can speak freely to heart. We, too, have to come alive to the truths the Rule contains, engaging the heart of Benedict that birthed.  Casual indifference and neglect can turn the Rule from an easy and life-giving yoke into a cumbersome dead and deadening letter—that is, if we refuse in practice to enter into a promising I-Thou exchange with its author.

In other words, an attitude of docile receptivity as we listen to the master’s words is of the essence in this dialogue, and the disciple can be receptive only when motivated by an absolute trust that his elder is speaking with love and on the basis of what he has himself long lived, struggled with, and made his own. The wisdom that passes from master to disciple is no abstract doctrine, but the fruit of the lived experience of God. Joy in God, in the truth, in fullness of life, in filial communion, is the result of the willingness of the elder to generate new life, to open up to another the heart of his experience so as to allow the torrent of God’s love that dwells there to pass over into a beloved spiritual son. To my mind, such is the meaning of the first verse of the Holy Rule: “Listen, O my son, to the teachings of your master, and turn to them with the ear of your heart. Willingly accept the advice of a devoted father and put it into action.”

While ultimately a mere, humble pedagogue when compared to Christ, Benedict, along our way to Christ, must at times speak to us like both a teacher and a father, as he does here, but only vicariously, by way diaconal representation. No one is more aware than St Benedict that, in fact, the race of Adam and Eve has only one Father, from whom every fatherhood, in heaven or on earth, takes its name (Eph 3:14-15, NJB). For me the most moving aspect of the Rule is St Benedict’s pedagogical desire to introduce us, his filial charges, to the paradise of life and joy he has himself discovered by living in a monastery in obedience to God and in communion with the brothers. To this paradise of life and joy Benedict gives the more sober name of school of the Lord’s service.

Still within this context of life-giving dialogue, you may have noticed that each of our readings abounds in conditional if-clauses, such as Solomon’s if you receive my words, Paul’s if I deliver up my body to be burned, and especially Jesus’ if you keep my commandments. The hard-hitting meaning of all these conditional clauses is that the goodness, generosity and love of the teacher, in order to have their intended effect, must be reciprocated by his hearer, love for love. The disciple’s humble and entreating eagerness to listen and learn, his attitude of deep receptivity, is the essential first step, but it is not enough; only the learner’s desire to obey the instructions and commands he has been privileged to receive can move his will to put the received wisdom into practice.

Paternal, generative love has been the motor force impelling the elder to teach, and the corollary it elicits—obedient, filial love—must now drive the disciple’s response to incarnate creatively in his life the truths he has received. In the process of spiritual rebirth, we must actively want to be regenerated and must cooperate intensely in the shaping of our own new life. Nothing here happens to us automatically, for grace is highly personal and intensely engaging. Otherwise, the attempted regeneration, even when it is God attempting it, will result in sad fetal miscarriage. By our non-responsiveness we can tie up the hands even of an omnipotent and loving God, for love cannot be imposed. To love is to respond with glad freedom, to surrender to the Beloved with mirth.

In today’s second reading, St Paul sings his famous Hymn to Divine Charity, in which he exposes the tragic vacuity of apparently religious actions that do not have love as their real driving force: If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, and so forth. No matter how well one has learned one’s theology and how impressively one has performed even heroic-seeming religious deeds (which surely include every aspect of monastic observance and, in fact, monastic life itself!), if supernatural charity is not the fire fueling those actions and observances, then the Christian monk is nothing but a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. This is why St Benedict declares, with unusual absoluteness, that one of the indispensable “Instruments of Good Works” is To prefer nothing to the love of Christ (RB 4).

Yet, transcending even this extraordinary hymn, today’s gospel not only speaks about and exalts divine love but actually brings us into the very presence of Love incarnate by ushering us into the presence of Jesus, the personal and living Wisdom of the Father. This passage of John’s Gospel initiates us into the mystical dimension of Love. Here, Jesus invites us to abide in himself as he abides in his Father. Ultimately, we would have to speak with Bishop Barron of Eucharistic coinherence. Indeed, the chief benefit of the Incarnation is that, in Christ, we encounter God himself without further need for intermediaries. Thus, Benedict is for us an intermediary only in the sense of being, again, the wise and humble pedagogue who brings us by the hand of his expert instruction to the very threshold of the place where we may behold with joy God’s radiance on the Face of Jesus, our only Master, and partake of his life in the Father.

As pedagogue, the great Patriarch makes himself one of us and cheers us on, saying: “As we progress in the monastic life and in faith, our hearts will swell with the unspeakable sweetness of love, enabling us to race along the way of God’s commandments” (Prologue). Through all his prescriptions, Benedict’s sole goal is to bring us, along with himself, to Christ, knowing that only the radiant Christ Jesus, the one Mediator between God and men (1 Tim 2.5), can say to us: Abide in my love … that your joy may be full. But here, too, a non-negotiable condition is indispensable: Are we willing to pay the cost in self-oblation required for abiding in Christ’s love, which Jesus himself defines as the willingness to lay down one’s life for one’s friends?

Somewhere during this meditation I was struck by the realization that, in each of the readings, we hear only one side of the dialogue—that of the wise speaker who shares his wisdom with us. In the case of Jesus, Wisdom incarnate shares with us the very substance of his own life as Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, desiring us to enter into permanent intimate communion with himself. This one-sidedness in the form of the readings must mean that we disciples must, in the end, complete the dialogue by inscribing our part not in words written in ink but with the honey and the blood of our anonymous lives as Christian monks, known to God alone.

In his Prologue, St Benedict comments on some words of Jesus he has just quoted. He remarks: “Having finished his discourse, the Lord waits for us to respond by action every day to his holy warnings.” How lovely to see in this exhortation the fact that the great Patriarch, even while legislating, actually includes himself among his questing disciples by use of the inclusive, communal we. This is a decisive and specifically Christian trait, I think: I mean envisioning the abbot not only as a paterfamilias but, in the end, as simply another conservus Christi—just one more fellow servant among the servants of Christ (sýndouloi: Mt 18:28-29; Col 1:7, 4:7; Rev 19:10, 22:9). Such a staggering reversal in outlook and self-presentation could never have originated in Benedict’s Roman social background, in which the role of paterfamilias was all-determining, massively solid, unyielding. Yet here and often in the Rule, the dignified and bearded Patriarch presents himself to us not only as a humble pedagogue or “nanny” but even, like Jesus, “wearing an apron”, as it were, and ready to serve his brothers (cf Jn 13:4-5).

Let us then, my brothers, give thanks for the privilege of being here today celebrating God’s gift to the Church of St Benedict’s fruitful apostolic holiness, and let us not keep our Lord waiting—at least not for too long!—but gladly respond to this gift by bearing abundant fruit from the seed Our Holy Father Benedict has sown in us by divine dispensation.

Detail of a fresco by Fra Angelico, San Maro, Florence, 1441. Today's homily by Father Simeon.