Holy Cross Monastery, West Park, NY
Br. Aidan Owen, OHC
The Feast of St. Benedict- Wednesday, July 11, 2018
To see the sermon in its fullness click here.
What do you desire?
To see the sermon in its fullness click here.
Br. Aidan Owen, OHC |
That is the first question when you’re received as a postulant into a monastic community, and again when you receive the habit as a novice, and again when you make the three-fold Benedictine vow of obedience, stability, and conversion of life to the monastic way.
I do understand the impulse to defeat and vanquish evil. But such violent impulses are a part of evil’s grip on us. Although we can and must resist evil, we can never destroy it. Such is not within our power. Rather, we are called to bear witness to the one who can heal and integrate evil, to the one who can break evil open, and turn even the stoniest heart to flesh. We are called to point the way, through our own fleshy hearts, to the one who can transform and convert evil into good, so that, at the end, even Lucifer will bear God’s light again.
This question of desire drives the Benedictine Way, and, indeed the Christian Way. In his Rule for monks, Benedict gives a very simple and a very challenging answer: prefer nothing whatever to Christ.
You see, Benedict knew that, contrary to the image of monasticism in popular culture as a dour and serious life, the monastic life is really a love affair. For fifteen hundred years Benedict’s rule has provided a structure and context for pursuing the deepest longing of the heart for wholeness and unity in God. The Christian mystical tradition calls this search the pursuit of “purity of heart,” though we might more accurately describe it as “unity of heart,” which is to say the uniting of our entire being—body, mind, spirit, heart-centered in love on the one who is Love itself.
Monastic communities have always been spacious places in a crowded world. That space was certainly what drew me to Benedictine life. My whole life I had been driven by a longing so deep and powerful I couldn’t find a name for it. This longing was a burning secret at the center of my life. And every context in which I found myself was simply too small to hold it, or to hold me.
When I came to Holy Cross, where I’m now a monk, my intuition told me that I had finally found a place with enough space for that longing. It was certainly one of the few places I’d found where people nodded their heads knowingly when I mentioned this deep desire without a name.
I remember Andrew, in particular, an old Scottish monk with a wicked sense of humor, who would sit with me on my visits. He looked me right in the eyes, looked deep into my heart as only those who have lived the life of faith for decades can do, and he said, “I love you.” And as the tears streamed down my face, he said, in voice that understood, “Yes, it hurts to be loved.”
It does hurt to be loved. And it also hurts to love. Which is probably one reason so many of us avoid loving as fully, deeply, and freely as Jesus calls us to do. In this world that is so often small-minded, bitter, and violent—and increasingly so—we harden our hearts to keep them from breaking. But it is only the broken heart that has enough space to love as we ought. And it is only by breaking that our hearts turn from stone to flesh.
Monastic life participates, right here and now, in eternity. That is the secret to its spaciousness. In the hallowing of the everyday, Benedict’s rule points toward the holiness of the incarnate life in which, as he points out, the tools of the kitchen or the garden are as precious as the vessels of the altar. With eternity as its context, there is enough space for the whole of one’s life to emerge.
How different that process is from the process of education, identity-building, and success in contemporary society and even in the Church today. In Benedictine life, you don’t “become someone.” You don’t “make it.” Instead, over a lifetime, you surrender to God’s desire to stitch back together the fragments of your life, so that, what once seemed maimed, ugly, or shameful becomes, through the persistent and loving movement of God, beautiful, whole, and holy.
The Benedictine vision of the Christian life, in fact, asserts that it is precisely these parts of ourselves we would most like to deny that is the gateway to wholeness. We are not to jettison the shameful inner fragments, nor to exile or erase them as if we ever could. No, we are to allow God, in the context of our community life, to heal and transform those parts so that even they carry nourishing blood throughout the body.
If this movement toward wholeness is true on the individual level, how much truer it is for the community. For Benedictines, salvation is never individual. It is always communal. Each member of the monastic community is essential to the health of the whole body, each has his unique contribution to make. When a brother or sister is in need of a physician, the community provides one, which may include disciplinary action, but always with the goal not of punishing or shaming but of healing, transforming, and integrating that brother or sister back into the body of the community, where their flourishing is our flourishing.
None of us can or will be saved in isolation. It’s all of us or none of us. Because love is never finally satisfied. As any monk will tell you, the more your desire is fulfilled, the deeper that desire gets. It has no limit, because, ultimately, our desire is to be in total union with one who made and sustains us, the one whose Love is our true name and our true nature.
The more I live the monastic and the Christian life, the more fully I am convinced that no one and nothing is beyond this love. And that no matter how dark the times in which we live, God is still working, through each of us, to break the world’s heart open so that it can become a heart of flesh.
This is a challenging vision in the times in which we live. The forces of evil swirl around us and seem to tighten rather than loosen their hold. And yet, even—especially—when evil seems strongest, we are called all the more to allow our own hearts to break open, and to love without reservation.
As James Stephens so beautifully puts it in his poem “The Fullness of Time,”
There is nothing and no one who does not, ultimately, belong to God. There is no part of us, individually or collectively, that is beyond the reach of God’s healing and reconciling love. And if we follow the deep desires of our heart, if we prefer nothing whatever to Christ and allow Christ’s love to break and fill our hearts, who knows what kind of spacious sanctuary we may become?On a rusty iron thronePast the furthest star of spaceI saw Satan sit alone,Old and haggard was his face;For his work was done and heRested in eternity.And to him from out the sunCame his father and his friendSaying, now the work is doneEnmity is at an end:And he guided Satan toParadises that he knew.Gabriel without a frown,Uriel without a spear,Raphael came singing downWelcoming their ancient peer,And they seated him besideOne who had been crucified.
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