Saint Andrew Dung Lac and Companions: Divine consolation, peace, and the absence of suffering can sometimes be more difficult to bear that their opposites. As monks, we have grown so accustomed to associate virtue and following Christ with self-denial, deprivation, and hardship, that comfort, ease, and relaxation are suspect. Thus, wars, insurrections, famines, and earthquakes […]
All Saints of the Benedictine Family
The radical and literal laying down of one’s life for one’s friends is generally an exception in the life of most Christians and monks. However, this does not mean that this noble deed is without relevance in our ordinary daily lives. Every time we resist our selfish inclinations or don’t satisfy our self-centered wishes and […]
Saturday of the 31st Week
For the monk, detachment is another word for inner freedom. One of the paths to this detachment is asceticism. A common pitfall, however, is inadvertently reinforcing our sinful self-will with our ascetic practices. More than one novice has clung to his self-will by resisting the novicemaster’s efforts to curb his overzealous asceticism. A safer and […]
Friday of the 30th Week
Several authors in our present refectory book have alluded to the idea that human beings are what might be termed destructive intruders into nature’s harmony and that the earth would probably be a whole lot better off without us! Similarly, Christianity (in the view of some) is directly implicated in the misuse and exploitation of […]
Friday of the 29th Week
As more than one wise person has insisted, peace is about more than the absence of war or conflict. True peace is, among other things, inseparable from unity, that fruit of self-forgetting love. Living life detached and separated from one another may obviate conflict and engender a pseudo-peace, but this is usually little more than […]
Friday of the 28th Week
Dualism, that old and recurring heresy that would pit the body against the soul—seeing the former as evil and the latter good—would seem to find support in Jesus insisting that we are not to fear those who kill the body, but after that can do no more. For, this could be made to imply that […]
Saturday of the 26th Week
In the process of growing to adulthood, some people are blessed with never losing their spiritual childlikeness. Those who do lose it, will need to regain it. This seems to have happened with Job who at the end of his long ordeal proclaims: I have dealt with things I do not understand, which I cannot […]
Saint Michael and All the Angels
Various authors in our present refectory book have been approaching the complex issue of the interaction between time and eternity. Although, as Christians, we regularly speak of the end of time, this does not necessarily mean that time will cease—unless, of course, God were to allow his wondrous creation to slip back into nothingness. How […]
Memorial of Saints Cornelius and Cyprian
The glorious light emanating from the face of the transfigured Christ on Mount Tabor or the radiant countenance of Moses after descending Mount Sinai, intimate either divinity or divinization. So too, the sanctity of saints has sometimes been manifested by a similar ethereal light radiating from within them. When we think of divinization we can […]
Friday of the 21st Week: Memorial of Saint Augustine
On this feast day of Saint Augustine, we have an interesting interpretation of today’s parable about the wise and foolish virgins which I share for your personal reflection. Quoting Galatians Saint Augustine begins: So if a person thinks he is something when he is nothing, he is deceiving himself; but let each one prove his […]