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24 March 2014

When the Well is Dry

3/20/2014
 
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Within an hour, this bulletin must be finished. Nothing has come to mind to write as a mediation. What does one do when the well is dry? One returns to the Source of all that exists.

LORD God Almighty, God of Abraham, Moses, and the prophets, God of Jesus Christ, the Apostles, and the host of saintly people through the ages, In You all begins, each being has its origin; and in You we all have our End without end: Help each of us to honor You more generously with our lives than with our lips, To revere You in our hearts, and in the heart of our neighbor, and in every creature: Help each of us to love You not only as You are, but also in all whom You love, including in the man, woman, child who is hurting, who needs some support.

LORD God, as you came to the rescue of your people enslaved in Egypt, move us to have hearts of compassion, and hands to take action to help relieve the sufferings of others. Surely You in your infinite goodness are drawn to suffer in and with those who suffer; help us to do likewise, as we draw on your strength and compassion. Inspire us, LORD, to suffer with and for one another, that we may truly be your people.

As we continue on our Lenten journey towards Easter, As we continue on our life-long journey home to You, Eternal One, forgive, cleanse, and heal our defections, our sins, our betrayals of Your will and justice; and strengthen our will to do good, to reject evil, and to overcome evils with good. Strengthen us, LORD, with the Life and Love by which you conquered sin and death, and set us free from slavery to ourselves that we may serve You in deed and in truth.

LORD, what can I possibly say or do to be a source of blessing to your people? Keep me from betraying You, from hurting any of them, from betraying their trust. With St. Francis, LORD, make me, make each of us, a channel of your peace, a vessel of your holiness, a conduit of blessings You pour into your people.

To You, eternal Father, only-begotten God, and Holy Spirit, be honor and obedience now and into the timeless age of eternity.  Amen.

08 March 2014

Some Thoughts As We Begin Lent

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    Lent for you will mainly be what you choose and work to make of it. Simply going through a liturgical season, without active involvement, without thoughts and choices and actions on your part, will do very little for your spiritual life. If you wish to grow in grace, to become more truly a disciple of Jesus Christ, then you must “change your ways,” and undergo real disciplines of body and mind. Is there one of us in our parishes who is truly ready to meet the LORD “face to face”? Well, we stand warned in the Scriptures: “Now is the acceptable time, now is the day of salvation.” Repentance—understood as a real change of life—is something that you and I must do here and now.  

    There is an old Latin saying, “Look to the end.” Before undertaking a task, know your goal, be aware of what you are aiming for, or else your actions will be more or less random, haphazard. As we begin Lent, there are two ends which we need to keep in mind: the end of the “journey of Lent,” which is Easter; and the end of the “journey of Life,” which is union with God beyond death. The second end is the greater, and the end that a spiritually alive, healthy human being must keep in mind daily: “Prepare to meet your God.”  As Lent unfolds, we need to keep in mind these two ends: that the liturgies and Scriptures are moving us towards a joyful celebration of Easter, “with heart and mind renewed.” And we must keep in mind why we must change, why we willingly undergo “the discipline of Lent.” We deny ourselves some food, drink, rest, entertainment, shopping, and so on, in order to give more thought for our final end. God is drawing us day by day to the Easter that has no end, to Life beyond the flow and ebb of time, into the eternal Now. God is not drawing us primarily to liturgical celebrations and religious practices, but to Himself. Each of us needs to be mindful of this ultimate End.

    As Lent begins, each of us would do well to ask ourselves a few questions in the silence of our hearts: Why am I here? Why do I exist? What is the meaning of my life? How well am I truly living a life of faith and love of God? Do I show my discipleship of Jesus Christ by how I am
    living? What do I need to change, in order to become more like Christ, or at least a more noble, self-giving disciple? How is the grace of God being offered to me today? What is God’s grace, and how does one worthily receive it? What is God asking of me that I should not put off? Am I really engaged in a process of conversion, or do I secretly think that I have “arrived,” that I am “part of the church” and therefore beyond God’s demand to change my ways?  

    Given our common liturgical practices during Lent, each of us could ask ourselves a few more pointed questions: Do I take time to read over the Scriptures at Mass before they are read, and before the homily? Do I make a real effort to think about what was read and preached at Mass, or do I let the teachings “go in one ear and out the other”?  Do I try to come into church before the celebration begins, to quiet myself, and prepare to enter into Christ’s Word and Sacrifice more wholeheartedly? Do I really renounce my sinful ways, and ask for divine correction? Or am I just going through the motions of being a “good Catholic”? 

02 March 2014

Notes on what to do with the remainder of my life here


Three points by way of introduction: First, I have never been one to try to plan my future in any detailed way. Second, my mind has often been focused toward “future” beyond space-time, toward eternity. Third, if I did not see value in some rational planning for future time here, I would not bother with this exercise.

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                                The ultimate goal and life “here”

What follows is not a plan, but at best, a prelude to a plan. I have not given sufficient thought about “what to do” in time remaining to me here. It seems true that I have never been one to try to plan out my life in advance, and surely not in details. At best I have tried to consider what I will be doing in the next year or two. In a life with so many changes, many of which have come without human willing or forethought, rational planning has seemed all but impossible to me. Despite this pattern, however, I shall attempt, in coming weeks, to give some coherent thought about “what to do” in time remaining to me. 

As for time and eternity: Historically, in centuries saturated with Christian experience and thought, “future” meant primarily non-time beyond death, not coming temporal years. That conception changed radically in the period we call “modernity,” from roughly the 17th century to the present.  Now, “future” is usually understood to mean “here on earth,” or even somewhere in “outer space,” but not—for most people, most of the time—life beyond death. Since my youth (late teens), I have been far more focused on what St. Ignatius of Antioch plainly called “getting to God” than in building up my life and future in this passing world. Had I not repeatedly chosen to spend my mental and spiritual efforts in the “search for God” according to the philosophical and Christian traditions, I would have sought more lucrative employment, found a suitable wife, raised a family, and worked hard to acquire a degree of “security” and “empowerment” for life in this world. Obviously, I have taken a different path.

Having been able to keep no salary until about age 50, I have had to spend considerable time investing to provide for my eventual retirement, as I chose not to aim at returning to St. Anselm’s Abbey, but to be independent “in the world.” Such financial planning is not the issue here, as saving and investing money is a means to an end, not the end sought. Investing is for the sake of independence and “empowerment” (as Jeanie recently wrote) to accomplish one’s chosen tasks. That much is evident. That I also invest to gain knowledge and experience, and as a mode of entertainment, is not the issue here, either.

At age 63, I do not regret time and effort spent in the quest for God (the Anselmian fides quaerens intellectum, faith seeking understanding); on the contrary, I regret not having engaged in this intellectual-spiritual work more avidly and intelligently. While still seeing the ultimate goal of life as union with God beyond death (the Christian transcendental hope), I have long sought to avoid a mental split between life “here” and life “there,” as if one lives one way now, another way after death. On the contrary, I appreciate the philosophers, mystics, and saints East and West who sought to live now, to the extent possible, the life in which they would participate “then.”  In other words, I fully accept the Platonic understanding of “eternal life” (and he coined the phrase in western culture): not as life “after death,” or primarily as “everlasting life,” but eternal life as true life, here and now. And this true life, eternal life, is a sharing in that which is eternal, deathless—namely, the divine. So my goal is eternal life, understood not as “life in heaven,” but as a real participation in ultimate reality. And this Life transcends the confines of space-time.

Perhaps a question or two may clarify and sharpen what is meant: What do I consider the ultimate goal of life, and how does one achieve it? The old catechism was not wrong, even if simplistic: the goal of life is happiness here, and eternal life with God beyond death. But for me, these two ends are not separate: happiness is eternal life, in the sense of true life. The goal of life is true, complete, and lasting happiness. Believing this to be true (and such is the common belief in the Greek philosophical and Christian perspectives), it seems to be clear what I must do with time remaining on earth, does it not? 

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                            A brief note on happiness and eternal life

What is happiness? Aristotle’s famous insight is as good as any I know as a starting point: “Happiness is an activity of the soul in conformity with virtue.”  The virtuous life engenders happiness. And as Aristotle proceeds to show in the Nicomachean Ethics, there are two distinct kinds of virtue, each with its kind of happiness: the active life achieves happiness through right action, through exercising the moral and intellectual virtues (summarized as courage, self-control, justice, and prudence); and the contemplative life, the life of study, finds its fulfillment in “immortalizing,” and “becoming divine to the extent possible,” using Aristotle’s phrases. Through contemplating the divine, man becomes like what he contemplates. 

I agree with St. Thomas Aquinas that for us in this world, the best life combines the active life of virtuous activity (doing good, loving one’s neighbor), and the contemplative life of loving God. Without living virtuously, and loving the person near us, who has a claim on our hearts and actions, what could loving God possibly be, but an escape into a void? And true love of neighbor—seeking the happiness and well-being of one’s fellow creature—is an outflow of one’s love of Goodness, of the Good, of that which in Christian tradition is called “God.”  

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                                      So what am I to do?

Rather than develop these thoughts in the abstract, I return to the practical question: What do I intend to do with any time left me to be physically alive?  What is the best at which I should aim, and how can I best achieve it?

From what I have written, it would not be reasonable if I sought to spend my remaining time in amusements or entertainment, would it? But again, as Aristotle teaches, amusements have their place if they serve to refresh the soul for virtuous activities and contemplation (study, thought, prayer). As we eat to do good and to think, so one allows time for amusements and “diversions” in order to be more fully engaged in the essential tasks of life: loving God and neighbor, doing good and seeking to understand reality. The danger for all of us, myself included, is that such “diversions” can become primary, or usurp the proper focus of life. As Irving Babbitt wrote, “All life is either diversion or conversion.” We see much evidence that our society is obsessed with diversions: consumerism, drugs, booze, entertainment, “being connected,” trips, porn, and so on. A foremost danger for me is that diversions such as following business news, surfing the web, playing a card game, shopping, and so on, can and often do eclipse the larger, more true goal to bear in mind: doing good to one’s neighbor out of the ongoing search for God (the truth of reality). 

What kind of activities ought I to perform in order to be happy, to share in true life, eternal life? What do I have to give to others, that may benefit them?  How can I best serve the well-being of others, and at the same time, actively seek to love and to know God? This question, and others like it, determine for me any future plans I would wish to develop. Good questions guide good actions and right understanding. What questions must be asked?  How shall I proceed?

I ask the questions not in the abstract, but concretely, given who I am, what talents or skills I may have, what opportunities to benefit others. I do not ask now, “How can a human being best serve others?” but “How can I best serve others, and respond to the God seeking me through seeking truth, goodness, beauty?” 

Now for a few partial answers open to re-examination, revision, rethinking.

Having written all of the preceding material four days ago, one practical thought keeps returning to consciousness: Stay where I am, if permitted by church authorities, and seek to assist these parishioners with their lives, to the extent that I am able to do so. I cannot justify “retiring” in order to have more “leisure time” to “do what I want.”  If I manage my time well, I already have sufficient time for leisure (schole) in the proper sense, as analyzed by Aristotle: freedom from necessities, in order to engage in a virtuous life, through good deeds and study, as outlined above. Admittedly, there are days and weeks when I am overly busy for my good or that of others, but these periods pass. 

Some kind of “early retirement” would not only bind me to the necessity of struggling to “make ends meet” with a small Social Security check and relatively small savings / investments, but could give me too much opportunity to waste time on “personal projects,” on activities done “because I want to do them,” and not really focused either on what benefits others or on the life of the mind in the sense of contemplation and the search for truth about reality. I seem to give my best to others when duties demand me to do so, as in preaching, teaching, ministering to the sick and dying, and so on. As I reject being “a hermit,” so I am not interested in providing for myself a life of ease to do whatever I want, when I want it. 

A large practical problem for me is that without having duties to perform, I have not engaged sufficiently in genuine prayer, study, or contemplation; nor do I have a solid record of seeking the well-being of others, beyond the range of my required duties. In religious language, I have not had a clear sense of being “called” to some particular work, other than what my duties require of me. The one clear exception to this last generalization is this: I have long felt drawn to seek God through study and writing. That much I know clearly. But when given the time and means to do so, I have often diverted myself in diversions, and avoided the hard work of contemplation in the real sense.

In other words, given who I am, it makes more sense to remain in my present job, working with these people, and seek to serve them better. At the same time, I owe it to myself to engage more actively in the “search for God” to which I truly feel drawn. 

Concluding note: I shall continue this discussion below, perhaps on 27 Feb 2014 (today).  What I have written could be circulated, as to family; what I need to work on is private material: a critical analysis of ways that I divert myself from the search for God. Each soul must do this work for him/herself. “Know thyself.”  Come clean in the solitude of one’s heart.  How am I spending my time?