Showing posts with label Merton Hagia Sophia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Merton Hagia Sophia. Show all posts

Monday 2 June 2014

Fr.Louis (Thomas Merton)


COMMENTS:
Dear William,
Thank you.
Your "many notes" from days of Retreat give me a useful synthesis of the bundle of recent Blogs
In fact from our exchange of Icons, liturgy quotations, remembrances,  I feel replete in reflections, the stirring of sharing. 
Yours......
fr. Donald

Fw: Retreat
On Sunday, 1 June 2014, 
William ...> wrote:  
                           
Dear Father Donald,
. . . . 
I delighted in opening your Blog email of this morning - what better ... than the very photo and the writing of Thomas Merton! I have many notes [from time spent with you!] of planned projects, delighting in the beautiful edition you gave me of Marmion's 'Christ in His Mysteries', using your photocard USB stick to save the attached photos for printing at Boots, and looking out for Nouwen's book (your icon Christ Pantocrator is quite magnificent!), and see what I can find on the Song of Songs (CCEL online looks promising, but I feel a visit to the 2nd hand bookshop coming on!), and of reading about the Merton Society! and seeing what I can find on Charles Dumont and those golden years you experienced. With St Ambrose's commentary on Ps 118 still very much in my mind, last night I located the passage in St Augustine's Confessions, a reference I noted down, where he describes his meeting with St Ambrose in Milan [V.xiii -23].These projects will quietly distract and engross me, and help to settle me.                    
                                                                                                     
Thank you so very much for personally making my retreat, . . .
..... in Our Lord,
William
      
Fr. Louis (Thomas Merton) Life in Christ.
see: 
http://nunraw.blogspot.co.uk/2014/06/seventh-sunday-of-easter-thomas-merton.html
Virgin of Vladimir
Nouwen's book
 





 
 

Tuesday 24 January 2012

COMMENT

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: William
Sent: Monday, 23 January 2012, 22:20
Subject: Re: [Blog] "Sunset. The Hour of Compline. Salve Regina." Thomas Merton

Dear Father Donald,
Unsleeping, your blog post delights me so much!
With my copy of the book by my bedside, and the window of my mind open to the night sky:
"The shadows fall. The stars appear. The birds begin to sleep Night embraces the silent half of the earth."
And "everything depends on our laying ourselves down "under the sweet stars of the world" and giving ourselves over to the hidden Wisdom of God."
With quiet inner joy,
. . .in Our Lord,
William

Monday 23 January 2012

'Hagia Sophia, Holy Wisdom, who crowns Christ' Merton




She crowns Him not with what is glorious, but with
what is greater than glory: the one thing greater than
glory is weakness, nothingness, poverty.
She sends the infinitely Rich and Powerful One forth
as poor and helpless, in His mission of inexpressible
mercy, to die for us on the Cross. (Merton)




«Wisdom will honour you if you embrace her   she will place on your head a fair garland   she will bestow on you a crown on of glory.» (Proverbs 4:8-9)

HAGIA SOPHIA

§..  One day Father Louis (Thomas Merton) our friend came from his monastery at Trappist Kentucky to bring an ill novice to the hospital in Lexington. (I had known Father Louis since 1955 when I visited him for the first time. Later we printed several of his books.) We had prepared a simple luncheon and I welcomed him to sit with us at table. From when we be sat he had a good view of the triptych on. the chest and he often looked at it. After a while he asked quite abruptly «And who is the woman behind Christ?  said «I do not know;:yet.» Without further question he gave his own answer. «She is Hagia Sophia, Holy Wisdom, who crowns Christ.» And that she was - and is.
Victor Hammer

"Hagia Sophia Crowning the Young Christ." A line-cut of Victor Hammer's triptych painting of the same title. Courtesy of the Estate of Victor and Carolyn Hammer, and the King Library Press, University of Kentucky.


"Sunset. The Hour of Compline. Salve Regina." Thomas Merton


Hagia Sophia page 205-208

Sophia: The Hidden Christ of Thomas Merton

"Sunset. The Hour of Compline. Salve Regina."
"The Hour of Compline" invokes Hammer's image of the woman crowning the boy Christ. "It is she, it is Mary, Sophia, who in sadness and joy, with the full awareness of what she is doing, sets upon the Second Person, the Logos, a crown which is His Human Nature. Thus her consent opens the door of created nature, of time, of history, to the Word of God.” As Michael Mott observes, "Where Merton expects us to see the image from the painting" in these lines, "he also expects us to hear music.”128 When the Salve Regina is sung by the monks at the Abbey of Gethsemani, all lights in the abbey church are extinguished except for one, directed at the image of Mary in a window over the altar. 129
Yet Mary crowns her son "not with what is glorious, but with what is greater than glory: the one thing greater than glory is weakness, nothingness, poverty."130 It is thus through Mary's wisdom and "sweet yielding consent" that "God enters without publicity into the city of rapacious men:” Indeed, her "sadness" and "full awareness of what she is doing" reflect a wisdom well beyond her years, a wisdom deeply attuned to the "wisdom and foolishness" that will one day cause a sword to pierce her own heart. "She sends the infinitely Rich and Powerful One forth as poor and helpless, in His mission of inexpressible mercy, to die for us on the Cross.”
It is Significant that Mary is depicted in Hammer's picture neither as the mother of an infant nor as a royal Queen of Heaven. Her crowning of the boy Christ, notes McCaslin, is "an act of feminine power;' subverting traditional depictions of "the Coronation of the Virgin" in which Mary is crowned by Christ, rather than she actively empowering him. In crowning the Child with his "human nature,” the poem reminds us "that all men and women come from a common womb (the earth, the Feminine) and are alike vulnerable, frail, and utterly dependent on the earth and the feminine matrix.”131  Moreover, by depicting the Child not as an infant but on the brink of adulthood, both the picture and the poem underscore our common humanity with Jesus-not only "as ones who have undergone birth,”132 as McCaslin suggests, but also as a people called to serve in a world riven by sin and contradiction. As the incarnation of divine Wisdom, "the Child goes forth to ... crucifixion and resurrection. As humanity the child goes forth, an Everyman or Everywoman, into exile from paradise.”133  

Mary, in her "wise answer;' accepts the contradiction. Through her understanding, God enters "without publicity" into human history. The final scene of the poem, as Michael Mott notes, is a scene of haunting "solemnity, great beauty, and a piercing loneliness.”134:

The shadows fall. The stars appear. The birds begin to sleep Night embraces the silent half of the earth.
A vagrant, a destitute wanderer with dusty feet, finds his way down a new road. A homeless God, lost in the night, without papers, without identification, without even a number, a frail expendable exile lies down in desolation under the sweet stars of the world and entrusts Himself to sleep.”135

McCaslin sees in these lines "a strangely modern figure of the exile or God as exile in us,”136 -suggesting that human destiny in a world exiled from Sophia is not altogether different from that of Jesus, the Son of Man who "has nowhere to lay his head.” O'Connell makes a similar point, citing Philippians 2:6-11, Paul's striking hymn of kenosis, God's self-emptying in Jesus: "In identifying fully with the human condition, Christ is the perfect epiphany of Sophia, embodying and extending to all the redemptive mercy of God.”137
The final scene of Hagia Sophia unforgettably reprises Merton's celebration of Pasternak, whose protest is "the protest of life itself, of humanity itself, of love" against the "reign of numbers,"138 against the alienation and anonymity of mass society. What meaning can our lives have, after all, in "the vast expanses" of an evolutionary universe? Like the hospital patient in the opening section of the poem; like Mary, receiving with astonishment the message of the Angel Gabriel; like Joseph, who struggles in faith to make sense of it all; like Mary Magdelene, Peter, Nicodemus, John, all the hidden but crucial players in the narrative subtext of the gospels-when "night embraces the silent half of the earth;' everything depends on our laying ourselves down "under the sweet stars of the world" and giving ourselves over to the hidden Wisdom of God. Though our heads may pound with the clamor of many doubts and fears, and though it is more difficult than ever to see the stars, or even to remember to look for them through the glow of towering, sleepless cities, there is an inner music of Love, Mercy, and Understanding that rises up from the earth itself, Natura naturans, and from the still point of the human heart, asking to be set free in the world. She is Wisdom, our Sister: "God-given and God Himself as Gift.” When we attend to her tender voice and give our quiet consent, she effects in us a work greater than that of Creation: the work of new being in grace, the work of mercy and peace, justice and love.
Who, then, is Hagia Sophia? She is the Spirit of Christ but more than Christ. She is the Love joining the Father, Son, and Spirit that longs for incarnation from before the very beginning. She is Jesus our mother, and Mary, the Theotokos. She is the "pivot" (le point vierge) of nature, Natura naturans, and all creation in God from the beginning. Perhaps most of all, Merton's Sophia is our "true self;' when we (like Mary, seat of Wisdom) allow Christ to be birthed in us, and so realize the hidden ground of mercy, creativity, and presence in our very selves, the mystical Body of Christ. The moment her name awakens in us a sense of mercy, communion, and presence, Sophia is one Wisdom, one Child, one Meaning, one Sister" -is not symbolic, but real, more than literally real. The remembrance of Sophia opens onto a mystical political spirituality of engagement in the world.

Friday 20 January 2012

Hagia Sophia COMMENT

hagiaprayercard


Hi, Wiiliam, 
It so happened that the COMPLINE of Thomas Merton in Hagia Sophia giving us our actual Compline.
And your underlining is enlightening. - and the pictures.
Thank you,
. . . . Donald
________________________________

--- On Fri, 20/1/12, William . . .
From: William
Subject: Re: [Blog] Hagia Sophia. Thomas Merton
To: "Fr Donald"
Date: Friday, 20 January, 2012, 19:36

Dear Father Donald,
 
hagiabroadside
What a joy and a delight to be sharing this wonderful book with you at one and the same time!
 
I cannot remember when any book held my fascination as this one has done.
 
With great excitement I found on the internet the image of Sophia (as on page 300), and one that has subtle variation [attachments].
And these are the lines of the poem highlighted below that capture it for me..."It is she, it is Mary, Sophia...."
 
Wonderful! 
. . . in Our Lord,
William

 
IV. Sunset. The Hour of Compline. Salve Regina.
Now the Blessed Virgin Mary is the one created being
who enacts and shows forth in her life all that is hidden in Sophia.
Because of this she can be said to be a personal manifestation
of Sophia, Who in God is Ousia rather than Person.
Natura in Mary becomes pure Mother. In her, Natura
is as she was from the origin from her divine birth. In Mary Natura
is all wise and is manifested as an all-prudent, all-loving, all-pure person:
not a Creator, and not a Redeemer, but perfect Creature, perfectly
Redeemed, the fruit of all God's great power, the perfect expression
of wisdom in mercy.
It is she, it is Mary, Sophia, who in sadness and joy, with the full awareness
of what she is doing, sets upon the Second Person, the Logos, a crown
which is His Human Nature. Thus her consent opens the door of created
nature, of time, of history, to the Word of God.
God enters into His creation. Through her wise answer, through her obedient
understanding, through the sweet yielding consent of Sophia, God enters
without publicity into the city of rapacious men.
She crowns Him not with what is glorious, but with
what is greater than glory: the one thing greater than
glory is weakness, nothingness, poverty.
She sends the infinitely Rich and Powerful One forth
as poor and helpless, in His mission of inexpressible
mercy, to die for us on the Cross.
The shadows fall. The stars appear. The birds begin to sleep.
Night embraces the silent half of the earth. A vagrant, a destitute
wanderer with dusty feet, finds his way down a new road. A
homeless God, lost in the night, without papers, without
identifications, without even a number, a frail expendable exile
lies down in desolation under the sweet stars of the world and
entrusts Himself to sleep.