Tuesday 10 December 2013

Welcome to Lectio - Gerard Bogan

'Watch for Wisdom ... you will find her
sitting at your gates.' (Wis 6 15
)

                         
Welcome to Lecti

Fr. Gerard Bogan

Welcome to the second issue of Lectio. Earlier in this Year of Faith we produced the first Lectio in response to Pope Benedict's invitation to renew our Christian commitment. With it we hope to offer some reading material to help people to be encouraged in their practice of the Faith. The word '!ectio' (pronounced lektsio, or lexio) is just a Latin word for 'reading'.
Pope Benedict opened the Year of Faith with his letter Porta Fidei (Door of Faith). We started Lectio. When the magazine was at the printers Pope Benedict sat down after walking strenuously, for his age, in the shoes of Peter. Pope Francis was elected. Soon after his election he wrote a letter to the Church entitled Lumen Fidei (Light of Faith). He continued the thinking of Pope Benedict. In fact, it is interesting to note the way in which both men have pointed to the great gift to the Church which was the Second Vatican Council.
The Year of Faith was inaugurated on the fiftieth anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council. This is itself a clear indication that Vatican II was a Council on faith, in as much as it asked us to restore the primacy of God in Christ to the centre of our lives, both as a Church and as individuals. The Church never takes faith for granted, but knows that this gift of God needs to be nourished and reinforced so that it can continue to guide her pilgrim way.'
In this second issue of the magazine I am very pleased to be able to include an article by Dam Donald McGlynn, Abbot Emeritus of Nunraw Abbey, on the Cistercian monks who were martyred only a few years ago. Indeed, the gratitude I feel towards Dam Donald can only be outdone by a sense of humility in being able to share the same pages with the memory of such courageous men who gave their lives for the Gospel, in the Atlas mountains.
Writing on paper may be useful; however, what is far more important is what we write with our lives.  
Pope Francis, Lumen Fideihttp://www.vatican.va/holy_father/ francesco/ encyclicalsdocumentspapa
Atlas Martyrs

It is seventeen years since the seven Cistercian monks were killed in the Atlas Mountains in the conflict of terror. Through the windows, Br. Michel watching the night fires of the rebels in the hills, would hear the army helicopters hovering over the monastery and the village. The assassination of the seven monks on May 21, 1996 shocked France and the world media. The information was particularly detailed, enabling the compiling of the reports and the production of the book.

Now, responding to Lectio magazine, the memory of the Seven Martyrs stirs deep again. The very voices of Fr. Christian de Chergé, Br. Luc Dochier, Fr. Christophe Lebreton, Br. Paul Favre-Miville, Br. Michel Fleury, Fr. Bruno Lemarchand, and Fr. Célestin Ringeard, speak to us all. The Year of Faith is a fitting time to read from the accounts, and whatever page is chosen comes alive.

Christian was born (1937) in Algeria during the time that his father was in the French Army. In his earliest years, his mother gave him the awareness of Islamic prayer and a love for the land of Algeria. Later he too did Army Service in Algeria. One evening when walking with a young Algerian rural policeman, they were attacked by some nationalists. The young Algerian interposed his body to protect Christian, but two days later his body was found with his throat cut. Christian never forgot this incident.

Christian obviously had an amazing vocation of love for Algeria. Isolated in Islamic territory, the monastery of Our Lady of Atlas at Tibhirine was Christian’s first choice. After his monastic formation he studied the Arabic language and culture before he settled into the unique role in Islamic-Christian dialogue that came to distinguish his monastery. He actively supported and shared in the Ribât association of dialogue and friendship between the two faith communities.

Christian became Prior, 1984, and from knowledge and wisdom (his priest friend described him as having an ‘elegant presence’) he was able to speak to the regular community conferences in the mounting emergence of terrorism: he thought the situation out deeply with the monks, with each pondering their own dedication.
From his own heart, before the hijack and ultimate death, he had written his ‘Testament’. It was his testimonial of faith, his lines encapsulating the theology and spirituality and passion of love of the land and the people of Algeria. "If it should happen one day," Fr. Christian wrote, "and it could be today. . . ."

It all means a great deal to me from having had acquaintance with Christian during several OCSO Annual General Meetings. In particular we shared the group discussion on the subject of Vocations. He was asked to address the Assembly on the life of monastic dedication.

The identities of the seven martyrs were very aptly described in the French paper La Crois, with these descriptions; Christian, “Transparent”; Luc, “Toubit”; Christophe, “Passionate”, Paul, “Self possessed”; Michel, “Without guile”, Bruno, “Gentle and just”; Celestin, “Vibrant”.  Each of the brief personal biographical notes there given could become the full ‘Story of the Soul’ of each of the seven.

To follow just one out of the seven, Br. Michel, “without guile”, reacted remarkably when taken hostage, taking his monastic cowl with him. It was found on the road to Médéa.  With his extremely self-effacing character he was perhaps the most unexpected person to respond to the appeal for Algeria. In the shade of the terrorism, he wrote on a postcard to his family:

"Through our windows there is only smoke and fire in the hills and mountains. Until when? To depart?... If something happens to us, I wish to be in solidarity with the people here.”

The TESTAMENT of Prior Christian is the articulated ‘word’ of faith of the Cistercian community. The world’s wider ‘audience’ shares in their lives through the messages and the digital media. One such message is given below, and a perceptive and faith enriching review by a family of the film “Of Gods and Men” ...

“Message to our Christian Friends” from The Young Muslims' Collective of France  

We have learned with dismay of the abduction of seven Trappist monks in Algeria, near Médéa. This unworthy, inhuman act cannot be claimed in the name of Islam or in the name of God. We, young Muslims, wish to express to you our brotherhood in these so difficult moments. We firmly condemn the abduction of these men who make a work of solidarity and brotherhood in great humility. Know, dear friends, that we are by your side. For several decades the Islamic-Christian dialogue has been developing, and this event will not destroy the profound desire to respect each other's differences, to listen to each other's points of divergence, and to meditate on the point on which we converge; over and above tolerance, it is divine love and coming closer to God that guide our progress in order to tie and retie our bonds as men of faith….


The film, “Of Gods and Men”, which the monks at Nunraw Abbey saw as an experience of faith in witness with the Monks of Tibhirine, was ‘reviewed’ by a family

We have just returned from seeing the film ‘Of Gods and Men’.  What a movie.
It is very sensitive to the very simplistic way of life of these monks in their Cistercian monastery , very spiritual, prayerful and at parts very emotional, especially after the community had decided to remain in the monastery. True to the story, during the community meal, one of the monks opened bottles of wine and played a recording from Swan Lake - a very moving moment as each member of the community realised what lay ahead of them.

Dom Donald McGlynn, ocso A Heritage Too Big For Us
Volume I, The Atlas Martyrs A Heritage Too Big For Us, online (illustrated), with section one of Vol II, The Martyrdom of Charity by Dom Christian. Volume II is available at Nunraw Abbey http://nunraw.blogspot.co.uk/2011/12/atlas-martyrs-vol-1.html 



On Saturday, 30 November 2013, 16:55, William Wardle <williamwardle2bp@btinternet.com> wrote:
Dear Father Donald,

I spotted this on the OCSO website, which gave me a cause for joy....

Cause of the Martyrs of Algeria - Tibhirine
Friday, 29 November 2013
On October 7th Archbishop Bader of Algiers, with the agreement of the Abbot General and his Council, appointed Father Thomas Georgeon, monk of La Trappe and present Secretary of the Abbot General, as postulator of the cause of Archbishop Claverie and his 18 companions (among them our 7 brothers of Tibhirine). The appointment was approved by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints on October 11, 2013.

May their cause be blessed in our lifetime!
Atlas Martyrs - OCSO

With my love in Our Lord,
William

Web results. Definition of On October 7th Archbishop Bader of Algiers, with the agreement of the Abbot General and his Council, appointed Father Thomas Georgeon, monk of La Trappe and present Secretary of the Abbot General, as postulator of the cause of Archbishop Claverie and his 18 companions (among them our 7 brothers of Tibhirine). The appointment was approved by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints on October 11, 2013. by TheFreeDictionary.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dom-Christian-de-Chergé/18391...
On October 7th Archbishop Bader of Algiers, with the agreement of the Abbot
General and his Council, appointed Father Thomas Georgeon, monk of La
Trappe and present Secretary of the Abbot General, as postulator of the cause of
Archbishop Claverie and his 18 companions (among them our 7 brothers of
Tibhirine).


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