Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Bernard St. Solemnity 20 Aug 2014

Saint Bernard Solemnity
Community Sermon in the Chapter - Fr. Nivard 
 
Father Nivard ocso



St Bernard on Interior Simplicity
 
   Cistercian life sets men apart from the world and purifies their souls. Our souls must be led to perfect union with God, by the recovery of our lost likeness to Him.
 The fall andredemption of man, become for St Bernard, matters of cardinal importance. It is in the finest sermons, on the Canticle of Canticles, that St Bernard enters most deeply into this subject. These are a preparation for the great discourses on the mystical marriage.
It is here that we find him introducing the topic of simplicity.
 
The soul was created in God's image and likenessSt Bernard's treatment of the fall can be summed up in this; man lost his likeness to his Creator, but retained the imageingrained in and inseparable from the essence of his soul   
To understand all that is implied by this is to possess the key to the mystical theology of St Bernard. Thtragedof fallen man is the constant selfcontradictiogenerated within him by the confronting of the essentiaimage of God in his soul with thlost likeness that has been disfigured bsin.
 
Noonof the ways in which St Bernard describes thdivine image in thsoul is to say that it consists in three things:
   
1. Man’s natural simplicity,
2. His naturaimmortalityand
3. His inborn freedoof will.
 
Now thtrugreatnesoman consistnot onlin his owessentiasimplicitybut also in his ability to rise tparticipation in thinfinitely perfect simplicity of the Word. We too can braised to such a statthat to live will bperfect and unutterabldelight. Life and joy will becomin our souls identical.
 
This greatness, of course, was not lost in thfall. Without the redemptionthis capacity would havremained forever unfulfilledbuit would have remainedWhat walost was not the soul's greatness but itrectitudeits uprightness, its justice. To put it in other words, when Adam fell, he ceased to be true to his own nature. It becamimpossiblfor him, without grace, to btrue to himselor fit founion with God. Bernard tells us that this power for union with God is thmosgloriouproperty of human nature.
 
God maduwhat ware, in hiimageHoweverhdid not make umore than thisThhuman soul is only madad imaginemin the imagea copof the imageIt inot thimage itself (Imago), for onlthe Word, the second person of thHoly Trinityis that.
Satanhowevertempted Eve tdesirwhat man was not made to desire, that is, divinity, not bparticipation buindependently of God's free gift. It is in this sense that eritis sicut diu, You will be as god, is to btaken. Eve was tempted to think human beings could becomgodbnatural right.
   Thipride was thbirth of sin and the immediate ruin of our simplicity. It caused our fall into servitudto sin and death. How was our simplicity lost? Nobbeing destroyed. St Bernard is always careful to insist that human nature was in no way harmedin its essence, bthfall. Thtragedis that God'good work is overlaiby the evil work oouown wills. Hence, ousimplicity wanot taken from us but concealed under thdisfigurement of a duplicity, a hypocrisy, a living lie that was not natural to us or part of our nature. Yet it would inevitably cling tus akind of hideous second-nature. However, God sent his beloved Sotdeliveuby his death on thCross.
The purpose of the Rule of St Benedict and the Cistercian Usageis to keep man in an atmosphere where he will be constantly running into occasions where he will be brought face to face with the truth about himself. He will be compelled to recognize his misery without God. God will free the divine image within him from all the sordid appetites and evil habits that cling to us.
 
However, this purification is only the beginning. The Father looks down from heaven into the loving soul that seeks him and sees there the likeness to his Son reappearing  
As the simplicity of the concealed image begins to be freed from the dark crust of sin, God instantly pours more love into the soul.
He raises it up towards himself ever more and more, until finallyby faithful correspondence to gracethe perfect image is restored.  
  The soul is now utterly purged of all the 'fearthat is inseparable from 'unlikeness' to God. From then onthe way to heaven is nothing but confidence and love. St Bernard does not hesitate to promise, as the normal term of the Cistercian life of simplicity, a perfect union of wills with God, by love.
 
He calls it the mystical marriage.
 
Adapted and simplified from Cistercian Studies No9
‘Thomas Merton on St Bernard’. Feast of St Bernard, 2014
   
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