Thursday, 28 August 2014

Community members Wednesday Chapter Talks 27/08/2014

Wednesday Chapter Talks
 27 Aug 2014 Fr. Raymond
          


Fr. Raymond - Nunraw Cloister 
VISION OF THE ORDER
The Phenomenon and significance of
PRECARIOUSNESS
I would like to attempt to look at the simple reality of the precariouness of the monastic life today in the light of the mystery of the Church as a whole. After all the Monastic Community is, as St Paul describes it, the Church at Nunraw, the Church at Roscrea, and the Church at Tautra or wherever.
We might start by recalling how the monastic community is said to be a powerhouse of prayer in the life of the Church. A beautiful and very meaningful metaphor that wasn't available to the Doctors and the Fathers of old. Again the monastic community has been compared to a Lighthouse, a beacon for the faithful, lighting up the true and safe harbour of life's voyage for each of them. No doubt you could all bring to mind many other beautiful images of the place of the monastic life in the life of the Church.
These images put us at the heart of the Church's life in way that sets us above the common faithful, if we dare use such an expression. They put us an a pedestal, they put us in the front line of the Christian warfare. They set us on the battlements of the Church's defences, and so on. But there is another side to our relationship with the Church at large. And this only becomes evident in the light of our precariousness.
I mean the fact of our being born of the local Church. The foundation of the vocation of most of us was established by the life and vigour of the local Church from which we came. On the whole no Monastery is stronger than the living faith of its local Church. We may be Powerhouses of prayer, we may be Lighthouses of Faith, but on the whole, the foundations of those Powerhouses, the foundations of these Lighthouses are the strength of the Local Church out of which we are born. When that strength wanes, and history proves that wane it must, sooner or later, then the foundations of the monastic life are weakened.
If Church History proves anything it proves that the history of the Church, including the Monastic Church, is the history of Israel all over again.
Every Church goes through its great cycles of growth and decay, rising and falling. Where is the Church of the great St Augustine in North Africa today? Where is the Christian heritage of Egypt or Asia Minor today?
And this brings us to the final assessment of our precariousness, an assessment that measures it against the final destiny of the Church as a whole. The New Catechism of the Church tells us :
"Before Christ's second coming the Church must pass through a final trial that will shake the faith of many believers .
"The Church will enter the glory of the kingdom only through this final Passover, when she will follow her Lord in his death and resurrection. The Kingdom will be fulfilled, then, not by a historic triumph of the Church through a progressive ascendancy, but only by God's victory over the final unleashing of evil.. ..... "
The most significant phrases here for our spiritual understanding of our precariousness are that the Church will "follow the Lord in his death" as well as his "his Resurrection", and that the Kingdom will be fulfilled, not by the historic triumph of a progressive ascendancy, but only by God's victory over the final unleashing of evil., ..... "
Now we are the Church, the Church at Citeaux, and we are caught up in that great mystery, that Divine foolishness, of victory through being vanquished.
The good of the Order no more consists in the historic triumph of a progressive ascendancy than does the good of the Church. The success of the mission of the Order is as much tied to following the Lord in his failure and death as does the mission of the Church.
The measurement of Life is not a mathematical thing. When the Order was at its strongest there is every reason to believe it was also at its weakest. And likewise we may dare to think that when it is at its weakest it may be at its purest and strongest.

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