The Path of Life

The Path of Life

Monday, October 22, 2012

Pray much, speak little

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To pray for a long time is not the same as to pray by multiplying words. Lengthy talk is one thing; a prayerful disposition which lasts a long time is another. Excessive talking should be kept out of prayer. To talk at length in prayer is to perform a necessary action with an excess of words. To spend much time in prayer is to knock with a persistent and holy fervor at the door of the One whom we beseech. This task is generally accomplished more through sighs than words, more through weeping than speech. He places our tears in his sight, and our sighs are not hidden from him, for he has established all things through his Word and does not seek human words.
-- St. Augustine

Basset hound blues


This photo from my hometown newspaper in Ohio, The (Findlay) Courier, is too good not to share. Pictured is a contestant (and his "human") in the Flag City Basset Waddle and Games this past weekend. Besides howling, contests included longest tail, saddest face, and longest ears. Findlay, incidentally, is also well-known for its annual Dachsund races. (Courier photo by Nick Moore)

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Mary, our partner in prayer

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Acts of the Apostles 1:13-14; 2:1-4
 
[After the Ascension of Jesus, his disciples returned to Jerusalem.] When they entered the city, they went to the upper room where they were staying—Peter and John and James and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James son of Alphaeus, Simon the Zealot, and Judas son of James. All these devoted themselves with one accord to prayer, together with some women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and his brothers. When the time for Pentecost was fulfilled, they were all in one place together. And suddenly there came from the sky a noise like a strong driving wind, and it filled the entire house in which they were. Then there appeared to them tongues as of fire, which parted and came to rest on each one of them. And they were all filled with the holy Spirit and began to speak in different tongues, as the Spirit enabled them to proclaim.
 

The reflection I gave this afternoon at the Monte Cassino Shrine:

“Pray for me.”

“I’ll pray for you.”

Most of us have said these things—or something similar—at one time or another. They are expressions of faith in a God who cares for us, but they also communicate the hope we have in one another as believers. We draw strength from knowing that we are united with one another in prayer. So we keep prayer lists. We form prayer chains. We join prayer groups. We participate in pilgrimages such as this at Monte Cassino Shrine. And, of course, we come together in the Liturgy—especially the Eucharist—to pray for the world as the Body of Christ and offer ourselves as a spiritual sacrifice. We believe Jesus’ words in Matthew’s Gospel (18:20): “Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them.”

Whether we pray together or alone, of course, we do so as the faithful on earth in communion with one another, but also with the saints in heaven and the souls in purgatory. We are never really alone. We are all partners in prayer, imploring the gifts of the Holy Spirit, drawing strength from Christ, and seeking guidance during our earthly journey toward God the Father.

When we pray the rosary—either individually or as a group—we certainly honor Mary, the Mother of Jesus, and the Mother of the Church, the Body of Christ. When we pray the Hail Mary, we acclaim the Mother of God using the words spoken by the angel Gabriel at the Annunciation, and those addressed to her by her cousin Elizabeth at the Visitation. We also ask her to pray for us, saying, “Pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death.” Mary is certainly our foremost partner in prayer.

However, we do not simply pray to her, asking her to intercede for us. We also pray with her as the first Christian disciples did—as recounted above in the reading from the Acts of the Apostles. Mary prays with us, directing our gaze toward Christ, and preparing us for the continual outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon all the members of the Body of Christ. After the risen Jesus had ascended to the Father, all the Apostles, along with some women, Mary, and other relatives of Jesus, went back to Jerusalem to the Upper Room—the same room where Jesus instituted the Eucharist during the Last Supper the night before he died on the Cross. There, we are told, “all these devoted themselves with one accord to prayer.” Mary prayed with all of them as they awaited Jesus’ promise to send the Holy Spirit upon them.

Later, during the feast of Pentecost, we are told that “they were all in one place together,” and “they were all filled with the Holy Spirit,” which enabled them to proclaim the Good News.

Tradition asserts that Mary was present for all this. Just as the Holy Spirit had descended upon her at the Annunciation to give birth to Christ, now the Holy Spirit descends upon the first Christian assembly in Mary’s presence to give birth to the Church, children of the Father as one Body of Christ.

Mary had already been overshadowed by the Holy Spirit at the Incarnation. She had been with Jesus from the moment of his conception to his last breath. The rest of the disciples, however, had not yet received the Holy Spirit. They were still waiting, and were not sure what to expect. Imagine their confusion and anxiety considering all that had happened in the preceding days—the Crucifixion of their Teacher, his Resurrection, his post-Resurrection appearances to them, his command to “go and make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:20), and his Ascension. They were not sure what it all meant, or how they should respond. They were afraid, the Gospel of John tells us.

Already a recipient of the Holy Spirit and the perfect model of faithfulness to God’s Word, Mary remained with the Apostles and other disciples to strengthen and prepare them for what lay ahead. As Blessed Pope John Paul II said during a general audience in 1997, “Unlike those in the Upper Room who were waiting in fearful expectation, Mary, fully aware of the importance of her Son’s promise to the disciples, helped the community to be well-disposed to the coming of the Paraclete.” She was involved “in preparing the minds and hearts of those around her.”

She was their partner in prayer, and remains so for us.

The reading from the Acts of the Apostles is the last mention of Mary in the New Testament. She was the only follower of Christ who was with him at every stage of his life—from conception and birth to his death, and now his new birth in the first community of believers who will carry on his work in the world as the Church. As John Paul II said, “Mary's prayer has particular significance in the Christian community: It fosters the coming of the Spirit, imploring his action in the hearts of the disciples and in the world. Just as in the Incarnation, the Spirit had formed the physical body of Christ in her virginal womb, now in the Upper Room the same Spirit comes down to give life to the Mystical Body” (May 28, 1997, general audience). … “As Mother of the Church, Mary ‘continually brings to birth children for the Mystical Body of her Son. She does so through her intercession, imploring upon them the inexhaustible outpouring of the Spirit” (2002 Encyclical Rosarium Virginis Mariae).

Mary is our partner in prayer—from the moment of our birth in Christ at Baptism until the hour of our death. She prays not only for us, but with us, just as she did with the first community of believers in the Upper Room at Pentecost.

To illustrate this point further, let us take a very brief look at one episode from each of the four sets of mysteries of the rosary. We’ve already examined Pentecost, the third Glorious Mystery. If we turn to the Visitation, the second Joyful Mystery, we encounter Elizabeth crying out with joy as the child John leaps in her womb at Mary’s greeting (Luke 1:39-55). Mary, who had come to assist Elizabeth in her old age in giving birth to John the Baptist, responds to her cousin with the words of the Magnificat, the ancient hymn from the Gospel of Luke which we sing each evening at Vespers. As John Paul II wrote (Encyclical Redemptoris Mater), the Magnificat is an “inspired profession of faith, in which Mary’s response to the revealed word is expressed with the religious and poetical exultation of her whole being toward God. The Church, which even amid trials and tribulations does not cease repeating with Mary the words of the Magnificat, is sustained by the power of God’s truth.” As we can see, Mary was not only physically present to Elizabeth. She was also spiritually present, praying with her--and that prayer continues through the ages in the voices of people everywhere who pray the Magnificat.

In the Wedding Feast at Cana, the second Luminous Mystery of the Rosary, “Mary places herself between her son and mankind in the reality of their wants, needs, and sufferings” when she tells Jesus that “they have no wine” (John 2:1-5). Also, when she says to the servants, “Do whatever he tells you,” Mary “presents herself as the spokeswoman of her son’s will” (Redemptoris Mater). Here again, Mary prays with the people, presenting their needs to Jesus, and conveying to them how important it is to listen to him.

Finally, at the Crucifixion, the fifth Sorrowful Mystery, Mary and the beloved disciple stand with Jesus who has been nailed to the Cross. Jesus says to Mary, “Behold your son,” and to the beloved disciple, “Behold your mother” (John 19:26-27). Here, he entrusts all disciples to Mary, and calls all disciples to honor Mary as Mother of the Church. In essence, he makes them prayer partners.

Aspects of intercession or partnership are evident in all four of these mysteries—the Visitation, the Wedding Feast at Cana, the Crucifixion, and Pentecost. If we look more closely at each one of them, we can see that Mary makes herself prayer partners with four distinct groups of people. In the Visitation, it is relatives. At the Wedding Feast at Cana, it is friends. At the Crucifixion, it is family—both physically and spiritually. And at Pentecost, it is the entire community of believers. Mary joins herself in prayer to all these people—both at that time and right now. She prays with and for relatives, friends, families, and the entire Church.

We participate as partners in prayer through the reading of Scripture and through praying the Rosary—which Mary, in essence, recited through the very experiences of her life. We pray with Mary in the secret recesses of our hearts, pondering as she did the unfolding of these mysteries in our own lives. And we pray with Mary in the Liturgy, such as at the Divine Office during the singing of the Magnificat, and especially at the Eucharist. We must recall that through the Incarnation, when the Holy Spirit first descended upon Mary, Jesus, the Word made Flesh, received his earthly flesh and blood from her. It is this same humanity he gives to us sacramentally during the celebration of the Eucharist. “She who had lived in close union with Jesus in the house of Nazareth now lives in the Church in intimate communion with her Son, present in the Eucharist” (Paul Haffner, The Mystery of Mary).

All of this points to the timeless nature of Mary’s prayer. Pentecost was not a one-time event in the history of salvation. “Pentecost is still happening,” said John Paul II in a homily in 1980. “Every place where the disciples of the Lord gather is an extension of that original [Pentecost].” As the Second Vatican Council’s Lumen Gentium stated, “The entire body of the faithful pours forth instant supplications to the Mother of God and Mother of men that she, who aided the beginnings of the Church by her prayers, may now … intercede before her Son in the fellowship of all the saints, until all families of people, whether they are honored with the title of Christian or whether they still do not know the Savior, may be happily gathered together in peace and harmony into one people of God” (LG 69).

So, Mary remains with us as our partner in prayer--today and each day of our earthly sojourn. “In our time, she is no less present to the Church than she was at Pentecost, gathered with the Apostles in prayer. With her prayer and presence, she will surely support the new evangelization just as she supported the first. In times of difficulty and pain, Mary has been an unfailing refuge for those seeking peace and healing. In churches, chapels and homes, the image of Mary reminds people of her loving presence and her maternal protection” (Pope John Paul II, Ecclesia in Oceania).

Like the first Christians, let us devote ourselves to prayer together with Mary, the mother of Jesus. Let us make Mary our prayer partner, praying not only to her but with her as we contemplate the mysteries of Christ. Let us place ourselves in the Upper Room at Pentecost, imploring the gifts of the Holy Spirit, so that “the prayer of the Church is sustained by the prayer of Mary and united with it in hope” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 2679).

Let us say together: “Mary, pray for us.”

… And believe in our hearts that she is saying to us: “I’ll pray for you.”

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Autumn splendor


The fall colors are quite vibrant around Saint Meinrad this year--which seems surprising considering the extremely dry summer we experienced. A few photos I took from around campus in the last few days:





Saturday, October 13, 2012

God meant it for good

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An exerpt from this morning's second reading at Vigils:
There are times when evils become the occasion of blessings and when God causes good results to follow from the sinful designs of men. A manifest example of this is the case of Joseph, whom his brothers, moved by jealousy, sold to the Ishmaelites for twenty pieces of silver. As things turned out, this crime against Joseph marked the beginning of all manner of benefits for the father and brothers of Joseph and for the whole land of Egypt, so that Joseph could later say to his brothers: "Even though you meant harm to me, God meant it for good."

-- St. Jerome

A monk out of the playoffs


Well, if you follow baseball at all, you know by now that the Cincinnati Reds lost their playoff series (unbelievable!) against the San Francisco Giants even though they had a 2-game advantage, were playing at home, and were just an out or two away from taking game 3 and earning a trip to the National League Championship Series. 'Twas not to be. The Giants suddenly found new life, and the Reds hung in there, but wasted some key opportunities (including some masterful pitching performances) to get back in it. The Giants won games 3, 4, and 5 to advance to the NLCS where they will play -- this really hurts -- the St. Louis Cardinals. Oh, the humanity!

The two teams with the best records in Major League Baseball during the regular season -- the Washington Nationals and Cincinnati Reds -- are now out of the playoffs. Anything can happen in the postseason! It was unintentional, but it is both fitting and ironic that the last posting included a quote about how baseball teaches us how to deal with failure. Disappointment plagues many players and fans at the moment, but after the World Series is played, and after resting up for a few months, it all begins again with renewed hope in the spring.

As for the remainder of this posteason, I suppose now I could root for the Detroit Tigers, but at this point, I'm not much interested. Deflated is a good description.

But, life goes on ... On the bright side, I can now give full attention to many pressing tasks I have in front of me over the next couple weeks without the prospect of daily playoff games demanding my attention. The 1 p.m. EST start for the Reds-Giants deciding Game 5 on Thursday was rough !!!

This is a busy weekend around here. Today is the Benedictine Hills Youth Pilgrimage, so there will be a lot of young people on the Hill today. The pilgrims--along with a number of Benedictine sisters from Monastery Immaculate Conception in Ferdinand--will be joining the monks for Vespers and then a cookout after a long afternoon of hiking. Many lay-degree students are also on the Hill for classes this weekend, as well as retreatants. On Sunday, the second Monte Cassino Shrine Pilgrimage for the month of October will be held nearby. Tomorrow the monastery's periodic visitation also begins. This takes place every four years, and involves a group of monks from other monasteries coming in to evaluate and offer suggestions on such things as liturgy, relationships, work, and formation. The visitators, as they are called, will interview every single monk here over the course of several days before offering a final report. It is a way for us to receive some outside feedback on how we go about things.

As for yours truly, I am spending most of the weekend holed up to finish two urgent writing assignments--as mentioned previously, a book on the Stations of the Cross (now slightly overdue), and an upcoming talk to be given at the Monte Cassino Shrine. Two of my spiritual directees are lay-degree students here this weekend, so I also have appointments with them. After all that is accomplished, there's plenty of other things waiting on the runway for takeoff, so once again I must beg your pardon and patience for the scarcity of blog postings.

It may not be the World Series, but life here on the Hill is never boring. Ultimately, it's also more fulfilling. Batter up!

Saturday, October 6, 2012

A monk in the playoffs

"Baseball teaches us how to deal with failure.
Failure is the norm in baseball and,
precisely because we have failed,
we hold in high regard those
who fail less often--those who
hit safely in one out of three chances
and become star players.
Baseball, alone in sport,
considers errors to be part of the game,
part of its rigorous truth."

Francis T. Vincent, Jr., on baseball and life
 
 
The great debate season is under way. No, it has nothing to do with Republican vs. Democrat. This is much more momentous and significant: Who will win the World Series?
 
Yes, we have some monks who are baseball fans, and several of them have teams in the playoffs--including yours truly, who roots for the Cincinnati Reds. The Reds begin their October Odyssey tonight vs. the San Francisco Giants. I don't watch much TV around here, and typically don't stay up terribly late, but I may have to make an exception tonight (the game is on the West Coast).
 
The actual purpose of this post, however, has less to do with baseball and more to do with simple logistics. There will be no Scripture commentary on this Sunday's Mass readings, and I suspect further postings will be rather sparse and sporadic the next few weeks. This is not because I have baseball fever (I do; but it's an "illness" you can play through). Rather, a number of other projects, engagements, and responsibilities are currently demanding my attention.
 
I am currently wrapping up a book I have written for the Abbey Press, which will be published at the beginning of the new year, tentatively titled The Way to Eternal Life: Contemporary Reflections on the Traditional Stations of the Cross. Besides my own reflections, the book will feature the artwork of our late Fr. Donald, and will be released around the one-year anniversary of his death (and also in time for the beginning of Lent). This project has taken up a considerable amount of my time the last several weeks, and that promises to continue for a least a couple more.
 
In addition, I have a number of oblate conferences to deliver in the coming weeks, as well as a talk at our Monte Cassino Shrine (Oct. 21) on the subject Mary, Our Partner in Prayer (an address I have yet to write--yikes!). Furthermore, there are a number of appointments with spiritual directees and our daily round of ora et labora in the monastery. Somewhere in there, I also need to begin the enrollment application process for the new Graduate Certificate in Spiritual Direction Program in the School of Theology which I will be entering in January. And I really need to clean my room!
 
So, the blog must temporarily take a back seat. Come the beginning of November, things should (hopefully) ease up a bit, and I should be able to resume posting more regularly.
 
In the meantime, my primary dilemma seems to be how to get all of the above accomplished and still pay attention to what the Reds are doing on their way--presumably--to the World Series. Our Fr. Eugene has advised me that "all work must be put aside during this sacred season." However, he's a Cardinals fan, and I think he's just trying to get me in trouble. Never trust a Cardinals fan! Otherwise, he's pretty much OK. Everyone has their flaws.
 
Wouldn't a Detroit Tigers-Cincinnati Reds matchup in the World Series be close to divine? Of course, both the Left and Right would hate it--that is, those on the Left Coast and the Right Coast, who have yet to learn that sometimes it's best to meet in the Middle (as in Midwest).
 
But I digress. Back to work...
 
Play Ball -- Go Reds!