St. Mary's Monastery
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Br. Jerome Leo’s Daily Reflection on the Holy Rule
January 2, May 3, September 2
Prologue (8-13)
Let
us arise, then, at last, for the Scripture stirs us up, saying, "Now is
the hour for us to rise from sleep" (Rom. 13:11). Let us open our eyes to
the deifying light, let us hear with attentive ears the warning which the
divine voice cries daily to us, "Today if you hear His voice, harden not
your hearts" (Ps. 94 [95]:8). And again, "Whoever has ears to hear,
hear what the Spirit says to the churches" (Matt. 11-15; Apoc. 2:7). And
what does He say? "Come, My children, listen to Me; I will teach you the fear
of the Lord" (Ps.33 [34]:12). "Run while you have the light of life,
lest the darkness of death overtake you" (John 12:35).
REFLECTION
Check out
the similarities of this section, at the beginning of the Holy Rule, and
the readings of early Lent, which stress that "now is the acceptable
time." It brings to mind St. Benedict's later chapter which says that
the monastic life ought always to have some semblance of Lent.
That
perpetual Lent chapter is the source of a lot of grumbling about austerity from one
camp and cheering about it from another. Both may have missed a
salient point. Perhaps the greatest elements of perpetual Lent have less to do with
austerity- even the monastic fast did not last all year- but repentance, wakefulness
and self-examination do, and they do so daily.
Monastic
life withers in either smugness or a rut. What St. Benedict wants us to do is
always to try to stay at that serious moment of taking inventory that many of us
feel at Lent's beginning. We need to be daily checking what needs to be
cleaned up and we need to be prepared, even a bit eager, to start working on
it. This is why a daily examination of conscience is so necessary. Compline,
the traditional
liturgical place for such examens, is a very apt place for same. As we
prepare for sleep, which prefigures death, we prepare also for death,
by examining our faults and asking forgiveness.
The Holy
Rule, like Lent, is by no means the gateway to an easier life, but to a
holier one. As we actually grow in holiness much of it will become
easier, more natural to us. Until that time, it is a struggle and, in
unconquered areas, it remains something of a struggle for all of our lives.
What's hard about that struggle isn't fasting or penance, but changing
ourselves. Austere practices are just a means to that end, not ends in themselves.
The whole
idea of Lent and the Holy Rule is lasting change for the better. Lent is a
seasonal construct to get us to begin anew, the Holy Rule says that beginning anew
must be a daily thing. Lent is an attempt to get us to do for forty days what we
ought to have been doing all year. The Holy Rule is a way to do what we ought to
do all year, every day.
Br. Jerome Leo Hughes, OSB (RIP)