Letters from the International School
Benedict by Laurence Freeman
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Can the pursuit of a spiritual path lead to the very egocentricity
it is trying to escape? Not infrequently. The Desert monks were
acutely aware of this danger especially in solitude and relied above
all upon the abba-disciple relationship to avoid it. It was however
Benedict of Nursia (480-550) who devised a masterly, sapiential
formula of training for the mystical life based on community rather
than a personal master. His Rule, though, is masterly especially
in its modesty - and despite lacking any direct mystical doctrine.
Even his name is anonymous, meaning the ‘blessed one’
as the Buddha was often called by his followers. The story of his
life is known to us through legendary miracle stories collected
as theological illustrations by Pope Gregory, a former monk under
the Rule. These inspired innumerable works of art, most beautifully
in the frescoes by Signorelli and Sodoma at Monte Oliveto Maggiore,
worth a week’s retreat in themselves. Benedict began his monastic
journey in an archetypal desert mode. He dropped out of school in
Rome, (‘wisely ignorant’), curiously so for the founder
of the system that saved learning in the Dark Ages. He took the
habit from a nearby hermit and then spent years in a cave (Sacro
Speco) in Subiaco, near Rome and still one of the most presence-filled
and holy places in the world. He taught the Gospel to the pagan
peasants around him anticipating the missionary branch of his spiritual
progeny in future centuries. When some leaderless monks in the vicinity
begged him to come and be their abbot, he kindly but unwisely accepted.
He was too strict for them and, not for the last time in monastic
history, the community tried to murder their abbot. He left them,
but stayed in the coenobitic (community) form of monastic life rather
than returning to solitude. He formed twelve monasteries each with
twelve monks. Modern sociologists reading the rule note the emphasis
on smallness for healthy group dynamics . Even in the big community
he organises the members in ‘deaneries’ of ten. Yet
in Chapter One of his Rule on ‘The Kinds of Monks’ he
sees solitude as the goal. After an unspecified ‘long’
period of time in the monastery those who have ‘built up their
strength .. go from the battle line in the ranks of their brothers
to the single-handed combat of the desert.’
The military imagery might seem better suited for men playing at
soldiers. Yet women, including Benedict’s own sister, Scholastica,
whom one story shows praying better and more wisely than her brother,
respond as much as men, with certain adaptations, to the psychological
wisdom of the Rule. The point of the military symbol is not the
use of force but solidarity, obedience and good management on a
collective mission. The short Rule was probably composed over many
years and seems to have a second ending attached. Most of the material
is lifted directly from the Rule of the Master one of the many other
contemporary monastic rules. Pope Gregory, with Roman centralising
efficiency, selected Benedict’s for use throughout the western
church. Benedict’s genius is seen in what he left out of his
original and in the Prologue which is his own. He was aware that
he was forming a softer rule than that of the golden era. ‘We
read that monks should not drink wine at all but since monks of
our day cannot be convinced of this, let us at least agree to drink
moderately.’ This via media and common sense backed up by
a firm but flexible structure of life and perennially valid principles
of time management made the Rule, after the Bible the most influential
text in European civilisation for a millennium. Abbots and business
leaders still join and turn to it for light on contemporary social
issues. And interestingly the best commentaries on the Rule may
not be written, as is often claimed, in hotel rooms, but certainly
are often composed today by women and no doubt one day by Oblates.
The Rule is a masterpiece of rationality, modesty and self-transcendence.
In the last, and usually least commented upon, chapter Benedict
calls it a little Rule for beginners. Those who want to move on
to high school or even graduate school should consult Cassian and
the fathers. So in what ways does this little Rule train those who
seek God and hunger for the contemplative experience of seeing God
and listening to God’s Word? Firstly by identifying the call
itself: ‘is there anyone here who yearns for life and desires
to see God?’. Quoting psalms and the Wisdom literature as
he often does, Benedict identifies seeking God with the goal of
human life. That life does not cease to be human and variable once
the goal is being pursued. When the ‘first fervour of conversion’
wears off your brethren no longer seem saints or even best friends.
Stability then is one of the vows Benedict defines and requires
both physical and mental perseverance. He would have enjoyed the
rabbinical saying ‘you are not obliged to succeed, but you
are not allowed to give up.’ But being Benedict, he knows
that people will, and so gives the monk three strikes before he
is out and not allowed to return.
To balance stability which otherwise becomes static, his second
vow stresses commitment to an ongoing conversion of life and manners,
a form of the endless pursuit of God in the mystical life described
by Gregory of Nyssa. And obedience – ideally or eventually
practiced without delay, spontaneously and from love not out of
fear – completes the triad. Obedience must be practiced vertically
to the abbot and horizontally to each other and thus becomes Christ
like. Unlike later religious orders who saw the will of God in the
superior’s commands, Benedict allows the monk an appeal if
he is commanded to do what he finds impossible. If it fails, he
has to do his best to obey and trust in God.
The monastery is the laboratory in which the vows and the ‘tools
of good works’ train the monk for the higher slopes. If it
works well it becomes such a loving and freeing place that it feels
like the summit but this depends on good management. Firstly time-management,
getting the balance right between physical work, lectio (spiritual
reading) and prayer, which correspond to the human person’s
composition as body, mind and spirit. The kind of prayer Benedict
describes is communal psalmody and reading – a collective
lectio which serves as preparation for true contemplative prayer.
Stress is the disruption of natural human harmony. Peace is their
working well together. Murmuring (gossip and moaning) is picked
out especially for its corrosive attack on peace. Organisational
management in the Rule shows the Roman virtues of paternitas and
gravitas with not much left (at least officially) for hilaritas.
Overall, the abbot has an impossible task. He must be able to keep
the list of the tools given out for work each day and constantly
adapt himself to each different temperament. He has the final word
but is himself subject to the Rule and must consult.
It is a wonderful, brief, vivid and humane description of the Christian
lifestyle in which ‘all the members will be at peace’.
Exceptions prove any rule and Benedict makes many of them, especially
for the old, sick and children, the most vulnerable members of any
society. Weaknesses of body and character are treated with patience–
a rare feature in most spiritual doctrines. Yet there is a single-mindedness
(‘prefer nothing whatever to the love of Christ’) that
never turns moderation to compromise. Focusing on the mundane as
he does, Benedict achieves something astounding. We see God reflected
in the ordinary – Christ dancing in a thousand places. And
yet this, he insists, is still the spiritual kindergarten, just
the beginning.
Laurence Freeman OSB
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