Saturday, March 31, 2018

Chapter 49: How Lent should be observed in the monastery


Therefore we urge that all in the monastery during these holy days of Lent should look carefully at the integrity of their lives and get rid in this holy season of any thoughtless compromises which may have crept in at other times. (From para. 1 of Ch. 49 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

Where are the gaps between who I am and what I do? Where do distractions create thoughtless compromises in my life? Am I especially attentive to the times when compulsion replaces patience, when sluggishness replaces hope?

Friday, March 30, 2018

Chapter 48: Daily manual labor (paragraphs 6-7)


If there are any who are so feckless and lazy that they have become unwilling or unable any longer to study or read seriously then they must be given suitable work which is within their powers so that they may not sink into idleness. (From para. 6 of Ch. 48 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

At the beginning of this chapter, Benedict says, "Idleness is the enemy of the soul." That means to me that idleness is a disconnect between body and soul - a forgetting of the awe in which Benedict wants me always to live. Living in awe of God, and living with gratefulness for life, opens me to the divine energy that can lead me to appropriate action.

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Chapter 48: Daily manual labor (paragraphs 3-5)


From the first of October to the beginning of Lent they should devote themselves to lectio divina until the end of the second hour, at which time they gather for Terce and then they work at the tasks assigned to them until the ninth hour. (From para. 3 of Ch. 48 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

My copy of the Rule carries a special note on "hours" in the Rule: "For the Romans, each day (from dawn to dusk) and each night (from dusk to dawn) was divided into twelve 'hours'. The actual length of these 'hours' varied according to the season.... Timekeeping, therefore, called for a special expertise and flexibility." I like the idea that, in my own life, time can have a malleable quality, and that it's  my choice whether I use it to create stress or freedom.
     

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Chapter 48: Daily manual labor (paragraphs 1-2)


It may be, of course, that because of local conditions or the poverty of the monastery the community may themselves have to do the harvest work. If that happens it should not discourage anyone because they will really be in the best monastic tradition if the community is supported by the work of their own hands. (From para. 2 of Ch. 48 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

It seems to be that it's in that flashpoint, between hand and heart, that awareness can be sparked, my attention can become full, and my work, no matter how small, can become energized by the Spirit.

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Chapter 47: Signalling the times for the work of God


The superior is personally responsible for making sure that the time for the work of God, both at night at during the daytime, is clearly made known to all. (From para. 1 of Ch. 47 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

Clearly making known the times for the work of God, clearing the way for the work of God, little by little time takes on an eternal quality, and all time becomes God's time.

Monday, March 26, 2018

Chapter 46: Faults committed elsewhere


Any member of the community who in the course of some work in the kitchen, in the stores, while fulfilling a service to others or in the bakery, the garden or the workshops or anywhere else does something wrong or happens to break or lose something or to be guilty of some other wrongdoing, must as soon as possible appear before the superior and the community with a voluntary admission of the failure and willing reparation for it. (From para. 1 of Ch. 46 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

For me, this passage poses an examen: am I doing better at seeing each task, each moment, each person as an opportunity to relate with love and gratitude? Am I better at seeing that, no matter how small the work seems, Christ waits for me there? Am I better at seeing how failures in my attention may require reparation to those around me?

Sunday, March 25, 2018

Chapter 45: Mistakes in the Oratory


Anyone who makes a mistake in a psalm, responsory, antiphon or reading must have the humility to make immediate reparation there before all the community in the oratory. A failure to do that so clearly shows lack of the humility to put right a fault which was due to carelessness that it must incur a more severe punishment. (From Ch. 45 of Saint Benedict's Rule, trans. by Patrick Barry, OSB, 1997.)

I think about how my distracted state of mind  -- a lack of attention -- interferes with meditation or other work I do.  But am I alert to how my distracted state of mind makes a difference to those around me?