Sunday, June 30, 2013

July 30

The Sixth Sunday after Pentecost

The Rule of St. Benedict: Chapter 23


Chapter 23 is the first of eight chapters dealing with consequences for faults.  No one wants to talk about the dark side of community life, when earnest good intentions can no longer be assumed.  We would that human evil remain an abstraction, an idea we can rail against on Facebook, but never encounter within our own homes.  As soon as we open ourselves to living in community, however, we open ourselves to the possibility that someone will betray the trust that makes community possible.  To betray is to make use of that which is derived from a community--resources, information, security, relationships--against the interests of that community.

These chapters are St. Benedict's 6th Century prescription for dealing with such betrayal in order to preserve the health of his communities.  I will not be concerned with the specific means of correction or punishment, as they have little to offer us in the 21st Century, but I believe there is much to be gained from listening carefully with the ear of the heart, even as we move through these eight difficult chapters.

Notice with me the nature of the offenses our Father Benedict lists here in Chapter 23: obstinacy, disobedience, pride, murmuring, contemptuousness.  These are attitudes that we can all find living within ourselves at one time or another.  What is so harmful about them within a Benedictine community is that they indicate an unwillingness to be moulded, to be transformed.  They are ways a human heart digs its heels in and refuses to budge.  Such a posture cannot be ignored, if Benedictine community is to remain an association of unified intentions.

Br. Chad

No comments:

Post a Comment