It
is impossible to read the Rule of St. Benedict without noting St. Benedict’s
constant appeal to Holy Scripture as the primary source for his formulation of
the Rule itself. Benedict makes this clear in his prologue:
That is why the Lord says
in the Gospel: Whoever hears these words
of mine and does them is like a wise man who built his house upon the rock; the
floods came and the wind blew and beat against this house, but it did not fall:
it was founded on the rock (Matthew 7:24).
With this conclusion, the
Lord waits for us daily to translate into action, as we should, his holy
teaching.[i]
In
many places Benedict refers to Holy Scripture as the source of his teaching,
notably, and in this order, and starting with a strong predominance of verses
from the Psalms, then the Gospels, Proverbs, and the Epistles, and then many of
the Old Testament Scriptures. Of the Psalms Benedict says,
For monks, who in a
week’s time say less than the full psalter with the customary canticles betray
extreme indolence and lack of devotion in their service. We read, after all,
that our holy Fathers, energetic as they were, did all this in a single day.
Let us hope that we, lukewarm as we are, can achieve it in a whole week.[ii]
In
doing so, Benedict in his teaching sets a model for us in our own pursuit of
God. The teaching is not just Benedict’s teaching, it is the Lord’s teaching,
and this teaching of the Lord is brought from a wide variety of verses in Holy
Scripture, and if we would follow St. Benedict we will also follow the
teachings of Holy Scripture. But this teaching of the Lord runs cross-grain
against our fundamental rebellion protecting our own autonomy and our lordship
over ourselves. That is why Benedict places such a strong emphasis on
obedience, saying,
“The first step of
humility is unhesitating obedience, which comes naturally to those who cherish
Christ above all. Because of the holy service they have professed, or because
of the dread of hell and for the glory of everlasting life, they carry out the
superior’s order as promptly as if the command came from God himself. The Lord
says of men like this: No sooner did he
hear than he obeyed me (Psalm 18:45); again, he tells teachers: Whoever listens to you, listens to me (Luke
10:16). Such people as these immediately put aside their own concerns, abandon
their own will, and lay down whatever they have in hand, leaving it unfinished.
With the ready step of obedience, they follow the voice of authority in their
actions.”[iii]
It is through surrender
and obedience that we pass through the gate where the angel with the flaming
sword bars the way before us.[iv]
Benedict
says of the Abbot, “The Abbot must never teach or decree anything that would
deviate from the Lord’s instructions.”[v] Neither psychology nor any
other human wisdom ought to be the source for the Abbot’s guidance for his
monks. For Benedict, the revelation of God in Holy Scripture, and its witness
to the Incarnation of God in Christ Jesus, is his source for his Rule. For Benedict
it is the Incarnate Word to whom ultimately we all must bow, whether or not we
like it; “You have given him dominion over the works of your hands; you have
put all things under his feet,”[vi] and, every tongue must “confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.[vii]
Benedict
was thoroughly Catholic in his treatment of Holy Scripture and his instructions
to his monks came at a time when the great Ecumenical Councils were hammering
out the nature of that orthodox faith. Benedict would have been in thorough
agreement with Vincent of Lerins in the 5th Century who said,
Now in the Catholic
Church itself we take the greatest care to hold that which has been believed
everywhere, always and by all. That is truly and properly ‘Catholic,’[viii] as is shown by the very
force and meaning of the word, which comprehends everything almost universally.
We shall hold to this rule if we follow universality,
antiquity, and consent. We shall follow universality if we acknowledge that one
Faith to be true which the whole Church throughout the world confesses;
antiquity if we in no wise depart from those interpretations which it is clear
that our ancestors and fathers proclaimed; consent, if in antiquity itself we
keep following the definitions and opinions of all, or certainly nearly all,
bishops and doctors alike.[ix]
We
on our part live in an age where the ancient heresies are being re-played as
though Church History did not exist. As a result, we need to revisit the nature
of false teaching so that we may plant our feet solidly on Holy Scripture.
Today we do have false prophets and teachers, and well as prophets and teachers
who are true to the Word of God; and sometimes these false prophets rise to leadership
in the Church.
This
becomes important on a personal level because through the media, and especially
through the social media, there is a constant hammering against the notion that
Jesus Christ is Lord. But this is an illusion fostered by the principalities
and powers; the rulers of this present age.[x] Pre-eminently in all of
the media, from television programming and news, to internet media, to social
media, to movies, and to books, the principalities and powers are hammering us
about human sexuality, seeking to break down the nature of marriage. We should
remember that marriage, the union of one man and one woman is the very model,
in our flesh, of Christ and his Church.[xi] It is not a matter of the
liberation and dignity of those with other sexual orientations as we are
constantly told, but it is a matter of the bondage and indignity of all the
world under the ‘rulers of this present age’[xii].
Is
this pertinent to our walk as Oblates of St. Benedict? Remember what Benedict
said, “We must then be on guard against any base desire, because death is
stationed near the gateway of pleasure.”[xiii] It should be clear from
a reading of The Rule of St. Benedict that for us there should be no bowing
down to the morality of the world around us.
In
the 1st Epistle of John we have a caution about the false prophets
who would declare something contrary to the Word of God. In his First Epistle
St. John says,
1 Beloved,
do not believe every spirit, but test the spirits to see whether they are from
God, for many false prophets have gone out into the world. 2 By this you know the Spirit of
God: every spirit that confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is
from God, 3 and every spirit that does not confess Jesus is not from God. This
is the spirit of the antichrist, which you heard was coming and now is in the
world already. 4 Little
children, you are from God and have overcome them, for he who is in you is
greater than he who is in the world. 5
They are from the world; therefore they
speak from the world, and the world listens to them. 6 We are from God. Whoever
knows God listens to us; whoever is not from God does not listen to us. By this
we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error. 7 Beloved, let us love one
another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows
God. 8 Anyone who does not
love does not know God, because God is love.[xiv]
Karl
Barth remarks, “The spirit of the false prophet is known by the fact that it
answers to what is demanded by men; the God-given spirit of the true prophet on
the contrary by the fact that it does not answer to anything but speaks on its
own, if and whatever it is commanded to speak. Thus the former has no
power—just as a stone or drip of water hurled at the sky certainly will not
reach the sky, whereas a hailstone or a drop of water falling from the sky will
reach the earth” [xv]
Here Barth is drawing from a mid-second century Apostolic Father,
The
Shepherd of Hermas: Commandment Eleventh
Try by his deeds and his
life the man who says that he is inspired. But as for you, trust the Spirit
which comes from God, and has power; but the spirit which is earthly and empty
trust not at all, for there is no power in it: it comes from the devil. Hear,
then, the parable which I am to tell you. Take a stone, and throw it to the
sky, and see if you can touch it. Or again, take a squirt of water and squirt
into the sky, and see if you can penetrate the sky." "How, sir,"
say I, "can these things take place? for both of them are
impossible." "As these things," says he, "are impossible,
so also are the earthly spirits powerless and pithless[xvi]. But look, on the other
hand, at the power which comes from above. Hail is of the size of a very small
grain, yet when it falls on a man's head how much annoyance it gives him! Or,
again, take the drop which falls from a pitcher to the ground, and yet it
hollows a stone. You see, then, that the smallest things coming from above have
great power when they fall upon the earth. Thus also is the Divine Spirit,
which comes from above, powerful. Trust, then, that Spirit, but have nothing to
do with the other."[xvii]
An Old Testament account of King Ahab and the False
Prophets that illustrates this principle is found in the footnotes. [xviii]
Current
Progressive theological reflection begins with the needs of the world and from
them attempts to understand God’s ways among men. The method is upside down. It
is not that the needs of humankind and of the world are unimportant; but rather
that God has already addressed them in His Word and it behooves us to listen first
to what God has said in His word. By the way, I carefully used the words
“progressive theological reflection” instead of Progressive Theology, because
the word “theology” [Theo-Logos] refers to the knowledge of God, but revelation
begins with what God has already said, not what men try to deduce on the basis
of their own preconceptions. There is as a result no such thing as “progressive
theology” for you cannot reach the knowledge of God starting from the bottom
up.[xix]
St.
Benedict would agree thoroughly with John Donne, the 17th Century
Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral who makes the point very clear when he says, “The
Scriptures are God’s voyce; the Church is His eccho.” The same might be said of the Rule of St.
Benedict, “The Scriptures are God’s voyce; and the Rule is his eccho.” When
Benedict wrote his Rule he made it clear that the Word of God was the source
for his teaching; as Jesus said, “It stands written, ‘Man shall not live by
bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.'"[xx] In the temptation in the
wilderness Jesus three times answers the devil saying, ge,graptai – “it stands written,” and that sensibility
is also true of the use of Holy Scripture in The Rule of St. Benedict.
At
the very end of his Rule St. Benedict writes, “What page, what passage of the
inspired books of the Old and New Testaments is not the truest of guides for
human life? What book of the holy catholic Fathers does not resoundingly summon
us along the true way to reach the Creator?”[xxi] To be a Benedictine is
to follow the ways and teaching of St. Benedict, and Benedict himself clearly
followed the teachings of Holy Scripture and the traditions of the early Catholic
Fathers. In the midst of all the vagaries and uncertainty of our contemporary
world Benedict’s Rule provides for us firm foundation as we hasten to our heavenly
home.[xxii]
[i]
The Rule of St. Benedict [RB], The Prologue 33-34
[ii] RB, Ch. 19: 24, 25
[iii]
Ibid, Ch. 5:1-8
[iv]
Genesis 3:24
[v]
Ibid, Ch. 2:4
[vi]
Psalm 8:6
[vii] Philippians
2:11
[viii]
Catholic means Universal
[ix] Vincent
of Lerins 5th C : The
Vincentian Canon
[x]
Ephesians 6:10
[xi]
Ephesians 5:25-33
[xii]
Ephesians 6:12
[xiii]
RB Ch. 7, v 24
[xiv] 1
John 4:1-8
[xv] Barth,
“God’s Time and Our Time”, The Doctrine of the Word of God, p. 60
[xvi]
Pithless: having no substance or significance
[xvii]
“The Pastor of Hermas”, The Ante-Nicene Library, Vol. 1, trans.
Alexander Roberts & James Donaldson, (Edinburgh: T. and T. Clark, n.d.), p.
368
[xviii]
2 Chronicles 18:4-17 [I Kings 22 & II Chronicles 18 ].
Ahab and the False Prophets
4
And Jehoshaphat said to the king of Israel, "Inquire first for the word of
the LORD." 5 Then the
king of Israel gathered the prophets together, four hundred men, and said to
them, "Shall we go to battle against Ramoth-gilead, or shall I
refrain?" And they said, "Go up, for God will give it into the hand
of the king." 6 But
Jehoshaphat said, "Is there not here another prophet of the LORD of whom
we may inquire?" 7 And
the king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, "There is yet one man by whom we
may inquire of the LORD, Micaiah the son of Imlah; but I hate him, for he never
prophesies good concerning me, but always evil." And Jehoshaphat said,
"Let not the king say so." 8
Then the king of Israel summoned an officer and said, "Bring quickly
Micaiah the son of Imlah." 9
Now the king of Israel and Jehoshaphat the king of Judah were sitting on their
thrones, arrayed in their robes. And they were sitting at the threshing floor
at the entrance of the gate of Samaria, and all the prophets were prophesying
before them. 10 And Zedekiah
the son of Chenaanah made for himself horns of iron and said, "Thus says
the LORD, 'With these you shall push the Syrians until they are
destroyed.'" 11 And all
the prophets prophesied so and said, "Go up to Ramoth-gilead and triumph.
The LORD will give it into the hand of the king."
12
And the messenger who went to summon Micaiah said to him, "Behold, the
words of the prophets with one accord are favorable to the king. Let your word
be like the word of one of them, and speak favorably." 13 But Micaiah said, "As the
LORD lives, what my God says, that I will speak." 14 And when he had come to the
king, the king said to him, "Micaiah, shall we go to Ramoth-gilead to
battle, or shall I refrain?" And he answered, "Go up and triumph;
they will be given into your hand."
15 But the king said to him, "How many times shall I
make you swear that you speak to me nothing but the truth in the name of the
LORD?" 16 And he said,
"I saw all Israel scattered on the mountains, as sheep that have no
shepherd. And the LORD said, 'These have no master; let each return to his home
in peace.'" 17 And the
king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, "Did I not tell you that he would not
prophesy good concerning me, but evil?"[xviii]
[xix]
Alexander Pope 18th C, was wrong when he wrote “Presume not God to
scan; the proper study of mankind is man.” Contrary to this, “It is not for us
to know in advance what we are on the ground of a general anthropology. We are
what the Word of God tells us we are. We are flesh. And that is what God’s Word
Himself becomes in His revelation. Right in the decisive passage Jn. 1:14, it
does not say generally “man,” but concretely “flesh.” [Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics, The Word of God, Chapter
II, 13].
[xx] Matthew
4:4
[xxi] RB Ch. 73:3-4
[xxii]
RB Ch. 73:8
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