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July 31, 2006

Beneath the Cross

Crucifix_chapel_3Beneath the cross of Jesus I fain would take my stand,
The shadow of a mighty rock within a weary land;
A home within the wilderness, a rest upon the way,
From the burning of the noontide heat, and the burden of the day.

O safe and happy shelter, O refuge tried and sweet,
O trysting place where Heaven’s love and Heaven’s justice meet!
As to the holy patriarch that wondrous dream was given,
So seems my Savior’s cross to me, a ladder up to heaven.

There lies beneath its shadow but on the further side
The darkness of an awful grave that gapes both deep and wide
And there between us stands the cross two arms outstretched to save
A watchman set to guard the way from that eternal grave.

Upon that cross of Jesus mine eye at times can see
The very dying form of One Who suffered there for me;
And from my stricken heart with tears two wonders I confess;
The wonders of redeeming love and my unworthiness.

I take, O cross, thy shadow for my abiding place;
I ask no other sunshine than the sunshine of His face;
Content to let the world go by to know no gain or loss,
My sinful self my only shame, my glory all the cross.

- "Beneath the Cross of Jesus" by Scottish Presbyterian Elizabeth C. Clephane, 1868, published posthumously.

Picture: Crucifix in the Chapel of Reconciliation, Church of the Nativity, Rancho Santa Fe, CA.

July 30, 2006

A Happy Feast of St. Ignatius of Loyola to All Jesuits

July 31 is the feast day of St. Ignatius of Loyola, one of the founders of the Society of Jesus ("Jesuits"), and the 450th annniversary of his death.  This year is also the 500th anniversary of the birth of another of the order's founders, St. Francis Xavier. 

In an interview with Zenit published today, Father Peter Hans Kolvenbach, father general of the Jesuits, said that his hopes for Jesuits in this year of celebration are that "the Jesuits will revive in their lives and in their apostolate the three charisms that they embodied: to encounter God and unite oneself to him through the work to lead everything to its fulfillment, as Ignatius did; to proclaim passionately the Gospel as Xavier; and to deepen one's spiritual life as Faber."

This post is a tribute to the Jesuits whose hard work contributes to the internet, with appreciation for their work although I only know them by their writing, with wishes for a blessed feast day, and with a few quotes of things they have said that I think reflect those charisms:

Father Paul Andrews, S.J., of Sacred Space, the online prayer site of the Irish Jesuits.  Father Andrews, whose picture and introduction are in the Latest Space newsletter, has been writing the weekly meditations for the site for some time and now is moving from the Jesuit Center of Spirituality to the Jesuit Communications Center, where he will work more closely with the editor of Sacred Space, according to the newsletter.  His thought for this week reflects on the 450th anniversary of the death of St. Ignatius of Loyola and on looking back over the years of our own lives, saying: "The God we serve is a God of surprises; retrospect shows that it is his plans, not ours, that counted. He does not call us to help him out of a jam. He calls us because he loves us."

Father James V. Schall, S.J., is a professor of political philosophy at Georgetown University and a frequent author of articles for Ignatius Insight (a publication of Ignatius Press which, of course, was founded by another Jesuit, Father Joseph Fessio, S.J.).  His latest article there is a review of Ann Coulter's book, Godless.  In Part II of an interview posted there last August, Father Schall offered this observation among others: "Our souls ought not to be flat, we should be brave. I am suspicious of someone, particularly a Catholic, or a student, who can get excited about nothing of the important things.  But it has to happen. You cannot force it. Some people will be moved by Augustine, others by Bonaventure, others by Aquinas, some by all three.  And as Chesterton says, it is quite possible just to be moved by the wonder of things, even by tragedy, and more unsettlingly, by joy."

Mark Mossa, S.J., a Jesuit scholastic nearing the time of his ordination, whose blog You Duped Me Lord was the winner of this year's Catholic Blog Awards "Best Blog by a Seminarian" category.  He says  his latest article "On the Ministry of Writing" would also include the ministry of blogging.  It appears in the summer 2006 issue of Light & Life (Downloadable in .pdf format).  About the kind of thing he is writing now, he says, "I'm not just writing academic papers these days.  I am writing about people and events that bring me closer to God, or that challenge my relationship with God.  I'm addressing larger concerns like war and peace, or describing intimate moments like rubbing a dying woman's feet.  I'm trying to capture in words and images how God is made apparent in the messiness of life."

Mike Rogers, S.J., another Jesuit seminarian whose blog, A Prayer for Generosity, was recently mentioned by Mark Mossa, S.J.  Mike's blog has posted the first part of a post on St. Ignatius Day, mentioning live Maine lobsters for the feast that will follow that day's Mass at Georgetown University, where he is working as a hospital chaplain, pointing to "the reality of the importance of celebration".  He writes, "In celebrating Ignatius, we celebrate the saint of course, but we also celebrate the society of which we are a part, and I think we celebrate being Jesuits, and just what that is.  For some of us it is a celebration of having survived the year, for others it is a moment of profound gratitude and joy. . . .

"The feast of Ignatius is not about those live Maine lobsters, and I have been without them on Ignatius day before, but that extravagant moment reminds us of the specialness of the occasion which is born out of the joy of our brotherhood, the grace of our vocation, and the beauty of the world in which we are called to act as companions of Christ.
 

Happy feast day, to Jesuits everywhere -- and for those of you at Georgetown, enjoy the lobster!

Lobster

Catch-All Clipart

Give me Thy love and Thy grace

Christ_on_the_cross_2"Take, O Lord,
and receive all my liberty,
my memory,
my understanding,
and my entire will,
all that I have and possess.
Thou hast given all to me,
to Thee O Lord,
I return it. 
All is Thine,
dispose of it
according to Thy will. 
Give me Thy love
and Thy grace,
for that is enough
for me."

- St. Ignatius of Loyola, Spiritual Exercises

Picture: Crucifix from Church of the Nativity, Rancho Santa Fe, California (bronze Spanish corpus on a cross designed by Renzo Zecchetto).

Cardinal George Lauded by Chicago Tribune

Cardinal Francis George, who had surgery this past week for bladder cancer, was lauded by today's Chicago Tribune for his candor in addressing such a private matter.  Doctors were following the Cardinal's instructions in speaking openly and publicly about his two surgeries.  Yesterday, his vital signs were stable, and he had been able to get out of bed at least twice, which the Tribune article stated was a priority in view of his childhood battle with polio.  Among several Chicago Catholics quoted in the article, Gilbert Ostdiek, O.F.M., a professor of liturgy at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago, is quoted as saying:

"If spiritual leadership is not just confined to the human spirit, but it can touch the whole of our human experience, then it ought not be restricted to just spiritual matters."

Others quoted in the same article specifically mentioned the pastoral role of clergy in reaching out to people who are sick and suffering and the benefit of Cardinal George's candor about his own illness in that context.

The Desired Good of True Peace

In his message before praying the Angelus today at Castel Gandolfo, Pope Benedict XVI again mentioned the fighting that continues in Israel and Lebanon.  According to P.I.M.E. Asia News, he called on all those responsible to "immediately lay down their weapons, on all sides", stressing the word "immediately", so as to build a means of "lasting and peaceful coexistence" through dialogue.  As he prayed for peace and continued to request prayer for peace, here is an excerpt of his words about the Church's message:

"More than ever, we see how prophetic, and at the same time realistic, is the voice of the Church when, faced with war and conflicts of all kinds, it indicates the path of truth, justice, love and freedom (cfr Enc. Pacem en Terris). This is the path that mankind must travel today also to achieve the desired good of true peace."

The Zenit translation of the entire message is here, and the Vatican translation is here.

July 29, 2006

An Interview with Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard of Solesmes

On May 25, 2006, while the Pope was in Poland, ZENIT published an interview with Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard of l'Abbaye de St. Pierre, Solesmes, in its French language news.  The interview was not translated into English.  This past week, I received permission from ZENIT to translate it myself and to post the entire interview here in English.  ZENIT still holds all copyright interests in the interview, although the translation is my own and not ZENIT's.  The original French language article is here.  Here is the translation:

Concerning the Origins of Gregorian Chant: Christian Europe’s Carolingian Roots

ROME, Tuesday, May 25, 2006 (ZENIT)  Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard, a monk from Solesmes, just published in Rome, in the Benedictine journal Ecclesia Orans, a study of the exact origin of Gregorian chant. 

He delivered the essentials in edition no. 3027 of France-Catholique, in magazine racks June 2 (http://www.france-catholique.fr) or (http://www.monde-catholique.com) and a preview to ZENIT readers:   

Zenit:  Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard, does Gregorian chant go back to Pope/Saint Gregory?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: People only lend to the rich. Gregorian chant is credited with that ancestry because of the immense influence that great pope (590-604) had in the Latin Church.  Actually, chant originated in Gaul in the eighth and ninth centuries.  It was the fruit of the reforms of Pippin the Short, Charlemagne (768-814), and Louis the Pious.  We know that the repertoire of the Mass did not yet exist around 750, and that it did exist around 800 (the date of the first manuscript with chant pieces according to Gregorian order.  We know it is not Roman (because it has characteristics foreign to Rome) and that it fits perfectly into the liturgical revolution of the Carolingian era.

Zenit: What revolution do you mean?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: The Carolingian Era not only knew liturgical reform, like what followed the Vatican II Council, it also knew the replacement of Gallican liturgies with an entirely new liturgy.  Pope Steven II came to Gaul in 753 to obtain Pippin's military assistance against Lombard warrior incursions.  But the pope could not move without his court, nor without the liturgy of the Church of which he was Pontiff.  Thus, he brought with him his cantors and everything that a solemn liturgy required.  Of course, he presided over great ceremonies (including those consecrating Peppin and his sons).  Roman pomp abounded, and Pippin wanted his kingdom’s churches to adopt the Pope's customs at the expense of local customs.  That is what happened almost everywhere in Europe during the next decades.

Zenit: How was it possible to implement Papal customs outside of Rome?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: It was not easy.  Take the calendar, for example.  It was not very natural to celebrate Roman saints outside of Rome.  People did it anyway and, until the Vatican II Council, it was done not only in France but also all over the world.  Other elements were easier to accommodate, such as the order of the readings of the Mass, or chant.  However, it was in the latter field that the Gauls took the greatest liberties in comparison to their model, which was known as "Old Roman Chant".  The composers of this country kept the chant pieces’ Roman settings, but they modified the melodies according to their taste.  The result is what we call "Gregorian chant".

Zenit: Do we have to speak of a new chant?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: From a global point of view, the answer is "no", since the settings, the texts, the manner of singing, etc. are Roman. From a musical point of view, the answer is "yes". The manuscripts that offer primitive Roman chant show that it was much poorer than Gregorian chant.  The Gallican composers were brilliant, and such a creation in so little time is amazing.  There was actually an urgency about it, since it was necessary to provide chants for Mass celebrations.  However, a complete repertoire was composed in a few years.  The Old Roman Chant (which is from before the seventh century) and Gregorian chant are the oldest known musical ensembles in the whole world.  There is nothing like it in the Asian or African repertoire, nothing in Byzantine music.

Zenit:  How long has it been known how this revolution transpired?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: Historians are scarcely interested in music, and liturgists often lack musical gifts, which makes them overlook chant.  That is why the context and chronology of Gregorian chant’s creation has only been known with certainty for about fifty years.  There is indeed still hesitation among people who are interested in Gregorian chant.  In fact, among Anglo-Saxon musicologists, not very familiar with the liturgy, and not understanding the range of the arguments suitable for the liturgy, prefer demonstrations usually used for ordinary historical phenomena.  In the same way, the faithful, moved by a sentimental piety, prefer to imagine that Gregorian chant descended directly from chants of the Synagogue, or that it is derived from melodies from Spain or from Eastern Christians.  That thinking succeeds by brushing aside problems related to the creation of Gregorian chant.

Zenit: But if the history is already known, what do you bring that is new?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: We have already known for several decades that the Gregorian chant of the Mass was created around 765, in Metz, under the authority of Bishop/Saint Chrodegang.  That includes entry chants or introïts (for example, those which were once well known: Low Sunday, Laetare, etc.), chants for the offertory and communion, and all other ornate chants used for the Mass. But Gregorian chant also includes the chant of Vespers, Matins, Compline, etc.: which we call the “Office”.  However, until now, people were unaware of the origin of the Office chant, except that it had been created soon after the composition of the melodies of the Mass.

Zenit: How did you go about determining the date of origination and the place where the repertoire of the Office appeared?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: The method was simple, even if accurate demonstration required a lot of work.  Gregorian chant came down to us, not thanks to discs, but by transcriptions in manuscripts.  Several hundred such artifacts still exist.  However, in spite of their diversity of age and place, they almost always have the same melodies and well as other details, without significant modifications.  However, if they mention - as should be the case – Roman saints’ feast days and those their own local saints, they always add four saints: Martin, Brice, Maurice and Symphorian, whose cult existed in Tours around the year 800.  These saints were never seen anywhere else at that time, in a common cult.  We conclude that the Office was developed and spread beginning at Saint-Martin de Tours around 800, undoubtedly under the aegis of the great Alcuin.

Zenit: What role did Alcuin have in the liturgy?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: Alcuin was an Englishman trained in the great intellectual center which was York. Called by Charlemagne to the court of Aachen, he became master to the prince and to many young men who were educated at the Palace School.  More than a professor, he was a kind of Minister of Culture, in the secular field as well as the religious.  Near the end of his life, Charlemagne named him head of Saint-Martin de Tours, a religious center where the faithful came in pilgrimage from all over the West.  Alcuin’s influence – whether direct or indirect and posthumous - was at the origin of a great many devotions that blossomed in the Middle Ages and down to our own era: the feasts of the Holy Trinity and All Saints' Day, Saturdays devoted to Our Lady, and also the feast of Saint Martin, who from then on received a largely standardized liturgical cult.  We undoubtedly owe to Alcuin the feast of the Beheading of St. John the Baptist on August 29 and the old Feast of the Cross on May 3.

Zenit: You were also interested in the origin of the feast of St. Mary Magdalene...

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: In the west, devotion to St. Mary Magdalene owes its rise primarily to Pope/Saint Gregory the Great (590-604).  That is not to say that she was then the subject of liturgical feasts, as we now have for St. Martin or St. Joan of Arc.  The liturgical celebration of St. Mary Magdalene originated around 790 in Flavigny, in the Côte d'Or, when authors of liturgical works confused the married Saints Marius and Martha with the sisters Mary (of Bethany) and Martha mentioned in the Gospel, and that they set on January 19 the foundations of a Mass in honor of the two friends of Jesus.  However, in the West, that Mary of Bethany was identified with Mary Magdalene; it was thus quite natural that the first liturgical observance – set on January 19 - was gradually transferred to July 22 (the current date) when collections of saints place only the feast of St. Mary Magdalene.  Private devotion to St. Mary Magdalene, which was thus doubled by the liturgical observance, had, as everyone knows, an extraordinary proliferation during in the Middle Ages, as seen in the sanctuaries of Saint-Maximin of Provence and Vézelay.

Zenit: How did the Gregorian Office develop?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: This Office, which was planned for colleges and cathedrals, was adapted very quickly for Benedictine use by the monks of Saint-Denis.  In fact, I noticed that the Benedictine manuscripts that include the Gregorian Office, always mention, in addition to the usual saints, not only St. Benedict, the monks' founder, but also St. Denis, whose life was written by Hilduin, abbot of the Monastery of Saint-Denis, just after that community placed itself under the practice of the Rule of St. Benedict (832).  The adaptation was thus carried out by that abbot Hilduin at Saint-Denis around 835.  Consequently, the Gregorian office existed in two forms, which would serve as the base for the secular liturgy and the Benedictine liturgy, respectively, until the twentieth century.  That shows how much these creations from Tours and Saint-Denis marked the Western Church in a hidden but universal and profound way.

Zenit: How can such a discovery interest Christians of today?

Father Jacques-Marie Guilmard: It is necessary to return ceaselessly to the roots of the Church and its liturgy.  Gregorian chant was born at the same time as Christian Europe: Romans, Franks, Germans, the English and perhaps the Visigoths were involved in its creation.  It is thus wise to refer to the Christian ideal of the eighth and ninth centuries during which the Christian roots of Europe were planted, and when the liturgy had a major place.  This way, we can propose to present-day Catholics ceremonies which "supernaturalize" their spiritual life and their religious vision of the world -- we could also say their "politics" – in the sense of a concept of civic life.  The future of Europe is necessarily going through a renewal which is finding its direction and its style in ancient Christian times.

New Search Engine in Sidebar

I added a new search engine feature to the side bar.  Please let me know what you think of it, either good or bad, and whether you think it is helpful enough to keep. 

I have some misgivings about it, but felt that the usefulness outweighs the sources of my hesitation.  It lets me provide a "search" feature that includes posts in such blogs as Pontifications, Sacramentum Vitae, The Pertinacious Papist, Ressourcement, Apolonio Latar, etc., which I think could be very helpful to people searching for discussions on a specific theological issue.  It also brings together some of the best devotional blogs, including Flos Carmeli, Moniales,  Word Incarnate, Pause for Prayer, and A Penitent Blogger, whose blogs might not otherwise be as readily searchable together.  The concept is one I thought was very good.

There are also disadvantages.  Among these, the search website is not Catholic, and I cannot control the advertising or the other links that come up with search terms.  Thus, for example, a search for "Anglican" brought up advertisements for Anglican rosaries and other things that I would not advertise if it were up to my choice.  Those links are not to items in the various blogs I included in the search engine; they are links to advertisers that apparently pay the company that provides the search feature.  Sometimes the ads are funny, such as "Find your chant ancestors now" on a word search for chant -- ah, promises that ancestry.com can solve it all in a 14-day trial!

Another cause for hesitation was the name of the search engine provider itself, "Rollyo" (with the motto "Roll your own search engine").  I didn't like the drug-related motto, and I don't expect my readers to like it either.

Lastly, it does not work as well as I would like.  When I tried the word "Anglican", I got a large predominance of posts over the years in Pontifications, and not as many matches to other blogs as I would have liked to have seen on the first 2 or 3 pages of matches.  So it may not be as useful as I am hoping it may be.

Give me your thoughts if you try it, either by e-mail or by posting a comment.  If I hear that a few people are offended or find it useless, I may drop it.  However, I am hoping that it will provide a useful resource for some people.

July 28, 2006

Prayer Request for Sandra Miesel's Husband

A prayer request relayed by Amy Welborn's Open Book:

"You all know Sandra Miesel, medievalist extraordinaire who co-authored the Ignatius Press DVC book with Carl Olsen, The Da Vinci Hoax, and is regular and learned commentor on many blogsSandra let us a know a couple of months ago about her husband's illness, and now writes, asking for our prayers:

"Sandra Miesel's husband John is in his last days of life, suffering from a cancerous brain tumor. He's at peace (and) not in pain. Your prayers for him and our family would be much appreciated at this difficult time."

July 27, 2006

Disappointment over the Lack of a Cease-Fire

Here are a few links to articles about Archbishop Giovanni Lavolo's statement today expressing Vatican disappointment over the lack of an agreement to a cease-fire in Israel and Lebanon at yesterday's International Conference for Lebanon, held in Rome:

Vatican Information Service

Catholic News Service

Catholic News Agency

Catholic Online reports that the Lebanon humanitarian crisis is spiraling out of control, and that tourists have left Nazareth

Carmelite Father Millan on Forgiveness and Judaism

Carmelite Father Fernando Millan Romeral, a professor at the Pontifical University of Comillas in Madrid, was interviewed by ZENIT, as reported in an article published today.  The subject of the interview was a comparison of Christian and Jewish ideas of forgiveness.  An excerpt:

"What has perhaps happened, at least in certain milieus, is that by preaching a merciful God, which could not be otherwise, we have forgotten that forgiveness means a "return" to God, a conversion -- that God does not rain down forgiveness and does not distribute it indiscriminately."

July 26, 2006

Carmel as the Order of Our Lady

Mary_of_graceThis is a third post in a series on the stories of Carmel, looking at references to them in the writings of St. Teresa of Avila and at how much real historical fact there is within the legends.

The first such post was about Elijah as the father of Carmel.  The second was about the early hermits of Mount Carmel.  The second of those posts contains some small mention of New Testament passages about Christianity spreading to the north and south of Mount Carmel during New Testament times, which may have some significance to this post too, although Mary was not much mentioned there.  That post also quotes an excerpt from a fourteenth century French sermon about the history of the Carmelite order, which mentions that the early Christian hermits "built a Church or oratory in honor of the Holy Virgin, in a spot which, they had been told, she often frequented in her life, with her maiden companions.  For this reason, they were the first among all religious orders to be called children of the Blessed Mary of Mount Carmel."

This post is about the references in the writings of St. Teresa of Avila about the order as the Order of Our Lady, and the habit as Our Lady's habit, and how the Carmelite devotion to Mary reflects the memory of Mary's life in Nazareth, which is not far from Mount Carmel.   

St_teresa_of_avila_rubensScripture, History and Geography

The only part of Scripture that ties Mary to Mount Carmel is the proximity of the mountain and coast to Jesus's childhood home town of Nazareth.  Of course, it is easy to imagine that a first century family living in Nazareth would have spent time together in the nearby mountains and by the sea.  We know that the Holy Family traveled to Jerusalem for the Passover, a much greater distance.  We also know that the New Testament mentions Jesus going into the mountains and hills to spend long hours, even the entire night, in prayer.  It makes sense to think that his mother might have spent time in the mountains praying and meditating, and that he felt comfortable there alone at night having spent time in the mountains as a child. 

Aside from that kind of inference and guesswork, there is little historical evidence to tie the Holy Family, or Mary in particular, to Mount Carmel.  The stories may have developed from exactly that kind of inference and imagination, or they may have been passed down through the centuries.  It is not possible to know for sure, from historical records, whether she really walked there or not.

Also, we do not know a lot about how Marian the early hermits on Mount Carmel were in their faith.  However, devotion to Mary is something that marked the faith of St. John of Damascus, who was born and was educated in seventh century Damascus (north of Israel) and  who is thought to have later become one of the Palestinian monks of the Great Laura of St. Sabas in Israel, south of Galilee.  The canons of St. Andrew of Crete, who was born in Damascus in 660 and educated at the Monastery of the Holy Sepulcher of Jerusalem, also show a strong Marian devotion.  The worst opponent of St. John of Damascus in the crisis over iconoclasm was Byzantine Emperor Constantine V, who opposed the use of images and references to Mary as the “Mother of God", and who later persecuted the entire monastic system.  Thus, we know that other monks and hermits elsewhere in Palestine underwent persecution in the eighth century for their devotion to Mary, and it is thus likely that any monks and hermits then living on Mount Carmel were also persecuted for similar Marian devotion.

Present Day Carmelite Devotion to Mary

The present day Carmelite devotion to Our Lady is not based on legends and stories.  Rather, as mentioned in this earlier post, Pope John Paul II wrote that "Those who wear the Scapular are thus brought into the land of Carmel, so that they may "eat its fruits and its good things" (cf. Jer 2:7), and experience the loving and motherly presence of Mary in their daily commitment to be clothed in Jesus Christ and to manifest him in their life for the good of the Church and the whole of humanity."

Sixteenth Century Carmelite Devotion to Mary

However, in the Middle Ages and in sixteenth century Spain, the Carmelite order was thought to date back to Jewish and Christian hermits who lived on Mount Carmel going all the way back to the time of Elijah.  In that context, Mary, who was thought to have walked on Mount Carmel with her friends, was thought to offer special protection to the hermits on Mount Carmel.

The North American Carmelite Provincials wrote the following in "Pastoral Comments on the Brown Scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel" (from Catechesis and Ritual for the Scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel:

"Stories and legends abound in Carmelite tradition about the many ways in which the Mother of God has interceded for the Order, especially in critical moments in history.  Most enduring and popular of these traditions, blessed by the Church, concerns Mary's promise to an early Carmelite, Saint Simon Stock, that anyone who remains faithful to the Carmelite vocation until death will be granted the grace of final perseverance. The Carmelite Order has been anxious to share this patronage and protection with those who are devoted to the Mother of God and so has extended both its habit (the scapular) and affiliation to the larger Church."

St_teresa_of_avila_rubens_2_1The Carmelites as the "Order of Our Lady" in the Writings of St. Teresa of Avila

St. Teresa of Avila's writings have numerous references to the Carmelite order as the order of Our Lady, and to the habit as the habit of Our Lady, especially in her later writings.  When she wrote The Life, her first book, she did not speak of the order or habit that way as much, perhaps because of the circumstances of writing and the intended audience.  She did call the 1248 Carmelite Rule the "Rule of Our Lady of Carmel" in  Chapter 36.  Moreover, she described visions of Our Lady.  In Chapter 37, she described a vision of the Virgin that she had while at the Monastary of the Incarnation in Avila: 

"While praying in the church, before I went into the house, and being as it were in a trance, I saw Christ; who, as it seemed to me, received me with great affection, placed a crown on my head, and thanked me for what I had done for His Mother.  On another occasion, when all of us remained in the choir in prayer after Compline, I saw our Lady in exceeding glory, in a white mantle, with which she seemed to cover us all.  I understood by that the high degree of glory to which our Lord would raise the religious of this house."

In The Way of Perfection and Interior Castle, there are at least a couple of references to the Carmelite order as Our Lady's Order, and quite a few such references in The Book of the Foundations.  At the outset of The Way of Perfection, she described herself as "a nun of the Order of our Lady of Mount Carmel" and her nuns as the "discalced nuns who observe the primitive rule of our Lady of Mount Carmel"  In The Way of Perfection (3:10 in Kieran Kavanaugh's translation) she asked for prayer for the bishop, and in the Toledo manuscript, she added, "and this Order of the Blessed Virgin, and all the other orders." [footnote 4 to Fr. Kieran Kavanaugh's Study Guide]

In The Book of the Foundations, more such references appear.  In Chapter 23, writing about a man who became a Carmelite, she wrote:

"He left this care to God for whom he left all, and decided to be a subject of the Virgin and take her habit.  So they gave it to him amid the great happiness of all, especially of the nuns and the prioress.  The nuns gave much praise to our Lord, thinking that His Majesty had granted them his favor through their prayers."

In Chapter 27, she refers to the Rule of St. Albert as "the primitive rule of the order of the Virgin, Our Lady".   

Orthodox_nunAnd in Chapter 28, she called the order "the order of the Blessed Virgin, Our Lady".

In Chapter 29, she spoke of "an endeavor that was so important for the honor and glory of His glorious Mother since it concerned her order.  She is our Lady and our Patroness.  And this for me was one of the great joys and satisfactions of my life."  In Chapter 30, she again calls it the "order of our Lady."

The Carmelite Habit as the "Habit of Our Lady" in the Writings of St. Teresa of Avila

The two Rubens paintings shown here depict the Discalced Carmelite habit as shown by an artist who lived in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.  By comparison, the last two photographs show Orthodox Church nuns of the present day, whose habit is different in some respects, similar in others, but which serves to illustrate that the idea of nuns wearing veils and habits goes far back in time.  Present day Orthodox habits differ from each other, as Catholic habits differ from each other, although the two shown here are alike.  What caught my interest was the similarity of the veil itself, although Teresa of Avila may have never seen an Orthodox nun, and the Orthodox habit seems too unlike the Carmelite habit on the whole to have been derived from it.

In his introduction to The Collected Works of St. Teresa of Avila, Vol III, Father Kieran Kavanaugh, OCD, mentions that the Discalced Carmelite nuns at St. Joseph's in Avila, Teresa's first foundation, "made themselves externally recognizable through their coarse wool habits and their bare feet."  About the veil, he wrote:

"The use of veils by women to cover their faces is a custom almost as old as humanity.  The veiling of women in certain parts of the ancient Near East, for example, is manifested in the Middle-Assyrian law Code, in which a harlot or female slave may not veil her face, but all other women must veil themselves when appearing in public.  The custom of women veiling their faces in public was common in Palestine in the first Christian century, but St. Paul found it difficult to enforce in some other places.  Christianity, in fact, inherited the practice from three civilizations, Jewish, Greek, and Roman. . . .  The custom for women to be veiled gradually fell into disuse in the West but was preserved in the East and among Moslems.  Nonetheless, the use of the veil was still current in sixteenth century Spain, especially where there was Moorish influence.

"In one of its religious uses the veil became the sign of the consecrated woman.  In Teresa's time it caused no surprise or annoyance to see nuns with their faces veiled; this was often done by other women as well when they ventured into the streets."

Orthodox_nun2

Accordingly, the veil itself did not necessarily mark the habit as Marian -- as the style could be worn by ordinary women and not only by nuns -- but its link to the Middle East and to first century Palestine was real.  Our Lady is regularly depicted with a veil in both western and eastern artwork, and she indeed would have worn a veil. 

The early Carmelite habit, like the Carmelite habit of today, held that tie with what Our Lady really would have worn.

In another sense, however, St. Teresa of Avila could have referred to the Carmelite habit as Our Lady's habit simply because she saw the Carmelite order as Our Lady's order, as she said in the sections quoted above.

Here are the references:

"Among [the women Jesus loved] was your most blessed Mother, and through her merits and because we wear her habit we merit what, because of our offenses we do not deserve." [The Way of Perfection 3:7]

"Let us, my daughters, imitate in some way the great humility of the Blessed Virgin, whose habit we wear, for it is embarrassing to call ourselves her nuns.  However much it seems to us that we humble ourselves, we fall far short of being the daughters of such a Mother and the brides of such a Spouse." [The Way of Perfection 13:3]

"May the mercy of God help me.  In Him I have always trusted through His most sacred Son and the Virgin, our Lady, whose habit I wear through the goodness of the Lord."  [Foundations, Chapter 28]

In Interior Castle, St. Teresa mentions Our Lady in the context of telling the nuns to place their trust in the mercy of Christ, relying only on His mercy and fleeing to Him, rather than placing their confidence in Teresa.  She calls herself unworthy of the habit, and encourages them to imitate Mary instead of herself.  In Chapter 1 of the Third Mansions, she speaks of the importance of that aspect of the nuns' devotion to Our Lady of Carmel as their Mother:

"His Majesty knows that I have nothing to rely upon but His mercy; as I cannot cancel the past, I have no other remedy but to flee to Him, and to confide in the merits of His Son and of His Virgin Mother, whose habit, unworthy as I am, I wear as you do also. Praise Him, then, my daughters, for making you truly daughters of our Lady, so that you need not blush for my wickedness as you have such a good Mother. Imitate her; think how great she must be and what a blessing it is for you to have her for a patroness, since my sins and evil character have brought no tarnish on the lustre of our holy Order."

Further Thoughts

A few interesting points arise in the course of these references. One is the absence of any reference in these quotations to some of the legends, such as that of Simon Stock mentioned by Father Kavanaugh above.  St. Teresa of Avila mentions Our Lady in connection with Jesus, and not in connection with any apparitions.  Second is that these quoted references to Our Lady do not base her devotion on her own visions of Our Lady described in The Life.

Why was it important to her that the Discalced Carmelites remember themselves as the Order of Our Lady, and their habit as Our Lady's habit?  In the vision quoted above from The Life, it was the Lord who she said would raise the order up.  In The Way of Perfection, she mentioned Mary in connection with a discussion of Jesus's love for women, including His mother.  The reference to her as Jesus' mother, and to the nuns as brides of Christ, is in the context of encouraging them to live holy lives, remembering their connection with the mother of God.

Graphics:  (1)A collection of pictures of Our Lady of Grace, from the Divine Retreat of Ashram, Faridabad, India, the Divine Will Blog, and La Mésange; (2) St. Teresa of Avila interceding for the souls in purgatory, painted by Peter Paul Rubens, Flemish (1577-1640); (3) St. Teresa of Avila by Rubens; (3) Orthodox Church nun Nektarija Karajcic with two of the icons she wrote, from Der Spiegel, hat tip to Gerald Augustinus at The Cafeteria Is Closed; and (5) Orthodox Church nun from the website of St. Anthony's Monastery.

July 25, 2006

"Deliver us from all evils and give us peace"

ZENIT has posted a full translation of Pope Benedict XVI's homily given this past Sunday at the church of Rhemes-SaintGeorges near his vacation town of Les Combes.  Here is an excerpt:

"In the Mass, as we prepare for holy Communion, to receive the Body of Christ that unites us, we pray with the Church: 'Deliver us, Lord, from all evils, and grant us peace in our days.' May this be our prayer at this time: 'Deliver us from all evils and give us peace,' not tomorrow, or the day after: Lord, give us peace today! Amen."

The Vatican translation is here

The Pope had requested prayer and penance for peace that Sunday in view of the ongoing military conflict in Israel and Lebanon.

Teresa Benedetta also has a translation of the same homily at the Papa Ratzinger ForumSandro Magister also offers a translation and reflections on the Pope's  approach to the Church's role in the peace process, shown in that improvised address and in this past Sunday's message at the Angelus.  Among Sandro Magister's comments:

"So Benedict XVI shows he has no doubts: the specific contribution that the Church can make to peace in the world is not political, but essentially religious. With the cross of Jesus at the center."

 

July 24, 2006

The Carmelite Monastery in Haifa

ZENIT today has an interview with Sister Maria Giuseppina, one of the Carmelite nuns at the Carmelite convent in Haifa.  The interview was sent to the news agency from the Carmelite order.  In it, Sister Maria Giuseppina talks about life in the convent during the present conflict.  She has this prayer request:

"As Carmelites, we are in prayer and we pray, but we ask all Christians worldwide to pray, as the Holy Land is loved by all and our communities are here at the service of all.

"Pray that the situation will change and that the desired peace will finally come. 'It is an appeal we make with all our heart!'"

She also mentions the rocket that landed on July 13 near the Stella Maris Basilica, and says that their phones have been ringing all day long.  A Chicago Tribune news article from July 15 discusses the rocket attack that landed near the basilica and monastery compound.

Feast Day of St. James the Greater

St. Luke's Gospel has this reference to Jesus praying all night before he chose the twelve apostles:

"And In these days [Jesus] went out into the hills to pray; and all night he continued in prayer to God.  And when it was day, he called his disciples, and chose from them twelve, whom he named apostles . . ." [Luke 6:12-13]

July 25 is the feast day of St. James the Greater, the son of Zebedee who with his brother John left their fishing boats to follow Jesus (Mark 1:19-20) and who was later beheaded by Herod (Acts 12:1-2).  Pope Benedict XVI spoke about him in his weekly audience on June 21.  St. Mark's Gospel tells us:

"And passing along by the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and Andrew the brother of Simon casting a net in the sea; for they were fishermen.  And Jesus said to them, 'Follow me and I will make  you become fishers of men.'  And immediately they left their nets and followed him.  And going on a little farther, he saw James the son of Zebedee and John his brother, who were in their boat mending the nets.  And immediately he called them: and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired servants, and followed him. . . .  And he went up into the hills, and called to him those whom he desired; and they came to him.  And he appointed twelve . . ."  [Mark 1:16-20, 3:13-14 RSV]

July 23, 2006

Prayer and Penance for the People of the Middle East

In his words before praying the Angelus today, Pope Benedict XVI spoke of the present conflict in Israel and Lebanon, quoted in an article by Asia News:

“I entrust all humanity to divine love, while urging everyone to pray so that the beloved peoples of the Middle East may be capable of leaving the path of armed conflict to build, with the bravery of dialogue, lasting and just peace. Mary, Queen of peace, pray for us!”

The ZENIT translation of the entire message is here, and here is the Vatican translation.
 

The Pope has asked all people to set aside today for prayer and penance for peace in the Middle East.  The remainder of his message mentioned the situation affecting people now living in the areas affected by the bombing and also mentioned St. Mary Magdalene, whose feast day was yesterday.  Teresa Benedetta has a full translation at the Papa Ratzinger Forum (scroll down to July 23).

Meanwhile, Amy Welborn has links to blogs from people who are in the wartorn area.  Catholic News Agency has an article about an appeal from the Melkite Catholic bishop for aid to all of Galilee:

“The whole Galilee region is practically paralysed,” the archbishop wrote, “(there are) no jobs, no circulation, and people stay at home waiting for deliverance and sometimes receiving a rocket or a cachucha instead.”

July 22, 2006

The Early Hermits of Mount Carmel

July 23 is one of the days when the memorial of John Cassian is observed, officially in Marseille, although he is not included in the Catholic universal Church calendar.  His  Eastern feast day is February 29.  In keeping with the memorial of one of the Desert Fathers who influenced Carmelite spirituality, this post is about the  history of monasticism near Mount Carmel and its influence on Carmelite spirituality.

This is the second post in a series of posts about the stories of Carmel and the history that lies within them.  The first such post was Elijah the Father of Carmel.

Palestinian Monastic History in the Stories of Carmel

The Carmelite Order traces its roots, spiritually, from hermits who lived on Mount Carmel at the time of the Church Fathers, and traces the origin of its order to western hermits who lived on Mount Carmel during the Crusades.  The primitive Carmelite rule known to St. Teresa of Avila was the rule for Carmelite mendicants approved in 1247 by Pope Innocent IV. There was an earlier Carmelite rule approved for hermits in 1226 by Pope Honorius III (Kieran Kavanaugh, Introduction to "The Way of Perfection, Study Edition).  The 1226 Rule of St. Albert for Carmelite hermits was written for the thirteenth century hermits who lived on Mount Carmel, and the 1247 rule was adapted for monasteries.

Through the stories of Carmel passed down through the centuries, Carmelites in the era of St. Teresa of Avila traced their history not only back to hermits of the Crusades, but all the way back to hermits thought to have lived on Mount Carmel even before the New Testament.  In a French sermon from 1342 quoted by Father Kavanaugh in his introduction to the Collected Works of St. Teresa of Avila, Vol. III (the same sermon quoted in part in my earlier posting on Elijah and Carmel), the 14th to 16th century understanding of that history was told like this:

"You are wondering why I refer to the Carmelites as the special and ancient order of our Lady but if you were to know the reasons, you would wonder no more.  Trustworthy histories of Elijah and Elisha tell us how these two often dwelt on Mount Carmel, three leagues distant from Nazareth, the city of our Lady.  And saintly men continued to live there in solitude, until the time of our Saviour.  At that time, the hermits were converted by the preaching of the apostles.  On one side of the mountain, they built a Church or oratory in honor of the Holy Virgin, in a spot which, they had been told, she often frequented in her life, with her maiden companions.  For this reason, they were the first among all religious orders to be called children of the Blessed Mary of Mount Carmel.  From the early days of the Church, they worked with alacrity to preach the Gospel and in later times they were given a rule of life by John, Patriarch of Jerusalem, based on that of St. Paulinus and St. Basil.  Thus, quite justly this Order enjoys the honor of being the oldest of them all."

Father Kavanaugh, commenting on that fourteenth century view of Carmelite history, recounted the later critical study of the actual history of the order and concluded that "what can be affirmed historically is that there was a school of prophets on Carmel, that the prophet Elijah undoubtedly had an impressive impact on the hermits and monks of the early Church, and that Christian hermits resided on Mt. Carmel from a very early date."

Accordingly, there is not strong evidence for a direct chain of historical development from the Old Testament prophets to the western hermits of the twelfth century.  Father Kavanaugh references specific studies on the Latin hermits of Mount Carmel, published in 1979 and 1982, which no doubt address that history more directly than I can do here.   However, what this post will offer is some references to this history in the writings of St. Teresa of Avila together with some insights into the actual history from historians writing more recently than 1982.

Palestinian Monasticism in the Writings of St. Teresa of Avila

St. Teresa often mentions St. Jerome and the Desert Fathers, and occasional mentions John Cassian, to whose writings she was much devoted.  St. Jerome and John Cassian lived in monasteries in fourth century Bethlehem, giving St. Teresa's Carmelite thinking a connection with fourth century Palestinian monasticism, whether or not it reached her from the medieval Carmelites of Mt. Carmel.  In the process of beatification, Petronila Bautista told that St. Teresa was very devoted to the Conferences of John Cassian and the Fathers of the Desert, and asked Petronila to read 2 or 3 accounts of those saints each day and at night to tell her about them, when Teresa did not have time to do so herself.  She also made repeated references to St. Jerome and the Desert Fathers in her writings, and told in the Book of her Life how she had read the letters of St. Jerome to her uncle when she was a young woman.

Earlier posts here specifically addressed St. Teresa of Avila and St. Jerome and John Cassian and the Carmelite Tradition.  Those posts look at specific examples of writings that mention St. Jerome and John Cassian and their writings.

Some of St. Teresa of Avila's references to hermits could refer either to those early Palestinian monks and hermits or to the medieval Carmelite hermits, offered as role models for her nuns.  Here are a few examples of such references:

"Let us remember our holy fathers of the past, those hermits whose lives we aim to imitate.  What sufferings they endured.  What solitude, cold, and hunger, and what sun and heat, without anyone to complain to but God!  Do you think they were made of steel?  Well, they were as delicate as we." [The Way of Perfection 11:4]

"If it is necessary because of the extremely secluded life you live to have a stretch of land (and this even helps prayer and devotion) with some hermitages where you can withdraw to pray, well and good. But no buildings, or large and ornate house." (The Way of Perfection 2:9)

"The wall should be high, and there should be a field where hermitages can be constructed so that the Sisters may be able to withdraw for prayer as our holy Fathers did."  (Constitution 32).

Insights on Palestinian Monasticism in Mount Carmel from Scripture and Recent Historical Writings

 Mount Carmel from the New Testament to the Middle Ages

Mount Carmel is near the area where Christ lived in the Gospels, but it is not specifically mentioned in the New Testament.  In the Gospels, the childhood was in the town of Nazareth, which is about halfway between the Sea of Galilee and Mount Carmel.  His early ministry involved the towns of  Capernaum, Bethsaida, and Gennesaret, also in Galilee, and just north of the Sea of Galilee.  He was also in the towns of Tyre and Sidon, near the Mediterranean Sea in Phoenicia (now in Lebanon).  At one point, he returned to his childhood home town of Nazareth, to find that the people there refused to believe he was the Christ (Matthew 13:53-58 and Mark 6:1-6).

Part of the area along the Palestinian coast was Christianized in New Testament times, such that we know that there were Christians in cities on the coast both north and south of Mount Carmel, mentioned in Acts 9:32-10:48 and Acts 21:7.  Mount Carmel itself is not mentioned, but Jesus's retreats to the wilderness would make it all but certain that first century Christians spent time on Mount Carmel.  The Acts of the Apostles mentions Caesaria, which is south of Mount Carmel, as the home of Cornelius, where St. Peter was led by a vision to take the Gospel to a Gentile named Cornelius.   South of Caesarea along the coast is the city of Joppa, where Peter raised a woman from the dead. Inland from Joppa were the cities of Lydda and Sharon, where all of the residents became Christians after St. Peter healed a paralyzed man.

Closest to Mount Carmel was the city of Ptolemais, mentioned in Acts 21:7, the city later called Acre by the Crusaders.  Ptolemais lies at the north end of a bay on the Mediterranean, and Mount Carmel lies at the south end of the same bay, about 9 miles away.  There, Paul stopped and stayed with "the Brethren" for a day after his return from Tyre.

Hebrews 11:37-38 speaks of the Old Testament saints who were persecuted, including the prophets and some of the women, describing them in ways that would have reminded readers of first century Christian persecutions, and in ways that sound like the lives of later fourth and fifth century hermits:

"They were stoned, they were sawn in two, they were killed with the sword; they went about in skins of sheep and goats, destitute, afflicted, ill-treated -- of whom the world was not worthy -- wandering over deserts and mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth."

N.T. Wright describes the geographic area of the spread of Christianity in The New Testament and the People of God (1992) at 356-357:

"Turning from history to geography, we have already said enough to show what sort of geographical spread took place within the first century of Christian activity.  Jerusalem and surrounding Judaea; Samaria; Antioch, Damascus and surrounding Syria; Asia Minor (Smyrna and Bithynia); the cities of Greece; Rome; all these are clearly indicated in the texts we have examined, and in the New Testament, as major centres of Christianity.  This much is uncontroversial.  Beyond this, however, it is very difficult to go with any certainty. . . . Of Syria (Antioch excepted) and Egypt it is impossible to say anything for sure; but something must be said, because of the evident presence and power of Christianity in both places by the later second century. . . . Clearly Syria and Egypt were among the important early centres of Christianity, but it is extremely difficult to say about them, any more than about most other places, exactly what their brand of Christianity was like."

He does not discuss the question of what Christians were then like on Mount Carmel, if indeed there were any Christian hermits there at that time.  However, if they were there, it must be said, as for Syria and Egypt, that we cannot say much about their brand of Christianity. However, the description of the prophets and other Old Testament saints in Hebrews 11:37-38 provides an image of the prophets living as hermits in the mountains, which reflects how early Christians would have viewed their contemporaries who may have similarly lived as hermits on Mount Carmel.

Wright also offers a description of the difference between Jews in Galilee (where Mount Carmel is located) and those nearer to Jerusalem in the first century, including this at pages 167-168:

"There were considerable differences between the pressures upon, and consequent cultural, social and religious needs and viewpoints of, Jews in the Jerusalem area on the one hand and Jews in Galilee on the other.  The former could focus attention most naturally on the Temple, on the problems of pagan overlordship and the threat to the sanctity of the capital, and on the maintenance of cult, liturgy and festival as symbols of a de jure national independence in the face of de facto subservience.  The latter, Galilee, was three day's journey away from Jerusalem, with hostile territory (Samaria) in between.  Surrounded and permeated as it was by paganism, Galilean Jewry naturally looked, more than its southern compatriots needed to, to the symbols of distinctiveness which mattered in the local setting.  The Torah assumed new importance in border territory. . . . Those who live on the frontiers get into trouble if they do not keep the boundary fences in good repair."

That description of Galilee as a whole as being on the boundary with hostile territory and paganism would have applied to Mount Carmel in the first century.  It was near the boundary with Samaria, and it was not far from Phoenicia (Lebanon).  The memory of Elijah confronting the prophets of Baal there would have fit well with the concept of needing to protect those "boundary fences" of faith.

Archaeologist Joseph Patrich, in Sabas, Leader of Palestinian Monasticism: A Comparative Study in Eastern Monasticism, Fourth to Seventh Centuries (Dumbarton Oaks Series) (1995), affirms that there were Latin centers in the Holy Land as far back as the fourth century, erected and maintained by money from wealthy Roman donors.  Among these would have been the Bethlehem monasteries of St. Jerome and St. Paula in the late fourth century.  Patrich mentions that there was also an earlier monastery in Bethlehem, where John Cassian lived. 

Although he does not mention monks or hermits on Mount Carmel during those early centuries, he does mention monks living in mountains, including anchorites on Mount Nitria.  He also indicates that Christian monasticism began in Palestine, and that it spread throughout Palestine in the fourth century (page 3):

"Christian monasticism began in Palestine, the Holy Land . . . in the early fourth century, before Christianity became the official religion of the empire. . . . During the fourth century monasticism spread throughout Palestine, and monasteries were also established in Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and in other holy places connected with Christ's life, as well as in the lowland (Shephela) and in Sinai. . . .

"The process by which monasteries came into being, whether in the desert or in rural regions, was similar.  A hermit lived in a cave or hut near a source of water; in the course of time other monks joined him and a community was formed.  With donations from wealthy admirers or a legacy bequeathed to the founder (an act sometimes considered a miraculous deed of divine intervention), dwelling cells, a prayerhouse, and water reservoirs were constructed.  The founder, who was the leader of the group, determined whether it would be built as a  monastery of anchorites, a laura . . . or as a communal monastery. . . ."

At the time of the Arab invasion of Jerusalem, in 614, Patrich describes some Palestinian Sabaite monks, and others, as fleeing to Jerusalem or to Arabia beyond the Jordan.  Some fled to the west, founding Greek speaking monasteries in north Africa and later a Greek monastery in Rome.  By the end of the tenth century, the once Greek-speaking monastery in Rome was Latinized.  Other monks remained in their Palestinian monastic communities. Patrich, pg. 328.  He does not deal with any hermits then on Mount Carmel in particular, but he does mention that the attack on Mar Saba was not unique.

According to Andrew Louth, in St. John Damascene: Tradition and Originality in Byzantine Theology (2002) at 236, Byzantine monastic liturgical practice originated in the Sabaite monasteries in Jerusalem and the Judaean desert, during the first century under Arab control.

Little is known about the western monks who settled several centuries later near the fountain of Elijah on Mount Carmel or about what brought them together.  For that reason, it may never be known whether, or to what extent, they were connected with monks who had lived there before them.  Around 1210, they organized themselves together and sought a rule of life from Albert, the Patriarch of Jerusalem who lived a few miles away in Acre.  Albert wrote that original rule for hermits, which was approved by Pope Honorius III in 1226, for the monks called "the hermit brothers of St. Mary of Mount Carmel."  Excavations have found their church and cells.

    Was there a rule of monks on Mount Carmel before the Rule of St. Albert?

If there was a community of monks on Mount Carmel, who shared an oratory built in the fourth century (as was said in the fourteenth century sermon quoted above), it is reasonable to ask whether they were organized under an earlier monastic rule than the first Rule of St. Albert, and whether there is any recent evidence that the hermits might have been organized so as to pass down their traditions and way of life to the medieval Latin Carmelites.

Joseph Patrich (whose book is linked above) mentions that the rules of monasteries collected by Voobus include 23 collections of monastic regulations written in Syrian or Arabic, some of them dating back to the early fifth century.  Thus, other groups of hermits in that era were governed by monastic rules.  That so, it is likely that any group of hermits living on Mt. Carmel in that era and sharing an oratory would have lived under some sort of monastic rule, and that their rule may have differed in some respects from the rule followed by hermits and monks in other geographic areas. 

St. Teresa of Avila had a particular interest in St. Jerome, who had a monastery in Bethlehem, in Palestine, in the late fourth century, as his student and friend  St. Paula had a monastery there for women.  If there were rules particular to fourth century Palestinian monasticism, perhaps including Mount Carmel, the writings of St. Jerome and of John Cassian might provide glimpses of what life was like under that rule, as could the rule followed by the nearby Sabaite monks and the Rule of St. Basil.

    Hermits on Mount Carmel and Devotion to Elijah

Historian John Chryssavgis, in his book John Climacus: From the Egyptian Desert to the Sinaite Mountain (2004) mentions Elijah in connection with monks who lived in the Sinaite desert (Egypt -- See I Kings 19:1-18, which tells that after killing Baal's prophets by Mount Carmel, Elijah fled from Queen Jezebel to Mount Horeb, also known as Mount Sinai, where he talked with God).  Chryssavgis wrote that those monks "enjoyed a high reputation, with an atmosphere and tradition of their own, distinct from that of Palestine or of Egypt yet at the same time blending both in an austere but balanced ethos.  It is in these mountains that Moses encountered God; it is here that Elijah heard God; and it is here that John Climacus, or John of the Ladder, recorded his experiences of God."

If the association with Elijah gave the monks of the Sinaite desert a "high reputation" and a "tradition of their own", it is reasonable to surmise that the same was true for early hermits on Mount Carmel, with or without specific documentation to support it.

    If the hermits were there through the centuries, why can't we document it?

St. John Climacus lived in the seventh century, by which time Christian monks in the area were encountering some persecution from the growing Arab Empire.  St. John of Damascus lived in the late seventh and early eighth centuries.  It is already difficult to document the events of the lives of monks living in the Arab Empire by their time.  However, some Christian monks remained in the Middle East under Arab control.  From the time of Arab conquests in Palestine, beginning in the seventh century, until the Crusades, surviving documentation would be scarce.

Beyond that, however, is the fact the more scholarship needs to be directed at the era, and especially at those ties between the Latin west and the Church in Palestine during those centuries.  Some enlightening documents may be out there, whose significance for this issue is not yet known.  It is entirely possible that more detail will be widely known in the future about the medieval western hermits who lived on Mount Carmel in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and about the extent of their connection to those who lived there before them.

July 21, 2006

Two Interviews on Music: "A Liturgy that Gives Music Its Proper Place"

"The great repertoire of sacred music that has been handed down to us from the past is made up of Masses, offertories, responsories: formerly there was no such thing as a liturgy without music. Today there is no place for this repertoire in the new liturgy, which is a discordant commotion – and it’s useless to pretend that it’s not. It is as if Michelangelo had been asked to paint the general judgment on a postage stamp!"

So said Maestro Domenico Bartolucci in an interview with the expert in classical music for the weekly "L'espresso", Ricardo Lenzi, and posted today by  Sandro Magister.  Maestro Bartolucci is outspoken in his analysis of the changes in church music over the last several decades and about the difficulty of restoring music to its proper place in the liturgy today.

Meanwhile, I just became aware this past Sunday of an interview on French language Zenit with Père Jacques-Marie Guilmard of the Abbey of St. Pierre in Solesmes, France, about the origins of Gregorian chant.  The interview posted while the Pope was in Poland, and I could not find it in English.  Perhaps it was  overlooked because of more immediately important articles about the Pope's travels in Poland.  I have e-mailed Zenit asking for permission to translate and post the whole article, if they do not plan to translate it, and I have not yet received a response. 

Update July 24:  I have received Zenit's permission to post an English translation of the interview, and I will translate and post it this week-end if not sooner (by July 30).

Meanwhile, here is a link to the interview with Père Guilmard in French.

July 20, 2006

A Day of Prayer and Penance this Sunday

The  posted a press release today calling for a day of prayer and penance this Sunday for peace in the Middle East.  Here is the entire press release:

VATICAN CITY, JUL 20, 2006 (VIS) - Faced with worsening situation in the Middle East, the Holy See Press Office has been directed to communicate the following:

  "The Holy Father is following with great concern the destinies of all the peoples involved and has proclaimed this Sunday, July 23, as a special day of prayer and penance, inviting the pastors and faithful of all the particular Churches, and all believers of the world, to implore from God the precious gift of peace.

  "In particular, the Supreme Pontiff hopes that prayers will be raised to the Lord for an immediate cease-fire between the sides, for humanitarian corridors to be opened in order to bring help to the suffering peoples, and for reasonable and responsible negotiations to begin to put an end to objective situations of injustice that exist in that region; as already indicated by Pope Benedict XVI at the Angelus last Sunday, July 16.

  "In reality, the Lebanese have the right to see the integrity and sovereignty of their country respected, the Israelis the right to live in peace in their State, and the Palestinians have the right to have their own free and sovereign homeland.

  "At this sorrowful moment, His Holiness also makes an appeal to charitable organizations to help all the people struck by this pitiless conflict."
OP/MIDDLE EAST/...        VIS 060720 (230)

 

July 19, 2006

John Chryssavgis: Lessons of the Desert

ZENIT yesterday posted an interview with John Chryssavgis, the Orthodox Church historian and theologian whose books have been cited and quoted here for his knowledge of the Desert Fathers and St. John Climacus.  He answered questions about what the fourth and fifth century saints have to teach us now, their realism, and how to apply their work to the modern day equivalent to the desert.  One of his thoughts:

"Learning to face who and what we are -- without any facade, without any make-up, without any false expectations -- is one of the hardest and at the same time, one of the finest lessons of the desert. Putting up with ourselves is the first and necessary step of learning to put up with others. And it is the basis for recognizing how all of us -- each of us and the entire world alike -- are unconditionally embraced and loved by God."

More of that kind of psychology and thinking about history can be found in his books, including In the Heart of the Desert and Soul Mending.

The Mantle of Elijah

July 20 is the feast day of the prophet Elijah, a Carmelite feast day

A short description of the Carmelite view of "our Father Elijah" appears in Terrye Newkirk, OCDS's article "The Mantle of Elijah: The Martyrs of Compiègne as Prophets of the Modern Age", which can be read online at the webpage of ICS Publications' archives; The main article from the pamphlet by the same name, copyright 1995 by ICS Publications: 

"The double dimension, mystical and prophetic" is the essence of the Carmelite charism: according to ancient tradition, the order traces its origins to a community of hermits gathered near the fount of Elijah on the slopes of Mount Carmel, forever linked in Scripture with the memory of the great prophet. It was only natural, then, that from the beginning Carmelites should see themselves as the spiritual heirs of Elijah, living in his power and spirit; the feastday of Saint Elijah is still celebrated with solemnity in Carmelite monasteries throughout the world.  It is certain that since Elijah, carried off like a flaming whirlwind in a chariot with fiery horses, a prophetic spirit has not ceased to breathe on the family of Carmel."

The Scripture reference is II Kings 2:1-14:

"Now when the LORD was about to take Elijah up to heaven by a whirlwind, Elijah and Elisha were on their way from Gilgal.  And Elijah said to Elisha, 'Tarry here, I pray you; for the LORD has sent me as far as Bethel.'  But Elisha said, 'As the LORD lives, and as you yourself live, I will not leave you.'  So they went down to Bethel.  And the sons of the prophets who were in Bethel came out to Elisha, and said to him, 'Do you know that today the LORD will take away your master from over you?'  And he said, 'Yes, I know it; hold your peace.'

"Then Elijah said to him, 'Tarry here, I pray you; for the LORD has sent me to Jordan.'  But he said, "As the LORD lives, and as you yourself live, I will not leave you.'  So the two of them went on.  Fifty men of the sons of the prophets also went, and stood at some distance from them, as they both were standing by the Jordan.  Then Elijah took his mantle, and rolled it up, and struck the water, and the water was parted to the one side and to the other, till the two of them could go over on dry ground.

"When they had crossed, Elijah said to Elisha, 'Ask what I shall do for you, before I am taken from you.'  And Elisha said, "I pray you, let me inherit a double share of your spirit.'  And he said, 'You have asked a hard thing; yet, if you see me as I am being taken from you, it shall be so for you; but if you do not see me, it shall not be so.'  And as they still went on and talked, behold, a chariot of fire and horses of fire separated the two of them.  And Elijah went up by whirlwind into heaven.  And Elisha saw it and cried, 'My father, my father! the chariots of Israel and its horsemen!'  And he saw him no more.

"Then he took hold of his own clothes and rent them in two pieces.  And he took up the mantle of Elijah that had fallen from him, and went back and stood on the bank of the Jordan.  Then he took the mantle of Elijah that had fallen from him, and struck the water, saying, 'Where is the LORD, the God of Elijah?'  And when he had struck the water, the water was parted to the one side and to the other; and Elisha went over."
 

July 18, 2006

The knowledge of God is received in divine silence

Chartres_3_2"The very pure spirit does not bother about the regard of others or human respect, but communes inwardly with God, alone and in solitude as to all forms, and with delightful tranquility, for the knowledge of God is received in divine silence."

- St. John of the Cross, "The Sayings of Light and Love", translated by Kieran Kavanaugh, OCD, and Otilio Rodriguez, OCD, revised edition (1991), copyright ICS Publications.

Photo: Chartres Cathedral

July 17, 2006

Elijah as the Father of Carmel

As mentioned by Pope Benedict XVI in his words at the praying of the Angelus this past Sunday, the history of the Carmelite order traces its roots to the contemplative devotion of hermits living in Mount Carmel as far back as the prophet Elijah.  I am going to do a few posts looking at some of the interesting stories of Mount Carmel reflected in the writings of St. Teresa of Avila, and looking at how much history lies within the stories of Carmel.  This is the first such post.

Mount Carmel is by the Mediterranean Sea, roughly 20 miles from Jesus' boyhood home of Nazareth, and 30 miles east of the Sea of Galilee.  It is a hill, 1,742 feet high, which is the one headland of the coast of Palestine.  A present day map can be found online here.   The Protestant ATS Bible Dictionary describes it as abounding in caves, some of which have been enlarged "and fitted for human habitation", and calls it the "most beautiful mountain in Palestine."

Hermits have lived on Mount Carmel going back to the time of Elijah and Elisha in the Old Testament, and Elijah is credited with being the original founder of the hermits of Carmel.  In fact, Elijah may not have been the first.  As stated in The Catholic Encyclopedia:

"The sacredness of its heights was well known in ancient Israel. Apparently long before Elias' time -- how long before cannot now be made out -- an altar had been erected in honour of Yahweh on Mt. Carmel, and its ruins were repaired by that prophet as soon as this could be done with safety (1 Kings 18:30)."

In his Introduction to Volume 3 of The Collected Works of St. Teresa of Avila, Kieran Kavanaugh, O.C.D., summarizes some of the legends and history.  He quotes a sermon preached in Avignon, France in 1342 expressing the thinking still common when St. Teresa wrote, including this about Elijah that Father Kavanaugh quotes from that fourteenth century French sermon:

"Trustworthy histories of Elijah and Elisha tell us how these two often dwelt on Mount Carmel, three leagues distant from Nazareth, the city of our Lady.  And saintly men continued to live there in solitude, until the time of our Saviour."

Fr. Kavanaugh adds:

"Not included in this little summary was the legend behind the nuns, which went so far as to say that the wife of Elijah founded a similar institute for women."

As for what we actually know to be true, Father Kavanaugh adds:

"[A]fter Teresa's times, the order of Carmel, without a critical sense of history or a definite founder, got caught up in the challenge to prove its age-old traditions. . . .  Later, in 1725, when the Carmelite order triumphantly installed in St. Peter's in Rome its celebrated statue of Elijah as the order's founder, its apologists considered themselves the winners.

"What can be affirmed historically is that there was a school of prophets on Carmel, that the prophet Elijah undoubtedly had an impressive impact on the hermits and monks of the early Church, and that Christian hermits resided on Mt. Carmel from a very early date."

The shield of the Carmelite Order takes as its motto Elijah's words, "Zelo zelatus sum pro Domino Deo Exercituum" ["I have been very jealous for the Lord God of hosts", I Kings 19:10].  It was on Mount Carmel that the prophet Elijah challenged Ahab and said to the people, "How long will you go limping with two different opinions?  If the Lord is God, then follow him; but if Baal, then follow him."  (I Kings 18:21).  There, according to I Kings 18:19-20, Elijah gathered all of Israel and the 450 prophets of Baal to defend the Lord, and Ahab gathered the prophets together there.

Moreover, Elijah is not the only Old Testament prophet associated with Mount Carmel.  In II Kings 4:25, the Shunammite woman went to Mount Carmel to speak to the prophet Elisha.  Isaiah mentioned Mount Carmel in Isaiah 33:9 and 35:2.  The prophet Amos, at Amos 9:3, mentioned people hiding themselves in the top of Mount Carmel.  Jeremiah mentioned Mount Carmel in Jeremiah 46:18 and 50:19 ("I will restore Israel to his pasture, and he shall feed on Carmel and Bashan, and his desire shall be satisfied on the hills of Ephraim and in Gilead.")  Nahum prophesied about it at Nahum 1:4 ("He rebukes the sea and makes it dry, he dries up all the rivers; Bashan and Carmel wither, the bloom of Lebanon fades.")

Mount Carmel is not specifically mentioned by name in the New Testament.  Yet it is only about 20 miles from Jesus' childhood town of Nazareth, such that it is likely that Jesus spent time there.  It would have been near the boundary between Galilee and Samaria.

In an earlier post about Elijah and the Carmelites, the topic was how St. Teresa of Avila's writings about fire and living water might have been influenced by the Scriptural account of Elijah's pouring water on the altar on which God sent fire to burn the sacrifice. 

In addition to the quotes mentioned there, there are also places where St. Teresa specifically mentioned the prophet Elijah, including these:

In The Interior Castle, St. Teresa of Avila specifically mentioned Elijah as "our Father Elijah" when she mentions his calling fire down from heaven, writing:

"Would it be good for a soul with this dryness to wait for fire to come down from heaven to burn this sacrifice that it is making of itself to God, as did our Father Elijah?  No, certainly not, nor is it right to expect miracles.  The Lord works them for this soul when he pleases . . . ." [Interior Castle VI:7:8]

Later in the same book, she again calls him the order's father:

"The great penances that many saints - especially the glorious Magdalene, who had always been surrounded by so much luxury -- performed must have come from this center.  Also that hunger which our Father Elijah had for the honor of his God and which St. Dominic and St. Francis had so as to draw souls to praise God." [Interior Castle VII:4:11, alluding to I Kings 19:10 and the order's motto quoted above]

In The Book of Her Foundations, she again mentioned Elijah as their "father":

"[O]n the first day of our journey from Malagon to Beas I was traveling with a fever and so many illnesses all together that while considering the distance we still had to travel and seeing myself in this condition I remembered our Father Elijah when he was fleeing from Jezebel, and said: 'Lord, how can I suffer this?  You take care.'  The truth is that when His Majesty saw me so weak, He suddenly took away my fever and illness." [Foundations 27:17]

"The entrance to [the monastery of our Lady of Succor]  is underground, as though through a cave, which represented that of our Father Elijah." [Foundations 28:20, alluding to I Kings 19:9-13]

Her poem "On the Way to Heaven" also mentions "Elijah, our Father", saying that he "leads, in our self-denying we follow him" as nuns of Carmel, and also expressing a wish to have "Elisha's double spirit" [alluding to II Kings 2:9-10, where Elisha asked to have a double share of Elijah's spirit].

Ana de Jesus, one of St. Teresa's most treasured "daughters", mentioned Elijah as the order's "trunk" in her description of St. Teresa of Avila, given to the Provincial of the Mitigated Friars (quoted by Brother John Bruno in Saint Jean de la Croix, as quoted in turn in Teresa of Avila by Marcelle Auclair, Kathleen Pond's translation:

"Mother Teresa could not clothe herself in camel's hair like Elias [Elijah], I grant you; but she exchanged your fine cloth and your gauze for the roughest and coursest frieze.  And she imitates the prophet as far as she possibly can: fasting, withdrawal from the world, penance and prayer.  I repeat it to Your Reverence, we would rather die a thousand deaths than separate from our trunk.  In my opinion Your Paternity and all the Calced are separated from it: such brethren do not imitate their holy Father Elias, since they seek fine clothing, society instead of the desert, and instead of unceasing prayer, the latest news."

Thus, the story that Elijah was the founder of the hermits on Mount Carmel, and the father of the Carmelite order, was one that St. Teresa of Avila believed and held dear, and she went to much effort to live by Elijah's example.  The history of the Carmelite order goes back to the twelfth century, and there is sound reason to believe that there were hermits living on Mount Carmel from the twelfth century back to the time of Elijah who followed his example.  Indeed, even Elijah may not have been the first to live and worship on that mountain. 

Very little is actually known about the connection of the twelfth century Carmelite hermits on Mount Carmel with the hermits who lived there before them, but it can be safely assumed that they knew it as the mountain of Elijah and sought to live much as the hermits before them.  Thus, there is some truth in the legend naming Elijah as the founder of the order of Carmel.

Thoughts of Mount Carmel and the Present Conflict

Sunset_over_mount_carmel"And when he had sent the multitudes away, he went up into a mountain apart to pray: and when the evening was come, he was there alone."  [Matt. 14:23]

O Sabbath rest by Galilee!
O calm of hills above,
Where Jesus knelt to share with Thee
The silence of eternity
Interpreted by love!

With that deep hush subduing all
Our words and works that drown
The tender whisper of Thy call,
As noiseless let Thy blessing fall
As fell Thy manna down.

Drop Thy still dews of quietness,
Till all our strivings cease;
Take from our souls the strain and stress,
And let our ordered lives confess
The beauty of Thy peace.

- John Greenleaf Whittier, from "The Brewing of Soma", first published1872 in The Pennsylvania Pilgrim.

Photo: Sunset over Mount Carmel (coastal headland near Lebanese boarder, Israel), used with permission from photographer Gil Castel of Israel. 

Troubling comments:

"The only way we are going to get a cessation of hostilities is the deployment of an international force to stop the bombardment of Israel and get Israel to stop its attacks on Hezbollah," Blair told reporters at a news conference in St. Petersburg, Russia, at the end of the Group of Eight summit."
[CNN]

"For me it was virtually a given that in a situation of grave crisis in the Middle East, Hezbollah's provocations would lead to an alliance between the radical Palestinian group and Hezbollah, an alliance marked, moreover, by a clear link with the Islamic Republic of Iran." [Father Justo Lacunza Balda, rector of the Pontifical Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, ZENIT]

Gerald at The Cafeteria Is Closed wrote short descriptions of the primary parties to the present conflict.   

July 16, 2006

On Mount Carmel