To start chapter three Dreher introduces us to the monastery
at Norcia, the hometown of St. Benedict, and the monks who live there. He gives
us a glimpse into their lifestyle and purpose and then uses this as a
springboard into the “Rule of St. Benedict,” which is the detailed instruction
for organizing and governing a monastic community.
Dreher notably points out that the Rule, “far from being a
way of life for the strong and disciplined…was for the ordinary and weak, to
help them grow stronger in faith.” This doesn’t apply just to head knowledge
about the Faith. Rather, the Rule helps to “channel your spiritual energy into
conversion of heart and putting beliefs into practice.
In short, the Rule is “an instruction manual for how to form
one’s life around the service of Jesus Christ within a strong community.” The
main point of the Benedict Option is that we can use this Rule, at least in
adapted form, as a guide to building strong Christian communities that will
preserve the Faith in the West through a time of testing and antagonism.
There are seven main element to the Rule, and Dreher shows
that we can apply each of them to form a strong Christian community. The first
is order, which is really a recognition of the order that God has written into
creation. The effort of Christians to hold onto order and truth stands in stark
contrast to a world of disorder and constantly changing values. This order
keeps us focused on God and prevents us from wandering away with the latest
fashions in theology and culture.
The second element, not surprisingly, is prayer. This
includes both private and communal prayer, and both structured prayer like the
Liturgy of the Hours and less structured prayer like lectio divina. This prayer
is simply time spent being with God and communicating with Him. Without this
explicit element in community it is easy for the community to simply become a
social circle which can lose its rudder and drift off with cultural trends.
As ridiculous as it sounds, it is extremely easy to find Christian
groups in which none of the members have a deep or regular prayer life or
relationship with Christ. The element of prayer is one that has to be fought
for on a daily basis and at an individual level. It is too easy to think that
there is not time in the schedule to fit in prayer, and soon enough prayer
disappears completely. This is when Christian identity starts sliding easily
into the realm of moralistic therapeutic deism or conforming to whatever the
prevalent cultural trends may be.
The third element is work. There are two primary views of
work in society today – for some it is a source of identity, for others it is
simply a means to make money so that we can do whatever we wish. The
Benedictines show us that neither of these views is correct. Our work is not supposed
to serve us, but rather it should serve God. Our work is an opportunity to
glorify God.
Dreher suggests that we need to reorient to this view of
work as glorifying God, especially as we move toward a time when Christians
will lose their careers and be blocked out of certain professions due to their
faith. Seeing our work as serving God rather than serving or defining us will
help as some proportion of Christians are forced to work in a field other than
their chosen profession.
The fourth element of the Rule is asceticism, or the taking
on of physical rigors for the sake of a spiritual goal. An obvious example of
this is fasting. Asceticism trains us to put God ahead of ourselves and helps
to prevent against self-centeredness by saying no to our desires and yes to
God. As one of the Benedictine monks mentioned to Dreher, “We are often further
away from God than we realize. Asceticism serves as a healthy reminder of how
things are. It’s not a punishment for being so far away.”
A great illustration that Dreher uses when discussing
asceticism is that of an athlete training his body for competition. In the same
way, asceticism trains us in the love and service of Christ and His Church.
The fifth element of the Rule is stability. For the monks
this means spending their entire lives in the same monastic community. For lay
people, stability means setting roots and investing in community. Moving from
city to city from one job to another to climb the career ladder, or eschewing
family and community for the sake of travel and novel experiences cuts off the
roots that build community. There is great value in the lifelong relationships
of a deep, stable community in times of trouble, but also in everyday tasks of
supporting one another, raising children, etc.
This leads into the sixth element of the Rule, which is in
fact community. In a deep, strong community the individual members are really
part of an organic whole, a spiritual family. These communities allow for
accountability between the members and deep levels of support. This level of
community is difficult to achieve and even more difficult to maintain,
especially among a variety of families from differing backgrounds, and it can
take some reckoning.
The social interaction within a strong community leads to
bonds that are hard to match in any other way, though. This interaction is glaringly
absent from society today. Much of human interaction has been reduced to pixels
on a screen, and this can never replace the bonds between real people,
especially those formed over a long time in community.
The seventh element of the Rule which Dreher focuses upon is
hospitality. This is the part that many reviews and discussions of the book
seem to miss. While the element of stability and community that he recommends
require us to draw back a little bit from society to augment our closeness and cohesion
with others that share our faith, we still must reach out, welcome, and serve
outsiders.
The Rule requires monks to welcome outsiders, at least to a
point. That hospitality cannot interfere with the community’s way of life. As
one of the monks puts it, “If we let visitors upset the rhythm of our life too
much we can’t really welcome anyone.” Even so, the goal is to be as open to the
outside world as possible.
I like how another of the monks describes the balance
between preserving the community and welcoming outsiders: “Yes, you have to
have borders, but our duty is not to let the borders stay there. We have to
push outward, infinitely.” He states that this is done first by changing our
own hearts toward God, and then our families, and then the world.
The final element of the Rule is balance. The Benedictines
strive to be rigorous but not extreme. As one of the monks says, “If a
community relaxes its discipline too much it will dissolve. But if it is too
rigid, it will make people crazy.” He says that a balanced community should
show good fruit – they should be cheerful and happy, growing, doing good, and
helping people.
It is also pointed out that balance is not to be confused
with spiritual mediocrity. This is where some amount of rigor comes in,
especially in prayer. The balance is not between good and bad, but between
different goods. The end goal, given to us by God, is to be perfect as our
Father in heaven is perfect. This is a goal that requires balance in the approach,
but really requires total abandonment of self-will to the will of God.
Applying all of these elements to the building of strong
Christian communities, Dreher suggests, is what will help to build strong
fortresses of the Faith to stand in contrast to the culture, and against its
onslaughts, in the coming years when orthodox Christianity becomes increasingly
unwelcome in the West.
The conundrum faced by a community that begins to implement
the various elements of the Rule is the identity and relevance dilemma, as
pointed out by Bishop Robert Barron. This theory states that the more we
emphasize the uniqueness of Christianity, the less is seems to speak to the
wider culture, and the more we emphasize the connection between faith and
culture the less distinctive Christianity becomes.
The Benedict option is asking us to move to one end of this
dilemma, or perhaps to the opposite end than we have been: emphasize the uniqueness
of Christianity and let the culture view it as irrelevant for a time. Keep it
alive until the culture is looking for what Christianity has to offer, and then
offer it in spades.
Bishop Barron also offers an example of this being done very
successfully, one that I had not heard connected to the Benedict Option before.
Growing up in Poland under Nazi and Communist rule, Karol Wojtyla (later Pope
John Paul II) was a part of an underground theatre group that kept Polish literature,
poetry, and faith alive in an environment of dramatic oppression. Later on, as
a priest, then bishop, then Pope, he was able to help bring the Polish culture
back from the ashes to become one of the more prominent Catholic countries
today.
Perhaps the difference in this example is that the Polish
people were trying to outlast an outside force that was controlling their
country, while the West is moving into a self-inflicted oppression of
Christianity in the sense that it is our own country and culture that is
secularizing. Even so, I think this is a great illustration of how the Benedict
Option can be effective.
The coming chapters will break from the macro-level
examination of the Benedict Option and start digging into some of the specifics
for how the Benedict Option can be carried out.
1 comment:
Great post. This was the most insightful chapter so far and you summarized it well.
One of the tricky things for Christians to figure out is how to live out the principle of balance insofar as other principles may be in conflict. For instance, one may be compelled to move (giving up stability) so as to find a job more in fitting with the Benedictine conception of work. I don't think we need to be perfectionists here; it's probably enough to realize that there will be tradeoffs, and we must prudentially consider what is best for us and our families.
The seventh element of the Rule which Dreher focuses upon is hospitality. This is the part that many reviews and discussions of the book seem to miss.
Indeed. If even the monks can be hospitable and show others the light of Christ, it's not credible to argue that Dreher is insisting we escape to the bunkers. Much of the confusion seems to deal with a misunderstanding of monasticism, which this chapter clarifies.
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