The Carmelite family was able to celebrate with great joy the Solemn Profession of vows of their brother Ged Walsh. The Mass of Profession was attended by Carmelite Friars from Britain, Ireland and Indonesia. Ged's family and friends gathered from Britain and Ireland. The Authumn weather was cold, but the warmth and joy in the Relic Chapel was palpable.
The congregation prepared for the Mass with the gentle chant of Nada te turbe (Nothing can trouble)
before rising to the gathering hymn - All are welcome
Br. Ged lies prostrate before the altar as the Litsny of the Saints is chanted
Fr. Damian intoning the Litany of the Saints, asking the whole host of heaven
to intercede for our brother Ged and the whole Church.
Br. Ged places his hands in those of the Prior Provincial as he
makes his Solemn Profession. Br David Twohig, a classmate from Dublin, looks on.
The brothers share in Br. Ged's joy
Fr. Wilfrid and Br. Ged
The Carmelite friars and the Walsh family - they haven't lost a son
they have gained two thousand!
Br. Ged is part of the Yotk Carmelite Community and will continue to work alongside his brother friars in the University and Hospital Chaplaincies. We wish him many long years of service in Carmel and every joy and blessing.
My name is Brother Gerard Walsh; I am a Carmelite friar
in first vows, living in our community in York, England.I am currently working in chaplaincy,
dividing my time between the University of York and the York Hospital.Earlier this year I applied and was accepted
for Solemn Profession of vows, which will take place at The Friars, Aylesford
in October.Here I will publically
profess the vows of poverty, chastity and obedience to God, within the Order of
Carmelites, for life.This will happen
on Saturday, so this will be my last blog regarding my Solemn Profession
preparation.
Dear friends, as I draw close to the end of my Solemn
Profession preparation, I wanted to let you know how things are
progressing.On the practical side all is
in place¸ the booklet and prayer cards are produced and printed, all that needs
to be done is the music practise which will happen between now and the
ceremony.
With the formal arrangements in place, I can direct my
thoughts to the spiritual side of the forthcoming event.I have been using the following prayer as my
focus over last few weeks.This is the
Prayer of Consecration that our Provincial, Fr. Wilfrid, will pray over me,
during the Rite of Profession on Saturday. The words are beautiful and I include them in
this blog:
O God, source and fount of all holiness,
you have loved those you have created so much that
you made them sharers in your divine nature.
Neither the sin of Adam nor the sins of the whole world
could change or destroy your divine plan.
At the beginning of time you chose Abel to be an example
of right living for us.
Among the Jews, your chosen people you raised up men and
women outstanding in holiness and prominent in virtue.
First among these is the Most Blessed Virgin Mary,
Daughter of Sion.
From her chaste womb came forth your Word made flesh for
the life of theworld, Jesus Christ our
Lord.
He is the model of all holiness, Father:
he made himself poor that we might become rich,
he took the form of a slave to make us free.
By the Paschal Mystery, in his boundless love,
he redeemed the world and sanctified the church to which
he promised the gifts of the Spirit.
Through the promptings of the Paraclete
you have drawn innumerable sons to follow Christ.
Drawn by the strong and welcome bonds of love
they have left all things and given themselves completely
to the service of all.
Be pleased then, Lord, to look upon this your servant
whom you have called by your heavenly providence.
Send upon him the Spirit of Holiness
so that he may faithfully fulfil what he has promised
with joy.
May he contemplate with love and diligently follow his
Divine Master.
Lord,
may unsullied chastity, joyful poverty and generous
obedience be his.
May he do the things which please you with humility,
serve you with meekness and cling to you with love.
May he be patient in times of sorrow, firm in faith,
joyful in hope and strong in love.
May his life build up the church,
promote the good of all,
and be a clear sign of the good things of heaven.
Lord, Holy Father,
be pleased to guide and protect this servant of yours.
When he comes before the judgement seat of your Son,
be his recompense and reward.
There may he rejoice in the completion of his labours
and, strengthened in your love,
may he enjoy the fellowship of the saints with whom he
will offer you
everlasting honour and glory.
I was directed to use this as a focus for my prayer
during the last couple of weeks of preparation and I have found it a great
source of strength and comfort.Please
keep me in your prayers over the coming days and I will keep you in mine.In York, we have just completed freshers’
week and I am conscious that there are students at this time who might be
finding adjusting to university life quite difficult, I am praying, also, for
anyone who might need them.
Can I take this opportunity to thank all those people who
have journeyed with me, in prayer, for the past couple of months.I will pray for you all over the next few
days and I am sure that we will be united in prayer on Saturday when I profess
my final vows.
God bless each and every one of you.
Br Ged J
The video link is of us in a party mode!
Br. Ged will profess his Solemn Vows at Aylesford Priory at 11.30am this Saturday. Please keep him in your prayers.
The Archbishop of
Canterbury’s Address to the Thirteenth Ordinary General Assembly
of the Synod of Bishops on The New Evangelization for the Transmission of
the Christian Faith
Your Holiness, Reverend
Fathers,brothers and sisters in Christ – dear Friends
I am deeply
honoured by the Holy Father’s invitation to speak in this gathering: as the
Psalmist says, ‘Ecce quam bonum et quam jucundum habitare fratres in unum’. The
gathering of bishops in Synod for the good of all Christ’s people is one of
those disciplines that sustain the health of Christ’s Church. And today
especially we cannot forget that great gathering of ‘fratres in unum’ that was
the Second Vatican Council, which did so much for the health of the Church and
helped the Church to recover so much of the energy needed to proclaim the Good
News of Jesus Christ effectively in our age. For so many of my own generation,
even beyond the boundaries of the Roman Catholic Church, that Council was a sign
of great promise, a sign that the Church was strong enough to ask itself
some demanding questions about whether its culture and structures were adequate
to the task of sharing the Gospel with the complex, often rebellious, always
restless mind of the modern world.
The Council was,
in so many ways, a rediscovery of evangelistic concern and passion,
focused not only on the renewal of the Church’s own life but on its credibility
in the world. Texts such as Lumen gentium and Gaudium et spes
laid out a fresh and joyful vision of how the unchanging reality of Christ
living in his Body on earth through the gift of the Holy Spirit might speak in
new words to the society of our age and even to those of other faiths. It is
not surprising that we are still, fifty years later, struggling with many of the
same questions and with the implications of the Council; and I take it that this
Synod’s concern with the new evangelization is part of that continuing
exploration of the Council’s legacy.
But one of the
most important aspects of the theology of the second Vaticanum was a renewal of
Christian anthropology. In place of an often strained and artificial
neo-scholastic account of how grace and nature were related in the constitution
of human beings, the Council built on the greatest insights of a theology that
had returned to earlier and richer sources – the theology of spiritual geniuses
like Henri de Lubac, who reminded us of what it meant for early and mediaeval
Christianity to speak of humanity as made in God’s image and of grace as
perfecting and transfiguring that image so long overlaid by our habitual
‘inhumanity’. In such a light, to proclaim the Gospel is to proclaim that it is
at last possible to be properly human: the Catholic and Christian faith is a
‘true humanism’, to borrow a phrase from another genius of the last century,
Jacques Maritain.
Yet de Lubac is
clear what this does not mean. We do not replace the evangelistic task
by a campaign of ‘humanization’. ‘Humanize before Christianizing?’ he asks –
‘If the enterprise succeeds, Christianity will come too late: its place will be
taken. And who thinks that Christianity has no humanizing value?’ So de Lubac
writes in his wonderful collection of aphorisms, Paradoxes of Faith. It
is the faith itself that shapes the work of humanizing and the humanizing
enterprise will be empty without the definition of humanity given in the Second
Adam. Evangelization, old or new, must be rooted in a profound confidence that
we have a distinctive human destiny to show and share with the world. There are
many ways of spelling this out, but in these brief remarks I want to concentrate
on one aspect in particular.
To be fully human
is to be recreated in the image of Christ’s humanity; and that humanity is the
perfect human ‘translation’ of the relationship of the eternal Son to the
eternal Father, a relationship of loving and adoring self-giving, a pouring out
of life towards the Other. Thus the humanity we are growing into in the Spirit,
the humanity that we seek to share with the world as the fruit of Christ’s
redeeming work, is a contemplative humanity. St Edith Stein observed
that we begin to understand theology when we see God as the ‘First Theologian’,
the first to speak out the reality of divine life, because ‘all speaking about
God presupposes God’s own speaking’; in an analogous way we could say that we
begin to understand contemplation when we see God as the first contemplative,
the eternal paradigm of that selfless attention to the Other that brings not
death but life to the self. All contemplating of God presupposes God’s own
absorbed and joyful knowing of himself and gazing upon himself in the
trinitarian life.
To be
contemplative as Christ is contemplative is to be open to all the fullness that
the Father wishes to pour into our hearts. With our minds made still and ready
to receive, with our self-generated fantasies about God and ourselves reduced to
silence, we are at last at the point where we may begin to grow. And the face
we need to show to our world is the face of a humanity in endless growth towards
love, a humanity so delighted and engaged by the glory of what we look towards
that we are prepared to embark on a journey without end to find our way more
deeply into it, into the heart of the trinitarian life. St Paul speaks (in
II Cor 3.18) of how ‘with our unveiled faces reflecting the glory of the
Lord’, we are transfigured with a greater and greater radiance. That is the
face we seek to show to our fellow-human beings.
And we seek this
not because we are in search of some private ‘religious experience’ that will
make us feel secure or holy. We seek it because in this self-forgetting gazing
towards the light of God in Christ we learn how to look at one another and at
the whole of God’s creation. In the early Church, there was a clear
understanding that we needed to advance from the self-understanding or
self-contemplation that taught us to discipline our greedy instincts and
cravings to the ‘natural contemplation’ that perceived and venerated the wisdom
of God in the order of the world and allowed us to see created reality for what
it truly was in the sight of God – rather than what it was in terms of how we
might use it or dominate it. And from there grace would lead us forward into
true ‘theology’, the silent gazing upon God that is the goal of all our
discipleship.
In this
perspective, contemplation is very far from being just one kind of thing that
Christians do: it is the key to prayer, liturgy, art and ethics, the key to the
essence of a renewed humanity that is capable of seeing the world and other
subjects in the world with freedom – freedom from self-oriented, acquisitive
habits and the distorted understanding that comes from them. To put it boldly,
contemplation is the only ultimate answer to the unreal and insane world that
our financial systems and our advertising culture and our chaotic and unexamined
emotions encourage us to inhabit. To learn contemplative practice is to learn
what we need so as to live truthfully and honestly and lovingly. It is a deeply
revolutionary matter.
In his
autobiography Thomas Merton describes an experience not long after he had
entered the monastery where he was to spend the rest of his life (Elected
Silence, p.303). He had contracted flu, and was confined to the infirmary
for a few days, and, he says, he felt a ‘secret joy’ at the opportunity this
gave him for prayer – and ‘to do everything that I want to do, without having to
run all over the place answering bells.’ He is forced to recognise that this
attitude reveals that ‘All my bad habits…had sneaked into the monastery with me
and had received the religious vesture along with me: spiritual gluttony,
spiritual sensuality, spiritual pride.’ In other words, he is trying to live
the Christian life with the emotional equipment of someone still deeply wedded
to the search for individual satisfaction. It is a powerful warning: we have to
be every careful in our evangelisation not simply to persuade people to apply to
God and the life of the spirit all the longings for drama, excitement and
self-congratulation that we so often indulge in our daily lives. It was
expressed even more forcefully some decades ago by the American scholar of
religion, Jacob Needleman, in a controversial and challenging book called
Lost Christianity: the words of the Gospel, he says, are addressed to
human beings who ‘do not yet exist’. That is to say, responding in a
life-giving way to what the Gospel requires of us means a transforming of our
whole self, our feelings and thoughts and imaginings. To be converted to the
faith does not mean simply acquiring a new set of beliefs, but becoming a new
person, a person in communion with God and others through Jesus Christ.
Contemplation is
an intrinsic element in this transforming process. To learn to look to God
without regard to my own instant satisfaction, to learn to scrutinise and to
relativise the cravings and fantasies that arise in me – this is to allow God to
be God, and thus to allow the prayer of Christ, God’s own relation to God, to
come alive in me. Invoking the Holy Spirit is a matter of asking the third
person of the Trinity to enter my spirit and bring the clarity I need to see
where I am in slavery to cravings and fantasies and to give me patience and
stillness as God’s light and love penetrate my inner life. Only as this begins
to happen will I be delivered from treating the gifts of God as yet another set
of things I may acquire to make me happy, or to dominate other people. And as
this process unfolds, I become more free—to borrow a phrase of St Augustine
(Confessions IV.7)—to ‘love human beings in a human way’, to love them
not for what they may promise me, to love them not as if they were there to
provide me with lasting safety and comfort, but as fragile fellow-creatures held
in the love of God. I discover (as we noted earlier) how to see other persons
and things for what they are in relation to God, not to me. And it is here that
true justice as well as true love has its roots.
The human face
that Christians want to show to the world is a face marked by such justice and
love, and thus a face formed by contemplation, by the disciplines of silence and
the detaching of the self from the objects that enslave it and the unexamined
instincts that can deceive it. If evangelisation is a matter of showing the
world the ‘unveiled’ human face that reflects the face of the Son turned towards
the Father, it must carry with it a serious commitment to promoting and
nurturing such prayer and practice. It should not need saying that this is not
at all to argue that ‘internal’ transformation is more important than action for
justice; rather, it is to insist that the clarity and energy we need for doing
justice requires us to make space for the truth, for God’s reality to come
through. Otherwise our search for justice or for peace becomes another exercise
of human will, undermined by human self-deception. The two callings are
inseparable, the calling to ‘prayer and righteous action’, as the Protestant
martyr Dietrich Bonhoeffer put it, writing from his prison cell in 1944. True
prayer purifies the motive, true justice is the necessary work of sharing and
liberating in others the humanity we have discovered in our contemplative
encounter.
Those who know
little and care less about the institutions and hierarchies of the Church these
days are often attracted and challenged by lives that exhibit something of
this. It is the new and renewed religious communities that most effectively
reach out to those who have never known belief or who have abandoned it as empty
and stale. When the Christian history of our age is written especially, though
not only, as regards Europe and North America—we shall see how central and vital
was the witness of places like Taizé or Bose, but also of more traditional
communities that have become focal points for the exploration of a humanity
broader and deeper than social habit encourages. And the great spiritual
networks, Sant’ Egidio, the Focolare, Communione e Liberazione, these too show
the same phenomenon; they make space for a profounder human vision because in
their various ways all of them offer a discipline of personal and common life
that is about letting the reality of Jesus come alive in us.
And, as these
examples show, the attraction and challenge we are talking about can generate
commitments and enthusiasms across historic confessional lines. We have become
used to talking about the imperative importance of ‘spiritual ecumenism’ these
days; but this must not be a matter of somehow opposing the spiritual and the
institutional, nor replacing specific commitments with a general sense of
Christian fellow-feeling. If we have a robust and rich account of what the word
‘spiritual’ itself means, grounded in scriptural insights like those in the
passages from II Corinthians that we noted earlier, we shall understand
spiritual ecumenism as the shared search to nourish and sustain disciplines of
contemplation in the hope of unveiling the face of the new humanity. And the
more we keep apart from each other as Christians of different confessions, the
less convincing that face will seem. I mentioned the Focolare movement a moment
ago: you will recall that the basic imperative in the spirituality of Chiara
Lubich was ‘to make yourself one’ – one with the crucified and abandoned Christ,
one through him with the Father, one with all those called to this unity and so
one with the deepest needs of the world. ‘Those who live unity … live by
allowing themselves to penetrate always more into God. They grow always closer
to God … and the closer they get to him, the closer they get to the hearts of
their brothers and sisters’ (Chiara Lubich: Essential Writings, p.37).
The contemplative habit strips away an unthinking superiority towards other
baptised believers and the assumption that I have nothing to learn from them.
Insofar as the habit of contemplation helps us approach all experience as gift,
we shall always be asking what it is that the brother or sister has to share
with us – even the brother or sister who is in one way or another separated from
us or from what we suppose to be the fullness of communion. ‘Quam bonum et quam
jucundum …’.
In practice, this
might suggest that wherever initiatives are being taken to reach out in new ways
to a lapsed Christian or post-Christian public, there should be serious work
done on how such outreach can be grounded in some ecumenically shared
contemplative practice. In addition to the striking way in which Taizé has
developed an international liturgical ‘culture’ accessible to a great variety of
people, a network like the World Community for Christian Meditation, with its
strong Benedictine roots and affiliations, has opened up fresh possibilities
here. What is more, this community has worked hard at making contemplative
practice accessible to children and young people, and this needs the strongest
possible encouragement. Having seen at first hand—in Anglican schools in
Britain—how warmly young children can respond to the invitation offered by
meditation in this tradition, I believe its potential for introducing young
people to the depths of our faith to be very great indeed. And for those who
have drifted away from the regular practice of sacramental faith, the rhythms
and practices of Taizé or the WCCM are often a way back to this sacramental
heart and hearth.
What people of
all ages recognise in these practices is the possibility, quite simply, of
living more humanly – living with less frantic acquisitiveness, living with
space for stillness, living in the expectation of learning, and most of all,
living with an awareness that there is a solid and durable joy to be
discovered in the disciplines of self-forgetfulness that is quite different from
the gratification of this or that impulse of the moment. Unless our
evangelisation can open the door to all this, it will run the risk of trying to
sustain faith on the basis of an un-transformed set of human habits – with the
all too familiar result that the Church comes to look unhappily like so many
purely human institutions, anxious, busy, competitive and controlling. In a
very important sense, a true enterprise of evangelisation will always be a
re-evangelisation of ourselves as Christians also, a rediscovery of why our
faith is different, transfiguring – a recovery of our own new humanity.
And of course it
happens most effectively when we are not planning or struggling for it. To turn
to de Lubac once again, ‘He who will best answer the needs of his time will be
someone who will not have first sought to answer them’ (op. cit.
pp.111-2); and ‘The man who seeks sincerity, instead of seeking truth in
self-forgetfulness, is like the man who seeks to be detached instead of laying
himself open in love’ (p.114). The enemy of all proclamation of the Gospel is
self-consciousness, and, by definition, we cannot overcome this by being more
self-conscious. We have to return to St Paul and ask, ‘Where are we looking?’
Do we look anxiously to the problems of our day, the varieties of unfaithfulness
or of threat to faith and morals, the weakness of the institution? Or are we
seeking to look to Jesus, to the unveiled face of God’s image in the light of
which we see the image further reflected in ourselves and our
neighbours?
That simply
reminds us that evangelisation is always an overflow of something else – the
disciple’s journey to maturity in Christ, a journey not organised by the
ambitious ego but the result of the prompting and drawing of the Spirit in us.
In our considerations of how we are once again to make the Gospel of Christ
compellingly attractive to men and women of our age, I hope we never lose sight
of what makes it compelling to ourselves, to each one of us in our diverse
ministries. So I wish you joy in these discussions – not simply clarity or
effectiveness in planning, but joy in the promise of the vision of Christ’s
face, and in the fore-shadowings of that fulfilment in the joy of communion with
each other here and now.
Spirit of Life, who in the beginning hovered over the abyss, help humanity of our time to understand that the exclusion of God leads to being lost in the desert of the world, and that only where faith enters, do dignity and liberty flourish and the whole of society is built on justice.
Spirit of Pentecost, who makes the Church one Body, restore in the baptized an authentic experience of communion; make us living signs of the presence of the Risen One in the world, a Community of saints that lives in the service of charity.
Holy Spirit, who equips us for the mission, grant that we may recognize that, also in our time, so many people are in search of the truth about their existence and the world. Make us collaborators of their joy with the proclamation of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, grain of the wheat of God, which renders good the terrain of life and assures the abundance of the harvest.
Amen.