This article will be published in the St Pius X newsletter in the next week or so. I'll post an "early edition" of it here!
On Becoming
a Monk
Father Jay
Kythe
I
don’t know about you, but I am struck by the strangeness of this news! I suspect all of you are as well. Come on, how often do you hear about
someone—anyone—becoming a monk, especially your parish priest? And here I am, struck by what a strange
thing this is!
Parish
priests live in the world. All
faithful Christians live in the world but are not of the world. They are “new creations” by virtue of
their baptism. Parish priests
especially must be witnesses of being this “new creation,” of being citizens of
the Kingdom of God, of sojourners towards an Eternity that awaits us. But frankly, this is pretty hard to
do. I realized this when I really,
really, really wanted an iPhone.
How much more worldly can you get?
Yes, my iPhone has cool Catholic apps. I can do my prayers on it, and I can listen to Relevant
Radio any time of the day or night.
I have Catholic podcasts alongside apps that give uplifting daily
messages. But I also have two Star
Trek tricorder and one communicator apps, an Amazon.com app, four weather apps,
and ... how much more worldly can you get?
There
are times I set down my iPhone and gaze off into space, longing for that life
of peaceful surrender to the Lord.
I felt called to religious orders before coming to Minnesota, but my
route led me to ordination and serving in the archdiocese. I chose to belong to the Companions of
Christ and live a common life of prayer and fellowship with others. But I was still in the world a bit too
much for my taste. One day I heard
about a diocesan priest entering the Trappists, and I thought, “Could I do
that?” Having visited this
community of Benedictines in Atchison, Kansas, I decided to get back in touch
with them.
Years of prayer, visits, and conversations went by, and then the
archbishop gave me permission to spend six weeks down there, during a hot
Kansas summer! Remember, I hate
the heat and I hate sweating. I’m
from New Orleans, right? You’d
think that New Orleanians are used to the heat, but alas, no. They are used to air conditioning. So here I was, outside the mildly air
conditioned monastery, picking corn, beans and tomatoes and trimming tree
branches and doing many other things to torment me in the heat, sweat pouring
down like sheets. As if that
wasn’t the worst thing, there were mosquitoes, one of God’s creatures (what was
He thinking?) that absolutely adore me.
I mean it, they LOVE me!
They give me kisses all over my sweaty body, so much so I have to cover
myself in that special cologne that has DEET in it.
But
I loved being there! I’m not crazy
about manual labor under the hot sun, but I wanted to stay! Leaving that place was difficult, and
it would be two more years before the archbishop would grant me permission to
return, to test out this possible vocation.
And
now I stare at my iPhone and think, I have to give this up. I have to give up many things, like my
car, the blankets and quits beloved parishioners gave me, the 15 or so sweaters
I have (I only need one or two), all the knick-knacks that I’ve accumulated
over the years, etc. The monks did
tell me that I can bring my books, because “when you die, we’ll have them!”
(And the monk who told me that laughed mischievously!) Now, my life is pretty simple
anyway. Compared to many people, I
really don’t have that much stuff.
When I moved last time, all my volunteers noticed that. You would think that giving up some of
these things would be pretty easy.
No one told me about how possessions can possess you! There is a sentimental connection to
things that I have to give up too.
Furthermore,
giving up things only reminds me that I must give up my will. For eight years I have been a pastor,
in charge of things and making decisions for the good of the parish. Now I will be the “low man on the
totem pole.” I will receive the
decisions that others have made for me.
The first year-and-a-half will be the hardest. After that I shall become (God willing) a junior monk and
given an assignment in which I can utilize my gifts and talents. And then three years later, I will have
to discern and decide whether or not to make this life a permanent one. I will either return back to the
archdiocese or stay there for good.
The
question that should arise is “Why?”
Why do something like this?
Why give up things that have a sentimental meaning or things that I
enjoy? Why restrict my life in
this way? Why give up my freedoms?
Because
I want to separate myself from the world a bit more and gaze towards
Heaven. Jesus tells us that the way
to heaven is through the narrow gate.
Or as St Thomas More said, “You can’t get to heaven on a feather
bed.” Believe me, I want to get to
heaven, but I want my “feather bed” (actually, it’s a cool full size Serta
mattress and a captain’s bed with an awesome headboard that has bookshelves and
cabinets ... but I gotta give that up too!).
As I meditated on this, I had an imaginative vision of jogging to
heaven. There was a fork in the
road. One way was tough and rocky,
filled with thorns and narrow. The
other way was gentle and wide, with chirping birds and sunlight and
flowers. Knowing that the former
way was the right one (for the Cross was on the horizon), I began going down
that path. Along the way, I would
smile and ask the angels and the saints if this was the right way. They told me yes. “Is Jesus down there?” I would ask, and
they would say yes. “Will I see my
mom?” and they would answer yes.
But that road isn’t the one most people of the world would pick; they
would pick the other one. For this
road to Heaven involves a total surrender of your will to God. That’s why it’s a hard, difficult one.
God
created us in His image and likeness, and often we recreate Him in our image and likeness. We follow the God of our own
making. But when we conform
ourselves to the reality of who God is and what He has done for us, we must
also follow Him as He has revealed Himself through the centuries. That means, we must follow Him through
the Church He established. This is
the path trod by the saints, and there are thorns and rocks along this narrow
way. Their one true love’s choice
is Jesus Christ, and their destiny is Heaven.
So
why should I give up this blanket, and this car, and this iPhone, and ...
? Because I want Jesus. Jesus is worth it. The Kingdom of Heaven is worth it. For me, this means walking down this
strange path that God has shown me, a path not meant for everyone, for God has
an individualized path towards Heaven for everyone else. And every time one goes on a particular
path, one needs to ask trusted people whether or not this is the right
one. Most of all one needs to ask
God. He will draw us towards
Himself with the fruits of the Holy Spirit.
People
in the world say that the Church is behind the times and needs to “get with
it.” Rather, I think the world is
really behind the times, God’s time, and needs to get with it! At the end of our life, God will ask us
a very important question: smoking or
non-smoking? “Do you want to
be with me in Heaven for all Eternity, or not?” We make the choice in the here and now, and we embark on the
path towards ... the smoking section or the non-smoking section. Which will it be for you?
Sharing in your JOY - and praying with you in holy anticipation! Can guests come to the August 14th Vespers?
ReplyDeleteYes, guests are most welcome! The ceremony for entry into the postulancy is not too special, some prayers said and I'll be given a place in the choir. The ceremony for the novitiate is worth seeing, on the Vigil of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, December 7 evening. I'll probably have more guests coming then. Let me know, and I can work on getting a guest room for you.
DeleteFr. Kythe: I want to wish you well in following the leading of the Holy Spirit in your decision to enter a Benedictine monastery! I am quite familiar with the writings and life of Trappist monk Thomas Merton and such a life is no picnic even though the spiritual benefits seem unlimited. I have your Google blog bookmarked on my iPhone and have appreciated your postings thus far. I started a Google blog in Feb2010 and find it to be a useful tool for expression. I wondered immediately when you connected “monastery” with“blog” if you would also be asked to give up your blog at same time you turn in your iPhone? Hope Not! Dave Kubiatowicz, long time parishioner but now at St. Odilia in Shoreview.
DeleteThanks David! I don't think I would have to give up my blog. Another priest from a different diocese entered and kept up with his blog. I'm assuming it is okay, but I don't know for sure. I will have to find out!
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