Advent is
a short season, yet it covers a long distance. It is the road of a soul from
Nazareth to Bethlehem. It seems such a short distance as we are accustomed to
thinking of distances. Yet it is a road into infinity, into eternity. It has a
beginning, but no end. In truth, Advent is the road of the spiritual life which
all of us must start if we do not want to miss the way.
We must
start with a ‘fiat’ that re-echoes Mary’s fiat (“Let it be done, O Lord”). It
is a fiat that each of us should say in the quiet of our hearts. Let us arise,
then. Let us shake the sleep out of our eyes—the sleep of emotions run amuck;
the sleep of indifference, of tepidity, of self-pity, of fighting God. Let us
arise from that sleep with its dark nightmares, and begin our journey to
Bethlehem.
But let
us understand that this ‘Bethlehem’ we seek is within our own souls, our own
hearts, our own minds. Advent is a time of standing still, and yet making a
pilgrimage. It is an inner pilgrimage, a pilgrimage in which we don’t use our feet.
We stand still; yet, in a manner of speaking, we walk a thousand miles across
the world—just because we choose to stand still.
So, then.
Let us enter, you and I, into the pilgrimage that doesn’t take us from home.
For ours is a journey of the spirit, which is a thousand times harder than a
journey of the feet. Let us ‘arise and go’.
Catherine
de Hueck Doherty, Donkey Bells
Reflection – I think there are few things Catherine
wrote about that were misinterpreted than her writings on pilgrimage. She wrote
a book—Strannik—on the Russian notion
of pilgrimage, which very much is encapsulated in the above passage.
It was a
source of considerable dismay to her that she received dozens of letters from
people telling her that she had inspired them to leave their homes and families
and responsibilities to go marching off on walking pilgrimages to the Holy Land
or one of a dozen other shrines.
It was the
inner pilgrimage she was writing about, but people stopped reading her at the
word ‘road’ or something, and went haring off without a thought to good
spiritual order or charity for others. Of course, actual physical pilgrimages
were a facet of her Russian Christianity, but these had to be done within the
context of one’s state of life and the duties and obligations that it
contained.
And of course,
the point she was making was precisely that this interior pilgrimage is a deep
event that is meant to be ongoing in all our lives all the time. It is a
spiritual matter, and as is often the case with spiritual matters, she writes
in a very symbolic vein—this was the language of spirituality for Catherine,
poetic and biblical imagery being for her a better vehicle for the truths of
the spirit.
But what does
it mean, stripped of the images and put into plain language? Well, I’m not sure
I personally get the whole of Catherine’s meaning; she was a woman of
prodigious depth and holiness, after all. But it seems to me that this interior
pilgrimage, this notion of our life being a continual journey towards
Bethlehem, essentially means living without complacency.
Complacency,
the sense of ‘having arrived’ is the death of the spiritual life. I was just
reading a Chesterton Fr. Brown story in which the priest defines the one
spiritual ailment as ‘to think oneself quite well.’ The truth is, we are not in
Bethlehem yet. ‘Bethlehem’ is the spiritual state of childhood, of totality of
trust and acceptance of God in a simplicity of surrender, out of which comes
that divine-human encounter which is the wellspring of joy and peace and all good
things.
We are not
there, not quite, not yet. We have our moments when Bethlehem comes to us, so
to speak. Christmas Day, for example. Or those truly holy moments in our lives,
sitting at the death bed of a beloved one praying the rosary, or holding a
newly baptized baby in our arms, or kneeling before the bishop to be ordained a
priest, or one’s own wedding, at the exchange of vows. Moments when ‘all is
calm, all is bright’, and there is little within us but our own beating hearts
and the drawn nigh presence of God. Bethlehem moments, each of them, when God’s
simplicity embraces ours for a brief space of time.
But meanwhile…
we are on a journey. And it is sheer death to us to stop journeying, to give up
and settle down and forget about Bethlehem all together and settle for living
in Toronto or Ottawa or Combermere. There is a continual action of ‘arising and
going’ within us that is necessary for a vibrant, living spiritual life.
Shaking off the dust of where we are and how our life is now, and seeing what
the next step is towards the simplicity of the child.
I’m sure there
is more that Catherine means by all
this, but I think that is the basic idea. So, let’s get cracking today, and see
where the journey takes us.
Advent can be understood in one aspect as a "standing still" which occurs when we take time to become more single minded in our goals. A decision is made for example, to set aside other things and become healthier so we read, learn, eat better, exercise, adjust our attitude for the positive and prepare ourselves to be more in line with the harmony of healthy principles. This Advent is really a life's work if being a good steward of our body is a goal. We begin by taking stock and choosing health. In a sense as long as we are on this path we are in the ambience of health. The spiritual has its own path of obedience founded on the same action principles placing us in saving the ambience of God's grace.
ReplyDeleteInteresting, and a good point. It occurs to me that, in a sense (since of course we are speaking in the realm of symbol and interiority) this standing still is the necessary element for the interior pilgrimage. After all, we cannot get anywhere in this world, even in the normal sense of things, unless we are fixed on a single goal. To wander aimlessly may get us somewhere, but nowhere we intend to go. Inner stillness, single minded and single hearted devotion, is necessary for our pilgrimage to be fruitful.
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