How can you be poor
unless you are obedient? Obedience is a surgeon’s knife that prunes that self
that remains even after the sword of the Spirit has done its work. Even after
the fire of the Holy Ghost continues to do its work and the light of the Holy
Spirit illuminates the dark depths of our souls.
Then the husbandman, the
farmer, the gardener, who is God the Father, moves in Himself. Now He begins
slowly, expertly, to strip all that stands in the way of the soul of man
becoming truly another Christ, or I should say, enhancing the likeness of men
to His Son, for the Catholic and the Christian is the Body of his Son and must
bear the marks of His Son. In this lies the holiness of the body, for it has
its being in Christ and Christ in it.
So the husbandman comes.
God the Father arrives with the pruning knife and strips, and the only way He
can do that is to wield that knife of obedience. Here we have to pause and face
ourselves, because here the gigantic, titanic struggle of man and God takes
place, I should say, perhaps, between Satan and God, with man having the final
word, because he has freedom. Freedom of will. Freedom of soul. Freedom of
choice.
Shall I, or shall you,
be obedient to God’s will or to our own will? Shall we twist God’s will into
our own will? Shall we totally reject God’s will, or shall we rationalize it
nicely away, so that we can put it in the compartments of our soul, according
to our filing system, and then rest in a nice, almost psychiatric forgetfulness
— blocking our conscience as to what we have done.
Which shall it be? Are
we going to let ourselves be stripped to the nakedness of a tree and allow God
to take, through obedience, through the pruning, all that He wants to take from
us in His mysterious and strange way, so that we can be grafted in truth unto
His Son. Which shall it be? How hard it is to tell our modern generation the
freedom of obedience, for unless we stand there and allow Him, the great
Husbandman, Gardener, Farmer, to prune us this way, or the great Surgeon to cut
out the cancerous parts of our being that may remain in those mansions, those
caverns in our soul, we shall never be free. We shall be always bound by the
illusion that we create in ourselves. We shall say to ourselves, “Obedience
depersonalizes”, ‘‘Obedience makes me an automaton”, “Obedience keeps me a
child” — not childlike, but childish. Does it? It is up to you.
Catherine
Doherty, Spiritual Reading, April 1, 1967
Reflection – One
more day here of Catherine Doherty on the scintillating subject of poverty,
obedience, love, freedom, and the heart of the Gospel, taken from the material
I used for my seminary retreat in Long Island.
We have to go deeply into this business
of obedience and its place in the spiritual life. It is worth noting here that
Catherine always understood obedience to God to be mediated through obedience
to a spiritual director, a confessor, or at the very least, obedience to the
right authority of the Church. It was never for her simply some interior
reality of merely following one’s own conscience. That comes into it, but that
can too easily become the very rationalizing away of obedience to God’s will
she cautions us against.
No, the judgment of conscience always
needs to be checked against an external voice. If one is blessed to have a
spiritual director, that person. If not, then at least we have to safeguard our
unity with the Church and its teachings on faith and morals, and exercise our
obedience to God through that obedience.
I think that part of why this ‘freedom
of obedience’ is so hard for modern people to hear and accept is that there are
so few examples being modeled. By this I mean that there are so very few
consecrated religious around, at least in North America. And so many of the
ones there are, are not especially visible because they do not wear habits, or
do not really practice obedience in a particularly concrete way.
I believe that one of the great gifts
consecrated life is to the Church is the visible, vibrant presence of men and
women who surrender their goods, their sexual expression, and their autonomy to
God out of love for Him and His Church, and so are a visible sign to the whole
church of the goodness and beauty of poverty, chastity, and obedience. The
wholesale collapse of consecrated life in the last fifty years has been a
spiritual and pastoral disaster for the Church and for the world, to a degree I
don’t think we realize.
Well, that’s where it is, until God moves
and generous young men and women respond to that movement of God. Meanwhile, we
need to ponder what Catherine writes here – that obedience is essential in the
deep purifying work of God in the human soul, that obedience is the place where
the radical choice for or against God comes to its most acute crisis, that the
fundamental choice of self and ego vs. God and love hinges on whether or not we
are going to embrace the freedom of obedience.
These are fairly heavy and serious
questions, and so I leave them with you on this fine winter day. Meanwhile we
do our best today: ‘God, may I do your will and not my own today. Teach me to
obey and to be free. Amen.’
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