Editorial
Note:
click here
for Part 1
published
on June 27, 2010
click here
for Part 2
published
on July 4, 2010
click here
for Part 3
published
on July 11, 2010
(Letter
to B. Racrasy on Titles in the Church - continued)

Dear "B",
Well, what about things like
Franciscans and nuns and third order Carmelites?
Also simple. These groups
aren’t part of the hierarchical structure of the Church. They began as popular
movements. It seems that from the earliest days of the Church, women would
sometimes live communally, especially widows and young unmarried women who had
decided to forego marriage for the sake of the Gospel.
In the 200's, men started getting into
the act. There were already Jewish desert communities in Egypt. Even before the
time of Christ, the Judean desert had been home to Jewish groups that fled what
they saw as the corruption of the temple in Jerusalem. The first notable
Christian hermit in Egypt was St. Paul of Thebes (228-341). He fled the Roman
persecution of Christians in the Nile Valley and took up life alone in the
desert.
Believe it or not, this sort of thing
caught on.
People started going out to the desert to live the simple life in
union with God. They were called “monachoi,” a Greek word that meant
“loner’ or “solitary person,” hence “monk.” The next big name in desert
lonerness, monasticism that is, was St. Anthony the Abbot. (a quick definition:
abbot means “papa” or “dad” from the Aramaic word “abba”) An abbot is the
leader of a monastery, not to be confused with the Swedish pop-rock group of the
seventies that some people love and some do not love so much.
Where was I? Oh, yes. Anthony the Abbot
(251-356). When he was just a lad of 18, his parents died and left him their
fortune and the care of his little sister. He was in church one sunny Egyptian
day and heard the words of the Gospel “Sell what you have and give to the poor”
so he did, stuck his sister in one of the women’s communities already mentioned
and ran off to the desert. There he lived in an old tomb and then in an
abandoned Roman fort, did battle with the devil and acquired a great reputation
for holiness. People flocked to hear his teaching, making it a little difficult
to be solitary.
At one point, he went to Alexandria
hoping to be martyred by the Roman government, but they were full up with
martyrs at the time and turned him down. He went back to the desert and
organized the other monks into communities with a more defined way of life
because, frankly, all the solitude in the Egyptian desert can make one a little
wacky. St Athanasius, (293-373) bishop of Alexandria wrote a life of St.
Anthony (still in print). It sold like hotcakes in the west and soon monasticism
became all the rage, people renouncing the comforts and indoor plumbing of Roman
life to go off and live in desserts, swamps and mountaintops in an attempt to be
martyrs after the Roman government had stopped martyring people. In fact, the
Roman government had become mostly Catholic by that time.
Monasticism was pretty disorganized.
Wandering holy men could be rather strange, and sometimes less than holy. There
were some interesting ascetic practices among early monks. My favorite were the
“stylites” (Greek for pole-sitters.) They would spend years living on small
platforms on top of high poles in an attempt to get away from it all and, quite
literally, draw closer to heaven. The crowds would come to admire their holiness
and the pillar sitters, in turn would harangue the multitudes for their
worldliness and a good time was had by all.
The next two big names in monasticism
were St. Basil of Caesarea in Turkey (335-379) and St. Benedict of Nursia in
Italy (480-547). They did something about the wackiness of monasticism by
writing rules of life for monks, Basil for the east, and Benedict for the west.
No more wandering around, sitting on poles, taking up collections and going to
dinner parties. They lived secluded lives of prayer, work and study in
monasteries. These are the origins of Benedictine and Basilian monks, and most
subsequent forms of monasticism. Monks still tried to live far from corrupt
society, and in the process they drained swamps, cleared forests, cultivated
land, preserved the learning of the Greek and Roman world, maintained hospices
for the poor, hospitals for the sick, schools for the young and in general
created Western Civilization. You remember Western Civilization, don’t you? It
flourished until people like Freud, Darwin, Ted Turner, Madonna and Elvis
trashed it.
Now you understand monasticism. All
orders of monks are variations on the theme. There are men and women monks. The
women monks are usually called nuns. They live in monasteries, sometimes called
convents. The are cloistered, a Latin word meaning “enclosed.” Thus, a cloister
is an enclosure. They have limited contact with outsiders and even with one
another. In traditional monastic life there are sometimes long periods of
silence during the day or even for extended periods of time.
They are not ordained as bishops or
priests except for specific purposes. A monastery will ask a local bishop to
ordain some men for the need of community, and sometimes bishops are chosen from
among monks, but the monk is essentially a lay man or woman who has taken vows
of poverty, chastity and obedience and lives in a monastic community. Regular
diocesan priests don’t take vows. We make promises of celibacy and obedience,
but they are not part of our primary calling.
The penitential life is the monastic
calling. The priestly and diaconal calling is devotion to the public prayer of
the Church, sustained by a life of personal prayer and holiness. Our calling is
to assist the bishop in offering of the Liturgy and the Sacraments. Celibacy is
useful in the west, though not necessary in all forms of ordained ministry.
Deacons are commonly married and in certain cases, especially in Eastern
Catholicism, priests are married. Obedience to the bishop is certainly necessary
and implied by the very nature of the priests and the deacon. If our job is to
assist the bishop, how can we help him without obeying him? However, obedience
is not the same for ordained diocesan clergy as it is for monks. Monks are
supposed to live a life of self denial. Poverty, chastity and obedience are the
very heart of their prayer and penance.
For diocesan clergy, celibacy and
obedience are part of our service. We do not take vows of poverty. I have to buy
my own car, pay for my own retirement, clothes etc. though I am provided room
and board as long as I am working in an assignment. My money, or the lack
thereof, is my own. If a monk needs new shoes, he asks the abbot for money to
buy them. As a diocesan priest, I ask the credit card company. A monk is not
supposed to have money or property of his own. He asks his superior. He forgoes
financial decisions as part of his penitential life. There is an old proverb
that monastic orders take a vow of poverty. Diocesan priests live it. But of
course, that is just an old proverb.
You promised to explain Jesuits! What
about Jesuits?
That, dear reader, will have to wait for next week.
(Next week....
the Jesuits) click here for Part 5
Rev.
Know-It-All

The
Question Was
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- -
What's with all
the titles in the Church?
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