We Dominicans have not
always been very good at promoting devotion to Our Holy Father St Dominic:
that’s why our constitutions explicitly remind the brethren of our duty to
foster a deeper appreciation of St Dominic’s life and ministry. Even at his birthplace in Caleruega,
it feels like there is greater devotion to his mother, Blessed Jane of Aza,
than there is to St Dominic, whose legacy as a preacher and founder of a
religious order has left a deep impression on the history and intellectual
culture of Europe. There is, however, something appropriate about this: St
Dominic was, above all, a preacher and the life of good Christian preachers
consists largely in learning to point away from themselves, so as to become
translucent to the light of Christ’s truth, and repeat John the Baptist’s “He
must increase; I must decrease” (Jn 3:30) in each successive era. So it is that
St Dominic, the founder of the Order of Preachers, never draws attention to
himself, but - as his early biographers observed - lived an entirely
God-centred life, speaking only to God or about God.
In Segovia too, the
cave in which St Dominic devoted himself to prayer and penitential exercises is
now hidden in the middle of a modern
campus university. Although Dominic probably wouldn’t recognise the modern
academy, his motley band of sons - who have continued century after century to
follow in his footsteps - have contributed much to the development of the
university system. The presence of the cueva, a place of prayer and penance, at
the heart of the University in Segovia is a reminder, however, that for
Dominicans, study is always understood as a spiritual and an ascetic
discipline. It may seem that the cave is the grit around which the pearl of the
University develops, but in fact our study is the grit, and our preaching the
pearl. Thus for Dominic study was not an end in itself, nor was it primarily
about amassing facts, gaining advanced qualifications, or becoming learned, but
rather about discerning the voice of God, speaking primarily through the
Scriptures and Tradition of the Church, but also in - and to - our culture.
This listening, because it is a listening to the voice of God, is one that
demands obedience, an obedience which sends forth the listener for preaching
and teaching. Throughout Dominic’s life, and the life of the brothers gathered
around him, listening and preaching always go together: Dominicans preach as
listeners, and listen as preachers, for no man is sent as an apostle without
having first been called as a disciple.
From
the outside, I expect that from time-to-time it seems like St Dominic has been
eclipsed by the Order he founded. Sometimes, I suspect, it seems like we talk
about our brother St Thomas Aquinas more than we do about our father St
Dominic. Even during his own lifetime, Dominic’s vision that lay brothers
should assume the burdens of leadership, in order to free the ordained for
preaching, was rejected by his brothers meeting in General Chapter, a decision
which Dominic accepted in humility. I suspect many subsequent Dominican
superiors will have tasted such ‘defeat’ at the hands of the brothers, but this
isn’t really a defeat at all, since our way of life commits us to discerning
the will of God as a community of brothers. What Dominic bequeathed to the
Order, and which we must never lose, is the sense of the radical urgency of our
task. The type of urgency with which one puts water on a burning building is the
type of urgency with which the sons of St Dominic approach this task of
prayerful preaching: it is the single priority of our lives, and it is in
following Christ in the task of proclaiming his Good News that we - like St
Dominic - find our essential identity.
This sense of urgency
does not derive from an obsession with doctrinal purity. Rather, St Dominic saw
with great acuity that the world in which we live is the very world in which we
encounter God, and that it is this simple principle that is so often
threatened. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is not an event in the same order
as the resurrection of Lazarus: Christ does not return to the same old
unchanged creation, but to a new and transfigured one, shot through with new
possibility. No matter what new and innovative ways we find to scourge our
world with the sins of violence and hatred, these can be healed and corrected
by a faithful preaching of the Gospel. This Good News that we proclaim is not
an abstract truth, but one that has brought us freedom, and a gift that we
share with our brothers and the world, “that our joy may be complete” (Jn
15:11). Thus, like St Dominic, our lives together should be lives of joy and
laughter. Ours is not the cheap laughter of the drunkard, but the costly
laughter, purchased for us by Christ’s passion and given freely to us, the
laughter of those intoxicated by the sharing of God’s word, and thus of a joy
that is born of authentic hope, itself born of faith in the gospel.
So, while there are
very few people who espouse the strange doctrines of the Manicheans that
Dominic dedicated his life to preaching against in the South of France, there
are plenty who follow them in denying the possibility of God’s presence in the
world. Many of our fellow countrymen stand on one of two metaphorical beaches: either
they stand with Matthew
Arnold on Dover Beach, watching the tide of faith apparently recede, or
they stand with the Manic Street Preachers on Porthmadog Sands, singing ‘this
is my truth, tell me yours’. At the heart of both these positions - the modern
and the postmodern - there is a rejection of the presence of God and his Truth
in the world. Supported by the prayers of Our Holy Father, then, may we be
faithful in our task of preaching, pointing out the presence of God in our
midst, that - in the word of Francis Thomas’ poem -
Jacob’s ladder is pitched “betwixt heaven and Charing Cross”, and “Lo! Christ
walks upon the water, not of Genesareth but Thames”.
I welcome you raising the profile of the Godzdogz blog here David. I've looked at your blog roll before, but I would appreciate knowing which particular Catholic blogs you personally consider to be worth reading on a week.
ReplyDeleteDefine a Catholic blog. But I am going to be sorting out the blogroll in a few days' time, with any luck, so watch this space. Certainly any of those currently on it are always worth a look.
ReplyDelete"Define a Catholic blog." I suppose I mean a blog written by a Roman Catholic about their faith.
ReplyDeleteThank you for letting me know about the blogroll update, I will look out for any new additions.