February 480-543 A.D. Benedict of Nursia
St. Benedict of Nursia
Founder of western monasticism, born
at Nursia, c. 480; died at Monte Cassino, 543.
The only authentic life of Benedict of Nursia is that contained in the second
book of St. Gregory's
"Dialogues". It is rather a character sketch than a biography and
consists, for the most part, of a number of miraculous
incidents, which, although they illustrate the life of the saint, give little help
towards a chronological account of his career. St. Gregory's
authorities for all that he relates were the saint's own
disciples, viz. Constantinus, who succeeded him as Abbot of Monte Cassino; and
Honoratus, who was Abbot of Subiaco when St. Gregory wrote
his "Dialogues".
Benedict was the son of a Roman noble of Nursia, a small
town near Spoleto, and
a tradition, which St. Bede
accepts, makes him a twin with his sister Scholastica. His boyhood was spent in
Rome, where he lived with
his parents and
attended the schools until
he had reached his higher studies. Then "giving over his books, and
forsaking his father's house
and wealth, with a mind only to serve God, he
sought for some place where he might attain to the desire of his holy purpose;
and in this sort he departed [from Rome],
instructed with learned ignorance and
furnished with unlearned wisdom" (Dial. St. Greg., II, Introd. in Migne, P.L. LXVI). There is
much difference of opinion as to Benedict's age at the time. It has been very
generally stated as fourteen, but a careful examination of St. Gregory's
narrative makes it impossible to suppose him younger than nineteen or twenty.
He was old enough to be in the midst of his literary studies, to understand the
real meaning and worth of the dissolute and licentious lives of his companions,
and to have been deeply affected himself by the love of a woman (Ibid. II, 2). He was
capable of weighing all these things in comparison with the life taught in the
Gospels, and chose the latter, He was at the beginning of life, and he had at
his disposal the means to a career as a Roman noble; clearly he was not a
child, As St. Gregory
expresses it, "he was in the world and was free to enjoy the advantages
which the world offers, but drew back his foot which he had, as it were,
already set forth in the world" (ibid., Introd.). If we accept the date
480 for his birth, we may fix the date of
his abandoning the schools and
quitting home at about A.D. 500.
Benedict does not seem to have left Rome for the purpose of
becoming a hermit, but only to find some
place away from the life of the great city; moreover, he took his old nurse
with him as a servant and they settled down to live in Enfide, near a church
dedicated to St. Peter, in some kind of association with "a company of
virtuous men" who were in sympathy with his feelings and his views of
life. Enfide, which the tradition of Subiaco
identifies with the modern Affile, is in the Simbrucini mountains, about forty
miles from Rome and two from Subiaco. It
stands on the crest of a ridge which rises rapidly from the valley to the
higher range of mountains, and seen from the lower ground the village has the
appearance of a fortress. As St. Gregory's
account indicates, and as is confirmed by the remains of the old town and by
the inscriptions found in the neighbourhood, Enfide was a place of greater
importance than is the present town. At Enfide Benedict worked his first miracle by
restoring to perfect condition an earthenware wheat-sifter (capisterium)
which his old servant had accidentally broken. The notoriety which
this miracle
brought upon Benedict drove him to escape still farther from social life, and
"he fled secretly from his nurse and sought the more retired district of Subiaco".
His purpose of life had also been modified. He had fled Rome to escape the evils of
a great city; he now determined to be poor and to live by his own work.
"For God's sake he deliberately
chose the hardships of life and the weariness of labour" (ibid., 1).
A short distance from Enfide is the entrance to a narrow,
gloomy valley, penetrating the mountains and leading directly to Subiaco.
Crossing the Anio and turning to the right, the path rises along the left face
oft the ravine and soon reaches the site of Nero's villa
and of the huge mole which formed the lower end of the middle lake; across the
valley were ruins of the Roman baths, of which a few great arches and detached
masses of wall still stand. Rising from the mole upon twenty five low arches,
the foundations of which can even yet be traced, was the bridge from the villa
to the baths, under which the waters of the middle lake poured in a wide fall
into the lake below. The ruins of these vast buildings and the wide sheet of
falling water closed up the entrance of the valley to St. Benedict as he came
from Enfide; today the narrow valley lies open before us, closed only by the
far off mountains. The path continues to ascend, and the side of the ravine, on
which it runs, becomes steeper, until we reach a cave above which the mountain
now rises almost perpendicularly; while on the right hand it strikes in a rapid
descent down to where, in St. Benedict's day, five hundred feet below, lay the
blue waters of the lake. The cave has a large triangular-shaped opening and is
about ten feet deep. On his way from Enfide, Benedict met a monk, Romanus, whose monastery was
on the mountain above the cliff overhanging the cave. Romanus had discussed
with Benedict the purpose which had brought him to Subiaco, and
had given him the monk's habit. By his advice
Benedict became a hermit and for three years,
unknown to men, lived in this cave above the lake. St. Gregory tells
us little of these years, He now speaks of Benedict no longer as a youth (puer), but
as a man (vir) of God.
Romanus, he twice tells us, served the saint in
every way he could. The monk apparently visited him
frequently, and on fixed days brought him food.
During these three years of solitude, broken only by
occasional communications with the outer world and by the visits of Romanus, he
matured both in mind and character, in knowledge of
himself and of his fellow-man, and at the same time he became not merely known
to, but secured the respect of, those about him; so much so that on the death
of the abbot of a monastery in
the neighbourhood (identified by some with Vicovaro), the community came to him
and begged him to become its abbot.
Benedict was acquainted with the life and discipline of the monastery, and knew that "their
manners were diverse from his and therefore that they would never agree together:
yet, at length, overcome with their entreaty, he gave his consent" (ibid.,
3). The experiment failed; the monks tried
to poison him, and he returned to his cave. From this time his miracles seem
to have become frequent, and many people, attracted by his sanctity and
character, came to Subiaco to be
under his guidance. For them he built in the valley twelve monasteries, in
each of which he placed a superior with twelve monks. In a
thirteenth he lived with "a few, such as he thought would more profit and
be better instructed by his own presence" (ibid., 3). He remained,
however, the father or abbot of all. With the
establishment of these monasteries began
the schools for
children; and amongst the first to be brought were Maurus and Placid.
The remainder of St. Benedict's life was spent in realizing
the ideal of monasticism which he has left us drawn out in his Rule, and before
we follow the slight chronological story given by St. Gregory, it
will be better to examine the ideal, which, as St. Gregory says,
is St. Benedict's real biography (ibid., 36). We will deal here with the Rule
only so far as it is an element in St. Benedict's life. For the relations which
it bore to the monasticism of previous centuries, and for its influence
throughout the West on civil and religious government, and upon the spiritual
life of Christians, the
reader is referred to the articles MONASTICISM and
RULE OF SAINT BENEDICT.
The Benedictine rule
1. Before studying St. Benedict's Rule it is
necessary to
point out that it is written for laymen, not
for clerics. The
saint's purpose was not to institute an order of clerics with clerical duties and offices, but an
organization and a set of rules for the domestic life of such laymen as wished to live as
fully as possible the type of life presented in the Gospel. "My
words", he says, "are addressed to thee, whoever thou art, that,
renouncing thine own will, dost put on the strong and bright armour of
obedience in order to fight for the Lord Christ, our true King." (Prol. to
Rule.) Later, the Church imposed the clerical state
upon Benedictines, and
with the state came a preponderance of clerical and sacerdotal duties, but the impress of
the lay origin of the Benedictines has
remained, and is perhaps the source of some of the characteristics which mark
them off from later orders.
2. Another characteristic feature of the saint's Rule
is its view of work. His so-called order was not established to carry on any
particular work or to meet any special special crisis in the Church, as has been the case
with other orders. With Benedict the work of his monks was
only a means to goodness of
life. The great disciplinary force for human nature is work; idleness is
its ruin. The purpose of his Rule was to bring men "back to God by the labour of
obedience, from whom they had departed by the idleness of disobedience".
Work was the first condition of all growth in goodness. It
was in order that his own life might be "wearied with labours for God's sake" that St.
Benedict left Enfide for the cave at Subiaco. It
is necessary,
comments St. Gregory, that
God's elect should at the
beginning, when life and temptations are
strong in them, "be wearied with labour and pains". In the
regeneration of human nature in the order of
discipline, even prayer comes after work, for
grace meets with no co-operation in the soul and
heart of an idler. When the Goth "gave over the world" and went to Subiaco, St.
Benedict gave him a bill-hook and set him to clear away briars for the making
of a garden. "Ecce! labora!" go and work. Work is not, as
the civilization of the time taught, the condition peculiar to slaves; it is
the universal lot of man, necessary for
his well-being as a man, and essential for him as a Christian.
3. The religious life, as
conceived by St. Benedict is essentially social. Life apart from one's fellows,
the life of a hermit, if it is to be
wholesome and sane, is possible only for a few, and these few must have reached
an advanced stage of self-discipline while living with others (Rule, 1). The
Rule, therefore, is entirely occupied with regulating the life of a community
of men who live and work and pray and
eat together, and this is not merely for a course of training, but as a
permanent element of life at its best. The Rule conceives the superiors as
always present and in constant touch with every member of the government, which
is best described as patriarchal, or paternal (ibid., 2, 3, 64). The superior
is the head of a family; all are the permanent
members of a household. Hence, too, much of the spiritual teaching of the Rule
is concealed under legislation which seems purely social and domestic
organization (ibid. 22-23, 35-41). So intimately connected with domestic life
is the whole framework and teaching of the Rule that a Benedictine may
be more truly said to enter or join a particular household than to join an
order. The social character of Benedictine life
has found expression in a fixed type for monasteries and
in the kind of works which Benedictines
undertake, and it is secured by an absolute communism in possessions (ibid. 33,
34, 54, 55), by the rigorous suppression of all differences of worldly rank -
"no one of noble birth may [for that reason] be put before him that was
formerly a slave" (ibid. 2). and by the enforced presence of everyone at
the routine duties of the household.
4. Although private ownership is most strictly forbidden by
the Rule, it was no part of St. Benedict's conception of monastic life that his
monks, as a body, should
strip themselves of all wealth and live upon the alms of
the charitable; rather his purpose was to restrict the requirements of the
individual to what was necessary and
simple, and to secure that the use and administration of the corporate
possessions should be in strict accord with the teaching of the Gospel. The Benedictine ideal
of poverty is quite different from the Franciscan. The Benedictine takes
no explicit vow of poverty; he only vows obedience according to
the Rule. The rule allows all that is necessary to
each individual, together with sufficient and varied clothing, abundant food
(excluding only the flesh of quadrupeds), wine and ample sleep (ibid., 39, 40,
41, 55). Possessions could be held in common, they might be large, but they
were to be administered for the furtherance of the work of the community and
for the benefit of others. While the individual monk was
poor, the monastery was
to be in a position to give alms, not
to be compelled to seek them. It was to relieve the poor, to clothe the naked,
to visit the sick, to bury the dead, to help the afflicted (ibid., 4), to
entertain all strangers (ibid., 3). The poor came to Benedict to get help to
pay their debts (Dial. St. Greg., 27);
they came for food (ibid., 21, 28).
5. St. Benedict originated a form of government which is
deserving of study. It is contained in chapters 2, 3, 31, 64, 65 of the Rule
and in certain pregnant phrases scattered through other chapters. As with the
Rule itself, so also his scheme of government is intended not for an order but
for a single community. He presupposes that the community have bound
themselves, by their promise of stability, to spend their lives together under
the Rule. The superior is then elected by a free and universal suffrage. The
government may be described as a monarchy, with the Rule as its constitution.
Within the four corners of the Rule everything is left to the discretion of the
abbot, the abuse of whose
authority is checked by religion (Rule, 2), by open debate with the community
on all important matters, and with its representative elders in smaller
concerns (ibid., 3). The reality of these checks upon the wilfulness of the
ruler can be appreciated only when it is remembered that ruler and community
were bound together for life, that all were inspired by the single purpose of
carrying out the conception of life taught in the Gospel, and that the relation
of the members of the community to one another and to the abbot, and of the abbot to them, were elevated
and spiritualized by a mysticism which
set before itself the acceptance of the teachings of the Sermon on the Mount as
real and work-a-day truths.
6. (a) When a Christian
household, a community, has been organized by the willing acceptance of its
social duties and responsibilities,
by obedience to an authority, and, further, is under the continuous discipline
of work and self-denial, the next step in the regeneration of its members in
their return to God is prayer. The Rule deals
directly and explicitly only with public prayer. For
this Benedict assigns the Psalms and Canticles, with readings from the
Scriptures and Fathers. He devotes eleven chapters out of the seventy-three of
his Rule to regulating this public prayer, and
it is characteristic of the freedom of his Rule and of the
"moderation" of the saint, that
he concludes his very careful directions by saying that if any superior does
not like his arrangement he is free to make another; this only he says he will
insist on, that the whole Psalter will
be said in the course of a week. The practice of the holy Fathers, he adds, was
resolutely "to say in a single day what I pray we
tepid monks may get through in a
whole week" (ibid., 18). On the other hand, he checks indiscreet zeal by laying down the
general rule "that prayer made in common must
always be short" (ibid., 20). It is very difficult to reduce St.
Benedict's teaching on prayer to a system, for this
reason, that in his conception of the Christian
character, prayer is coexistent with the
whole life, and life is not complete at any point unless penetrated by prayer. .
(b) The form of prayer which
thus covers the whole of our waking hours, St. Benedict calls the first degree
of humility. It
consists in realizing the presence of God
(ibid., 7). The first step begins when the spiritual is joined to the merely
human, or, as the saint expresses it, it is
the first step in a ladder, the rungs of which rest at one end in the body and
at the other in the soul. The ability to
exercise this form of prayer is fostered by that
care of the "heart" on which the saint so
often insists; and the heart is saved from the dissipation that would result
from social intercourse by the habit of mind which sees in everyone Christ Himself. "Let the
sick be served in very deed as Christ
Himself" (ibid., 36). "Let all guests that come be received as Christ" (ibid., 53).
"Whether we be slaves or freemen, we are all one in Christ and bear an equal rank
in the service of Our Lord"
(ibid., 2).
(c) Secondly, there is public prayer. This is short and is
to be said at intervals, at night and at seven distinct hours during the day,
so that, when possible, there shall be no great interval without a call to
formal, vocal, prayer (ibid., 16). The
position which St. Benedict gave to public, common prayer can best be described
by saying that he established it as the centre of the common life to which he
bound his monks. It was the consecration, not
only of the individual, but of the whole community to God by the oft-repeated
daily public acts of faith. and of praise and
adoration of the Creator; and this public worship of God, the opus
Dei,
was to form the chief work of his monks, and
to be the source from which all other works took their inspiration, their direction,
and their strength.
(d) Lastly, there is private prayer, for
which the saint does not legislate. It
follows individual gifts - "If anyone wishes to pray in private, let him go
quietly into the oratory and pray, not
with a loud voice, but with tears and fervour of heart" (ibid., 52).
"Our prayer ought to be short and
with purity of heart, except it be perchance prolonged by the inspiration of
divine grace" (ibid., 20). But if St. Benedict gives no further directions
on private prayer, it is because the
whole condition and mode of life secured by the Rule, and the character formed
by its observance, lead naturally to the higher states of prayer. As the Saint writes:
"Whoever, therefore, thou art that hastenest to thy heavenly country,
fulfil by the help of Christ this little Rule which we have written for
beginners; and then at length thou shalt arrive, under God's protection, at the
lofty summits of doctrine and
virtue of which we have spoken above" (ibid., 73). for guidance in these
higher states the Saint refers to the Fathers, Basil and Cassian.
From this short examination of the Rule and its system of prayer, it will be obvious
that to describe the Benedictine as a
contemplative order is misleading, if the word is used in its modern technical
sense as excluding active work; the "contemplative" is a form of life
framed for different circumstances and with a different object from St.
Benedict's. The Rule, including its system of prayer and
public psalmody, is meant for every class of mind and every degree of learning.
It is framed not only for the educated and
for souls advanced in
perfection, but it organizes and directs a complete life which is adapted for
simple folk and for sinners, for the observance of the Commandments and for the
beginnings of goodness.
"We have written this Rule", writes St. Benedict, "that by
observing it in monasteries, we
may shew ourselves to have some degree of goodness in
life and a beginning of holiness. But
for him who would hasten to the perfection of religion, there are the teachings
of the holy Fathers, the following whereof bringeth a man to the height of
perfection" (ibid., 73). Before leaving the subject of prayer it will be well to
point out again that by ordering the public recitation and singing of the Psalter, St.
Benedict was not putting upon his monks a
distinctly clerical obligation. The Psalter was
the common form of prayer of all Christians; we
must not read into his Rule characteristics which a later age and discipline
have made inseparable from the public recitation of the Divine Office.
We can now take up again the story of Benedict's life. How
long he remained at Subiaco we do
not know. Abbot Tosti
conjectures it was until the year 529. Of these years St. Gregory is content
to tell no more than a few stories descriptive of the life of the monks, and of the character
and government of St. Benedict. The latter was making his first attempt to
realize in these twelve monasteries his
conception of the monastic life. We can fill in many of the details from the
Rule. By his own experiment and his knowledge of
the history of monasticism the saint had
learnt that the regeneration of the individual, except in abnormal cases, is
not reached by the path of solitude, nor by that of austerity, but by the
beaten path of man's social instinct, with
its necessary
conditions of obedience and work; and that neither the body nor the mind can be
safely overstrained in the effort to avoid evil
(ibid., 64). Thus, at Subiaco we
find no solitaries, no conventual hermits, no
great austerities, but men living together in organized communities for the
purpose of leading good lives, doing such work as came to their hand - carrying
water up the steep mountain-side, doing the other household work, raising the
twelve cloisters,
clearing the ground, making gardens, teaching children, preaching to the
country people, reading and studying at least four hours a day, receiving strangers,
accepting and training new-comers, attending the regular hours of prayer, reciting and chanting
the Psalter. The
life at Subiaco and
the character of St. Benedict attracted many to the new monasteries, and
their increasing numbers and growing influence came the inevitable jealousy and
persecution,
which culminated with a vile attempt of a neighboring priest to scandalize the monks by an exhibition of
naked women, dancing in the
courtyard of the saint's monastery
(Dial. St. Greg., 8). To save his followers from further persecution
Benedict left Subiaco and
went to Monte Cassino.
Upon the crest of Monte Cassino
"there was an ancient chapel in
which the foolish and simple country people, according to the custom of the old
Gentiles,
worshipped the god Apollo. Round about it likewise upon all sides there were
woods for the service of devils, in which, even to
that very time, the mad multitude of infidels did offer most wicked sacrifice.
The man of God, coming hither, beat
in pieces the idol, overthrew the altar, set fire on the woods and in the
temple of Apollo built the oratory of St. Martin: and where the altar of the
same Apollo was, he made an oratory of St. John: and by his continual preaching
he brought the people dwelling in those parts to embrace the faith of Christ" (ibid., 8). On
this spot the saint built his monastery. His
experience at Subiaco had
led him to alter his plans, and now, instead of building several houses with a
small community in each, he kept all his monks in
one monastery and
provided for its government by appointing a prior and deans (Rule, 65, 21). We
find no trace in his Rule, which was most probably written at Monte Cassino, of
the view which guided him when he built the twelve small monasteries at Subiaco. The
life which we have witnessed at Subiaco was
renewed at Monte Cassino, but
the change in the situation and local conditions brought a corresponding
modification in the work undertaken by the monks. Subiaco was a
retired valley away in the mountains and difficult of access; Cassino was on
one of the great highways to the south of Italy, and
at no great distance from Capua. This
brought the monastery into
more frequent communication with the outside world. It soon became a centre of
influence in a district in which there was a large population, with several dioceses and
other monasteries.
Abbots came to see and advise with Benedict. Men of all classes were frequent
visitors, and he numbered nobles and bishops among
his intimate friends. There were nuns in
the neighbourhood whom the monks went
to preach to and to teach. There was a village nearby in which St. Benedict
preached and made many converts (Dial. St. Greg., 19). The monastery
became the protector of the poor,
their trustee (ibid., 31), their refuge in sickness, in trial, in accidents, in
want.
Thus during the life of the saint we
find what has ever since remained a characteristic feature of Benedictine
houses, i.e. the members take up any work which is adapted to their peculiar
circumstances, any work which may be dictated by their necessities. Thus we
find the Benedictines
teaching in poor schools and
in the universities,
practising the arts and following agriculture, undertaking the care of souls, or devoting
themselves wholly to study. No work is foreign to the Benedictine,
provided only it is compatible with living in community and with the
performance of the Divine Office. This
freedom in the choice of work was necessary in a
Rule which was to be suited to all times and places, but it was primarily the
natural result of the which St. Benedict had in view, and which he differs from
the founders of later orders. These later had in view some special work to
which they wished their disciples to devote themselves; St. Benedict's purpose
was only to provide a Rule by which anyone might follow the Gospel counsels,
and live, and work and pray, and save his soul. St. Gregory's
narrative of the establishment of Monte Cassino does
little more for us than to supply disconnected incidents which illustrate the
daily life of the monastery. We
gain only a few biographical facts. From Monte Cassino St.
Benedict founded another monastery near Terracina, on
the coast, about forty miles distant (ibid., 22). To the wisdom of long
experience and to the mature virtues of the saint, was
now added the gift of prophecy, of which St. Gregory gives
many examples. Celebrated among these is the story of the visit of Totila, King
of the Goths, in the year 543, when
the saint "rebuked him for
his wicked deeds, and in a few words told him all that should befall him,
saying 'Much wickedness do you daily commit, and many sins have you done: now at
length give over your sinful life. Into the city of
Rome shall you enter, and
over the sea shall you pass: nine years shall you reign, and in the tenth shall
you leave this mortal life.' The king, hearing these things, was wonderfully
afraid, and desiring the holy man to commend him to God in his prayers he
departed: and from that time forward he was nothing so cruel as before he had
been. Not long after he went to Rome,
sailed over into Sicily, and in the tenth year
of his reign he lost his kingdom together with his life." (ibid., 15).
Totila's visit to Monte Cassino in
543 is the only certain date we have in the saint's life.
It must have occurred when Benedict was advanced in age. Abbot Tosti,
following others, puts the saint's death
in the same year. Just before his death we hear for the first time of his
sister Scholastica. "She had been dedicated from her infancy to Our Lord, and
used to come once a year to visit her brother. To whom the man of God went not far from the
gate to a place that did belong to the abbey,
there to give her entertainment" (ibid., 33). They met for the last time
three days before Scholastica's death, on a day "when the sky was so clear
that no cloud was to be seen". The sister begged her brother to stay the
night, "but by no persuasion would he agree unto that, saying that he
might not by any means tarry all night out of his abbey.... The nun receiving this denial
of her brother, joining her hands together, laid them on the table; and so
bowing her head upon them, she made her prayers to Almighty God, and
lifting her head from the table, there fell suddenly such a tempest of
lightening and thundering, and such abundance of rain, that neither venerable
Bennet, nor the monks that were with him,
could put their head out of door" (ibid., 33). Three days later,
"Benedict beheld the soul of
his sister, which was departed from her body, in the likeness of a dove, to
ascend into heaven: who rejoicing much to
see her great glory, with hymns and
lauds gave thanks to Almighty God, and
did impart news of this her death to his monks whom
also he sent presently to bring her corpse to his abbey, to have it buried in
that grave which he had provided for himself" (ibid., 34).
It would seem to have been about this time that St.
Benedict had that wonderful vision in which he came as near to seeing God as is possible for man
in this life. St. Gregory and St. Bonaventure say
that Benedict saw God and in that vision of God saw the whole world. St. Thomas will
not allow that this could have been. Urban VIII,
however, does not hesitate to say that "the saint merited while still in
this mortal life, to see God Himself and in God all that is below
him". If he did not see the Creator, he saw the light which is in the
Creator, and in that light, as St. Gregory says,
"saw the whole world gathered together as it were under on beam of the
sun. At the same time he saw the soul of
Germanus, Bishop of Capua, in a fiery globe
carried up by the angels to Heaven" (ibid., 35).
Once more the hidden things of God were
shown to him, and he warned his brethren, both "those that lived daily
with him and those that dwelt far off" of his approaching death. "Six
days before he left this world he gave orders to have his sepulchre opened, and
forthwith falling into an ague, he began with burning heat to wax faint; and
when as the sickness daily increased, upon the sixth day he commanded his monks to carry him into the
oratory, where he did arm himself receiving the Body and Blood of our
Saviour Christ; and having his weak body holden up betwixt
the hands of his disciples, he stood with his own hands lifted up to heaven; and as he was in that
manner praying, he
gave up the ghost" (ibid., 37). He was buried in
the same grave with his sister "in the oratory of St. John the Baptist,
which [he] himself had built when he overthrew the altar of Apollo"
(ibid.). There is some doubt whether the relics of the saint are still at Monte Cassino, or
whether they were moved in the seventh century to Fleury. Abbot Tosti in
his life of St. Benedict, discusses the question at length (chap. xi) and
decides the controversy in favour of Monte Cassino.
Perhaps the most striking characteristics in St. Benedict
are his deep and wide human feeling and his moderation. The former reveals
itself in the many anecdotes recorded by St. Gregory. We
see it in his sympathy and care for the simplest of his monks; his hastening to the
help of the poor Goth who had lot his bill-hook; spending the hours of the
night in prayer on the mountain to
save his monks the labour of carrying
water, and to remove from their lives a "just cause of grumbling";
staying three days in a monastery to
help to induce one of the monks to
"remain quietly at his prayers as the other monks did", instead of
going forth from the chapel and wandering about
"busying himself worldly and transitory things". He lets the crow
from the neighboring woods come daily when all are at dinner to be fed by
himself. His mind is always with those who are absent; sitting in his cell he
knows that Placid is fallen into the lake; he foresees the accident to the
builders and sends a warning to them; in spirit and some kind of real presence
he is with the monks "eating and
refreshing themselves" on their journey, with his friend Valentinian on
his way to the monastery, with
the monk taking a present from
the nuns, with the new
community in Terracina.
Throughout St. Gregory's
narrative he is always the same quiet, gentle, dignified, strong, peace-loving
man who by the subtle power of sympathy becomes the centre of the lives and
interests of all about him. We see him with his monks in
the church, at their reading, sometimes in the fields, but more commonly in his
cell, where frequent messengers find him "weeping silently in his prayers",
and in the night hours standing at "the window of his cell in the tower,
offering up his prayers to God"; and often, as
Totila found him, sitting outside the door of his cell, or "before the
gate of the monastery
reading a book". He has given his own portrait in his ideal picture of an abbot (Rule, 64):
It beseemeth the abbot to be
ever doing some good for his brethren rather than to be presiding over them. He
must, therefore, be learned in the law of God, that he may know whence to bring forth
things new and old; he must be chaste, sober, and merciful, ever preferring
mercy to justice, that
he himself may obtain mercy. Let him hate sin and love the brethren. And even
in his corrections, let him act with prudence, and
not go too far, lest while he seeketh too eagerly to scrape off the rust, the
vessel be broken. Let him keep his own frailty ever before his eyes, and
remember that the bruised reed must not be broken. And by this we do not mean
that he should suffer vices to grow up; but that prudently and with charity he
should cut them off, in the way he shall see best for each, as we have already
said; and let him study rather to be loved than
feared. Let him not be violent nor over anxious, not exacting nor obstinate,
not jealous nor prone to suspicion, or else he will never be at rest. In all
his commands, whether spiritual or temporal, let him be prudent and
considerate. In the works which he imposeth let him be discreet and moderate,
bearing in mind the discretion of holy Jacob, when he said: 'If I cause my
flocks to be overdriven, they will all perish in one day'. Taking, then, such
testimonies as are borne by these and the like words to discretion, the mother
of virtues, let him so temper all things, that the strong may have something to
strive after, and the weak nothing at which to take alarm.
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