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Fr. Dwight Longenecker: Abba Father, Saint Benedict for Today's Fathers
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Benedict believes we should bloom where we're planted. God is to be found here and now, not there and then. He is found in the face of our husbands, wives and children. He is found in the terrible moments of family life as well as the wonderful moments. Benedict helps us to cope with the reality of life just where we are, and that is why his wisdom remains as fresh today as it was the day it was written over one thousand five hundred years ago.
Highlights
Catholic Online (https://www.catholic.org)
4/9/2011 (1 decade ago)
Published in Marriage & Family
Keywords: Saint Benedict, Fathers, Sons, Marriage, family, Benedictine Rule, Saints, Holiness
GREENVILLE, SC (Catholic Online) - When your eight year old son is screaming and slapping what should you do? Should you wade in bellowing and slapping as well? Should you come down heavy with threats and retaliation? Should you just opt out like a lot of Dads do -- letting the wife deal with it? A sixth century monk has some very relevant answers to the everyday demands of bringing up a Christian family.
Saint Benedict's recommended form of discipline is isolation. Bad behaviour means the family member doesn't know how to behave in community. As a result he should be excluded from that community. So when you're confronted by an eight year old who's lost control, try to keep control, and isolate him from everyone else. Keep in mind that the severity of the offense should determine the severity of the isolation. Furthermore, once he is isolated, ask his mother or a brother or sister to go and cheer him up. This is an example of the practical principles of fatherhood which permeate the Rule of Saint Benedict. The Rule of Saint Benedict may have been written for monks, but it offers a practical and profound rule of life for lay people in many walks of life. The Rule's gentle wisdom and profound understanding of human nature gives guidance for ordinary Christian living. Its principles for living together in community offer excellent guidance for the 'domestic church' of the Christian home.
Benedict says the Abbot is the father of the community. Indeed the word abbot comes from the term 'Abba' which Jesus himself uses of his heavenly Father. The Abbot also speaks with authority. He may be an earthly father, but he speaks for the heavenly father. If Benedict's abbot speaks with the Father's authority is is also meant to rule the monastery with the heavenly father's compassion, self-sacrificial love and service. Benedict's Abbot therefore presents modern Christian fathers with an excellent role model. Benedict's principles for discipline are always measured and loving. He writes, 'disciplinary measures should be proportionate to the nature of the fault.' Even isolation must be moderate and restrained. Elsewhere Benedict says his rule lays down 'nothing which is harsh or burdensome.' When somebody is punished the Abbot 'should carry out with the deepest concern his responsibility for the brethren who fall into sin.' He is to send another brother to console the one being punished in order to win him back in love.
In every case the Abbot deals with discipline in a careful and solemn manner, always being aware of human weakness, 'he must bear in mind that it is the care of sick souls he has undertaken, not a despotic rule over healthy ones.' This pattern of compassionate fathering may sound very modern, but it fits exactly with Saint Paul who wrote, '' Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.' (Eph. 6:4) The Christian father, like Benedict's Abbot must be flexible and loving towards each individual child. He 'must adapt and fit himself to all: one to be encouraged, another to be rebuked, another persuaded, each according to his own nature.' 'He must show the tough attitude of the master, and also the loving affection of a father.' In every detail, Benedict's abbot is mature and balanced, always aware that he has a great responsibility, 'The Abbot should always bear in mind what he is; and let him realize that more is demanded of him to whom more is entrusted.' At the heart of Benedict's wisdom is the assumption that the Christian family is a community of prayer. He gives detailed liturgical instructions, but balancing all the rules, he speaks clearly about the need for prayer to be natural and from the heart. 'Indeed we must grasp that it is not by using many words that we shall get our prayers answered, but by purity of heart. Prayer therefore should be short and pure.'
The oratory is the prayer chapel of the monastery, and it should be kept free so 'if a brother should have a mind to pray by himself, he will not be disturbed.' For a Christian family it makes sense to have a special place in the home dedicated to prayer time. If it is decorated with an icon or some candles and flowers, all the better. Every family will be relieved to discover that Benedict disapproves of long prayers. Prayer is better short and sharp than lengthy and long-winded. The rule of Saint Benedict is a treasure chest of practical wisdom on living together and loving together. Benedict's writings are not instantly accessible to everybody, but his principles are. There are plenty of books about the Benedictine way which make the bridge from the rule into ordinary life. In addition, the Benedictine Yearbook provides a detailed list of all the Benedictine monasteries and convents. The Benedictines have a great tradition of hospitality and a good number of the religious houses now offer retreats, conferences and seminars on the Rule of Saint Benedict and the Benedictine life. Whatever a person's place in life, Saint Benedict offers a 'little Rule for beginners'. The principles of the spiritual life which he sets down do not raise us to the esoteric heights of mystical speculation. They put us down firmly in life right where we are. Benedict believes we should bloom where we're planted. God is to be found here and now, not there and then. He is found in the face of our husbands, wives and children. He is found in the terrible moments of family life as well as the wonderful moments. Benedict helps us to cope with the reality of life just where we are, and that is why his wisdom remains as fresh today as it was the day it was written over one thousand five hundred years ago.
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Fr Dwight Longenecker is parish priest of Our Lady of the Rosary parish and Chaplain to St Joseph's Catholic School in Greenville, South Carolina. He is also the author of Listen My Son-St Benedict for Fathers. -- a book of daily readings applying St Benedict's rule to family life. Visit his website and blog at www.dwightlongenecker.com
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