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Temporary
Profession of
Br Stanislaus and Br Jonathan;
&
a new Novice & two Postulants
June
2010
On
the Solemnity of St Peter and St Paul, 29th June, two young monks at Belmont
made their First Monastic Profession - that is temporary vows for a period
of 3 years.
Br. Stanislaus Sliwka was born in Herefordshire of Polish parents and
was an organ scholar of Abbot Alan Rees. Before coming to Belmont as a
postulant three years ago, he was music and choir master at Downe House
School.
Br. Jonathan Rollinson is a native of Lincolnshire and, after leaving
university, taught English in Uganda and studied in Rome, among other
things. The whole monastic community was present for the profession as
well as many guests. Belmont has been blessed in recent years with a good
number of vocations. The Abbot's homily is given below.
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On
28th June a postulant began his novitiate with a private ceremony in the
Chapter House. It is a significant moment of clothing in the monastic
habit - which from the earliest centuries has marked the beginning of
the monastic life. For this we give thanks to God.
In
addition to this two men joined the monastery as postulants. The Postulancy
is a time of discernment when they live, work and study alongside the
novices as well sharing in the wider monastic life in prayer and community.
Please pray for all of them during their time of discernment and formation.
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Saints
Peter and Paul 2010
"You
are the Christ, the Son of the living God."
When
Jesus asked his disciples who they thought he was, in other words, what
they believed about him, this was the answer that Peter gave, speaking
in the name of all twelve. For two thousand years this has been and has
remained the very core of the apostolic faith, the faith of the Church.
It was on the basis of this very first proclamation of the Christian faith
that Jesus said to Peter, again speaking to all twelve apostles, "You
are Peter and on this rock I will build my Church." The Church, of
course, is not a building but a community, a community of faith in communion
with the faith of the apostles. Now St Paul tells us that the Church is
the Body of Christ made up of living stones.
You, Br. Stanislaus and Br. Jonathan, are two of those living stones that
make up the Body of Christ, and that is why the Lord Jesus has called
you to become monks and to make your first monastic profession this morning,
on the feast of Saints Peter and Paul. Only someone who really believes
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the living God, can ask for God's
merciful love and to share in the monastic way of life as members of this
Benedictine community. Just as faith gives meaning to the monastic life,
so it is the living out of our monastic vocation that begins to give meaning
and depth to our Christian faith.
From the very beginnings of the monastic way of life in the deserts of
Egypt, Palestine and Syria, monks and nuns believed that they were following
the example of Jesus' disciples and of the early Church in Jerusalem.
By focusing on a disciplined life of prayer and penance, meditating on
the Scriptures, working with their hands to provide the few essentials
needed to keep body and soul together, having all things in common and
remaining faithful to the teaching of the apostles, they came to see themselves
and their monasteries as rocks on which Christ could rebuild his Church
in times of persecution or whenever Christians were tempted to become
lax and easy-going in their following of Christ. In no way and at no time
did they believe that they were founding some sort of alternative Church,
but rather that they had been led by the Holy Spirit to discover a new
and exciting way of life, the Angelic Way, the Apostolic Way, the Coenobitic
Way, the monastic way, in which to follow Christ faithfully at the very
heart of the Church. We see this to be St Benedict's vision of the monastic
life in the "little Rule for Beginners" that he wrote for our
observance.
The three vows we take as Benedictines prove the point. Obedience is the
first and fundamental Christian vow, the basis for everything else, and
the vow all Christians hold in common. To obey is to listen, to listen
with the ears of the heart and to open our hearts to the word of life,
the word of God, which transforms and moulds us so that we conform ever
more to Christ, "who was obedient even unto death, death on a cross."
We long to become more and more like Christ every day. Through obedience
God's "will is done on earth as it is in heaven." Through obedience
we are united with Christ and in the Holy Spirit to God and to each other.
It is obedience that builds up the Body of Christ and keeps it whole,
keeps it one.
Stability is not the promise to stay put in one place, but rather to become
rooted in Christ, in the Gospel, in the Church and in the monastic community
of our profession. It expresses the hope, the desire to become that rock
upon which Christ can build his Church, not apart from or in competition
to the hierarchic Church of Pope and bishops, but rather as a support
and buttress, less institutional and more charismatic, but in the true,
traditional sense of that much misused word. Monastic vows to do not shackle
us to a legalistic maze of bygone restriction, that lead to a senseless
enslavement to false tradition. No, the vow of stability, that binds us
to Christ and to each other, should lead us to the freedom and happiness
of the sons of God, who are both disciples of Jesus and temples of the
Holy Spirit.
Conversatio morum, the third vow, is not easily translatable but means
essentially "all that the monastic life entails" or "all
that the Rule of St Benedict suggests". Here you could throw in chastity,
a very important aspect of our lives, and poverty, though we prefer to
talk about austerity and simplicity. This is the vow which says, with
St Peter and St Paul, I place all my hope and trust in God: he will see
me through, he will look after me. St Paul, writing to Timothy, said,
"The Lord will rescue me and bring me safely to his heavenly kingdom."
And St Peter in the Acts of the Apostles, confessed, "Now I know
it is all true. The Lord really did send his angel and has saved me."
On another occasion St Peter said, "Lord, to whom shall we go? You
alone have the message of eternal life," thus expressing the fidelity
and perseverance of the disciples. Conversatio morum keeps us faithful
to Christ and to the magisterium of the Church and reminds us that humility
and moderation, the mother of all virtues, are those human qualities as
well as Christian virtues that we should be cultivating as we dedicate
ourselves each day to the "ora et labora" of life at Belmont.
Br. Stanislaus and Br. Jonathan, as you make your First Profession, remember
that you are supported by the prayers of your community and of your family
and friends. We will always be there for you, with our love and affection,
as you progress in the monastic life and as you become more and more what
God has created and called you to be. May the intercession of Our Lady
and St Benedict, as well as of St Peter and St Paul and your patron saints,
keep you true to your vows and may you discover, as members of the Belmont
Community, the indescribable joys that God gives us in the monastic life.
Amen.
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