
his
year marks the 750th anniversary of the canonization
of St. Dominic. In the bull of canonization Pope Gregory
IX speaks of St. Dominic's apostolic sanctity and of
the fecundity of his spiritual family. Perhaps our most
fitting celebration of this anniversary would be a consideration
of these aspects of St. Dominic's life with reference
to our own living out of his ideal today.
Like
St. Dominic, we are called, through baptism, to be saints.
The Gospel for Ash Wednesday, in calling us to renewal,
reminds us of three essential elements of the Christian
life: prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. The process of
canonization of St. Dominic gives evidence of his living
these elements with signal intensity.
1.
Prayer. "...beyond all doubt he was very
fervent and constant in prayer, more so than any man
he had every known." We notice that St. Dominic,
while ever faithful to the obligation of choral prayer,
had his own highly personal rhythm of private prayer.
"He prayed. more than the other brothers who lived
with him, and kept longer vigils". (John of Spain).
We
need to be men and women of prayer in the sense of directing
our whole lives to God and in our fidelity to community
and private prayer, if we are to know God's will for
us and to fulfill it in practice. This rhythm of prayer
will be different for each branch of our family: the
cloistered nun, the preacher, the active religious,
the lay Dominican, and, indeed, will be different for
each person within each group. What is important is
that each individual, each group, realizes its need
of prayer, establishes a suitable rhythm of prayer and
is faithful to it.
2.
Fasting. He was also frugal in eating and drinking,
but particularly as regards any special dish.
Each of us
needs to examine his or her life style - our eating,
drinking, our holidays, our travel. We also need to
broaden our outlook on penance in the way that Pope
John XXIII did when he said that we must allow ourselves
to be scourged, and to scourge ourselves a little, too.
There is
a place for self-imposed fasts and penances, but it
is the lesser penance. The most important penance comes
from without, from the acceptance of the arrangements
of others, the difficulties of daily life, the pain
that is caused by envy, jealously, gossip, selfishness,
intolerance, and lack of forgiveness.
St.
Dominic teaches us to care for others, for our companions
- "He readily dispensed" others - for sinners.
We must look to our own responses and not judge the
response of others. "He never heard an evil, hurtful
or idle word from the lips of Brothers Dominic."
3.
Almsgiving. "Moved by compassion and mercy,
Brother Dominic sold his books (which he himself had
annotated) and other possessions and gave the money
to the poor."
Our
Lord teaches us (Mt 3, 5) that the ordinary everyday
things are important in discipleship... you gave me
food, you came to see me. There is a real and necessary
service to others when we enable them to attack the
root causes of injustice and oppression. There is a
need to devote ourselves to the cause of justice and
peace in the very best traditions of the order, but
none. of us is absolved from the obligation of personal
service to others within and without our communities.
In this context,
too, it is important that each community sets aside
a percentage of its income for the alleviation of poverty
as a normal allocation of our resources. We must also
take much more seriously the injunctions of our constitutions
with regard to sharing among ourselves, and provincial
and general taxation must be clearly seen as part of
this sharing among ourselves.
Our Christian
commitment is lived out in the Dominican Family. We
are inspired by the example of Dominic's gospel living
and we are further inspired by his apostolic zeal.
"It
seemed to the witness (John of Spain) that he was more
zealous for the salvation of souls that anyone he had
every known" and this was shown particularly in
his dedication and constancy "in preaching and
hearing confessions".
Our
family can never lose these characteristics of our apostolic
outreach - St. Dominic wanted his Order to be called,
and to be, Preachers. There will be other needs and
other stated priorities, but for us everything must
be directed towards the salvation of souls, our own
and others, through preaching.
Recent general
chapters have been very clear in putting Teaching/Research,
Justice and Peace, Means of Social Communication and
Reaching Out to the Unchurched as four priorities in
our apostolic outreach today.
We are not
called equally to devote all our energies to one or
all of these priorities, nor are we called on to give
up traditional apostolates, but we are asked, each of
us, to bring something of each of these priorities to
everything we do and to examine our present activities,
as individuals and communities (convents, congregations,
provinces) in the light of these stated priorities.
This demands a great deal of listening on the part of
each of us, a constant willingness to learn and adapt,
and a readiness to avail ourselves of the gifts and
insights of others.
In our family,
accordingly, great emphasis is placed on community.
St. Dominic's system of government and his own example
of accepting the will of his brothers are pointers to
the kind of community life we should be living. Normally,
it means a group of brethren or sisters living together.
However,
I have been present at fruitless discussions where the
brethren tried to determine the "ideal" or
minimum number for a Dominican community and been more
than edified by the adhesion to community ideals of
brethren living alone out of obedience for the sake
of the apostolate.
But
it does seem that the number of brethren, and of sisters,
living outside community in getting greater. It asks
questions of them as to their commitment to community
living and of the rest of us as to the quality of our
community life.
The difficulty
that some houses and provinces have experienced in getting
brethren to accept certain administrative positions
as a service to the Order and to the Church is noteworthy
and should lead to reflection on the part of us all
as to the apostolic value of administration.
Finally,
Pope Gregory IX spoke of the fruitfulness of St. Dominic's
family. The list of our saints and blesseds - religious
and lay, men and women, married and celibate - is a
varied and impressive one and shows how people of different
gifts and of different nationalities, in every century,
have found fulfillment and the means to holiness within
our family. It is no different today.
However,
there are two things that recent chapters and congresses
have spoken about and that we must not neglect.
The first
is the sharing by the whole family in the active apostolate
and this entails the promotion and the giving of their
rightful place to women and to the laity. The Chapters
of Walberberg and Rome have many good insights in this
regard.
The
second is that we be faithful to the call to Mission
that is so marked in the life of St. Dominic. The Congress
at Madrid in 1973 marked a great advancement in our
thinking on Mission and I hope that the General Chapter
at Avila in 1986, when we mark the centenary of our
missionary province, will further develop our thinking
on Mission and increase our awareness of the missionary
dimension of our family. 
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