Fr. Thomas Merton Explains -- In 16 Words -- Why "Christian" "Conservatives" Are Always Wrong
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Merton: "God Is Sick Of The Rich People And The Powerful And The Wise Men Of The World"
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"Thomas Merton: Adolph Eichmann, Sanity And Normality"
Eichmann, Merton, Galbraith, G.K. Chesterton And The Current Generation Of Pharisees
Thomas
Merton, Trappist monk, priest
"Our
job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are
worthy. That is not our business and, in fact, it is nobody's business. What we
are asked to do is to love, and this love itself will render both ourselves and
our neighbors worthy if anything can."
It seems to
me there are very dangerous ambiguities about our democracy in its actual present condition. I
wonder to what extent our ideals are now
a front for organized selfishness and irresponsibility. If our affluent society
ever breaks down and the facade
is taken away, what are we going to have left?
“Man’s
unhappiness seems to have grown in proportion to his power over the exterior
world. And anyone who claims to have a glib explanation of this fact had
better take care that he too is not the victim of a delusion. For after
all, this should not necessarily be so. God made man the ruler of the
earth, and all science worthy of the name participates in some way in the
wisdom and providence of the Creator. But the trouble is that unless the
works of man’s wisdom, knowledge and power participate in the merciful love of
God, they are without real value for the world and for man. They do
nothing to make man happy and they do not manifest in the world the glory of
God.”
From Disputed
Questions by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, San Diego, CA, 1960.
"Authority
has simply been abused too long in the Catholic church, and for many people it just becomes
utterly stupid and intolerable to
have to put up with the kind of jackassing around that is imposed in God's name. It is an insult to God
himself and in the end it can only
discredit all idea of authority and obedience. There comes a point where they simply forfeit the
right to be listened to."
Thomas
Merton in a letter to W. H. Ferry. Dated
January 19, 1967, 23 months before Merton's death
One of the
most disturbing facts that came out in the [Adolf] Eichmann trial was that a
psychiatrist examined him and pronounced him perfectly sane. I do not doubt it
at all, and that is precisely why I find it disturbing. . . The sanity of
Eichmann is disturbing. We equate sanity with a sense of justice, with
humaneness, with prudence, with the capacity to love and understand other
people. We rely on the sane people of the world to preserve it from barbarism, madness,
destruction. And now it begins to dawn on us that it is precisely the sane ones
who are the most dangerous. It is the sane ones, the well-adapted ones, who can
without qualms and without nausea aim the missiles and press the buttons that
will initiate the great festival of destruction that they, the sane ones, have
prepared. What makes us so sure, after all, that the danger comes from a
psychotic getting into a position to fire the first shot in a nuclear war?
Psychotics will be suspect. The sane ones will keep them far from the button.
No one suspects the sane, and the sane ones will have perfectly good reasons,
logical, well-adjusted reasons, for firing the shot. They will be obeying sane
orders that have come sanely down the chain of command. And because of their
sanity they will have no qualms at all. When the missiles take off, then, it
will be no mistake.
Thomas
Merton. "A Devout Meditation in Memory of Adolf Eichmann" in Raids on
the Unspeakable. New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1964
This change
is a recovery of that which is deepest, most original, most personal in
ourselves. To be born again is not to become somebody else, but to become
ourselves.
You are fed
up with words and I don’t blame you. I am nauseated by them sometimes. I
am also, to tell the truth, nauseated by ideals and with causes. This
sounds like heresy, but I think you will understand what I mean. It is so
easy to get engrossed with ideas and slogans and myths that in the end one is
left holding the bag, empty, with no trace of meaning left in it. And
then the temptation is to yell louder than ever in order to make meaning be
there again by magic...
The real
function of discipline is not to provide us with maps, but to sharpen our own
sense of direction so that when we really get going we can travel without
maps.
A demonic
existence is one which insistently diagnoses what it cannot cure, what it has
no desire to cure, what it seeks to bring to full potency, in order that it may
cause the death of its victim.
The
Christian is one whose life has sprung from a particular spiritual seed: the
blood of martyrs, who, without offering forcible resistance, laid down their
lives rather than submit to unjust laws... That is to say, the Christian is
bound, like the martyrs, to obey God rather than the state whenever the state
tries to usurp powers that do not and cannot belong to it.
[A] faith
that is afraid of other people is no faith at all. A faith that supports itself
by condemning others is itself condemned by the Gospel.
Thomas
Merton was once asked to write a chapter for a book entitled "Secrets of Success."
He replied: "If it so happened that I had once written a
best-seller, this was a pure accident, due to inattention and naivete, and I
would take very good care never to do the same again. If I had a message for my
contemporaries, I said, it was surely this: Be anything you like, be madmen, drunks, and
bastards of every shape and form, but at all costs avoid one thing:
success."
Do not
depend on the hope of results. When you are doing the sort of work you
have taken on, essentially an apostolic work, you may have to face the fact
that your work will be apparently worthless and even achieve no result at all,
if not perhaps results opposite to what you expect. As you get used to
this idea, you start more and more to concentrate not on the results, but on
the value, the rightness, the truth of the work itself. And there too a great
deal has to be gone through, as gradually you struggle less and less for an
idea and more and more for specific people. The range tends to narrow down, but
it gets much more real. In the end, it is the reality of personal
relationships that saves everything.
This change
is a recovery of that which is deepest, most original, most personal in
ourselves. To be born again is not to become somebody else, but to become
ourselves.
We become
contemplatives when God discovers Himself in us.
The night
became very dark. The rain surrounded the whole cabin with its enormous
virginal myth, a whole world of meaning, of secrecy, of silence, of
rumor. Think of it: all that speech pouring down, selling nothing, judging
nobody, drenching the thick mulch of dead leaves, soaking the trees, filling
the gullies and crannies of the wood with water, washing out the places where
men have stripped the hillside. What a thing it is to sit absolutely
alone in the forest at night, cherished by this wonderful, unintelligent
perfectly innocent speech, the most comforting speech in the world, the talk
that rain makes by itself all over the ridges, and the talk of the watercourses
everywhere in the hollows. Nobody started it, nobody is going to stop it.
It will talk as long as it wants, the rain. As long as it talks I am
going to listen.
How many
there must be who have smothered the first sparks of contemplation by piling
wood on the fire before it was well lit.
“Living with
other people and learning to lose ourselves in the understanding of their
weakness and deficiencies can help us to become true contemplatives. For
there is no better means of getting rid of the rigidity and harshness and
coarseness of our ingrained egoism, which is the one insuperable obstacle to
the infused light and action of the Spirit of God. Even the courageous
acceptance of interior trials in utter solitude cannot altogether compensate
for the work of purification accomplished in us by patience and humility in
loving other men and sympathizing with their most unreasonable needs and
demands.” From Seeds by Thomas Merton
“The dread
of being open to the ideas of others generally comes from our hidden insecurity
about our own convictions. We fear that we may be “converted” – or
perverted – by a pernicious doctrine. On the other hand, if we are mature
and objective in our open-mindedness, we may find that viewing things from a
basically different perspective – that of our adversary – we discover our own
truth in a new light and are able to understand our own ideal more realistically.
Our willingness to take an alternative approach to a problem will perhaps relax
the obsessive fixation of the adversary on his view, which he believes is the
only reasonable possibility and which he is determined to impose on everyone
else by coercion…This mission of Christian humility in social life is not
merely to edify, but to keep minds open to many alternatives. The
rigidity of a certain type of Christian thought has seriously impaired this
capacity, which nonviolence must recover.”
From Passion For Peace by Thomas Merton Edited by William H.
Shannon (New York: Crossroad Publishing 1995), pgs. 255-256
“The life of
contemplation in action and purity of heart is, then, a life of great
simplicity and inner liberty. One is not seeking anything special or
demanding any particular satisfaction. One is content with what is.
One does what is to be done, and the more concrete it is, the better. One
is not worried about the results of what is done. One is content to have
good motives and not too anxious about making mistakes. In this way one
can swim with the living stream of life and remain at every moment in contact
with God, in the hiddenness and ordinariness of the present moment with its
obvious task.”
From The Inner Experience by Thomas Merton Edited by
William H. Shannon (New York: HaperCollins 2004)]
“Where there
is a deep, simple, all-embracing love of man, of the created world of living
and inanimate things, then there will be respect for life, for freedom, for
truth, for justice and there will be humble love of God. But where there
is no love of man, no love of life, then make all the laws you want, all the
edicts and treaties, issue all the anathemas; set up all the safeguards and
inspections, fill the air with spying satellites, and hang cameras on the
moon. As long as you see your fellow man being essentially to be feared,
mistrusted, hated, and destroyed, there cannot be peace on earth. And who
knows if fear alone will suffice to prevent a war of total destruction?”
From Seeds of Destruction by Thomas Merton (New York:
Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1964), p.183
“Inexorably
life moves on toward crisis and mystery. One must not be too quickly
preoccupied with professing definitively what is true and what is false.
Not that true and false do not matter. But if at every instant one wants
to grasp the whole and perfect truth of a situation, particularly a concrete
and limited situation in history or in politics, one only deceives and blinds
himself. Such judgments are only rarely and fleetingly possible, and
sometimes, when we think we see what is most significant, it has very little
meaning at all. So it is possible that the moment of my death may turn out to
be, from a human and ‘economic’ point of view, the most meaningless of all. Meanwhile,
I do not have to stop the flow of events in order to understand them. On
the contrary, I must move with them or else what I think I understand will be
no more than an image in my own mind.”
August 16
and 19, 1961 - From A Year
with Thomas Merton, Daily Meditations from His Journals, selected and
edited by Jonathan Montaldo
“Fickleness
and indecision are signs of self-love. If you can never make up your mind what God
wills for you, but are always veering from one opinion to another, from one
practice to another, from one method to another, it may be an indication that
you are trying to get around God’s will and do your own with a quiet
conscience. As soon as God
gets you in one monastery you want to be in another. As soon as you taste one
way of prayer, you want to try another. You are always making resolutions
and breaking them by counter-resolutions. You ask your confessor and do
not remember the answers. Before you finish one book you begin another,
and with every book you read you change the whole plan of your interior life. Soon
you will have no interior life at all. Your whole existence will be a
patchwork of confused desires and daydreams and velleities in which you do
nothing except defeat the work of grace: for all this is an elaborate
subconscious device of your nature to resist God, Whose work in your soul
demands the sacrifice of all that you desire and delight in, and, indeed, of
all that you are. So keep still, and let Him do some work. This is what it means to renounce not
only pleasures and possessions, but even your own self.”
From New Seeds of Contemplation by Thomas Merton,
“…Grant us prudence
in proportion to our power,
Wisdom in
proportion to our science,
Humaneness
in proportion to our wealth and might.
And bless
our earnest will to help all races and peoples to travel, in friendship with
us,
Along the
road to justice, liberty and lasting peace:
But grant us
above all to see that our ways are not necessarily your ways,
That we
cannot fully penetrate the mystery of your designs
And that the
very storm of power now raging on this earth
Reveals your
hidden will and your inscrutable decision.
Grant us to
see your face in the lightning of this cosmic storm,
O God of
holiness, merciful to men:
Grant us to
seek peace where it is truly found!
In your will, O God, is our peace!
Amen”
From Passion
for Peace by Thomas Merton, Edited by William H. Shannon, Crossroad Publishing
Company, New York, NY, 1995. Appendix: Merton’s Prayer for Peace, pages
328-329.
“The shallow
‘ I ‘ of individualism can be possessed, developed, cultivated, pandered to, satisfied:
it is the center of all our strivings for gain and for satisfaction, whether
material or spiritual. But the deep ‘ I ‘ of the spirit, of solitude and
of love, cannot be ‘had,’ possessed, developed, perfected. It can only
be, and act according to deep inner laws which are not of man’s contriving, but
which come from God. They are the Laws of the Spirit, who, like the wind,
blows where He wills. This inner ‘ I, ‘ who is always alone, is always
universal: for in this inmost ‘ I ‘ my own solitude meets the solitude of every
other man and the solitude of God. ”
From Disputed Questions by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, NY. 1960.
“There is
another self, a true self, who comes to full maturity in emptiness and solitude
– and who can of course, begin to appear and grow in the valid, sacrificial and
creative self-dedication that belong to a genuine social existence. But
note that even this social maturing of love implies at the same time the growth
of a certain inner solitude. Without solitude of some sort there is and can be
no maturity. Unless one becomes empty and alone, he cannot give himself
in love because he does not possess the deep self which is the only gift worthy
of love. And this deep self, we immediately add, cannot be
possessed. My deep self in not ‘something’ which I acquire, or to which I
‘attain’ after a long struggle. It is not mine, and cannot become
mine. It is no ‘thing’ – no object. It is ‘I’. ”
From Disputed Questions by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, NY. 1960.
“There is a
stage in the spiritual life in which we find God in ourselves – this presence
is a created effect of His love. It is a gift of His, to us. It
remains in us. All the gifts of God are good. But if we rest in
them, rather than in Him, they lose their goodness for us. So with this
gift also. When the right time comes for us to go on to other things, God
withdraws the sense of His presence, in order to strengthen our faith.
After that it is useless to seek Him through the medium of any psychological
effect. Useless to look for any sense of Him in our hearts. The
time has come when we must go out of ourselves and above ourselves and find Him
no longer within us but outside us and above us…in service of our brothers.”
From Thoughts in Solitude by Thomas Merton. Farrar,
Straus, and Giroux, Publishers, New York, NY. 1958 Page 54
“In our age
everything has to be a ‘problem.’ Ours is a time of anxiety because we
have willed it to be so. Our anxiety is not imposed on us by force from
outside. We impose it on our world and upon one another from within
ourselves. Sanctity in such an age means, no doubt, traveling from the area of
anxiety to the area in which there is no anxiety or perhaps it may mean
learning, from God, to be without anxiety in the midst of anxiety. Fundamentally,
as Max Picard points out, it probably comes to this: living in a silence which
so reconciles the contradictions within us that, although they remain within
us, they cease to be a problem. (World of Silence, P. 66-67.)
Contradictions
have always existed in the soul of man. But it is only when we prefer
analysis to silence that they become a constant and insoluble problem. We
are not meant to resolve all contradictions but to live with them and rise
above them and see them in the light of exterior and objective values which
make them trivial by comparison.”
From Thoughts in Solitude by Thomas Merton. Farrar,
Straus, and Giroux, Publishers, New York, NY. 1958
“The fact
that our being necessarily demands to be expressed in action should not lead us
to believe that as soon as we stop acting we cease to exist. We do not
live merely in order to ‘do something’ – no matter what. Activity is just
one of the normal expressions of life, and the life it expresses is all the
more perfect when it sustains itself with an ordered economy of action.
This order demands a wise alternation of activity and rest. We do not
live more fully merely by doing more, seeing more, tasting more, and
experiencing more than we ever have before. On the contrary, some of us need to
discover that we will not begin to live more fully until we have the courage to
do and see and taste and experience much less than usual.”
From No Man is an Island by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, NY. 1955 Page 122.
“Those who
love their own noise are impatient of everything else. They constantly
defile the silence of the forests and the mountains and the sea. They
bore through silent nature in every direction with their machines, for fear
that the calm world might accuse them of their own emptiness. The urgency
of their swift movement seems to ignore the tranquility of nature by pretending
to have a purpose. The loud plane seems for a moment to deny the
reality of the clouds and of the sky, by its direction, its noise, and
its pretended strength. The silence of the sky remains when the plane has
gone. The tranquility of the clouds will remain when the plane has fallen
apart. It is the silence of the world that is real. Our noise, our
business, our purposes, and all our fatuous statements about our purposes, our
business, and our noise: these are the illusion.”
From No Man
is an Island by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, New
York, NY. 1955 Page 257.
“Augustine,
for all his pessimism about human nature, did not foresee the logical results
of his thought, and in the original context, his “wars of mercy” to defend
civilized order make a certain amount of sense. Always his idea is that
the Church and the Christians, whatever they may do, are aiming at ultimate
peace. The deficiency of Augustinian thought lies therefore not in the
good intentions it prescribes but in an excessive naïveté with regard to the
good that can be attained by violent means which cannot help but call forth all
that is worst in man. And so, alas, for centuries we have heard kings,
princes, bishops, priests, ministers, and the Lord alone knows what variety of
unctuous beadles and sacrists, earnestly urging all men to take up arms out of
love and mercifully slay their enemies (including other Christians)...”
From The Nonviolent Alternative by Thomas Merton. Farrar,
Straus, Giroux, New York, NY. 1980 Page 45.
“The silence
of the tongue and of the imagination dissolves the barrier between ourselves
and the peace of things that exist only for God and not for themselves.
But the silence of all inordinate desire dissolves the barrier between
ourselves and God. Then we come to live in Him alone.”
From No Man is an Island by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, NY. 1955 Pages 256.
“Perhaps
peace is not, after all, something you work for, or ‘fight for.’ It is
indeed ‘fighting for peace’ that starts all the wars. What, after all,
are the pretexts of all these Cold War crises, but ‘fighting for peace?’
Peace is something you have or do not have. If you are yourself at peace,
then there is at least some peace in the world. Then share your peace
with everyone, and everyone will be at peace.”
Conjectures
of a Guilty Bystander by Thomas Merton.
Image Books. A Division of Doubleday & Company Inc., Garden City, NY.
1968 Pages 200.
“Even though
we have the power to destroy the whole world, life is stronger than the death
instinct and love is stronger than hate. It does not make logical sense
to be too hopeful, but once again this is not a question of logic and one does
not look for signs of hope in the newspapers or the pronouncements of world
leaders (in these there is seldom anything really hopeful, and that which is
supposed to be most encouraging is usually so transparently hopeless that it
moves one closer to despair). Because there is love in the world, and
because Christ has taken our nature to Himself, there remains always the hope
that man will finally, after many mistakes and even disasters, learn to
disarm and to make peace, recognizing that he must live at peace with his
brother. Yet never have we been less disposed to do this.”
Conjectures
of a Guilty Bystander by Thomas Merton.
Image Books. A Division of Doubleday & Company Inc., Garden City, NY.
1968 Pages 214.
“This poem
was composed in the days immediately following Merton’s receipt of a telegram
on Easter Monday of 1943 reporting his brother, John Paul, missing in
action. His bomber aircraft had malfunctioned and crashed into the
English Channel, where he died of a broken back and dehydration before the rest
of the crew was rescued. He was buried at sea.”
For My Brother:
Reported Missing in Action, 1943
Sweet
brother, if I do not sleep
My eyes are
flowers for your tomb;
And if I
cannot eat my bread,
My fasts
shall live like willows where you died.
If in the
heat I find no water for my thirst,
My thirst
shall turn to springs for you, poor traveler.
Where, in
what desolate and smokey country,
Lies your
poor body, lost and dead?
And in what
landscape of disaster
Has your
unhappy spirit lost its road?
Come, in my
labor find a resting place
And in my
sorrows lay your head,
Or rather
take my life and blood
And buy
yourself a better bed –
Or take my
breath and take my death
And buy
yourself a better rest.
When all the
men of war are shot
And flags
have fallen into dust,
Your cross
and mine shall tell men still
Christ died
on each, for both of us.
For in the
wreckage of your April Christ lies slain,
And Christ
weeps in the ruins of my spring:
The money of
Whose tears shall fall
Into your
weak and friendless hand,
And buy you
back to your own land;
The silence
of Whose tears shall fall
Like bells
upon your alien tomb.
Hear them
and come: they call you home.
From In the
Dark Before Dawn, New Selected Poems of Thomas Merton prefaced by
Kathleen Norris, Edited by Lynn R. Szabo. New Directions Publishing
Company, NY, NY. 2005 Pages 181, 244
“Man’s
greatest dignity, his most essential and peculiar power, the most intimate
secret of his humanity is his capacity to love. This power in the depths
of man’s soul stamps him in the image and likeness of God. Unlike other
creatures in the world around us, we have access to the inmost sanctuary of our
own being. We can enter into ourselves as into temples of freedom and of
light. We can open the eyes of our heart and stand face to face with God
our Father. We can speak to Him and hear Him answer. He tells us
not merely that we are called to be men and to rule our earth, but that we have
an even more exalted vocation than this. We are His children.”
From
Disputed Questions by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, San Diego, CA,
1960. Page 98.
“I have a
profound mistrust of all obligatory answers. The great problem of our
time is not to formulate clear answers to neat theoretical questions… The way
to find the real ‘world’ is not merely to measure and observe what is outside
us, but to discover our own inner ground. For that is where the world is,
first of all: in my deepest self. But there I find the world to be quite
different from the ‘obligatory answers.’ This ‘ground,’ this ‘world’
where I am mysteriously present at once to my own self and to the freedoms of
all other men, is not a visible objective and determined structure with fixed
laws and demands. It is a living and self-creating mystery of which I am
myself a part, to which I am myself my own unique door. When I find the
world in my own ground, it is impossible for me to be alienated by it.”
Contemplation
in a World of Action by Thomas Merton. Image Books, Garden City, NY,
1973. A Division of Doubleday & Company. Pages 168 & 170.
Heavenliness
in the Nature of Things:
“Real Spring
weather—these are the precise days when everything changes. All the trees
are fast beginning to be in leaf, and the first green freshness of a new summer
is all over the hills. Irreplaceable purity of these days chosen by God
as His sign! Mixture of heavenliness and anguish. Seeing ‘heavenliness’
suddenly, for instance, in the pure white of mature dogwood blossoms against
the dark evergreens in the cloudy garden. ‘Heavenliness’ too of the song
of the unknown bird that is perhaps here only for these days, passing through,
a lovely, deep, simple song. Seized by this ‘heavenliness’ as if I were a
child—a child’s mind I have never done anything to deserve to have and which is
my own part in the heavenly spring. Not of this world, or of my
making. Born partly of physical anguish (which is really not there,
though. It goes quickly). Sense that the ‘heavenliness’ is the real
nature of things, not their nature, but the fact they are a gift of love and of
freedom.”
A Year with
Thomas Merton: Daily Meditations from His Journals by Thomas Merton, selected
and edited Jonathan Montaldo. HarperSanFrancisco, New York, NY, 2004, p
120.
"A
humble man can do great things with an uncommon perfection because he is no
longer concerned about incidentals, like his own interests and his own
reputation, and therefore he no longer needs to waste his efforts in defending
them. For a humble man is not afraid of failure. In fact, he is not
afraid of anything, even of himself, since perfect humility implies perfect
confidence in the power of God before Whom no other power has any meaning and
for Whom there is no such thing as an obstacle. Humility is the surest sign of
strength.”
Seeds by
Thomas Merton, selected and edited Robert Inchausti. Shambhala
Publications, Inc., Boston, MA, 2002, p 112. Originally published in New
Seeds of Contemplation. New York: New Directions, 1972, p 190.
"There
is in all visible things an invisible fecundity, a dimmed light, a meek
namelessness, a hidden wholeness. This mysterious Unity and Integrity is
Wisdom, the Mother of all, Natura Naturans. There is in all things an
inexhaustible sweetness and purity, a silence that is a fount of action and
joy. It rises up in wordless gentleness and flows out to me from the
unseen roots of all created being, welcoming me tenderly, saluting me with
indescribable humility. This is at once my own being, my own nature, and
the Gift of my Creator’s Thought and Art within me, speaking as Hagia Sophia,
speaking as my sister, Wisdom. I am awakened, I am born again at the voice of
this my Sister, sent to me from the depths of the divine fecundity.”
From when
the trees say nothing by Thomas Merton, edited by Kathleen Deignan. Notre Dame,
Indiana: Sorin Books, 2003, p 179. Originally published in Emblems of a
Season of Fury. Norfolk, CT: J. Laughlin, 1963, p 61.
"Basically
our first duty today is to human truth in its existential reality, and this
sooner or later brings us into confrontation with system and power which seek
to overwhelm truth for the sake of particular interests, perhaps rationalized
as ideals. Sooner or later the human duty presents itself in a form of
crisis that cannot be evaded. At such a time it is very good, almost
essential, to have at one’s side others with a similar determination, and one
can then be guided by a common inspiration and a communion in truth. Here
true strength can be found. A completely isolated witness is much more
difficult and dangerous. In the end that too may become necessary.
But in any case we know that our only ultimate strength is in the Lord and His
Spirit, and faith must make us depend entirely on His will and providence.
One must then truly be detached and free in order not to be held and impeded by
anything secondary or irrelevant. Which is another way of saying that
poverty also is our strength.”
Seeds by
Thomas Merton, selected and edited by Robert Inchausti (Shambhala, Boston &
London, 2002), P 59. Originally published in The Courage for Truth: The
Letters of Thomas Merton to Writers, selected and edited by Christine M. Bochen
(New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1993), P 159.
"I come
into solitude to die and love. I come here to be created by the Spirit in
Christ. I am called here to grow. ‘Death’ is a critical point of growth, or
transition to a new mode of being; to a maturity and fruitfulness that I do not
know (they are in Christ and in His kingdom). The child in the womb does
not know what will come after birth. He must be born in order to
live. I am here to learn to face death as my birth.”
December 1,
1965, V.333-34 From A
Year with Thomas Merton, Daily Meditations from His Journals, selected and
edited by Jonathan Montaldo (HarperSanFrancisco, A Division of
HarperCollinsPublishers, New York, 2004), P 31.
“The shallow
‘ I ‘ of individualism can be possessed, developed, cultivated, pandered to,
satisfied: it is the center of all our strivings for gain and for satisfaction,
whether material or spiritual. But the deep ‘ I ‘ of the spirit, of
solitude and of love, cannot be ‘had,’ possessed, developed, perfected.
It can only be, and act according to deep inner laws which are not of man’s
contriving, but which come from God. They are the Laws of the Spirit,
who, like the wind, blows where He wills. This inner ‘ I, ‘ who is always
alone, is always universal: for in this inmost ‘ I ‘ my own solitude meets the
solitude of every other man and the solitude of God. ”
From
Disputed Questions by Thomas Merton. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
Publishers, New York, NY. 1960. Page 207
“There is
another self, a true self, who comes to full maturity in emptiness and solitude
– and who can of course, begin to appear and grow in the valid, sacrificial and
creative self-dedication that belong to a genuine social existence. But
note that even this social maturing of love implies at the same time the growth
of a certain inner solitude.
Without
solitude of some sort there is and can be no maturity. Unless one becomes
empty and alone, he cannot give himself in love because he does not possess the
deep self which is the only gift worthy of love. And this deep self, we
immediately add, cannot be possessed. My deep self in not ‘something’
which I acquire, or to which I ‘attain’ after a long struggle. It is not
mine, and cannot become mine. It is no ‘thing’ – no object. It is
‘I’
Disputed Questions by Thomas
Merton. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, New York, NY. 1960.
“There is a
stage in the spiritual life in which we find God in ourselves – this presence
is a created effect of His love. It is a gift of His, to us. It
remains in us. All the gifts of God are good. But if we rest in
them, rather than in Him, they lose their goodness for us. So with this
gift also.
When the
right time comes for us to go on to other things, God withdraws the sense of
His presence, in order to strengthen our faith. After that it is useless
to seek Him through the medium of any psychological effect. Useless to
look for any sense of Him in our hearts. The time has come when we must
go out of ourselves and above ourselves and find Him no longer within us but
outside us and above us…in service of our brothers.”
Thoughts in
Solitude by Thomas Merton. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, Publishers, New
York, NY. 1958 Page 54.
“In our age
everything has to be a ‘problem.’ Ours is a time of anxiety because we
have willed it to be so. Our anxiety is not imposed on us by force from
outside. We impose it on our world and upon one another from within
ourselves. Sanctity in such an age means, no doubt, traveling from the area of
anxiety to the area in which there is no anxiety or perhaps it may mean
learning, from God, to be without anxiety in the midst of anxiety. Fundamentally,
as Max Picard points out, it probably comes to this: living in a silence which
so reconciles the contradictions within us that, although they remain within
us, they cease to be a problem. (World
of Silence, P. 66-67.)
Contradictions
have always existed in the soul of man. But it is only when we prefer
analysis to silence that they become a constant and insoluble problem. We
are not meant to resolve all contradictions but to live with them and rise
above them and see them in the light of exterior and objective values which
make them trivial by comparison.”
Thoughts in
Solitude by Thomas Merton. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, Publishers, New
York, NY. 1958
"But
now the power of Easter has burst upon us with the resurrection of
Christ. Now we find in ourselves a strength which is not our own, and
which is freely given to us whenever we need it, raising us above the Law,
giving us a new law which is hidden in Christ: the law of His merciful love for
us. Now we no longer strive to be good because we have to, because it is
a duty, but because our joy is to please Him who has given all His love to us!
Now our life is full of meaning! … To understand Easter and live it, we
must renounce our dread of newness and of freedom!”
Seasons of
Celebration by Thomas Merton (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York 1986), Pages
145-46.
"We
cannot avoid missing the point of almost everything we do. But what of
it? Life is not a matter of getting something out of everything.
Life itself is imperfect. All created beings begin to die as soon as they
begin to live, and no one expects any one of them to become absolutely perfect,
still less to stay that way. Each individual thing is only a sketch of
the specific perfection planned for its kind. Why should we ask it to be
anything more?”
No Man is an
Island (New York: Harcourt Brace Javonovich, 1983), PP 128
"The worst thing that can happen to a person who is already divided up
into a dozen different compartments is to seal off yet another compartment and
tell him that this one is more important than all the others, and that he must
henceforth exercise a special care in keeping it separate from them. That
is what tends to happen when contemplation is unwisely thrust without warning
upon the bewilderment and distraction of Western man. The Eastern
traditions have the advantage of disposing the person more naturally for
contemplation. The first thing that you have to do, before you start thinking
about such a thing as contemplation, is to try to recover your basic natural
unity, to reintegrate your compartmentalized being into a coordinated and
simple whole, and learn to live as a unified human person. This means
that you have to bring back together the fragments of your distracted existence
so that when you say ‘I’ there is really someone present to support the pronoun
you have uttered.”
Seeds
selected and edited by Robert Inchausti (Boston, MA, Shambhala Publications,
Inc, 2002, pages 84, 85).
"Douglas
Steere remarks very perceptively that there is a pervasive form of contemporary
violence to which the idealist fighting for peace by nonviolent methods most
easily succumbs: activism and overwork. The rush and pressure of modern
life are a form, perhaps the most common form, of its innate violence. To
allow oneself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns, to
surrender to too many demands, to commit oneself to too many projects, to want
to help everyone in everything is to succumb to violence. More than that,
it is cooperation in violence. The frenzy of the activist neutralizes his
work for peace. It destroys his own inner capacity for peace. It destroys
the fruitfulness of his own work, because it kills the root of inner wisdom which
makes work fruitful.”
Conjectures
of a Guilty Bystander by Thomas Merton (Doubleday and Co., Garden City, New
York, 1968)
"The
terrible thing about our time is precisely the ease with which theories can be
put into practice. The more perfect, the more idealistic the theories,
the more dreadful is their realization. We are at last beginning to
rediscover what perhaps men knew better in very ancient times, in primitive
times before utopias were thought of: that liberty is bound up with imperfection,
and that limitations, imperfections, errors are not only unavoidable but also
salutary. The best is not the ideal. Where what is theoretically best is
imposed on everyone as the norm, then there is no longer any room even to be
good. The best, imposed as a norm, becomes evil.”
Conjectures
of a Guilty Bystander by Thomas Merton (Doubleday and Co., Garden City, New
York, 1968)
"…
Finally, about being united with God’s will: I don’t mean that you should
specially formulate this in words frequently but rather just develop a habitual
awareness and conviction that you are completely in His hands and His love is
taking care of you in everything, that you need have no special worries about
anything, past present or future, as long as you are sincerely trying to do
what He seems to ask of you. And of course by that I mean simply what is
called for by the obvious needs of the moment, duties of state, people you
meet, events to cope with, sicknesses, mistakes, and so on. ‘When hungry eat,
when tired sleep.’
The Hidden
Ground of Love by Thomas Merton (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York,
1985), page 526.
Hoping for
Results? Facing Despair - and False Notions of
Success
In this
letter to a friend, Thomas Merton addresses a frustration every person has
known, or will one day know: the sinking feeling that one's efforts (in
whatever arena they are) are not succeeding or - even worse - seem wholly
ineffective....
Do not
depend on the hope of results. When you are doing the sort of work you have
taken on, essentially an apostolic work, you may have to face the fact that
your work will be apparently worthless and even achieve no result at all, if
not perhaps results opposite to what you expect.
As you get
used to this idea, you start more and more to concentrate not on the results
but on the value, the rightness, the truth of the work itself. And there too a
great deal has to be gone through, as gradually you struggle less and less for
an idea and more and more for specific people. The range tends to narrow down,
but it gets much more real. In the end, it is the reality of personal
relationships that saves everything.
You are fed
up with words, and I don't blame you. I am nauseated by them sometimes. I am
also, to tell the truth, nauseated by ideals and with causes. This sounds like
heresy, but I think you will understand what I mean.
It is so
easy to get engrossed with ideas and slogans and myths that in the end one is
left holding the bag, empty, with no trace of meaning left in it. And then the
temptation is to yell louder than ever in order to make the meaning be there
again by magic. Going through this kind of reaction helps you to guard against
this. Your system is complaining of too much verbalizing, and it is right...
The big
results are not in your hands or mine, but they suddenly happen, and we can
share in them; but there is no point in building our lives on this personal
satisfaction, which may be denied us and which after all is not that important.
The next
step in the process is for you to see that your own thinking about what you are
doing is crucially important. You are probably striving to build yourself an
identity in your work, out of your work and your witness. You are using it, so
to speak, to protect yourself against nothingness, annihilation. That is not
the right use of your work.
All the good
that you do will come not from you but from the fact that you have allowed
yourself, in the obedience of faith, to be used for God's love. Think of this
more and gradually you will be free from the need to prove yourself, and you
can be more open to the power that will work through you without your knowing
it.
The great
thing after all is to live, not to pour out your life in the service of a myth:
and we turn the best things into myths. If you can get free from the domination
of causes and just serve Christ's truth, you will be able to do more and will
be less crushed by the inevitable disappointments. Because I see nothing
whatever in sight but much disappointment, frustration, and confusion...
Our real
hope...is not in something we think we can do, but in God who is making
something good out of it in some way we cannot see. If we can do His will, we
will be helping in this process. But we will not necessarily know all about it
beforehand...
From a
letter, February 21, 1966
[T]hose who
have invented and developed atomic bombs, thermonuclear bombs, missiles; who
have planned the strategy of the next war; who have evaluated the various
possibilities of using bacterial and chemical agents: these are not the crazy
people, they are the sane people.
Raids on the
Unspeakable
My own
peculiar task in my Church and in my world has been that of the solitary
explorer who, instead of jumping on all the latest bandwagons at once, is bound
to search the existential depths of faith in its silence, its ambiguities, and
in those certainties which lie deeper than the bottom of anxiety. In these
depths there are no easy answers, no pat solutions to anything. It is a kind of
submarine life in which faith sometimes mysteriously takes on the aspect of
doubt when, in fact, one has to doubt and reject conventional and superstitious
surrogates that have taken the place of faith. On this level, the division
between Believer and Unbeliever ceases to be so crystal clear. It is not that
some are all right and others are all wrong: all are bound to seek in honest
perplexity. Everybody is an Unbeliever more or less! Only when this fact is
fully experienced, accepted and lived with, does one become fit to hear the
simple message of the Gospel-or any other religious teaching. The religious
problem of the twentieth century is not understandable if we regard it only as
a problem of Unbelievers and of atheists. It is also and perhaps chiefly a
problem of Believers. The faith that has grown cold is not only the faith that
the Unbeliever has lost but the faith that the Believer has kept. This faith
has too often become rigid, or complex, sentimental, foolish, or impertinent.
It has lost itself in imaginings and unrealities, dispersed itself in
pontifical and organization routines, or evaporated in activism and loose talk.
Thomas
Merton. "Apologies to an Unbeliever" in Faith and Violence. South Bend,
IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1968: 213-214.
"I am certainly no judge of television, since I have never watched
it. All I know is that there is a sufficiently general agreement, among men
whose judgment I respect, that commercial television is degraded, meretricious
and absurd. Certainly it would seem that TV could become a kind of unnatural
surrogate for contemplation: a completely inert subjection to vulgar images, a
descent to a sub-natural passivity rather than an ascent to a supremely active
passivity in understanding and love. It would seem that television should be
used with extreme care and discrimination by anyone who might hope to take
interior life seriously." Merton, 1949
Transcribed
from an oral presentation: There was an old Father at Gethsemani-one of those
people you get in every large community, who was regarded as sort of a funny
fellow. Really he was a saint. He died a beautiful death and, after he died,
everyone realized how much they loved him and admired him, even though he had
consistently done all the wrong things throughout his life. He was absolutely
obsessed with gardening, but he had an abbot for a long time who insisted he
should do anything but gardening, on principle; it was self-will to do what you
liked to do. Father Stephen, however, could not keep from gardening. He was
forbidden to garden, but you would see him surreptitiously planting things.
Finally, when the old abbot died and the new abbot came in, it was tacitly
understood that Father Stephen was never going to do anything except gardening,
and so they put him on the list of appointments as gardener, and he just
gardened from morning to night. He never came to Office, never came to
anything, he just dug in his garden. He put his whole life into this and
everybody sort of laughed at it. But he would do very good things-for instance,
your parents might come down to see you, and you would hear a rustle in the
bushes as though a moose were coming down, and Father Stephen would come
rushing up with a big bouquet of flowers. On the feast of St. Francis three
years ago, he was coming in from his garden about dinner time and he went into
another little garden and lay down on the ground under a tree, near a statue of
Our Lady, and someone walked by and thought, "Whatever is he doing
now?" and Father Stephen looked up at him and waved and lay down and died.
The next day was his funeral and the birds were singing and the sun was bright
and it was as though the whole of nature was right in there with Father Stephen.
He didn't have to be unusual in that way: that was the way it panned out. This
was a development that was frustrated, diverted into a funny little channel,
but the real meaning of our life is to develop people who really love God and
who radiate love, not in a sense that they feel a great deal of love, but that
they simply are people full of love who keep the fire of love burning in the
world. For that they have to be fully unified and fully themselves-real people.
Thomas Merton. "The Life that
Unifies" in Thomas Merton in Alaska. New York: New Directions Publishing
Corp., 1988
The purpose
of monastic life is to create an atmosphere in which people should feel free to
express their joy in reasonable ways. The final integration and unification of
man in love is what we are really looking for. Thomas Merton in Alaska
I came up
here [to his hermitage] from the monastery last night, sloshing through the
cornfield, said Vespers, and put some oatmeal on the Coleman stove for supper.
It boiled over while I was listening to the rain and toasting a piece of bread
at the log fire. The night became very dark. The rain surrounded the whole
cabin with its enormous virginal myth, a whole world of meaning, of secrecy, of
silence, of rumor. Think of it: all that speech pouring down, selling nothing,
judging nobody, drenching the thick mulch of dead leaves, soaking the trees,
filling the gullies and crannies of the wood with water, washing out the places
where men have stripped the hillside! What a thing it is to sit absolutely
alone, in the forest, at night, cherished by this wonderful, unintelligible,
perfectly innocent speech, the most comforting speech in the world, the talk
that rain makes by itself all over the ridges, and the talk of the watercourses
everywhere in the hollows! Nobody started it, nobody is going to stop it.
It will talk as long as it wants, this rain. As long as it talks I am going to
listen. Thomas Merton.
"Rain
and the Rhinocerous"in Raids on the
Unspeakable. New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1964: 9-10.
Philoxenos
in his ninth memra (on poverty) to dwellers in solitude, says that there is no
explanation and no justification for the solitary life, since it is without a
law. To be a contemplative is therefore to be an outlaw. As was Christ. As was
[Saint] Paul.
The doctrine
of man finding his true reality in his remembrance of God in whose image he was
created, is basically Biblical and was developed by the Church Fathers in
connection with the theology of grace, the sacraments, and the indwelling of
the Holy Spirit. In fact, the surrender of our own will, the "death"
of our selfish ego, in order to live in pure love and liberty of spirit, is
effected not by our own will (this would be a contradiction in terms!) but by
the Holy Spirit. To "recover the divine likeness," to "surrender
to the will of God," to "live by pure love," and thus to find
peace, is summed up as "union with God in the Spirit," or
"receiving, possessing the Holy Spirit." This, as the 19th-century
Russian hermit, St. Seraphim of Sarov declared, is the whole purpose of the
Christian (therefore a fortiori [it follows logically] the monastic) life. St.
John Chrysostom says: "As polished silver illumined by the rays of the sun
radiates light not only from its own nature but also from the radiance of the
sun, so a soul purified by the Divine Spirit becomes more brilliant than
silver; it both receives the ray of Divine Glory and from itself reflects the
ray of this same glory." Our true rest, love, purity, vision and quies is
not something in ourselves, it is God the Divine Spirit. Thus we do not
"possess" rest, but go out of ourselves into him who is our true
rest.
Thomas
Merton. "The Spiritual Father in the Desert Tradition" in
Contemplation in A World Action. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Co., 1971:
287.
In the
surrender of himself and of his own will, his "death" to his worldly
identity, the monk is renewed in the image and likeness of God, and become like
a mirror filled with the divine light. When people are truly in love, they
experience far more than just a mutual need of each other's company and
consolation. In their relations with each other they become different people:
they are more than their everyday selves, more alive, more understanding, more
enduring... They are made over into new beings. They are transformed by the
power of their love. Love is the revelation of our deepest personal meaning,
value and identity. But this revelation remains impossible as long as we are
the prisoners of our own egoism. I cannot find myself in myself, but only in
another. My true meaning and worth are shown to me not in my estimate of
myself, but in the eyes of the one who loves me; and that one must love me as I
am, with my faults and limitations, revealing to me the truth that these faults
and limitations cannot destroy my worth in the eyes of that one who loves me;
and that I am therefore valuable as a person, in spite of my shortcomings, in
spite of the imperfections of my exterior "package." The package is
totally unimportant. What matters is this infinitely precious message which I
can discover only in my love for another person. And this message, this secret,
is not fully revealed to me unless at the same time I am able to see and
understand the mysterious and unique worth of the one I love.
Thomas
Merton. "Love and Need" in Love and Living. Naomi Burton Stone and
Brother Patrick Hart, editors. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1979: 31.
Love is not
only a special way of being alive, it is the perfection of life. He who loves
is more alive and more real that he was when he did not love. (Alan: This
passage reminds me of Agustine’s observation, “We know to the extent that we
love.” We humans are co-creators. To a significant extent, ontology depends on
epistemology.)
***
The Thomas Merton Center at Bellarmine University
(My sister Janet's pastor says: We live in heaven now, and
death will lead us deeper in.)
***
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