Dwight Longenecker

Listen My Son


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      Listen, My Son

      St Benedict for Fathers

      DWIGHT LONGENECKER

      © 1999 by Dwight Longenecker

      First Published 2000

      Gracewing

      2 Southern Avenue

      Leominster, Herefordshire HR6 0QF

      England

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher.

      Morehouse Publishing P.O. Box 1321 Harrisburg, PA 17105

       Morehouse Publishing is a division of The Morehouse Group.

      Translation of The Rule of St Benedict, the estate of Abbot Parry, OSB.

      Cover design by Tom Castanzo

      Printed in the United States of America 05 06 07 08 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Longenecker, Dwight

      Listen My Son: St Benedict for Fathers/Dwight Longenecker.

      p. cm

      Includes bibliographical references.

      ISBN 0-8192-1856-1 (pbk.: alk. paper)

      1. Benedict, Saint, Abbot of Monte Cassino. Regula. 2. Fatherhood—Religious aspects—Catholic Church. I. Title.

      BX3004.Z5 L66 2000

      255’.106-dc21 99-086446

       To my Father

      CONTENTS

       Foreword

       Preface

       Introduction

       The challenge of fatherhood

       The Life and Rule of St Benedict

       The Way of Benedict

       How to use this book

       The Rule of St Benedict with daily commentary

       Futher reading

      FOREWORD

      In his writings, Pope John Paul II contrasts two things – the civilization of love and the culture of death. He highlights the basic struggle between good and evil, right and wrong. The Pope is saying, ‘Look at the contrast between destruction, violence, and death – all under the name of choice, but all about selfishness, all about rights, all about me putting myself first – look at the contrast between that and the civilization of love, which is based on the idea of community and love.’

      The most basic community is the family. Jacques Maritain, a great Catholic philosopher, taught that each person is made in the image of God. Each human being is unique and therefore to be intimately respected. He resisted the philosophy of individualism. For Maritain the human personality is at the heart of the equation. People are formed into communities and the most basic is the family. The family then becomes a neighbourhood, the workplace, school, institution, whatever it may be, and within those communities you may make things work by giving something of yourself. That to me is the civilization of love; it is giving something of yourself and not always expecting to have everything for your benefit.

      It is no wonder that Pope Paul VI named St Benedict the patron of Europe. He saw that in Benedict's Rule were the foundations of a civilization of love. In the Rule, Benedict calls his brother monks not only to obedience to the rightful authority, but also to mutual obedience, based on their love for one another. This is the love which Christ has for us since he was sent ‘not to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many’. This same mutual self-giving love is at the heart of the Christian marriage, and the Christian home. When it begins to live there, it spreads outward to the whole of society.

      Historically we can see how this happened through the Rule of St Benedict. The Rule was written in the dark days of the sixth century, when the Roman Empire – rotten with decadence from within – was finally crumbling into chaos. Benedict's ‘little Rule’ became the foundation document for the monasteries which became the oases of love, learning and light for the next thousand years. The monasteries kept alive the ideas and learning of earlier civilizations but they also generated a new ideal: civilization based not on military might, but on worship, service and love. Theirs was an attempt to build Christ's Kingdom, which flourished for a thousand years and still thrives quietly today.

      The wisdom of Benedict is timeless. His words are completely incarnational, blending practical wisdom with profound spiritual insight. Neither are Benedict's words simply for monks and nuns. More and more laypeople around the world are finding guidance, inspiration and encouragement by following the way of Benedict.

      In his book, Dwight Longenecker has provided a daily commentary on the Rule of St Benedict for fathers. In the UK alone, where 800,000 children have no contact with their fathers, we need a parable to facilitate the return of the lost fathers. Perhaps this is it. But although his focus is on fathers, the commentary applies Benedict's practical wisdom to every family situation; indeed, Benedict's insights apply not only within the home or monastery, but wherever people struggle to live, work and pray together. Benedict wrote before the great divisions of the Reformation. His words are simple, Scriptural and universal. I recommend this book to Christian parents of all traditions as they seek to build strong Christian families which will, in turn, be the building blocks of a civilization of love.

      Lord David Alton

      PREFACE

      Whenever I write or speak about religion a certain story of Jesus’ echoes in my mind. It is the one where he points to the Pharisees who ‘love to wear long robes and sit in the best seats in the temple and make long prayers’. This is never more true than when writing about spirituality, and the excruciating crunch of Christ's words has pressed home even more as I have written about the vocation of being a Christian husband and father.

      I am only too aware that what I have said about the Christian family is idealistic, and that the reality of our own home is far from the ideal. Gregory the Great said about Benedict, ‘He could not have written what he did not live’. I doubt if someone reviewing my life could be quite so optimistic. My wife is the first to point out that I don't live up to my own good words, but I think she admits that even if I don't succeed, at least I'm making the effort. I hope in our better moments we can have a laugh together and say with the old monk who was asked what they do in the monastery, ‘We fall and get up, fall and get up, fall and get up again’.

      So this book is not about my attainments, but my aims. It is written from my own experience of growing up in a Christian family. It is also written from the experience of trying to follow the way of Benedict for about fifteen years, first as an Anglican minister and now as a Catholic layman. It also comes