Thomas Merton

Called to Community


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this surprise you? Do not be taken aback when the philanthropists of this world fail to give help. Charity is not the way; it still holds back what is essentially needed. Therefore we must join together. A united company of Jesus must come about.

      How will this happen? We have lost the feeling for it. One reason why Christ’s followers did not remain organically bound together, as at Pentecost, is that they wanted to draw in too many foreign elements. The members wanted to convert the whole world before they themselves were fully converted. It is simply not possible to gather hundreds of thousands of people into common fellowship before the members themselves are ready for this. This is especially so if you draw in people who are materialistic, envious, unfree, and unwilling to go the whole way. It would be better if they remained outside and had the cares of the world. They are not yet fit to be co-fighters.

      Freedom of the heart must be there first, a freedom from all the worldly pleasures that might attract us. Then we can shed all worries. How much people are able to do once they are freed from all cares and do not worry about their daily bread! It does not take much, only that people are so bound together that they know, “When I get into need, the others will be there.” But if I say, “I will save enough for myself so that I will never have to depend on others,” then this is the ruin of any Christian community. It is a mockery of Christ’s body.

      For this reason I do not think much of “spiritual communities.” They do not last. People are friends for a while, but it eventually ends. Anything that is going to last must have a much deeper foundation than some kind of spiritual experience. Unless we have community in the flesh, in things material, we will never have it in spiritual matters (1 John 3:16–18). We are not mere spirits. We are human beings of flesh and blood. Every day we need to eat. We need clothing for every season. We must share our tools; we must work together; we must work communally and not each for himself. Otherwise we can never become one in the love of Christ, can never become the flock, the community of Jesus that stands up in the world and says, “Now things must become quite different. Now the individual must stop living for himself. Now a society of brothers and sisters must arise.”

      This is the way Jesus calls us to set aside our worries. Yet we Christians somehow expect people to have faith in the most impossible of situations, in conditions where they nearly perish in need and misery, where they exist in wretched hovels, hardly knowing how to keep the wolf from the door. And we come along and call out to them, “Simply believe!” To shout into this kind of distress, “Believe! Then everything will be added unto you – heaven awaits you!” is a demand that simply cannot be carried out (James 2:14–18). No, the kingdom of God must not be only a kingdom of the future. In Christ’s church community we should strive to become united, and begin to become free in such a way that, at least in the circles where we love one another, cares cease. ◆

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      Embodiment

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       Gerhard Lohfink

      One of the fundamental problems of the church is that faith no longer saturates the whole of life, but only a narrow sector. Out of an entire week we often have no more than sixty minutes on Sunday for “faith.” Our employment has long since become a world in itself with its own rule and ways of behaving. It has scarcely anything to do with Christian existence. All the efforts of Christian societies and church efforts toward a “lay apostolate” have not changed this. In the same way leisure time has also become a world unto itself, as have education, the economy, culture, and all the other spheres of life. Faith is drying up. It no longer has any material that it can transform. It has become unworldly and therefore ineffectual.

      For many Christians it would not be a turning point in their lives if they decided, one day, to stop praying tomorrow, to leave off going to church next Sunday, and at the next opportunity to stop the church magazine. Their lives would continue according to the very same social rules, norms, styles of behavior, and models as before. Nothing would change because, long before that, their faith already would have become unworldly, inconsequential, and ultimately futile. It was, in fact, not faith at all. Where faith is really faith it cannot be shoved to the margins of life.

      Christian faith, just like Jewish faith, subjects all of life to the promise and claim of God. Its nature is such that it interpenetrates all aspects of the lives of believers and gives them a new form. Of itself it demands that social relationships must change and that the material of the world must be molded. Faith desires to incorporate all things so that a “new creation” can come to be.

      At the same time faith tends toward a more and more intensive communion among believers, for only in the community, the place of this communion, only in the place of salvation given by God can the material of the world really be molded and social relationships really transformed. It would therefore be essential to Christian faith that individual believers should not live alongside one another in isolation but should be joined into a single body. It would be essential that they weave together all their gifts and opportunities, that in their gatherings they judge their entire lives in light of the coming of the reign of God and allow themselves to be gifted with the unanimity of agapē. Then the community would become the place where the messianic signs that are promised to the people of God could shine forth and become effective.

      All this is part of the tendency of faith to embodiment. Christian faith of itself produces an impulse to bind believers in communion and by way of that communion to draw all spheres of life into God’s new creation. This integrating tendency is a property of faith itself. It is not something added secondarily at some time or place. An individual cannot first begin to believe alone and then, afterward, join the church community. Accepting faith already means desiring the communion of believers. Accordingly, the transformation of world and society is not an obligation that is added to faith as something secondary. Instead, where faith is a living thing, it transforms the world from the very outset.

      The communion of believers thus is not something that is merely spiritual and intellectual. It must be embodied. It needs a place, a realm in which it can take shape. Perhaps we must read again, with new eyes, how often Paul’s letters and the Acts of the Apostles speak of “houses.” It is amazing how many houses are known to us by name simply in connection with the apostolic work and journeys of Paul: the house of Lydia the seller of purple cloth in Philippi (Acts 16:14–15, 40), the house of Jason in Thessalonica (Acts 17:5–7), those of Titius Justus and Gaius in Corinth (Acts 18:7; Rom. 16:23), the house of the evangelist Philip in Caesarea (Acts 21:8–14), and the house of Mnason of Cyprus in Jerusalem (Acts 21:15–17).

      In these and many other houses of the early Christian era unfolded a crucial piece of the life of the first Christian communities. The natural family, which constituted the central focus of the several houses, was opened and joined into a broader context: the new family of the community. In these houses catechumens were instructed, journeying brothers and sisters in the faith were welcomed as guests, the community gathered for its meetings and the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, unemployed Christians found work, and for the most part the first contacts were made with Gentiles who wanted to become acquainted with a Christian community. When they did so they did not learn merely a set of abstract principles of faith, but Christian life.

      In this context we should also consider the following: the ancient house cannot simply be compared to modern houses; the function of the latter is almost exclusively to furnish a mere dwelling place. In contrast, in antiquity and for a long time thereafter the house was a larger social unit. It contained not only the family in the narrow sense but also other people who lived and worked there. Frequently the house was also a place of production. Larger production facilities separate from the house were rarely found. This meant that in Christian houses like that of Aquila and Priscilla faith and life, or faith and work, constituted a unity. Priscilla’s family saw how Paul worked with his hands, and those to whom Paul preached the gospel in connection with his artisanal work at the same time experienced a Christian family.

      Something else must be added: the houses in which Paul dwelt were often those belonging to the first converts in a given city. This was true of Lydia’s house in Philippi and that of Jason in Thessalonica, and probably also of Gaius’s house in Corinth. It was precisely in the houses of the first converts,